WESTERN AUSTRALIA and the COMMONWEALTH

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WESTERN AUSTRALIA and the COMMONWEALTH June, 1927. THE ARGO 1 WESTERN AUSTRALIA and THE COMMONWEALTH. The following interesting article is taken from th e March issue of "The Round Table" An arid Lll1Pro luctive area clivid·es the we .. t from the east of Austrafia as completly as the sea divides the latter from New Zealand. Even Kalgoorlie is over a thousan 1 mil es from Port 'Augusta, in Sohlth u tralia. Fremantle is r,886 miles from Melbourne by sea. vVell ing­ ton in New Zealand is only 1,200 miles from Sydney Moreover there are onl y 370,000 \iVestern Australian as Selected and Matured against 5,700,00 in the eastern States. The point needing .by the Same Family explanation is not that the west i re tive, but that . he of Experta for Five ever consented to enter into so unequal a yoke. The explan­ Generations. ation may be found in (i) the gold rush which submerged. at a critical phase of the federal movement, an old colonial community suspicious rather than united in feeli ng with the ·eastern coloni sts, a community moulded by nature and isolation into pastoral and agricultural fo rms; and (ii) the re-emergence, amongst "tothersi lers" and "gropers" alike, in the rein forced western population, of the in eluct­ able effects of isolation . Founders of the first free colony, the V-l estern . ust­ ralians were cl iviclecl by necessity to ask in 1848 fo r a 0/Jia/ilob/e a/ a lithe ! eadmq lto!ei:J & J1/,'oe ,5oloMj supply of convict labour for public works. Thi antagon­ i. eel their eastern nei:,,;hbou r , just emerging from the mi re of transportation. Antagonism remain ed even after the end, in 1868, of the convict episode. Isolated and some­ what hardbitten through poverty, the \i\Testern Au tralians held aloof until 1890 under Crown government. They were clubbed ''sand gropers" by the wealthier East. Then responsible o·overnment and the discovery of gold wrought a dramatic change. \ iVith a rush came thousands of push­ ful re tJ.ess " tothersicler ," eager to kim the cream of the gold-fields' trade, and to use self government as a means of favouring every new development. A the population advanced from 4<;), 782 in 1891 to 184,124 in rgor, the "tothersiders " far outnumbered the "groper ," and t hreatened to take charo·e of the colony. T he gold-fields AERIAL MAIL CONTR ,\CTORS 35 A MP BUI L OlNGS around Kalgoorli e clamoured fo r a railway-port at Esper­ PERTH . \\'. A. ance to make them le s dependant on the Swan River colon­ ists, and to lessen the distance by sea from their eastern homes. The new community seemed likely to bridge over the gap of arid, uninhabited land that hac\ hitherto separated the two Australias, but it imported rather than diminished inter-colonial antagonism. The ·' tothersiders" natura ll y evinced a keen interest 111 the movement to place the map of Australia and all that lay therein under one Government. Long talked of in the MAP SHOWIN G AIR PORTS eastern colonies, to the old \Ale tern Au tralians thi ON THE LONGEST PASSENGER AIRWAY IN ThiE WORLD fede ral movement had been hitherto a matter of indiffer­ ence. T heir delegate to the 1881 and l 883 conferences bad REGU LAR WEEK LY S&RVICE B[lW[[N PERTH ANO NQR. WEST been instructed to refain from voting on any resolution. PORTS At the Australa ion Federal Convention of 1890, ir Jam s PASSENGERS FREIGHT Lee teere had made it plain that \iV estern Australia would MAILS not sacri fice her existing tariff, the· new Government' mam ource of revenue. This reluctance to surrender the integral self-government whi ch they had just gained continued to mark the 'Western Australi an delegates at the federal Conventions of 1897-8, w ho represented not the popular choice as in the other co loni es, but the Perth Parliament in which the rapidly growi ng gold-fields were then under represented. They soon ensecl danger to their future in the plan of leaving the surplus cu toms revenue, after the cost of the transferred services had been met, to THE A RGO June, 1927. + • - •a - n• - ·~1 - 11 - U I - II - II - 1~ - 111 - IM - 11 - fln - UN - 111 - IU - IIM - NII - MII - UI - 11 - II - 1 1+ +I-II-11-I I - II - II - 11 - 11 - ~1 - II - II - 11 - IM - •w - J • - ·· - ·· - ·· - 11 - IM - IW - l" -o + I • ' i ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS & CONTRACTORS. .j !I FURNITURE TO YOUR SPECIAL DESIGN. j i i OFFICE I'ITTINGS, ALTERATIONS & RENOVATIOt S i i ! L. H. DEAGUE & CO. Ltd., ! SilO!' FITTING , COUNTERS, SHELV ING & SCREEi'\S f 36 PIER STREET, PERTH. ! S ~ J OW CASES in WOOD or METAL i =, ALSO, SHOt' F ROi'\T t N WOUD OR METAL. i • W e Speciali•e in Heating and Cooking Devices. lI UB \IIT SKETCH AN D ASK FO R QUOTE. i i Send in your Electric Kettle, Iron or Cooker for Repair. :! 1 i Workmanship Guaranteed j We hire out a Vacuum CleanP.r, 5/- half day, 9/- a day. : Perth Shop Fitting Co. Ltd., ! i R IN G A 1786. I 3 70 Murray Street, Perth. i 1wt - ll - lll - t i - II - 11 - II - 1~ - II - II - 111 - IIU - IM - Uit - 1111 - lll - 111 - ll - ll~ - ~~~ - qJ - nl - l + +l l - qJ - UI - IN - UI - II I I - I II - 1111 - UII - UU - 1111 - IIII - 1111 - tiii - IIII - IIII - IIII - 1111 -0 II - W~ - MM - ll ll - l +' C. C. C. Enrolment Means ABIG STEP FORWARD ~------IN--------~ ::;YOUR Many o r L'er th's most prominen t bus in ss m en \V h ave r efn1incd f rom quoting special ca.scs­ elate back th ir prese n t s u ·ess to th e cl ay · they or 1ho:-:; e who h c.tv n1a.cl'" spectacula r t·ises fro In nothing de id cl to t ak e a ·.c.c. cou1'se. l t w ill h the . a m e in pa rti ·ular to positions earrying £1,000 or more per in your case. a nnum. Th osu cast.> ~ cited ar e oF ord inary young· m en c f >l ver age a bility. l nsLa n ·es or a tual inc: r ~ase~ in m on ey earnings as a r c~ uH in •ltl ! !' : :\'cve1· t:orgcl that what other~ have clone you can do. \.Yith the ever-widcn :n g activities ot' modern b u si­ ness. more a nd greater Ol)porlunities are presenting· (a) • a la r y o n en 1·olmc nt, r:l w ee kl y : on completion Of CO UI'Se, £4 1 ll s. : now £700 a year. thems ·lve:; for ad va ncement. :-lo matter w h a. l you (b) l ~ar nin gs on enrolment, £2 10s. w eekly; on a1 (l tlo ing 110w- no malter how c ircum s rib cl your com pl etion. £4; now £650 a yea r . o ppo r t unities. or lw w poor your pr o~ p ec L , it: you make up (c) l %. 1 · ning- ~ on en rolmen t . nil , n C<Jmpl tion , £5 you r mind to prepare for th e future and worl' for il, you1· chance of' advancement wi ll co m e. we k! y; n w. about £1,100 a y a r. (cl) l ~a r nings on nrolm nt, £6 a w -el'; on com­ C.C.C'. lessons ·an be ta.lH' n at our ollege or pletion, £6 1 Os.; now, £520 a y ear . s tudied at home, in your spar> tim . 'l'wo· CO!lrses t hat <~> B arnings on enrol m ' Ill, £3 15s. w ee k l y; on a r e w ot·th laki ng at a ny time a r e A cco untancy a nd compl ti on of co t11· sc, £·1 l Os. w e l<ly; now Sal ~s man sh i p. These \\'i 11 unlock th cloo 1· of oppor­ £1.200 a y a r. tunity, will open you 1· ey es to chances that oth rwi.· · you o uld not possibly see. :\'o\1', while you arc young­ (f l IGa rnin gs on en rolment, £1 15s. w e kly; on a nd f 1·esh, is the lime to get start cl on th · ri <• ht compl etion, £3 a w e k: now, £7 a w ee k . r ond. 1'lle old hackneyed phrase, "Do l.t .1\; ow," i s Cg) IGB I'nings on nrolm0nt, £2 :is. w ekly; on com­ Hppl irahl e to you 1· t> nrolment. H in doubt. a ll or p! lion, £·1 l fis. w kl y; now, about £5 0 a wriL <'- w ~ ~ha ll be happy to discuss you r cas · fully y ar. a nd frankl y , and without obligation. Commonwealth Correspondence College, Affiliated with the City Commercial College Principal: R. WILKES. F.I.P.S., etc. (staff includes six fully qualified Accountants) 713-21 HAY STREET, (central) Opposite Brennans Arcade. ~===============:=============~ June, 1927. THE ARGO 3 The older fields had won a bio·o-er percentage of the world's WESTERN AUSTRALIA and . 00 tota I output cl unng the 'seventies and 'eighties. Therefore as THE COMMONWEALTH. their production dropped and the monetary demand for gold Continued from page / . grew, they wer.e helped along by the scarcity value of their the disposal of the Commonwealth Parliament.
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