Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Apr 1912, p. 9

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----- Che _100. OUR DUR COLONIAL STATUS-A PASSING PHASE OF IT the allegiance to the make little appeals for losalty to throne and for ish empire ippressior To these two distinet "classes « population must be added & and er-increasing class, that Canadian native-born of the third and fourth. generations, minds the tntense Address Delivered'by C. H. Cahan, K.C., Mon- treal, Before the Kingston Canadian Club. Supreme Object of Our Poiiical Activities in Canada Should Be to Evolve and Maintain Such Conditions as Tend Towards Higher Ideals of (i Citizenship. or loyalty, which led fathers to separate themselves the American states to build homes in Ontario, and in the provinces, from generation, becoming evanescent, "It i& apparent, suprenie test which applied by the majority electors to any policy or police lating to inter-imperial affairs o external relations will be, such policy or policies are in the wmiterests of Canada palitieal entity. ture relations of Britain and with AYE, generation more therefore, tha The following is a verbatim report > will of the address delivered by C. H. Uy han, K.C., of Montreal, before the fnembers of the Kingston Canading Club; at the luncheon, in the city hall on Tuesday dealing with the subject "Our Colonial Status--A Pass ing Phase." "Peoples organize themselves into communities from an instinctive de sire that, by the union or co-opera tion of ther: resources, they may able the members of the community to live more complete human lives, ond thereby attain not merely full physi eal or material, but full moral and intellectual development. "Christianity has emphasized the priceless worth and value of each ha man being, by asserting his personal a -- Ni bp ir tv, were assured of the presegvation of the right and privilege of preserving their Ianguage, their laws and thew religion: while the wiwasure of the con- ceysions, which had theretofore been made by the Protestant majority to the Catholic minority in the English: «speaking Province of Ontario was, bv (he express provisions of the con- stitution, made the measure of the con: cesgions which the Protestant minority might require of the Catholic majori- tv in the French-speaking Province of Quebec. "Respect for the rights of the minority, " said Sir John Macdon- 'ald, "ix the great test of constitution. al freedom; and the history of every country, composed pf two or more races, or in which two or move relig- tons prevail, affords ample vindication of the truth of his eriticism. By re speating the established conventions under which Canada bas made such peaceful material and intellectual pro- gress in the past half century, we es- tablish the stromgest guarantees of like peaceful progress din the future. Mutual understanding and mutual con- fidence are naturally more easily tablished among men of the same race, than among those whose primary in- atincts are inherited from different an- tecedent histories; and while constitu- tional conventions may not always prevent in Canfda misunderstanding and strife, these may usually be obvi ated by mutual insight and sympathy, by mutual respect amd tolerance. r-- Cordial Cospperation. "I'he future development of Canada wamaterinl, moral and mtelectoal the worth of the gontributions, which history shall 'record our country as making to the moral and civilizing forees of the worldy depend, 'in a large measure, upon the cordial co-operin- tion of the descendants of the, two great races which now eompose the bulk of our population. We, English and Fronch, have wnited for all time in a political mareiage, which per mite of no divoree in Ke, and which can only be dissolved by the niter de- pieuet ion OL UE eon statul which we have hitherto progressed and prospered; and vou English-speaking Canadians of this great provines of Ontario must not forget that the French-speaking majority of your sis ter province yuebee has the un doubted constitutional right to im- pose the same restrietions upon the use of the English language in the schools of Uuebee, which you may im- pose upon the use of the French lan guage in the schools of Ontario. "But the line of the political de velopment of each and every con the middle west, we ate now, munity is necossarily the resalting ot CAIPENSI0RS Jat ey _ compromise between divergent tenden- Providi nay" 'expe Vi w, vies, sometimes opposing forces, : i BL a and the fact that, of Canada's pre eS pale exthout : gent population, at least two mil, 000 fd Privi ege w ulgoeve more are of French descent, : y i) aril reform and tari and that nearly a million at least are Ee. as received but foreign immigrants, a majority of | POPWAr support in Great whom have crossed our southern bor- | BOW affords Jat avery der from the United States, must ne pect of dominating the coxsarily affect or. modify in some | L0EN of thyt country measure the dominant political senti | So not pretend to | ment of this country. Asx for Cana- so-called froe trade policy of the dians of French deseent, they, as tish government or of the British whole, are the most intensely patrio- pie--1 merely desire to emphasize tie people of all Canada; since, hav fact, to which Mr ing long been severed from the his special atiention, tory, the traditions and the litera ture of old France, they now know no other country, and their political af fections are, first and last, centerod upon, Uanada, the home of their fathers for many generations; and yet, by reason of their history, their tra- ditions, and their religious teaching, they naturally adhere most tenacious iy to monarchical institutions, "In the development of all political policicagfor the advantement of Cann- dian interests, insofar as those in téresih are affected by the continued maintenance of our political relations with Great Britain and with "the British empire, we must first appeal in Quebee--~not as in Ontario to the racial instingts of its people--but we must append in Quebec to reason, to considerations of Candda's vital na- tional interests, andl, if you will, to motives of politieal expediency, rely- ing upon the popular sentiment in fa vour of the monscchical institutions, and uppn the - creation and develop: ment of material and moral interests which may be held in common by Canada and by other portions of the empire. noun, as n In particular, Canada with the British on by the te «hy than "I tions those, tain with of their utility sentiments of patriotism, by sentiments of racial in part due as these, who are most Camida's political Great Britain and was 10 consi such perhaps, with ol inter-imperial tariff preference, the hope that, by ereating interests, eommon to Great and to the overseas dominions, strong material bond might be | cated, which would abiding adhesive force, other sentiméntal should become weakened ted, It was due to These, it seems to me, men of Canada, tamed, and South Afriea*have not ranted preferential treat ment British goods in the markets of dominions, but that they have quently profiered to the governme Great Britain larger ference, tinal treatment in British the chief products of But during recent years economic bond has not ly strengthened, continue a considera oy motives that the st Australia, New such measures of the domin that con The Colonial Conference, the colonial Asquith, the "AL Mr. of of Great conference nam: . premier *. H. CAHAN, A.C. | ; self-governing dominions, clurad that preforence ara to consider the we shall treat golonies as it were differently, PRAY We eonteive we are not able do.' Since by Mr. Asguith have controlled th litical actions of Great Britain, and the governmen apparently been supported by a majority of the people of Great Lain, express! responsibilities and duties; his indivi dil rights and privi The es tablishmeht of the Staté and the or ganization he vprsnont of the white are hh Whaolite: ly inddidponsable %, for the co- operation of intdividudle, in develop the hiphest types of individual chavae- ter.and the most complete awd efficient wogdal and political systems which may be Pile unter the ever-changing conditions of tr ever- "dy ancing oivili zation. « "The whole tendency of modern po- litical history has been toward the establishment of popular rights on au representative basis, by conceding to ench member of the body politic u tall share in the government under which he lives, and by encouraging every cit- igen to develop a manly individual in dependencs 'in the exercise of his pub lic rights nnd privileges, and mm the performance of his public duties "and responsibilities. "Fhe supremo abject of our political activities ini Canada should be {1 evolve and mamtain such conditions vas will make pessible the attamment by our people tof the highest ideals of citizenship. In laying the fowddation of the Canadian conlfedaracy, the cre ators of the anion gave evideice that the people were fitted for popular sell government, 85 48 to "mike that gov. ernment best for the people, by giving expression, fin the new constitution of the country, to the desire and! abitty of thy majority of 'the people to place upon itself thdse constitutional re straints by whish the minority would be assured of seriving justice from the majority. "At the very -- they - werd oom: fronted by the special dificulty. that these British-American colonies hal boen peopled Ir over a century hy two distinct racas, 'whose ancestors lov venturies past had been in almost won stant conflict, add who were Mirther' separated by their 'traditional wdher ence to two distinetly" diffecent profes. sions of the Christian faith. "By separating ithe English © amd French divisions of Canada ints pro vinces, and by toserving. té the pros vincial authority wide powers of Jegin- ative atid admigtrative control, the Canadians "French descent in ihe Provinve of Quebec, in which then ns now thay sonstituted a Varge maori guestion ol trade vitally port and import matters which material provinces, and particularly EO in and other any or special lions or dritaih, mea political gre "a when, ut the boasted at Roverament bolted the door city's and then and there that 'they would not concede one Edinburgh that the had 'banged, barred ference on a single pepper-corn. ate a common economic bond bet the self-governing dominions and { Britain, by means nee, dominions and conceived that self-governing Britain, basis of joint co-operation for the tection of common interests ag possible foreign aggression--by corted action for establishing maintaining the naval and mil supremacy of the empire. lt dent that neither of the overseas the nations of sion, a8 a means ing populations. A Political Atmosphere. is also evident that She influ of foreign immigration into the two great. westdrn provinces of Saskatehe- wan and Alberta has created in those winces a which is possibly more Er "than Canadian, and which is certainly more { Canadian than British; and which, in the last alternative, is not altogether { m of J dissimilar to that which prevails in the EE of Quebee. The majority 's immigrants, erossing the wouth- : A boundary of those provinces, find nese expansion, Canada, creasing eastern above all, immigration: ities of tural lands and for wast indiaoed its tr Fe Porba fully the of the central western vinoes, on thy Pacifie coast of vague hereafter of Canadian 'means that the government eriticize of the imperial conference of 1907 be Sr aily 1 Yrilish Brit no favorable » our third the second, in whose sentiments of perfervid and their from new marilune to and pS Fe to whether best distinctive the Great empire will, in a large measure, be determined to Canada rather affinity. fu der ne that anxious to main connection the em- pire, first sought 10 develop the policy can mn economic Britain, , anomaly; a abri- 8 Aan even although / tions or disgipa as ates- Zea only to these "fre nt of pre in return for similar preferen- markets for ions mon been material 1907, Bri tain; in reply to the overtures of the y de- we whether the foreigners and the and to 1907, the views expressed © po of t has large Bri- "In all matters relating to the ex-| of Canada affect interests of all the Canathan those the of spite here treated hy foreigners pre I'he pre- indifferent and pr O08 "en the Bri peo the Churchill directed close he itish and * on imperial recipro- i declared ) inch they would not give one farthing pre "When all efforts hall failed to ere ween arent of a tariff prefer those who were sincerely desi irous of strengthening ithe ties between the Great as strong po- litical bond might be created on the pr Oo ainsl con and itary is evi a do minions can as vot" stand alone among the earth, many which are greedy for territorial expan of obtaining profit- able employment for their ever-inereas Australia lives constant fear of Chinese and of Japa- South Alvica has Ler many located on its northern border. , a5 a whole, fears the possi bilities that might result from the jn- i and, that the economic and in- 3 ie stuthoch neighbor for larger areas rienl- es of jpowors, circumscribed though the le satutnl products of the Rt: the the ses, may already have people to cast covetous upon this peaceful northern coun. this sentiment is not so | by at least a minority of pro- and of in Em ------------------------------ee---- Only One "BROMO QUININE," thet is A the be lakes that esent 1 al from the great am conbdent nection at pr sure the politi and that that ronnéction is honorable to both than any other political which we could possibly fg guarding our, national indbnests "Bat the possibility of LZR TessIOn directed public tion in ( the whole of our inter-imperial and internation al relations, a time when othe more or less irritating conditions have arousssl in a consciousness that wee have outgrown the ewaddling clathes of our exsisting colonial status Lhe legislative and administrative jurisdictions of Canada, in respect of which we enjoy responsible self-govern ment, appear all too circumscribed the light of incidents of al oceutrence, 'A Canadian (rips across to the United States erime of bigamy, by going through the form of marriage there, while his real wife ix still living in Canada, and honnd his newly wedded May return to Canada and flaunt (hem selves, with impunity, 'as 'man and Ne in the eves of his Canadian fam ¥, fo the Atlante the Bfitish econ is essential to ns far pe connect ron races in for sale very fe att scheme ha anada to us in almo daily the and commit border the SPoOtse Laws Insufficient. "Dur laws al ineffective dinn across the border, proved that he leit ( intent of committing the Canadian boundary; and merely punish the offender raving Canada with criminal We seek to the and it ing colonial nr 'an to punish in Canada w} Wile commits a "rime unless it is the ACTONS anada with a crime thin we fay intent ast rtam hasi we lind no status, in the fuet this country is and that its ergise amd cannot ditions, over. its not a soverie doe ex on government under those sovereign rig citizens which patty Btate, sting con hits teal exercise own and Are in any every ad South American "We admit, fined comditions, immigrants birth naturaliza this country; ly -imagine they are | and pr but when { boundary, Central ou under wall de of {i cilim and théy frequently f that, when naturalized, admitted to all the of Dritish Cross certam m of nd to tion a $0 righty ivileges the or pro¢ mile limit to their their personal prejudice that the rights and priv zenship conferred by © immigrants have no recognized by not when they citizenst horn thre find to MNES Aout the they our wil beyond from our coasts amazement, and, perhaps, and iloges of anada value, a most Great Britain butiness the vit upon d foreign nn i ar not tons evn «elf, sure, of thi "We enact hy i once, have 1 country. for or plea crossed confines laws in ance of the expr authoritie ved by our eonstitutiomml act, relat WE te tapasigh be do whippiug, or th like, only to hind that it necessary | that these same laws ghall he reserved tor approval or for disallowance at the ipse dixit a colonial secretary, holding a position in the British eab who ig neither to the people, nor to any parlia ment in which the will of the peop! of Canada may directly or indirectly find epression. "We recently legislation re specting a Canadian naval service, and the acquisition construction of ships for Canadian but had not procesded we were faced with the fact ships of the proposed only ubject Canadiad long their manoeuvres to our the operation necessarily of that hear our master's voice the Atlantic, whether of Mr. Churchill, secrelary--whose tore say scarcely intelligent audience ment gecall- voice soothing us are "masters in | that we exerts: seemingly puri confer is of inet, Canadian responsible | enacted or construction of ' navy; before th would laws restricted that law i we far that Service bo to 50 as are and of any restricted colony inland consied waters; lonial the boundaries "Wy ACro Gieor colonial "0 to walted Lloyd of the I ven tht mn Or or name of the master' saving that we household," a freedom "absolute, unfettered and complete," and we be come pufied up with a kense of foolish pride and seli-importance, until sonw oritieal issue external re lations, of perhaps sapreme importance to Canada, such as the declaration of London, a prize court the negotiation of a permanent treaty of arbitration with the United St; a treaty of ofiensive and defensive hance with Japan, or the like, which our most vital interests affected, but concerning which our re- sponsible gepresentatives ame never ev en consulted, and in respect of which we | no move exercise the responsible vights of wtizens of the empire than if we were inhabitants of such feebls for eign states as Liberia 'or Patagonia. "We are one day filled with rejoicing that His Gracious Majesty, for whose person und family we have the most loyal esteem and sincere affection, ha deigned to appoint his most disting wished kinsman az povernot-gemeral of this country, but soon, by or: ina- dent after another, we may be forced to realize thatour vicerov's official w- structions emanate from the osloninl secrelary--whose name a moment ago we could not even recall-and that our viceroy's official acts, in relation to ail imperial or Inter-imperial interests, are dictated from the same source. "We sometimes fancy that our liament and government exercise to any ean hear by one for we Our own Ares in our convention, ov ul} a by ne par- their thay are, by virtue of an irrevoeable con- stitntional vight, but ultimately we are to recognize the wndoubited fact, po matter how permanent the ldelegution, expressed in the British North Ameriea act, may appear to be, that those powers are exercised under a delegnied and revocable autherity-- revocable, at wil, by a pardiament, which ix solely responsible to the cles. tors : of Great Britain and Ireland, whose special interests its members are elected to conserve. "We may be thankiul that the king ~orl bless bim--is our ki snd that he und his descentlsuts wi over. ve main the of imperial wy, im purfect anomalous though that KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, APRIL 27, ! } i future of Caunda, {of Lord more | semble of anada | but fatiom ¥ up { | { 1912. ov this cons left for hy a elo powers of the House popular repressntaty Great idritain and Treland obtruded atten undoubted constitutional fact royal line he changed parliament that 1 indirectly responsible 1 be, bat ie pr uhity may on is no us, ithe s lhe rogating Has AY the the un upon ong tion that will tly may a 1 eit) nor § an be 'And then we " of part, will ite place then the ug in the face that by alto from the ¢ and political united to the States, be, to Mexico, a political au thority, which has repudiated | the idea of being, or of becom ing. directly indirectly, responsibil the millions of people who may | inhabit the Domin- | are part the a subordinate continue al present subordin empire, but ever stare "w pare that { ox wn witl and We may to our the fact can even saber we be seversd, piecesmeal or npire t nited by over wether, fy may or | oven or to hereafter on of Canada. ; "Mere loeal self povernment has { often been established in states which | controlled by absolute despotism, loeal self government is in with the development of types of individual charac tlie organization of institutions, and of the rhest forms of modern civilization "The instinetive of the race from which the Canadian people have sprung, conserve the rights of responsibl self br rdoted out. I was to ine | stinct that the people Eng de manded and obtained control through | parliament public expenditures same now or were mere compatible the highest ter, of the most politieal nl his desire and leges to ac pri rovernment juire and cannot due pousibly that land revenues snd of It was due to that the her the House © of of msiimnet second ehamber, pitish Ahi PAGES 9 TO 14. SECOND SECTION. TE OF BRONCHIAL CATARRH PROMPTLY a ~ JEVED BY Pe-AU-AA. Bronchial Catarrh Unless Stopped "Often - Spreads To The Lungs, Causing Catarrh finally control ht that wealth was deprived of even of government dhe tht American cintilla of ex penchitures: Wis thirteen tor THT stipet com mon separated as they Were independant political communiti sing a populaton of nearly minons of people, declared their of the erown, and there organized political whieh themselves own independence a uno through ght al of taxa afd expendi Fhat same instinct is shared, in a pre-eminent degree, by the two mil of people of French afindinn de who inhabit ( la, thousands of people, ars, have the tablish home tern un der they th solutely ir representative wll contribution m control or of m Abters tion ture fons 80 by who, HOW of recent Slates ana of left new k. and he tens mn United in the north-wes anada. That tent that it wonld inevitably the fervent lovalty of dinns of British descent which the ye to « Provinces Mme Instinet 1s so ju impair | many { to the British ana fin government {ions of the makes the | J. Co HER PetRtier, D op't de I'Agricuiture, Ottawa, Ont., writes : "The Peruna is parficularly efficacious in the cure of ecatarrhal affections of the Inng remedy most winter of bronohi Peruza. opinion of thiay valuable remedy. = ee ATARRH at appre us tad 3 | bronchial tubes, and it is in consequence the here in Ottawa. I am completely reste Six bottles cured me this cod and I owe thanks to the I have recommended this remedy to a large number of my friends afflicted with the same trouble, and they have verified my good » of often very q lung Poruna t hin pow. repress gid 7 ey Worn oe ph -- conv inetd Cahada achieving tical destiny, nn greater 2 v polutely "of the her highinat. pol tunity elf: governin Fo any © people of Canada may 1 all their « the free people of Canadians belie sumption of corm and responsibilities m conceded shies apd they ar possibility | of of as within dominion within a self nm pare. "The free win ternal the British that, with the ponding duties they should libert from cluded "ft. 3s, perhaps, British re ve be governed relations hy ales as he which rig ie HOW ¢ fo tie who British reluctant pected th Are be + min to he of ters now onh ponsible constituency pt alway loge wink will to extend fhe British citizenship ot OVEer-SAns will doubtles the past authority ne therefore, a complete that the representatives of the government, the have mere priv { ches in y Thain It SUP ise Briti recent sitant They as the Nnons argh the future, in tain their exclusive Wie present at should hy perial conference, BRITONS tv declared, dicated by their words thority clearly in wittude than bh that exclusive an aliairs, which 1 of the willing! repires ind © their that external n Fromm wernment will them HA with or end domimion that the vernment of wl as the conoessions lo true ehtatives Hritain maximum of the dominion subordinate governfhents more fully informed of sign or external policies of the exceutive, Bat it not matter of information, it is mental politieAl principle that that of participation direction' and control f the responsibility shvervign<in matters mnteresis, e are politicians in Fagland, they constitute the majority, who, apparently fuiling to comprihend the conditions, declare that it 18 impossible for the government the United Kingdom to share that re sponsibility ~~ with representatives the domimbne. Do they represent the intelligently matured views of the demorrgey of the United Kingdom ? We must ascertain definitely whether the Britikh people are with us ur against us. repre Girent possible that hall the io dominant 1 Iw kept is merely a funds is involved, the juint sharing in vising the collective "Ther possibly be r* €, ad of existing of of in | an i ition A trol Lhe "racy 1 i public with he The U nity of 1 the JFmpire, The unity of the mpires dander existing conditions, can only be eon sammated by the democracy; the do minant statesmen of the United &ing- don tacitly admit their indifference. In any case, it i= with the sovereign snd with the people of the Lnited | Kingdom that Canadians feel un really | vital relationship, and not with poli | ticians whose controlling desire. may be to obtain or to retain office on the | parochial issues that usudWy their parlinmentary parties. "I is sometinws suggested in the English press that Canada should state expressly what wee ther "de. mands," but if Canadian® shoud for- mally comply with that reciest they fannet Cdanand" ese than is hen birthright--the righ! to participate, through their responsible tives, in the control and direstion of of the collective tof iy ap in i the | time rao that divide | main. 3 ies ied 'sentatives ta- iment no longer detcrmice hich will Pritisl dhe sonable olved to for pre-determi the | dissolutio Weh na reg fon in relics bro- pre LR the patient irrenat Wit ie argiven "ih tf ritish liberatel persuaded people will Jer vour We cision vital postponed, them. ot till of IRIE 1 (here & vis parochinl which Piritish request ly would i for espuality {of the dom | British Isles, then we could laach out sight the VO imperial the re the of en foreign fiw son ge id eit ensnip wRPIrRLIn AN an excuse § of in ri ht faire, {that of the over partieipating we Ars control 8 germs that cu hugs prote hse Oris h& vin BYR ni Hi rey politic aol l srdded annot be siemoepey will that way ruption of wkd British peop which ean, place yi 18 deli Wire apinon pobiticnl wrliamenta ho ro 1 diy the i ore unity, on feet mg as well of the reslize oof Lhe mids veel ih all wihabit for wd ow frequen ri rent of the pedple in <r iotetnational rhial quired & Jasti nevital gotten n man yearnings of as of 'npoastbiitt ies" unperial denvipg tu be catary n to the is siost dis- | reputa Sound t throat, # shoul I ain ieavos | ie reais. British ted Wing il least, many that he has British and fa Fie corduiones nitely of | at endowed | bey perfes we wl thy a baie inhabitant the | ony of at the ir white 3 or i © <i ipod uf tly by re xl ques ons policy interests of the empire But neverthilers the power of making ord 4 {tween it Tred politicinna own | | PReTeve { mpoerd teked Pritain parlismen itary #enfect is png shpplanied and that the | Tiomept." § | iN 2) i Mr. Wickliffe R. Smith, Editor of The | Potlatch Herald, formerly Principal of i tlie Schools at Cameron, ldaho, writest "For seme time I suffered with ose tarrh of the throat and bronchial tubes, 1 tried many remedies, but could find | nothing that would give me relief, | "Finally I tried Peruna. Three hotties cured me, mage me sound and well, I beliove it will do as much for others as it did for me, I shall be glad te {Yecommend is to those suffering with eatarrh." -- -- Great ET tam, st i vith the people scutive The si the voling .. ed tn wides uy, Bom es and com». onlistment of of fupds; and the final ar questions of of supremy individual, omi- only 1 of speak of self-government." of and ' tially with the « alone contre and the are in all ti policy, « are to the and death Where the nent political re ality tal delénce, state of to the Bay m war, as executive, an wrnitde "h I but the reul ar, fannot a8 not i nomina wer laring w we i thon it hberty or determir these [eRe iit alren $4 no more, Can telly under woop bt no less the oxi ctice f t than dy, constitutional the ol in sting onceded to Britain ess th thector n two Years of of « Ago he anada pros de thats anada § coe bale, very i of "un defers Ii be at de shall have this the not frame A red tn the think the eral imperial minister house Ommons jurstion of with prrmancnt thedanse, involves vide « other to take empire very ind anipire ter ations da dominions their part i the whole, sh Ary rlions this in nitthbuting ta th whole empire, ol tn da to ferabie the one As citizens tone aloe wha te empire or Coun think cone ¥ peopls vould moment 8 ch for to condition." which imperial n vital [uestion of irganizatons for orga hzations go to our pottieal fife, ve settled even tems to me, hy cons representatives of the i on ne na- and the main. military En COT tributions of those roots of not to rary, i seams Feotween nie are tation he | 3 dian or whose ANG ty governmeny and the war department at technical advice and appropriate cog. of exceeding great value, not to be settled by expert the naval and military ser« by education and (raining ¢ Lnewacited for thee high duties the appointees of hure to the admirally board be permiited to determine Inical which involve iti of the overseas 'i hose Tasues can only ba profonged deliberations he ol Great Brie sovernmenis of the dos delibirations which can on- successfully, it seems (0 we, spon the way for these domin. a8 Mm ering units in the dicho po bi goverping em ire] thew open sohieve to Uanadiars, while domes anada, to sepfre and edt rights and privileses to British citizenship We hase bere in the imp' al wsid Premier Asquith, istrefi cing the government of bind Vill, "ond the imperial parfin- ort can neither surrender nor shave ts supreme authority with any other body, or nny other. part of his mae aly's domivions." dmir nd A t may, umwder ns, te ire isles of ¥ $ Loew, who } i Ives pol I destiny fominione ettfed by the i and rot ernment in the ree dd if hey eal destiny ns to andl 7, WHY of i i in tor that in par in Fras

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