4 THE DAILY NEWS Monda N —— a i — - 7 a a a ee aie ~ cn eee ee ' , ; ; : ‘ing the Amerfean ®truction of local navies to keep| hired in; areatest land power with a tram- events feaci' " . tates. open the tradé routes in case of| when (h, ed army of 4,000,000 men. Fif-} -evolution But, if British : t ne ; | ‘ & \ teon or siateen sears ago Ger-|men will intimate to the Cana-| wer. oe ee Tm had and whil lian people that a cash contribu. Hon, Geo. EB. Foster in intro. Canada jmany mad no navy and while in- dian | t and most effec-| ducing the resolution in the jmore a lvincible at home, she was not injtion is the Dest | tt ’ House of Commons said: try I : a ’ 0 0 y ‘ i fa position to quarrel with Great) tive means yt aes eae ceed sontril t | iit untry then Canadians) Suppose you contribute this/tect her Britain, who then was and is the ther ¢ | . ‘ 4 ' . found ready and willing year, your sum and next year jada’s dui a igreatest nava power in the will bet ’ — 1 t challenge our Conservative | your equal sum and thereafter|her «h wortd, : . . af 7 Continued from Page 3 right bonorable friend that tnere |the absolute freedom to carry on Germany began to build a na-| friends to point to one single ut-|year after year After ten, oriiices§ hy i a- 1 | is not an equipment in this coun- | their own affairs by all the do-} y. ostensibly to protect her, terance of a British statesman twelve or twenty years, you Willlcepting in | . . . g »} — ' , . . “@ » » ave ver 1 immense ' , n settlers into the northwest, open-j|try to cae - a eek Saar le ninions within ihe great ns itish | | ade routes, but naturally Brit- iaval expert of ee mph no dl "i ‘walt be aeekinten seal th “) { on » at 8 5 - 2 e eo » al overt " iv "as o : 2 Tt ing up this great country, and by ‘ mah et oe silmees . | Empire Let the people a ae ishers were suspicious that the cating the granting a ce ae tien tandibeiinns WAN. We Gamat era é ‘ver a > P » Ri- , p ons ~el f : ' . y P et ’ ‘ that very process creating a nat- as never made 1 Slightest ¢ | the British dominior fe tha real Object was to secure a navy eontribution by any ritish ' se ag Build Our Own levy ' fort to provide for it Does he/they can carry on their own busi- that could cope with that of| try All the authorities are aga-jitself there wi ve no roots ee ural market for the products Of/; now that Germany is holding ness, develop their natural life | peitain Today the German na net it istruck, there will be no residue — ‘ . : . e > ani . . own British Golumbia, it was dis-lout her right hand to get Greatlaeeording to their own concep-| .« ot Mie Neobate and Experts’ Opinion lieft, there will be no preparation Se i | 5 erio enace, al aye rat graceful for anyone in British| Britain by the throat and we are/tion. earry on their own affairs ‘ . lof the soil or beginning of grow- ‘ ee : Great Britain has been forced to Lord Shelbourne advocated} { heard Ca, Columbia to demand that these) not in a position to send a single|as the absolute security to the}, neentrate her navy n the) yy brethren beyond the sea jth of the product of defence WwW ley “ » » er 1é I it ; ’ “e . » » "as, oojile poor settlers ought to be taxel ship or a single dollar in Britain's | integrity of the Empire Every | North Sea it oe st the aa i , th maritime pirit But some time or other, no one i i ‘ jsvo0 sea. 1 si ears, ¢ ele vate e ar > © ’ eague { for lumber in this province But | defense? man in this country is British ' t ad ; can doubt that with resources ; ' yresent rate of eonstruction, the vil eir own navies and pro-| the othe the lumber manufacturers of thi iB t t rt uly | build their : : : land ulation constantly in ; the 2 é a ‘re 0 - ‘ ; e ands 0 elg ritis ; » core e onlyi,. han opule ) “onste . provinee went (0 Ollaws. Ledie It wer nto the hand f the | ane oe 1 te — ’ + i a |German navy will be equal t tect their trade routes ; a ca oh tates ond aah t jence that ro > » a. 48 > ba » Minister and they got to- iman la is afra‘ nis ¢ : a - today : A aime creasing, e mus ane 7 and gent!emen, the manufactur- reaee mt . ; ; ' : - loyalty is the man that f rsakes|‘"® aa et esame tance Lord Charles Beresford again | in this country a naval force of | """° * re » an ¢ : : ee der Par circumsté Ss, as ers of this country run the gov-|#ether and all in the Hou it for political purposes, who|],,,,, +% 3e : ther Bri-| 4nd again in the strongest PpoOS-| our own for coast and home de- oan ernment of Canada today. I tell/Commons unanimously agreed| sande on the street cornet ond] sich Desiaiawe b and aoe ; sible language advocated that all|fence. The interest we take in on British A : » : r . ari nd ; & 0 Mons Degan to Gisceus the emerge you that they put up the moneyjthat there was a serious cond'-|declares his loyvalty—no e Od} the best means of assisting the| the Dominions should build andj}a contribution spent by another: an vs : for the election and they won and|tion of things facing Britain and} man ever does that. The best are! yy thes Ghetes man their own navies under the | is not the interest I desire for ae - now it is a question of “as muchlit was -time to help. We passed! those who say the least about it.| In Canada. while Sir Wilfrid] direction of the British Admir-|Canada, T want to see something > : “f . : f aig PEAK tiv aa inielere oO : 4 4 a . . ‘ ’ : - ; . ‘. emergent as we can get because we havela resolution, sent ministers to|When a man carries either his! surier was in power, the fol-jalty. At an Australian banquet |grafted in the soil of Canadian ee dean the government By the very/meet the British admiralty avd)religion or loyalty on his sleeve lowing resolution was unani-|he said: “All the Dominions |fationhood which takes root and os throat® in this country today, and/ British government, brought jhe is open to considerable sus- : usly pa ' by the Parliament} must have mobile not fixed de-|grows and develops, awakes the mee ~* ’ - los j at! ac} > . . »ir >». | nousty passed by the arin © . ‘ories in Ene 7 iiede ane goer ee - me es oo a os . ~ | pk ion, but a man who in his or- of Canada: fences and be able to look after | spirit of defence in this country, hitical car after fifteen years o admitting port and on the Dasis o rat re-/ dinars practi e every day per- ’ 4 1iM- | les j t that sk terest i ) ; i : sir trade routes, and if difi-|leads to that quic interest in it tee fF 1 into the prov-| ~ovide 37 of) on. |Mouse of Commons Unanimous their fifteen yee eae Kenge Taiiber sate tne oe bie jaro re ve aes {iforms his duty, takes the obliga- - ¥8 ,eg| culties arises in their own wat | to glories, its duties, and its aie he b ince, which is a necessary fm ig ne for ov with een |e ms which the Empire imposes , pol House fu os . Ce lers, they must have the Imperial) accomplished work which is af- be six yea ow ee ee a va areal tenant aaa q he Trion him every day and says|the duty of the peopl m ~ | navy to assist them. I am certain /ter all the one great thing which a . 2 months the manufacturers of| Wilfrid Laurier was defeated nothing about it is the man to|ada, as they § increase in num! nat eo far es you Australians|compensates @ people for the|**" reach , . sre able to take the] The begin ro » Cans : . » avtal ers & se to assume it ae . : i of the Britis! this country were - 2 - aed The no a Fog ae be in the front if a crisis should oe and wealth ; i aa : | are eoncerned, if you want to |great expenditure either on land Sa é > or » of 4 ¢ ; _ 3 a it? . > " eo ‘ 2eaponsibille i ~ Borden government by the throat/navy and bu te a Eee oe. Spee | help us, the best thing for youjor on sea in the way of defense} oo. W pe ee See Gat em Sheree: ane ne erence Freedom brought Canada into} es in National defence Ito do is to determine to defend|anad the maintenance = of the | °°" z f » act against the in-/S8i ‘ilfri aurier ovided for “The se is of opinion that : - Germany ca tation on the act again he } | Sir Wilfrid Laurier provided ceiniiliin mie tt tte Beth ane The House i pi lvour own trade routes, and the | country Ses terests of the northwest They | that is what Mr. Borden is hes under the present Constitution-| to} They have litie in B a oo frel for i bout today I am elad|the national integrity of this a1 relations detw the mm ther| Dest way we can help you 1s to] ney have politicians ‘in ri- ae is @ ¢ rier a ¢ ecro re o g iz abo ode , gis sees . ’ é . ’ . en e 0 TT) | . aye One ay Lourter 6 8 gre aia = ae “eR te ; } ; | untey and the Empire will. bx « ana . ees rning | P83 your men through our/tain as well as in Canada and a ee > or i } s count é I i ride as ° h country 3 ek , ‘le ‘ — rover ' » Lau letting lumber ae iis ¢ | that “% ‘ 1a pe : : - I faada aman an¢ - ve . V 5 | training. inaval panic in almost as effective vied free, interpreting clauses in the|/enough to take a stand with th*|maimntainet ry le Operaltio of} dominions, the payment o eons i : ried out a ’ i gin 0 ter. | an expedient as flag waving is in| ,,, customs act contrary to reaso Liberal party in favor of that|the same principle. Let us stand| gular and periodical contribu- ir Charles Tupper, the veter- |‘ i tw With her s; i : i : ; ‘ Conservative statesman in|this country. They have had a This question was put to the Su-/prineiple. I don’t know what Mr. | by that principle, spend thejtions to the Imperial Treasury }@"® Conse od — naval panic in Great Britain)"° eo preme Court of this country lBorden’s poliey is and cannot|money of this country building|for naval and military purposes| Writing to Mr. Borden said: “The rd a i i ie a ie ae th jenough | { ’ | > © » if “> ever ca a “= or a Was Borden right or Sir Wilfrid} give an opinoin I know what|ships in this country, giving op-| would not, so far as Canada is} demand will saon be made by| ; Land so that : some, that Canada should con- last 100 years. right? The Conservative party|we stand for—we stand for the|portunities to the workmen of|eoncerned, be the i satisfac. | Some, 4 ‘ a would disap] placed it there. Sir Wilfrid ad-|national development of this|this eountry to build those shipsjtory solution of the question of tribute to the Imperial navy ay jot the Best Policy High Tariff Nava! Policy ministered the free trade in lum-|country. I am speaking as anjand man those ships. Beginning | defence. proportion to population and | We are unalterably opposed to The ter ber for fifteen years. The manu-/| Englishman, being in this coun-|right with the national responsi- “The House will cordially ap- this I regard as preposterous|a cash contribution and nothing | jeading wh: facturers had their way, forced | try twenty years and I am proud/bility and then, in my opinion,; prove of any necessary expendi- and dangerous. [ read with| more. I do not believe we can 40 | eontribut Mr. Borden to give them that con-| of it. [Tam just as delighted that|that is the proper way to secure/ture designed to promote the pleasure the resolution passed jour duty to the Empire and Can- millions f unanimously by the House of|)ada by merely writing a cheque.) ppitai; If tt cession and the Supreme Court am an adopted Canadian and I|the Empire and maintain it. The of Canada decided according to/take my stand on the prineiple|First Lord of the Admiralty two the interpretation of this clause,|that there never was an in port-|weeks ago declared that a few that there should be no duty on/ant nationality with high super-|years ago he believed that it was rough lumber. Borden and his|ior civilization and integrity that|;mecessary in the administration associates now have to admit|was developed on any other prin- | of international diffieulty to ad- that Laurier was right and they/ciple than maintaining its own|minister the protection of the were wrong. independence and when Canada|Empire from England. We have Let me come to the last ques-|does the best for herself andjchanged our opinion and we be- tion. Sir Wilfrid established the | makes proper equipment she does|lieve the basis of security is in principle of the Canadian navy.!|the best for the Empire What/assuming and strengthening the Sir Richard McBride has said it)about the contribution, you say ‘laffairs of distant posts of the was a tin pot navy. That may/Suppose there is a serious crisis.}Empire. Let every country have be true. There is always a day|To begin with, I don't believe|her own defense, that is Cana- of small things in large enter-|there is-any such crisis; if there|dian policy hat is for what we prises Sir Wilfrid Laurier es-jis we don't know anything about|stand, that is what the Liberals tablished the principle of thelit. The British government have| declare. to stand or all; that is Canadian navy, he provided the/not made any declaration that [| what I believe the people of this capitai expenditure of $37,000,000 know of Mr. Borden has not|country will support. for the buildiag of ships and #7,-|made any announcement and — 000,000 a year to be expended on | therefore we cannot discuss it Mr. Duncan Ross was greeted their maintenance. Why did he|We stand on the principle, how-|with a storm of applause when do that? He did it because there/ever, that whether there is aj,he arose to speak. After some was a war scare with Germany/crisis or whether there is not|jocular reference to Mr. Smith's in 1909—one of these political|the duty of the Canadians is tolattitude on women’s suffrage periodical excitements that arise|defend and protect their own and local affairs, he said: in the brains of certain men in/trade, to see that they have the “Fifty years ago Prussia was the Old Country and are easily | necessary equipment that willja poor land of net much import- reciprocated by the political|defend and protect that trade and}anee among the nations of the jJinses in Canada. Mr. Foster in|be ready for any danger that may!world. Under the guidance of his speech of 1909, pointing to|arise—that is our position. 1I|Bismarck the German Empire Su Wilfrid Lauriar, said: It is|stand for the prineiple that the} was federated, extended and de- necessary for me to remind my | thing that helps the Empire is | veloped until it beeame the $$ DUNCAN ROSS speedy organization of a Cana- dian naval service in co-opera- tion with and in close relation to the Imperial navy, along the lines suggested by the Admiral- ty at the last Imperial Confer- ence, and in full sympathy with the view that the naval supre- macy of Britain is essential to the security of Commerce, the safety of the Empire and the peace of the world “The House expresses firm conviction that whenever the need arises the Canadian people will be found ready and willing to make any sacrifice that is re- quired to give to the Imperial authorities the most loyal and hearty co-operation in every movement for the maintenance of the integrity and honor of the Empire.” The resolution was introduced by Hon. Geo. E. Foster, slightly amended and passed unanimous- ly after Sir Wilfrid and Mr. Bor- den had spoken in favor it, Laurier Policy The Laurier Government im- plemented the resolution by com mencing construction of a Cana- dian navy along the lines laid down by the British Admiralty. Tenders were called for the con- struction of ships and by aid- ing in the construction of dry docks, and in other ways pre- parations were made for the building up of a navy and in- cidentally a great ship-building industry in this country. This policy of building a navy to assist the Empire, did not please certain elements im the province of Quebec. ‘lune Nationalist party was formed apd they met with some success jpn a no-naval policy. Mr. Borden immediately deserted the unan- imous position taken by the House, made an alliance with the Nationalists, and made common cause against Sir Wilfrid in Quebec. The navy question had more to do with the defeat of Sir Wilfrid in Quebee than had re- ciprocity and those ultra loyal | Tories were found fighting shoulder to shoulder with the Nationalists, who frightened the simple habitants by telling oe that the Laurier policy would sacrifice their sons in fighting for England. Borden's Difficulties Mr. Borden got power, went to England and discussed matters with the Admiralty. He was a brave man while there, but now that he is back home he doesn't know what to do He is afraid jof his friends, the Nationalists. | He is ashamed to go back to the joriginal resolution and adopt the Laurier programme, and there- ifore thinks there is nothing for him to do but work the “ery of emergency, and endeavor to stampede the people into paying | 30 or 40 millions of money to the | British Admiralty, thus getting jrid of any further responsibility lin the matter A cash contribution is repug- nant lo everyone who knows the constitutional history of Ganada Commons which pledged parlia-|I do not believe we are strength-j|ine only war | ment to preceed vigorously with /ening the ties that bind us to the | pujjq more «| the construction of a Canadian) Mother Land by borrowing 30 or) pe pyitt : navy and to support England in/40 million in England and then) »ijjjons of Ca | . every emergency. I cannot un-| giving it back to England. Is |p. spent derstand the demand for Dread-|our connection with the mother | yo: pyild th noughts in face of the fact that|/land going to be drawn closer} oy Tory { the Admiralty and the British|by our paying in our money and) pyiiq the: Government have determined|taking chances on other people | pngiand r that it was not the best mode of settling our destiny? It smacks | ponsidorat maintaining the security of the|too much of the spirit of some |jjeye thy Empire and arranged with Can-|of the men in the United States, | ———————_ sai ada and Australia for the con- who at the time of the Civil War Conti SS — — PN je) Toe ie) A You Are on the Bench YOU—the Public—are the judge. On your good opinion and your good word depends the success of the advertised article. For no amount of advertising will induce you to buy a second time what you do not like. No advertising will offset the bad effect of a dissatisfied buyer. That is why advertisers must and do maintain the quality of their goods. Advertisers realize that to turn No manufacturer ean afford * their outlay for advertising into advertise for long an inferior artic|« profit they must give good calue. From o moment the advertising ‘ begins, e quality must either > _ They are not looking for one- kept Salles or eeeved—to g time sales. First sales, in most back means ruin. cases, would not pay for the adver- ATMA ADF LD TD DTD LD TN TNT TN HN TO TN Te TS) (C23) ) 0 oe The day is passing when you ask c for a pint of pickles. You name To be successful, they must make the brand. steady customers. So, quality is Y A ; i ; bold ou don’t ask for Rolled Oats. Pans os & % the trade that You name the brand you prefer. advertising produces, _ The unknown article may be Thus, to be sure of quality, one good, but you are not so sure of it naturally turns to g that are as you are of the advertised article, advertised. And isn’t it only rea- which bears the seal of quality, sonable? —a well known maker's trade name NM) Nie lie) w TO MANUFACTURERS You who make good goods and do not advertise—show your con- fidence in your product. Advertise it. Let the public know that you stand back of your goods to maintain their high quality. Make your trade name the recognized siandard in your line. Kiwis) Advice regarding your advertising problems is available through any ‘goed: advertising agency, or the Secretary of the Canadian Press Association, Room 503 Lumsden uilding. Enquiry involves no obligation on your part—so write, if interested. a) = jand who has read the history of TAAOAUMR AMT UAB nwidiy seu a