THE DAiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 10 1898 SIR CHARLES denounced.” Theee gentlemen heid a meeting and they passed a resolution re- questing the Colon] Secretary to take declaration thatif the treaties were de- steps to have the denunciation of the | AX, treaties effected; and they puton record a the Mother Coanutry A Splendid Papular | PRR RRR ENT LAL, TREAT- MBov IN THUIR TARIFFS } Ovation. el ELOQUENT SPEECH BY THE CONSERVATIVE LEADER. Ie Halifax,on Thursday, @ popular ova- | tion was tendered Sir Charles Tupper There was an excursion in the harbor fel- lowed by an address to the reteran leader, anda speech ia reply. In the course of his speech Sir Crarles said—we quote the Halifax Herald’e report: “J dare say you kaow that when Sir Wilfrid Laarier revarned ‘row Englaad on the accasion ofthe great jubilee, where he properly received such marks of high con- sideration from Her Majesty the Queen and from the government of Great Britain, as well.es from the people of that great city of nounsed, they #vuld suOmitto tbeir re~ spective parliaments the proprety of giving aver other sountriee; and in respeuse to that, Mr. Chamberlain said, Her Gaiesty’s goverument had deeidéd to deneunee the treaties. And now what next do we tiad? We findJMr. Bielding, after havieg been paid this unjust aod anworthy compli- ment by the premier, standing in the pre- sence of public men of England at a ban~ | quet at Sheffield, wnd declaring that the t denunciation of the German treaties was brought about by the united action of all ‘the premiers and of the representatives of these colonies in England, in which Canada has joined. Sol could say, ae a | auggestion to my right honorable triend, | Sir Wilfrid Laurier, that »henhbe again | addressed an intelligent body of citizens ia | the city of Halifax be should have better grouads for his a-sertions than he had on that occasion. But what more did he say? He said all these things had been brought about by the. PRBFERENTIAL TARIFF MR. VLELBING HAD BROTGHT DOWN. He did not know, I suppose he thought it wae a preferential tariff. Bat we dis- Jonden,—I dare -ay you know that On bts | enesed the matter in parliamgntand we ru return be made scene very At that cime, when my right » his wisit to England, speeches. vvoreble friend add Canada had attained rather a high posis tiwn. It bad accomplished the great coo- federavon which iad wnited these scattered coust wader one goveroment. i: had re- moved those antagonistic tariffs that sepa rated all these various provinces from each other. It had accomplished one of the most gizantic works that tive millions of peopl ever accomplishe on the face of the g'obe —the construction fof the great int-:r~ oceanic railway which, from where the waters of the Atlantic touch the lovely country of Cape |dreton, treverses ia Brit~- ish territory throughout until it reaches the shores of the Pacie>. (Applause. ) Anl when we hai! incurred all the liabili- ties that such gygantic works involved, even then ele ere lit of Canada stood at the highest poirt it had ever attained, so that Canada could enter the money markets of the world and borrow all the money she interesting | showed him that a great many other | countries would participate ig thé loge#r, ‘duty. We weretold we were dliogether | mistaken, but when they came to have the } question tried out ‘by the law officers of ee tnecrown they fowed we were right and provinces trom the Alantic to the Pacific Mr. Fielding and his prefereutial tariff was all wrong and that no tariff could give the preference to England which was constru~ cited on such lines. Mr. Fieldimg, himeelf, staied on the floor ofthe Howes of Com- mons that there was no perfereuce; so that Sir Wilfrid Lavrier was altogether wrong in the fivst place in sayiog Mr. Fielding was entitled tothe credit of securing the denounciation of the treaties, and in the second place THERE WAS NO PREFERENCE AT ALL as he innocently supposed there was. New | was pleased io see Sir Wilfrid visiting this city, because 1 think it did him seme good. 1 am sare the oppor'an ity wae not Jost by the intelligent people of Halitax of hearing him, but they found he their eurplus products. What was the se | sult? Canadian baods had no opportunity of doing the work that Canadians required on Canadian soil, and a period of the greatest depression exisied. But the peo- ple of Can :da placed ‘he Coa-rervatives io power. We came in with the colors of preection nailed to the mast, and we founded the policy of 1879,and with what remalt? [ will give you a Lieve ipfeerea ren that comes home §o ue here in, Nova Scotia. In taking up that valued paper, the Morn- ing Chronicle, [ find itdraws my sttea- tion te the failure ef my propbecy is referenee to the national policy. 1 may say to you thet the first campaign epeech io the election of 1878 was made in sign. of the international pier at Sydney Harbour by your humble servant, and on that occa- sion, looking down before me on the town where the people had no work to do and where the harbor was destitute of sbip- ping, I ventured to say that 1 beliewed the policy we propounded would so expand the industries of the country that there would be a forest of masts to be seen at no dis~ tant day in the barboar of Sydney. Well, the Chronicle made itself very merry over this simile of the forest of masts, It is true they are vot there, but why? It could not see in 1878 that in the year 1898 masts would have disappeared from pbip- ping. (Laughter.) htr- Yue SHIPS ARE THERE ALL RIGHT. 4* Goo the international pier to day and }you will find noc only that pier with its | two gigantic engines costing over $20,000 | each, far the purpose of loading coal more Rapidly, placed on that pier, which in 1878 | was idle, and you will also find anotner | pier which the Dominion Coal Co., were | compelled to build, and with those to | combined they are now shipping 20,000 ltons of cval and all the consolation the | poor Caronicle gets is that masts have gone |eutotuse. ‘That 1s an illustration of what istaking place all over Canada. Under the impetus cf that national policy we were not Only able to propouod and carry out ascheme for the deepening of our cauals toa depth of fourteen feet and to epend millions of money in so doing, but great work, the construction of the great inter-oceanic railway, upon which you can enter the cars at Sydney, and without once leaving British territory travel across the cootinent tothe Pacific. Yet it .ppears that the policy of 1579 is to be made the subject—as it is purely a non party ques~ tiou —(laughter)—of my being held up to we were also able to carry on that ather | (8 j the people. That was the decision ar- the non-political subjects Sir Wilfrid Laurier managed to crowd into this mem> orable speech. But there was another etill. He ventured totalk to the citizens of Halifax abont the mode in which confeder-~ ation had been carried in this province. I sav that Sir Wilfrid shonld be the last man living to talk about confederation. When he was in the city of London he said that Canada occupied a position of which he was proud. What gave her that position ? W ae it not THE. @ NYBDEBATIOW OF THESE PROVIXCES that had hitherto been antagonistic to each other—towards the accomplishment of which botb parties in Nova Scotia and Canada had spent fifty years in striving for? I say that that policy was one of which everyone who heard him was prond of. Buthe referred to the Hon. Joseph Howe, and he said that Joe Howe was not against confederation, but against the mode in which Nov, Scotia has been dragged into confederation. Let me say this 10 the citizens of Halifax: You all know that How was the great political giant ot the other side, and you know we bad maoy fierce struggles in the legislature but vou know that when the time came, when the interest of Canada required it, both of us united heart aod sou! in doing the best we could for our common country. Bat now, Sir, the premier is compelled to laud confederation tu tbe death, and there would be no confederation in Canada aod no great railway and pone of the great things which Sir Wilfrid Laurier is able to boast today if the party of which he is the leader could have had their way. Yet still he takes time atan agriculiural ex- hibition todenounce me and to appear concerped about the manner in which con- federation bed been carried: When, how- ever, this que-tion was brought upin the House of Commons I settled it forever, and po one bas ventured to raise the question again. At the Quebee Conference ar which George Brown, Wiliam McDougal! and (liver Mowat were present it was decided and with their approval, that the confede- ration should be CARRIED BY THE EXISTING LEGISLATURES and without its being first admitted to rived at. Therefore my hovorable frieud could not bring any charge home to me that could not be brought home against the leaders of the Liberal party. But what more? His party, the Rouge party of (Juebec—he was in pinafores himself then — offered a resolution that confederation should not be carried without being refer- HE ie aa . OP SE5 ~ THEM ALL. NEW STOCK, DOZENS SELLING. 4New Shades Opened | TO=DAY In double faced cloth just the thing for the Highland Cape. WAP ayy SD we bt et Be ae Pea Be Be raf ee A ea Pah etek HN ait, Lh 7 wi - in i - LEADER | ay had made a very great mistake on a very | ridicule. important occasion. He told you—and | Now you wil! suppose I have exhausted ANY OTHER COUNT) ON THE am confining myself entirely to his speech FACE OF THE GLOBE, | OD 80 Occasion when he said he should ; a pot touch on any questions of a_ political | England alone e> vepted. ‘That was the eharacter, and therefore I am keeping quite po-ition of things then. And not only | within the mark- he told you he observed required on better terms than (Continued en page 5.) ee New Plaid Shawls. New Plaid Capes. New Dress Goods, that, but every person knew that before | thatthe elevatur which Tupper bad con- In raising food in the New Millinery, | Sir Wilfrid Laurier visited England, | structed was burnt, and he said “I am in- 2 New Furs c a “7 atta: ced oa ro the e. formed it has not been mised.” Well now old - fashioned way, F . coutro! and manezement Of herown alialrs, | jt is very fortunate he made that statement : bat she attained such a status as a nation | pocause his friends pave taken the best with cream of tartar Jas. Paton c& , CIO. aniasacountry ‘hat nt Only were n>] means in their power ir aties entered into by the British govero- ment towGhing the interests of Canada, without Canaca being a consenting partv, but the privilege and right had been ac~|} and we now find that upon that whieb he corded to Canada of having her sons nomt- | endeavoured to throw cold water he now is } pa‘ed as plenipotentiaries by Her Majesty | spending money again. I trust you will the Queen to negotiate treaties concerning | have a finer elevator than ever before, and matters in which the interests of Canada| that you will see most valuable use put were especially at steke.\ (Applause). I!/toit. This is an encouraging incident as say, therefore, we have reached a position , it shows that these gentlemen are cepable of which any country,in the world, in my | of improving, and that in this case such judgement, might be proud. Well, you | has been the fact. can imagine my &#musement and astonish- Well next we find him speaking upon ment, when I read a spe ech made by Sir | the policy of 1879,—I need not say that Wilfrid to the pec ple of the province of | was the National Policy, and he endeavor~ Q.ucbec on hisreturn from England, de-| ed toshow that that policy had utterly '.*ing that until ne had accomplished the] failed. Why, gentlemen, who Coes not and soda, there is either an acid or an alkali remaining. The cream of tartar and soda bought from the shops vary great- ly in strength, so that no one but a chemist after analysis can use TO CONVINCE HIM HE MADE A GREAT MISTAKE, Gee ey — Baking Powder leaves neither acid nor alkali in the food. MAYPOLE SOAP THE GREAT HOME-DYE (MADE IN ENGLAND) IT IS THE BEST. . DYES ANY MATERIAL ANY COLOR... ® fi . . ° tj :: vantic work of getting the | know that if ever a policy in the history of | them in the proper proportions to obtain a neu- Nf treaties betweea Great Britain | avy country in the world justified itself | ; i ree Belgium and Germany | and vindicated its framers and showed its | tral result. A little too much cream of tartar, uv denounced, Uaneda was a mere blotch | unqualified yalueto every section of the ] ° : ‘ : h i jane map. (Laughter), This saleaaed it is the policy of 1897. (Ap- | and thereis anacid residuum, A little too much eonutry that we knew was aitracting the | plause.) Whatywas the,population of Can- | ‘ ; admiration of the civilized world, this} ada in 1879? The protection that Carada | soda, and thereis an alkaline or soapy taste left. country which had accomplished euch | enjoyed for the firrt fivé years of our na Royal is compounded by expert chemists who determine by analysis the quality of all ingredients and admit none but the most highly refined. The result of its work is accordingly pure, sweet, wholesome food which can be eaten without discomfort by those of most delicate digestion. The Royal saves labor to the house- wife amounting to more than its cost. <7 -+der yogres3 during the thirty years | tional existence, arising from the destruc- Ww ¢ riul | JE = 7 a . , oo & . : ot its federstion, we found out was only a | tion of the industries of the United States blo'ch upon the map until Sir Wilfred! of Amer‘ca caused by the deplorable Lauriet went t London. (Laughter) INTERNECINE WAR RAGING IN THAT COUNTRY Well, if that is not & very tall adjective, I : do not know what one is, and I think you has passed away. Under that protection | wil! agree with me that it is as remarkable | we were able not only to eupply our QWa | as i ny your humble servant has ever used needs, but we found a large market in the in the course of bis public life. Therefore | United States as well. The close of the I wust say that my distinguished friend war brought that to an end. A high pro~ pail me too high a compliment when he | tective tariff was brought in by the govern- stated Lcould ure (sl er adjectives than any- | ment of the | nited States, aud under it one else he knew. (Laughter). But, sir, he | gigantic industries grew up and scon they | ‘ood enough rot to claim all the credit |‘were not only able to manufacture every - ¥ thing their own people required, but to make a slaughter market of Canada for was for himself. He said that that ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. GREAT WORK WHICH HAD MADE CANADA 4 NATION on enone chown ante = was accompa! net by bimelt : Bie ing’ r ee. wa NEVER “STREAKS” OR “CROCKS” «+ a ete tie usoment. Tbe lil Siness IMPARTS BEAUTIFULLY PRESH COLES work of securing the denunciatiou of the ) MAY BE USED WITHOUT EXPERIENCE Cheap Crockery Store. JUST RECEIVED A beautiful lot of Dioner Sets, Tea Sets, Giass Sete, Chamber Sets. All kinds of fancy china and glass —ALSO— ‘ Lamps of every Style and Price. Liberal dis- counts for cash. This is the place to bay. No trouble to show goods. Wall Paper AT LEWIS, LARGEST AND BEST VARIETY PHOTOCRAPHS . | We are now makingal] the latest arn Styles of Photos, finished in a superior 15 manner, either on glossy or flat paper. Av THE oLD Staxp, Grarron Street, ‘North Side of Market Square. CLEANSES AND DYES AT ONE OPERATION MAKES NO MESS OR BIRT eee ee 0 OF Germap and Be!ium treaties was a work that had occupied the attention of all the colonies for a great mary years; it was & work that the statesmen of all the self- governing colonies of the Empire were dealing with, and when I make the state- ment that the denunciation of these treaties was effected as a result of the efforts of al! these atatesmen I oes 0 a rigbest autbority thatcag be produced,— Ur tices = Right Hor seabla Joseph Chamber- angen" lain, who stated on the floor of the House ot Commons how the denunciation of these treaties was brough about, and we have the wides: possible contradiction of The largest Furnitire busin2ss ia the Province, 'Tis the only perfect home-dye made The only one that may be relied on to do first class work. Previous experience not necessary, simply follow the brief directions and success is assured. . Sold by all Druggists and Dealers everywhere. 100, FOR COLORS, 1c. FOR BLACK. 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