,. UM ._s_~\_.<. ‘,,v-.u ,__ ‘_ _ - _ _ _» _ A______X- _ -_ ;.",< _ _ -_ 1- _¢,,,_;_»,,__w______________ _ _ _ _ ___ __ .». 4' __ ____ ,_4M__éu___,. _ ___.,3,-_._u~.l.,i.¢~._.g».,.”i,i_.__5,~s_1»-if# e, . ,?’|"iJ`-“91'»‘.I,"z-¢f¥_~* -*' ,_,,.-_¢_-!1l;___1\vv___.,.,__ ,~.l\‘§‘?_¢_f§f‘i,-...~,,;, .> t .~' j i . . ._ _ . \"‘v -el _ ‘ »<_\_\-fcf'_"" '.3 - ‘ -""" :fr ` . ,_s ~. __ _ ___________u-.y_g,~_l_i'|f,e__"_-. ; _ _ ' ` _ . _-__ "'* \ , ~ n`»__~i‘.‘¢"Uf$~'¢" - 7 ` i "" '. ' ` W.. . . _ _ \ f \ . , .. .fn nur.. . ...,,_, _ , . , ~ - A fs 1.-. ._ .,_,». \ f . “_ ‘. THE cHAR1.0'l"l‘ET0wN GUARMAN ‘i -._ . , , , ~ ~ _ _ »\ pu ,,.,.,.., ri _l _ _ N* - v » i “_ ‘.- / . 1 - v _ A ;.|.‘}J£ I the other the MacKenzie' Th 5 led- °f °°“’5°- "° in for the youth the rising generation, mon on trouble, New Zealand to shoulder them, guided by the “_ ing this determination of is basis of a treaty and after mouths ouusiuemiiou by ii-ie exchange that "it is a long time ive governments at Welling ld ottawa final adjustments hwd my 11°" °*°°P* “Bd ”°W°" ,een m,,d,,_ and now it is to about the Canadian National Rall- mitted to the House of Com this week mm. gc niiiicu showed surplus earnings of $45,000,- i this new treaty th, interest 000 over operating costs." It is al- farfners are protected, the u butt" being iixed at 5° brought the Liberal press and pol- imteud oi 1° uudei. the iticians into disreputs with the uzi, Kim, cwermmmt thinking people of the country. The Dominion Government ready concluded a Vcry fav commercial .meaty with quoted, which is obviously intend- ia, and thus early in its sd su on hu remedied wm agement of the Railway under the mu brought about by the present Conservative administra- md want of forwight of its “um in om” der the Mackenzie King Govern- MIER AND YOUTH 1 inspiring address before Dunning being Minister) set forth nembers of the Ottawa that in six years the debt of the .8 _ Win iff the gold standard, the =~ople have played their part ml 595ml/W” °bu3°‘| W 3|" e world is making its "second 55° P°°m°n °f Fmm” M1535" in towards stability te over _‘the King Government. It was a epression and get back to Piece of political trickery sensuous mu le fs tn W 1°' the l>“fP°°° °f 01111111112 r th .mound eiiow. ui,” in be ltalized to the extent of something e young men and womei-iflike fifty million dollars a year. ibut ou Wim If there is one part of the Liberal is announced an agreement the young of the wo,-id in ,om in Eben reached between the gov nts of Canada. and New The can is uuuuiugeiy mms”-y and f°l' U" °°“°“’-51°” °‘ “ for the universal crisis is felt in ty to replace the one set aside rich cenirem in pour ¢ii_sti~i¢;_,_ 95° It Wi” be ’° ““°d th” the touching the coutmcntscf fhewer1d,_whatever of help and protection it Kenzie King Government con touching the Empi"_ guiuugng ed s treaty with Australia in have played a leading part in lt- sed I" mu' d“”' ll this greet effort. through which Australia a tempting a restoration of stability to give a preferential market and we will continue to do so if the certain Canadian products. In young shoulder its rcelwllsibilitim. 'n certan Australian agricul- "we ourselves have suffered and products were to enter can will guffer," Mr. Bennett remarked. preferential rates The latter We have achieved much but we to be reached by raising ex must achieve more, and if the old Canadian general tariffs swf-y that misery loves company is rr, under the general tariff was true we can always rely that Can- raised from 4 to 5c per lb and ada has the company of all nations. Preferential reduction from 3 and of all the nations of the 'world r lb The same method was none is as well off as Canada is. ily to be followed through There are those who think that enty items in which Canada everything can be done by tes-rin! extend preferences At a down all we have built up in the date New Zealand c‘aimedilast 1900 years. With such a sug- by s treaty agreement she gestion Mr. Bennett has no wh Australia she was entitled gympathy. The habits of mankind c same prefercntals and as a gummy be ghsnged by a scratch of quence on October ist 1925 the the pen or an act of parliament ielllie King Govemmvnt. by and the 1900 years of efforts must in Council extended the count for something. Anyone who al e ian Treaty to New Zealand thinks that by the destruction of nabled New Zealand to dump everything success can be achieved into canada at a one cent is doomed to irretrievable defeat. which it did to the extent of Socialism and oqmfnnnism are 0001111 it year Notwithstmd broken erutchm on which to rely. 'otest from the agricultural Purim. mciuiisin is ouiy me pi,_y_ unitles from one end of Can thing of the mduimt and uuiihiuk o l ing, but thme things tend. to sow Goiernment refused to ex the seed of dim-uut uid ui., to be New zealand him" and °°n deprecated. In the "second effort" '#0 d°f°“fi lf* 1ml>°ft°“°“ fn world scubulty the uid muy ef-les it ‘m the “W” °1 the 1930 e]°° of courage, confidence, begotten of t gale notice to new Zealand courage, and faith will succeed. the “nd °f 51* mmm’ the The inherited courage of the Cona- affaniemfnl “°“l‘1 ii” ab dn.. fs equal fc me fum, and ft is .d ` _ . vice .and experience of those crcial treaty agreement, and have passed thmugh prmum “___ i legislation which adversely d our trade with that Do 1, especially in neu/sprint and cores fvu- H rf stevens this C. N. R. FINANCES I0 8 l t is. ncludcd a new agreement l' Complaint is made in a Liberal since the people of Canada have way system, "which five years ago legstions of this kind that have Nothing could be farther from the truth than the statement above ed to cast discredit upon the man- tion. The fact is that in i926, un- ment and three years before it left power, the published report of the Deputy Minister of Railway! (Mr. Conservative Club th Canadian National system had in at/er, the at Hen R B creased by $630.655.000. cr at the made an appeal to the rats of more than one hundred mil- ,ig Ggmdi, go ,haw geurgge lion dollars The report, it under their responsibilities in is well to note. also set forth that the "second effort” nooes 0! thi! 1110110504 #059 U10 lil-B1 Of overcome eoonom'o depns $153,103,000 "consisted of interest i the *struggle towards thevdue the Government and added to in smfllty, which had re *the debt of the Railways-" This lu cet back through nntuln compounding process did not begin until Mr. melding, because of feu- up resorted the e out of the older genera- Km? a°V°mm°°t 5° mi" I Wt' n perhaps they im" go ter financial showing for itself and wand in which nw 80 GQCCIVO U18 ¢|0¢tG!'l.fA-ihCl'8ll° im wreck! ui mum ui” ing the capitalization of the cm. sum. .ue emu- enlgutlem WF" N‘"°°*l- *WW mr-ca .h fake their contr- ia n .men wlil respond I __j_jf_'#,_’__ ’! .¢-»§___§`»-___.f____ ~__,_, ____._;-,fi umies, coumge and eu party record about which its partis- oi yuuiiu Thu youu' mmians might well feel that silence to that golden, it is their policy in regard bility when ence they gi»¢'to the railways. Now that the facts iuudmtuna its significance "6 °°mi"8 0° USM 91° °°ll11if¥ ii never was a call to amls "°“”“"3‘ Wh” " M1*-mu! 3 o was uyd bring more ioyai ,ii _that the Bennett Govornmlnt did uw Prim, Miuiuwi- cigimgg' not come into power some; .-, . l \ _ . . .. _ 5,.. .... i._~..-_ _ ° lance of trade whereby to discharge _ _T if I iii 0liAllLOT`|`ETOW|| GUARDIAN N ,m..¢_w enum s. mann. aa. P. vleo-rnusne-4. n. nuns( lecretuym-Llslm COL D. L Uafilllol. D. I. 0- - r¢|l|u|- me nnpaglug Diraetoré. I. Ianni. Asmclats Editors-Frank Walker and D. l. Ourrll asm-|..| bully ffeuuneu mn so-oc nr rear ill Mvllw) ¢|“'"*°'~ $1.50 per year (in advanre) mulled In Canada and United States. TUESDAY, APRIL, Z5. 1932 W ZEALAND TREATY -nd walled ~ Mn* °l»°*l il* W* °" -'- regard by th! P11200 01 WBI5 fill' le HUTES BY TIIE YIIY l I if ' -ii 4' '.'.l 'ill ff " ' ll ll I-\Ilyl Olly M |110' _gn paper- how some scheme might bring Uwvin. particularly if the livliimeiesdnstobepaidforby somebody else. We are all of us, _‘more or less. for the “somebody ielse” business. Particularly when it involves paying. Yet most of us mayaswelimakeupourmlnds that modern civilisation is more complex than that, and that we can't be a part and parcel ofa na- tion, sharing its advantages and affords, with somebody else asses. What is fame? Upon the walls of the corridor leading to the Par- iliamentary restaurant there are etchings of all the Prime Ministers of Great Britain. The other day, when two American visitors were walking down this corridor, one of (them stopped, pointed his cane at -the etching of Disraell, knowingly lremarked: “Ah. George Arlissl" Politics seldom are in the beat hands, they have been in very bad hands since the War ended, and ltlley are not in good hands today. ;Ths Americans have been grabbing lfor gold and denying their debtors a market for their goods. The French have been grabbing for K0ld in the belief that in it they had an instrument which they could use to obtain the security .their arms and diplomacy had fail- ed to get. Both these selfish na- tional policies have sown a whirl- wind which the luckless world- not excluding the ill-advised sow- ing states-are now reaping. The maldistrlbution of gold and goods at last broke _down the gold stan- dard, depreclated and disorganiz- ed currencies, and created a con- diton where every state wants to sell in order to get a favorable ba- its extemal debts, and nobody wants to buy and so get further in the debt of the foreign creditor demanding payment either in gold or his own currency- London Ex- change. lt is clear from advices ..wh|ch reach us from the other side of the Atlantic that the British Govem- ment is steadily refusing to be drawn into the discussion of future commercial policy with foreign countries, some of which have re-_ cently become more and more im- portunats. According to the Lon- don Times, in some quarters abroad there has been a hint of impatience at this British persistence in wait- ing for Ottawa. As the Times says, trading agreements with foreign countries are very important, and. when the time comes to discuss them, Great Britain will enter into negotiations with every desire to promote mutual trade; but the na- ture of the arrangements that will be possible will depend first and foremost on the terms of the agree- ments that can be made with the Dominlons _ in July and August next. The results achieved by the community progress competitions inaugurated two years ago by the Canadian National Railways in the three prairie provinces have been far beyond the expectations of the promoters. 'l\e boards of judges for the three provinces report that advancement quite substantial in character has been registered in respect of education, agriculture and public health. The wide range of nationalities affected may be illustrated by the results of the 1982 competitions. In Saskatche- wan the prize winners were: lst. Mennonite; 2nd, Ukranian; 8rd, German; commended: Mennonite. Scandinavian and Hungarian; and in the other provinces the nation- alities were equslly diverse. These competitions have three years yet to run, and the advancement al- ready noted may be regarded as cumulative. The authorities at Tokyo esti- mate that the Soviet forces on the Manchurian frontier now number 70,000 men, and a clash between Russia and Japan seems probable, if not imminent. Should such a conflict matcrialiae, it would be a major event, which might outlast the Stalin regime. While war in every form is to be deprecated, the ,civilized world would shed few itears if the Bear should catch a l Tlfbll. A high church dlgnitary in the ,United Stat/es. sums up the econo- mic situation when he says? “I g|,_,,_,,___. --an-.m__%=_|____=l=, When you think of the'w|ste that must be removed _from the body everyday, you naturally think of the ` waste from the large intestine, yet °t as you know, wastes are removed by P lungs as breath, and by the kidneys lain. was a dhmatie elif-B040 in Nl' as urine. ff fm of the 122 ounces “H” °‘ ’°““°““ ‘md ”°u"'°°"“"' Latter Day Saints the middle of the last centi-Irv: the followers of Brigham Y°'\ll\¢ Illinois and and the their _tourney across the crest. uid the Rocky Mountains. mdcameasaclimax iioa cu. l .. ...:;‘.:;1.. ...; Savings af fe 8-” 1°" “'° Account Mormonism and Morlnons may be somewhat dlfficlllf 1°? lm! guilt! ‘to imesrmus the crew# nnwn ing of thousands of members of this nngblls b0dy "ny ld M UPE4' nnnovsn or Wasil .°°“°t‘7 m-um W” _ . rnonvvrs _ mmm' m‘°’“° m M" ~ _wi monism was centered in the eilvdlll from your protection ‘ in later years c