__ _ _ V _ THE- CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN _ _ _ - PAGE NINE » _ the., and Gentlemen of the Radio Audience: lllill. null. lllcrllir Broadcast Last Week from Charlotte- ‘town Station G F C Y. ` _ _ad AllDllESSBY it -~l and more cfllt-ich* public ser- vice. me is drawing near wheii .'lrd~-Our Hospitals, our Orphanag- Thefil provincial election must Kemlaip this Province, anti it be- Télll all our citizens who have heart the welfife uf our PMN _ h, give serious thoillllil lOl w'»p questions of Dllblll’ llll-0*" e m.'l\lhl,|| will be the subject oi' t llllh- and political discussion for gnhgxl few months. “.l,'hl.4loric parties are at-'ruin thc support. ol' the elector- .h tp».»irl:ig lo nssanie lhl‘ tration ol our l’l'ovint-lull lqllpll party has its plitt-l mniuitu: the most ilnporlailt _ ,,l' policy inlemlcd to bi- l lor the nt-xl `i`nur yt-urs. ,hp|'ol~|iis buvc been publish- art- now lmbllc properly null' hills lor our clti7.ons lo, lll,.h-_rt-~.pot-live me-.ril~.i and hh. ll-pit-il pllt|'i'orili is lic:-ll ‘ml l_, prinnotc the ncllcrnl w|»ll'|ll‘c, :ind whicll party he most sai'uly rcllcd ll, pf-rl'tn’lu illcso lltings llpiy now promise. Inl ||_-ring this ]:l.lt.t\l' qucstion-~-l A ||l.- oxlcut to \vhich cnt-ll is Ilia-ly to nnikc realities ni' prc-t~ll»cliol1 proiliiscs---lt i-“il “ry lo rt-view their rtispec- trtnwl-..' in this 1'cp,ai'tl. years :mo our present Pre-l llicn Icutlcr ot’ the Opposi-t -pple-ll his party to the pulls. lie t hol‘o|'c the cleclorute it definite, can-rut platform. ll was it plat- rnl not loo ambitious-lmt tleslizneil es, public health anti many oth- er beneficial or!-ranlzations rc- ceivetl greatly increased assist- alice. ith---The public services generally were improved and controlable oxpendii ure reduced, ' Tllosu are n few ot the benefits resulting ironi that policy, nnti so you may conclude that it was n lvl-se and beneficial policy ami you will 'bc properly disposed to place ihc largest mcasure_ol` coniillence in thc judgment ot' Premier Stewart as to what is a good policy for this i'rovincu. ' For the Next Four Years. A short time ago Premier Stewart unuouncctl his policy for the next four ycars. ills plutt'orni is broad and t-tnnpi'ellclisivc and his policy mental activity is clearly oulliucll. You liuvo only to reurl his Dli\ll°\`"l crlllntinl when l'ct\|l'|itul lo power. ||u»l-I and lo servo colillilioils in* TCmP°’°3"\Cf’ p°ll°Y~ Viovim-t-, as they then c,\istcd to rt~|no\'c illnsu llartlslllps and to realize llnlnnniding faith in thcl possibilities oi’ our Province. llc Lawlessness and Abuses itclicvcs that Prince l1Jd'wul'd island _ is al. lust. comim; into her own, and lhll lh0l.c me mlwl. hmmls hllhe lllill ll lf* lllfi ‘lilly of ill” (l°V‘”`"' indictment. Proliibition is respons- nlcnl to assist in tho dovnlupineut lhle_ wl“h.ev(,l. ll is hl ‘ll-l~L,clv hh, ui' lici' Wi*-i‘i' i'¢Hli\ll`"¢*- “U ‘hill "‘""` forins ol' litwlessness and abuses inert-lui. ptlllvationnl and social nd- llel.hlhl»(h.c llllhmlhh wheh hhhlh. vnncclnent may _co baud in hand. ohlhhlh h, hhl lh hhhhhrl Ol h law That it-l llie uint ol' ills policy ond heohle "ooh lhhl mohhs lh evade that \vill be the purpose oi’ ills Gov- that h1w_ fl-hhhe hhnh whom ls | Discovered in Canada as a bride :nearly a year after- her disappear- lance in Boston, Mass., Isobel Foley above, says she ran away from her lguardlan, Mrs. Victoria Booth Dem- larest, noted evangelist, because 5|-ie lobjected .tc looking after the evan- -gelists’s children and being used as la “platform example" from city to lcity. Isobel had been placed in the _evangellsfs care alter being found in a home when two hold-up men were arrested. in ovory llcpnrlnient. oi (lovern-I __ support. of public opinion, anti pri- vaic observance, placed the tack of law cnforcement orc helpless without thc active ‘sympathy and moral co-opcl'lltlo|t oi' the public. As re|n~l=ssio:i ili- l l\=\\"‘ iiillil lllfll llllti l’l“lf°"’“ c\'cl\~ics new nlcaus nl' c\'~u=iou are uswi \\‘l\l<'-ll liilil lll'lHlHi ililI`ilii~5 lli'~“‘l"1ll~i Will* ll\""~" “"l""'““'~ “"9” discovered and nf-w i-vlls and abus- lbis l'rovinc¢~, by an ovcrwllcliu- roto, adopts-li iliul policy as own. and ll liocllnio tho duty rl»|l`-'.‘ t '. ‘ - to rt-ulizc l`ur his people piililiiscs wllicll lhul plat.l'orn| Four yours huvc pass- \\t- nrc now on the t-vo ot' au- clccliou, und it is prnpcr :tl llmt- to ask: llas that plat- becu carried oul, has that been pursued, have liiosc bct-n kept? l make thc prondly »~ at slatclncnl muy iinlcs bel`orc and ncvcr bci~aust~ lllcaptthlv of rt~i'u~ iht- :tlatcnicnt that lilo plut- inls ht-on fully lmplcm.c:iied. policy consistently pursued. liurposeis oi' tzolilparisliil It-l mc l'cl'cr to the rt-cord ol' lloll-Solintlr-rs ntlminisl.raliou thc |`our prccotllm.; ycurs--xl you will too lout: ronn-inbei' lcrurll oi' hrolten ]n~lni\iscs und plpritgos. Anti now you who kept faith with you \\'hult- atllninislraltion. luid lluwu lhusc poli- you eiultwsetl and who policies so sl1<'ccss- llnll llr may bu rellctl upon lu in-up nlilll wit-Ii his pl-oplc lrhcn lic is rclul'||l-tl to po\vl~l'. those promises which ho lu _vllll il0W. _ Some Benefits Received. llalvl' said that in 192:! he laid tl dollnlte policy and pursued but you may properly inqulrc. his judgment good, was it st ..._ policy and how have the apic and Province hcno|llt.oll'.' Lot 6 remind you ot' it few of the ut-ills you have received l'rum tho option nud pursuit of this (lov- nmcul's policies. l--Your taxes have been consid- erably retlucetl: the l'ull Tax was abolished: the Land Tax reduced; the Income Tux rc- tluced; und lilo Automobile 'l`ax wus rctlilcetl. ` tl- 'i`he Provluciili ilcvenucs lntvc l'i‘0ii greatly allpiliclilt-ll. ll was lply on this, thnl i’|'clnii'rl I - _ _ . ' . , _ _ pri-t-tillllll-_ years. The ptioplc-..l|on:. ot’ polity. 'l`hcic is one oi hh hl.mh_ .llm llwwlmz ul lhhmr :ll paranlouut interest. l rei`cr io the lmhlh uhll hh hhl.l.,.hlllh,hS __lhh,_ 'l`l‘lii|"‘i'1|i\<’l’ li0lll'>’ "l llli* (l"V"l`“' thc bootleggiiu: ol' poisonous iniila- lmcnl. lu this Province lor tt long 0 ii of H l ,hm .. .. ' ,. _hilion. lt has been in ollect under l.-:lit-t't~sslrf~ govcrliiliclils, hoth Lib , ti u tin tl ln.nu|., lil ull- li ,pl glplvml M11 pl-4 (nw lporiod or time wo have had prohi- m,,_l-rmlh(,hl l,l.l._lhl.l,._.. lh hl..,hlhl. ` tion lrinls, tile:-to were ill-:lt-lil-ea, ' happily unknown to it l'ornn»r non- ll‘i`iIl illli l'fi1i1~'-.and his lhllliivei-s l|i.- lin rnliiiiiiiitl ea ln those other Provinces, and .liquor has llccn llsctl lol' hcvcrugt lpllrptz-.-.'e:-x. f-pursuit of his new l.-nip.~i-.nice pol- because it will have behind it both llcy will accomplish lips purpose. public opinion and private observ- ' 'You know that in spite ot whnt- You have found lil-. will limit ood ance. . _ _ ' ‘ _ -' J R ll lever additional repressive nicasllrce in .the lmgt; lip." |,-,hp his jpeg. Some ot our'poiltlcai opponents laiiirlil ble vihillcfl, sinh use would ment now. Ile has pl-oinisl-d you on the platform and in the press llllllllllllf- that if' he is retln-:uni to po\vcr with have been very busy of into, ' You ‘itll ll_ll"\V llilll lllli Nfl li1lS lllil- it mandate from you to adopt. oln iicvfiiiililislicll hpn .-,ylpplit ueeoni- new Telnpei-aiu-.e l’olit~_v, that hc curdling accounts oi’ what will hap- lill-“ili Wliill ll Hel Ulll lil vi‘ or the disres- abandoned Pronlhltioii. Au or our . press our Fctlcrul claims ln alliect for ull low which cxisisln that nine Provinces. except Prince Etl~ que" evely vater to read Premier ,,‘,h._(,eh3l-Ill lhHhe_ Thhl l;l.l,mh,l.lt:oi1iilt'y which prohibition udvo- ward Island and Nova Scotia, have twlowurt has done, thug lpp\3pl;¢"Hl0H lifilill l-0 l\H_fl Slllllllilil ti*-Xiillilile. adopted some system of Govern- it the rgvenue lrtnn l-‘\-lit»:ni|l\_Vl‘- ilitlliovnt tllillttlllils not ill tbl; pub- ment. Control. Wo have noi. sopoor .iollrm-.s llli”»,illlll lllitilrlilv and' “' ll crcs pl mm glnp re- an o lnion u ol .~ sis "o in- s, iiplklpl; ll(,,.,,|l,lh lux l.,hlm.lhhlh.lniain in ollr atututo books a law thoirppeoplc,rtlltllr ltilltttlétt-‘l'lli hull lhgir we me opening B' bam-Dom in every wliicb has not-behind lt the solid (lovcrmnents, as to bclieve that in » tlliliiil B0 they had ally purpose in than the puhlie good lt has been lusilluatetl by the partlznn press and the apologists oi' Prohibition that the organized liquor interests are rcsponnllzlu for the abandon- ment oi’ Prohibition ln our sister Provinces. l have not. so poor an opinion of the people of our great Dominion as to believe that they can be bought or improperly influ- enced en masse by any interest. Such an lnslnuution or such an ar- Siuucnt is unworthy ol’ n Canadian. will “WY be brushed aside as be- lietttb our notice. They made the “M1130 as -we are making the filllilillo lor moral and social better- ment and it is noteworthy tllat in ull thesn Provinces there- has been "0 Silasestlon ot it change back to the nltlrbylfem of Prohibition. in several of these Provinces general elections have been h'old since the llillilguratlon of the new system and ‘ln no case hlmsny party made lt li part of its“l\olicy to return to Pro- hibition. _ s must conclude,thero- l0\’0. from this fact and from the the clues leitlmony oi* outstanding citizens, nliurchlnen and layman, all over Ctllladi, that the change was in the Plltht dlrcctlontand that the people Bro' universally satisfied with il. You have heard tonight. the opini- ons ot several citl|ena-nutatnud- liilr cltizone_:,ot this Province. Will “HY person question their motives or lnsinuats that they have at heart any other lntereht. than the welfare of our ‘Province and our people? 1 Mil sure not. _ Went. Temperance 'Fostel-ed.. one - of or Con- should already referred. it is to again re- Ste\vart’s policy for himself. Our opponents have called it n “wet” policy and n “free rum" plat- iorm. They have insinuated that village. and n tavern at every cross- roads. Read the policy and judge lor yourselves; judge our policy and read therein the refutation and denial ol our opponents' artruments ami judge for yourselves of the weakness of°a. cause which must he bolstered up by such arguments as they use. Read again our policy and then read -the pronouncement of Mr. Saunders regardilig Prohibi- tion. You will find our policy delinite. straightforward and full 0! promise for a better order of things. ‘ You will find his policy indefinite, con- tradictory. inconsistent, uncertain, endeavoring to promise all things to all men. Let each voter compare these policies for himself. Sprains, Muscular 'Soreness 'Com- pletely Overcome .Roliof Camo Quickly After Norvlllne WAI Appllod Toronto. April 29th.-The signific- ant statement ot Miss B. Witherall, of 302 Bloor street west, ipoints the way to -healthier many 'ii poor out-_ terer. 'il wont to tell you." states Mlm Wltherali. "new 1 have hehe- fited by Norvlline. _As I am an ath- lete I sailor from apralno and mus- cular soreness of the limbs. I have 'round sitter an application of Nervi- lino upon rotiriiit. my iimlba reel as good as new.”--Miao. -*““""" 3”” ' . J°’“‘ "“ “‘°"°°"“ _ -fad ' J. n. cf.. A. It madman R. B. Dlckrb' AJ.; B- B Chandler Adams() Archibald GeuI1¢E Cartier Thomall-I Huvl ii Y W' “"7 ' ` ` '~ ' ¢¢h»l'r he Ai _-rcalt J. corkhum william Mrnwgaii J.sat-cally Chu!" mm" G°°m°~C°l” J' C' Cup." A_|¢nn4,¢`¢ 1| 1-;¢¢¢o¢L l..qii;\r}l:¢llemm Pg me H Oliver Muwnt. Thomas D'Arcy McGee W. H. Steevn Jolm Hanuisxsgrltiz Tina lmvl* - Geo,” Brown Chnl” -mmm mum, . th Charlottetown conference of 1864. John A. Macdonald Ie standing in front f Afmr me Filming by iF.Li‘:1a;rl\'l' xtl‘a°te§l°l1¢mt;e:t"1a‘;w;tle|lne cartier. Further to the left and seated in front.Qf'¢,l1» table is Georal Brown. the centre window B 0 \’\'\» ' ~ _ | rr standing. To- his left are Oliver Mowat, seat Nli QM D' ch" °' "pp"’i i _ _ . ._ - -_. -_-_ -- - _ . . ff _ my Famous Confederation Pictures Reproduced for Guardian Readers \\§§\ #_ \\ f//’ .s,\ ,\ \\\_ \\ \ ~. \ \ -.. H, l l ,_» .co- _.;f_ W at- ___ ______¢-.-=-=- f--- .”`”" 'W ' `\ ' \`:§* J _i__.- - Har/ _--:Y..__} __ »~."` , *W _T ` A _ ` \ . ~--__"_. _ __,__.__ §__ “___ xh - ”""--~..-._ - _-1-- --1.=;\~2~‘- ,_ _ . - ""i~ '_ ~_.__ ;“'_’-' Y » - -` an .;\ _____ - Z.. a§~-"i .~~_ f. _ A ...___ --__ -¥.g`._ - -\`?: _;=_ _ ` - ` ~~\._>_ ~=;;”§“‘I_`\_ `._- " = ._A COUNTRY DANCE ' Life in Canada In the early days was not all toll or warfare. There was much rude comfort, hospitality and good -living, and the pioneer, had their time; of diversion and piety. ini winter, particularly, when the _work of the farm loosened, there were many oeoallonl for festlvity. Neighbors visited, old frllndo mot, and newcomers were welcomed: Frequently work and morrymaklnq were com- bined. Logging bon, barn railings, corn' bucking and apple pu-ing pmt" nrenllgt together all ui; union within the circuit oil many miles. _Most localities could _supply a tlddior. or in the Scotch settlements 0 piper. and than community labors generally ended with n dance. ~CIla`rle|tona and Black Bottom: were unknown, but the performer; of those days required- quite as muah aplllty, wind and endurance as the modern dnnoor, to be able to execute tltooprlngae, pigeon wings. and double-atiuniee of their period, handicapped an they were by tight ilaoing, voluminous pottlooltu 'and wide dup skirts, or by the rnlloullno tight collar and cliff stock, frillod nhlrt front and heavy cowhlde booth. Tho ploturo shown o 'somewhat formal d||ic\,ln the eighteen-thlrtin. It woo ltlil, In c_oleot\'lrtt|¢h elrelel, largely i ololn-thuvcn ora- At mol! a 'mutton chop olde whllklr doooondlng no lower than the bottom of the our wn`pcrmlulblo. bniy on_vulrymon_woro muotlehll, only foreigners. Highland cinnamon, patrlachcilnd bnoklwoodu- 1 C.\t~l~`li=l’f£f1?- A _ . _ ' gk =”3 __ _f;;\, _ ‘-=`?"v.. ~` - ._-- _ - _._ __ `_ EIGHTEEN-FORTIES men wore boards. There were signs of approaching change 1° ln li=¢r\_on some faces, but the golden ago ot whiskers did not come in till the sixties, when individual into cut nil aorta of fantastic patterns, from Nil bears to fringes round the Jawa. gonteenboneglln and Dundrenryl. The waistcoat; of the men were often double-breasted, out low, and 'of cloth In .lures plaid pattern: or flower spring designs. The women are dressed in low-out tight-fitting bodice; terminating in l sharp deep point lnjront, with elbow- length balloon lleeveu und: lace trlll falling over the toro- arm‘, and ankle deep wldl-bottomsd skirt! with flounces and tucks, and gathered at the waist. A white karchlef or tall of lpes ll draped like a cape over the shoulders and hush fastened in front with A brooch, I bow, or s qprsy ei flow urn., The slipper: are low-healed. with straps or wine l.\i..».=. cron-gartered over the instep nndround the ankte. The hair ll parted smoothly In the contra and drawn tightly down over the ears and tied in a knot lt the back. while long rlnglstu fall on either aide of the flee. some of un: elder woman wear oops. The noun la built ot logs, squared and smoothed by tho ldze or the broad axo. Candles in ocean with ls.-ight un reflectors behind them ar,-futcnod to the walls. From the oolllng bums hang nrtot corn, hom: and-strings of ontonl. A rude stair leads to a trap door- M pl, |°w ln". ltoroy olnplng quurtort show. _‘lf ' , -14/5,ji.v,'¢;.;1-:I-. 1 . /.-._-; _. »., ._.=¥`-`-*ir ms? ara.-_._ a.-».\-.s¢.-aaa-____ ani" ~ "<~.. :~1=&o0wlir=~ 5 \ . _ T _