,"l UN PIC Fi nl wi adian offer; 7 f. flour adinn . ities- -l woulc Domi T RAW ' ss, .. - of th. I-NDC At IBO! Free, . claw ¢1°.l¢ ,. s -.s-._ 1 i Al»`\ reclp- *- 5 ii it i i i W111»` i ciplined however, for weeks and C mmm; waiting the decision of H Congress and the Govermment. Thelrbm antlcipations were not realized, and 0 still they continued to haunt the, vicinity or the capitol. The svtiisr- le ities, tired of their presence, decid- a ed at the eleventh hour to make 1° them move on. This was the sparkll’ to set up a fire, for rioting and the ealllng out of the military followed. r This snows the folly of the loose M handling of crowds and demonstra- rm tions The experience of all the U ages has been that the best way L to handle s crowd with s grievanceibe lg to prevent it gathering, and if ii|d Ines eo, infspite of the authorities,” to have it dissolved with as little b delay as possible. 'rhere is no tell- 9 ini what s crowd may do in a M crisis. The spirit of the crowd has h been analysed and dilated upon in \nany`volurnes, ang all the writers 3-’ have reached the same conclusion, ° that for good or ill, it is swayed by VEEWUUM ' ` ' '_1»1‘-' ¢i-~-‘~f- ~` '»-l °i`-'f - ' . '_ fi" -w,- _cc - f ,. his cliiniolrisrowll cunliliillll turn agus wiv Lsslasrie-W. enum a. manure. ss. in* In vlee-r|r,¢_»:¢;_e-a- I- Thru need be and than slumld s;m:’:¥::£1:xnu|rnio:-4. lsnbiirnstt. 1” M *mt '”9l°m’°7 *b°“t 0°' Assnslsu Editors-Frank Wallis:-¢:d"l:..|:;-(’J;:;|0““"”* s un. |‘y' me Auckland Newm It 1 “MJ0°“m;s:);li’sr“(Tbln:t2sn1:ea;’m.s‘ii?d I1: guilds And United States 15 50 139 I nm. Bhd 11" B1101l1d 159 I ' ssrunnav, JULY so, 1932 commercial relations existing be- _. _ . '~ tween the different units of the L’IBs'n,41. Lsisolrnsnllz smsiisstusm .ss .til-rss sy air- ness.. ss' my might ss im- , _ _ _ _.___________ --~ ,gestion. The United States author- PY°'°i1- I-W1 Wh” °ff°1'1i °°°h Wm Anmmns ... cmwygg :`i°if|'"r'-cis: tEd"¢ll:em;;i>b;l1ive tif: ‘ . A boom is bein! Sfl1`if¢¢1 1°! H03- ities were warned 888iDst slldwlnl g! 1” ‘mr E them N° 1 me C.A.Dunning to replace Rt., Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King as Lib- m eral leader. Mr. King has steadily cl lost ground since the election, and t today has few supporters among 5 leading Liberals who sive him is even lip service. It is sad to See an one who occupied so prominent a e place eclipscd by his own marloeuv- it erlngs and manipulations. His chief h failing is unreliability. He does not cn seem to know what it is to stand ith fast-by cause or friend. When we pr recall the eve of last general ei€C-.ment for redress of their allegedithat an “mi°ab1° anmgement may tion it is to reflect on the vanity wrongs The consequence is the ilbe c°m° to’ but tm Dominion se' of political friendships The then g - r Prime Minister decided to take a H trip to Bermuda. to recruit and cm discuss the issues et cetera with a.|g few chosen friends and coni!ldants.’f,0 They were Senator MacDougald, re Senator Haydon and Sir Henry a Thornton. Where are the four of 3 them today? The Beauharnois scan- me-5¢_; of law and order go tak, dal accounted for Senators Mac- the necessary meagui-es at the gut. Doilgald and Haydon who shall get never enter the Senate chamber again. The railway investigations rl account for Sir Henry Thorntvrli ample or Premier Bennett at ottawa. while “The Valley of Humiliation" in speech, in which he sacrificed his ploye,-1 to congregate and ,D au- friends and party alike accounts for their grievances before parliament, the Rt. Hon. Mr. King. is Now the Party wants a newie , ~ d Leader. Mr. Ian MacKenzie, M. P.. ,md the United gear,” p,-evengpm of Vancouver, was the first pros- is pect, but he spoiled his chances by one or two lndiscreet speeches in the House. The Hon. Mr. Ral- ston, M, P., of Halifax and Mori- treal was, (and is) a strong fav~ nf be, th b tween Lord Beaverbrook and Rt. o -e, mg e est political, student on his side of the House,iH and considered a solid, reliable pol-‘mevme Chamberlain has been re' mem” of the old Laurier type' Buwneued. At the head oi' the erstwhile a Central Government, as the Empire Crusaders Lord Beaverbrook S1951" °f the U“1°“ "9 5“b°"d1' though he has domiciled himself in Montreal hc has not attracted Que-i waged Wm' on the mnsewative bee support; he lacks the glittering party' demanding the heads °f wth terects; and those interests are Mr. Baldwin and Mr. Chamberlain. magnetism so essential for success in that Province. The choice ls now H likely to fall on Hon. Mr, Dun- ning He is the most brmmnt pap ces, risking defeat of the Conserv liamentarian Mr. King attracted to atwe cause' on me eve °t the last Ottawa, and since his defeat in 1930 g i has been winning laurels as a pub-lm M Recently Liberal propagandists W in ottawa have been bringing hlsei-brook asserted that his past div- E llc-spirited citizen or Quebec I " Chamb°m1“~I“ °°"°5P°“d°“°° » i fs name prominently before the pub- lic, and his budget is being Cited *had originated chiefly in differences for unending patience and the mi- as the basis of Premier Bennet” upon that part of the Conservative success at the Imperial Conference. fiscal P011” dealing with am' Mr. King, on the other hand, is Culture. He was all for the en- timental side tothe Empire Con-\ .being lm in the background and couragement of British agriculture f¢f0l\°¢ li ONBWS $11” 81101116 Hp- ’ - l to i agin ti 1 ln - about the only publicity he recently and insisted on three measures for pe" uw m °' °“ ° th k received was when he took a sort mn T’“"P°5°*1mD°Sii1orl of import mm of ohtstmdmg abmty’-and taxes, use of quota, and application hitch-hiking expedition with sinks in the West- they °°“‘d hw" “° h‘"°1"°‘"d""-5° shelter a liewueci-ing variety of ln- flilv regarding the application of rmhitents-all classes. colors and WASHINGTON R107, these proposals, and M,-, Bsidwlm creeds; men and women of sharply ____ ns head of the Conservative party differing mentality, but all deeply It is deplorable the United states “roto io mrs ncsverbroolr in oct. °°"°°m°d ” °° wh" 'S "ing 1° war veterans parade at Washington 1930 Sllggcsting that the method by should have ended so disastrously W in the death and wounding of vet- be reached was to ask the electors 111911' Dl'"°U°¢ '11 the Cnnadhm . . | ,, erans and police, bllt noting was f01‘ H- °0mD10t01yfr€e hand to dis- t ! h t f th - what was to be anticipated from a cuss with the Dominions all the al- me 0 1 B vu ne" o ° Em l plre, the complexities of its prob- 'mme' make a song about mother lo " wan” to ambush ml ‘Num rnatlvc methods, imluding tue, mms, also me unique opportunity Till she, the soft-clad, for the gloryi But this is no book ab(;utV*;m_ among his mates. The -.good chu," were unemployed and anticipating 011 foreign foodstuffs." In accept- presented for welding more close- Chang; 215° with the chan” of mills ornature in the abstract, 'rpg ‘ _. g this poly” of the --free mndy ly together so mighty 's force at her smue human element is there as well, been Eathcred as a mob, well dis- 1-01'd' Beaverbrook wrote: "The human beings' n 'md hm wqmmtmc” ”"‘m3 th” -_._ ' Sioux and the half breeds who are ause is greater than the uarrel” It was dusk 'mid the thunder. nd the ‘ q The following are the words of dusk even as mmm 111-U h01pers are ss perietratingly Cause WHS 11° MUD Paflil-. one of the world’s greatest sports- mst brake out om, love like (and lovingly) gmlyggd 5, no hm ~ f en* With POWBI' i° KRD the heads men-night Hon. Stanley Baldwin whenthe storm, ‘cows arid horses, his foxes, wolves 1 British Producers throughout the himmf: "I have always sam it But no night-hour was in it, and md th’ my°1°"1°“5 1118111- <1llf1ll8 Empire above water. With this de do" not matt" tuppence whether back came the light, wmch mn” mute” W” .“lt“l`° rmination a. re-union took place my of us individually sew my ere' While our hands with each otha!! °°“°°' Mmm’ L5 111011419 01 H10 I nd Lord Beaverbmok threw in hu :itn2ltt_cz;;ist.e:7:`ee;ra\;,ev brliourgléit out were warm. iiplumll. amber-colored arms.. ‘is I E It e o care living character. Ll. Riol'|de’s aged wi h the National Governmentx who makes the runs as long as the Earth! fragrance went Wm, her, as father-in-law who mushy Wm, tm, arty last election, Reeeniry Lum side scores well. That is the spirit Sioux; the B'oux chief hi ` el in the wet grass ~ ml 1’ WHO Beaverbmk has 1' Enewed U19