PAGE FOURTEEN BALDWIN APPEALS ~T0 YOUNG PEOPLE "Imps' Whisper" Greets Prime Minister at Great Meeting London, (By Mail)--The Prime Minister addressed a huge audience at the Junior Imperial League Con- ference at the Albert Hall, In ad- dition, his speech was conveyed by an overhead wirc to Hyde Park, over a mile away, where many more heard it by means of loud speakers. Owinz to the ccld wind and a threat of srow shortly before the meeting hegau, the attendance at the open-air gathering was uot so large as had been anticipated. The * vast audience in the hall passed sway the time before Mr. Bald- win's arrival by community sing- ing. They gave the Prime Minister a tremendous reception. The whale audience stood up and waved their programs, which were of red, white and blue, and gave the "Tmps' Whisper," which is a prolonged cheer. Lord Plymouth, who resided, al- 'lauded to the growth of the Lea- gue, which he said now had a thousand hranches and was still rapidly increasing. Referring to the forthcoming Franchise Bill he sald it was merely an act of jus- tice. Believing as they did in the justice of their cause and the com: monsense and patriotism of their brothers and sisters, he could as- sure the Prime Minister that he need have no fear of the conse- quences of the Bill Mr. Baldwin's Speech The Prime Minister, who was re- ceived with the singing of "For he's a jolly good fellow," said:-- "It was not so long ago in the city of Cardiff that I observed that no party which failed to attract the youth of the country eould live. Judged by the A hall our life is etermal Holy But a few years ago the members of your branches 'could be counted on the fingers of one hand. Teday they are more than 1,000 and daily they are being added to. "I think we all recognize here the debt we owe to a veteran who}. is with us. Sir Henry Impert Terry, We recognize the sacrifice he must have made of his own feelings in doing what 1 shall have to do one day, before too long, and that is to hand over the reins to youth. It was for that reason that I chose a boy to lead you, Edward Stanley, and 1 do mot think 1 could have made a better choice. "More and more, day by day. the leaders of our orgamization look to you and rely upon you for work, sympathy -and encourage- ment. As was said of Napoleon's armies, in our Army today the Field-Marshal's baton is in every knapsack, Already 'Imps' are com- ing forward into the organization, and they will be in increasing de- mand as speakers, workers, agents, indeed for any post to which they may prove themselves fitted. I have no doubt that in time the highests posts will be filled by those who started their politica! careers as 'Imps.' "I think it well today while most of us have the world before us that we should take counsel to- gether as to what we mean by poli- tics. Let me beg of you all in these days of your youth to get one thing fixed firmly in your mind. You do not go into poli- tics for what you can get, you ge there for what you can give and do. "You are starting your political life in a wonderful age, * The whole world since the War is trying, how. ever, feebly and with whatever stumblings, to start a new life, At the next election we have our tirst election under complete manhood suffrage, and the lesser termy in- cludes the greater, (Laughter and cheers.) There is a catchword that has been running round the world since the war. It emanated, I think, from America, At any EMPIRE SHOPPING WEEK April 21 to 28 ade of the finest orkmen ino au w at Niagara Fa Industries 3 " Empire Buyers are Empire Builders" Ea oh -_-- rate, it has been used here widely must make democraey.' | will give you a much truer catch- word than means a much more difficult task, We have got to make democracy safe for the world. (& "As I told you, going into poli- not mean going and it is the world ties does what you talk about this count should all And so it be patient, struggling day, and year by year in the faith that there will be others when our work is finished to carry and carry "But yet if at home In this. 'We safe for that, can get, ry did have them. it forward, and one which in for In the same way wé have got to get another thing firmly in our heads. our rights, Do not talk about our duties, because if everybody in his duty could be no question of rights, there we |the path is that we have to on day by it along Great Britain, if in orkiig racy we fail, what then? only. fabric of the universe. Not For England Alone over the world, for helping whieh we ourselves and with out for belicve, timately makes for the happiness of the peoples of world. p---- aR aur demoe= Our failure--and this is more true of us than any people in the world --our failure would not affect ourselves Our failure would shake the "Your trust is not for Eagland alone, not for Great Britain alone, and there lies your responsibility, Our trust is the trust of our gwn people wherever they may be, all and it is a trust hundreds of millicns of human being to walk in and follow have carved which we its many faults, is yet the wisest and the one that ul- greatest this 'It 1s essential for world peace country stands like a rock in the waves. however rough they may' be, and with whatever regret those people who are mever so happy 4s when running" down their own country--with whatever regret they may see it--yet the fact remains that never in our history have peo- ple in other lands looked to us moze than they do today to give the world am example of yell-or- dered political progress and 'of the way in which a great people can hold together after such a time it has passed through, heal the wounds, make good and push for- ward grimly, earmestly, into the "We all of ys in this great whole are bound together by those com- mon ideals which 1 have tried to shadow forth to you. We all be- lieve that polities is a career worth entering upon, the work of polities is worth deing wherever you may be if you do it in the right spirit --that spirit of doing it to wark towards the perfection of your own country, believing that in that way you may make your greatest con- tribution towards the ultimate per- fection of the whole world. "It is good for us that those who believe this should hind them- selves together in a great organiza- tion as you have done. You gain by that enthusiasm that comes from contact with those like mind- ed with yourself. The mechanism of a party fs useful; it is necessary. But mechanism is nothing. without the animating spirit that gives its impulse. "Amongst us we feel that we are indeed a national party and re- presentative of the whole nation in a way that no other party can claim to be. Within four or five years we shall have seen holding the highest position in our organization as chairman of the National Union, a woman, a capitalist and a work- ing man. When any other party and for world progress that this can show me that they may then Ipoint at which their parents leit make some claim to be considered +4 envy you 'Imps' py tica llife at this time. You wi from us. We have every com- ce in you, and that you in in this country that we have longed for and shall not have You can do it if you 'will, Hand om the zation gemeration after generation has been seeking, frequently fall- national. beginning ve to see much that is hid- your political life at this time. Yon seen. It 1s within your . power. Torch "From the earliest dawn of civili- ing back, to advance beyond the them, and in the earliest days we see the ploneers of knowledge, of politics, struggling on with the rushlight which they held for a torch to light their feet, and the generation coming seizing it from their hands in due course and push- ing on into the gloom. These lights have lighted mankind through the whole procession of the ages. Now the lights are getting brighter. We know more, and I think human sympathies have beed amazingly quickened through these years of suffering; and, while there is much selfishness abroad and there is much of the spirit of seeking first material comfort, yet 1 believe there never was a time when there were more people in this country of ours, and especially among the young, who are deter- mined to make whatever sacrifice is necessary for the advancement of the well-being, physical and spirit- tual, of their own country. Mew 's Sond Work Pants ns OR c ae Co st. W. 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