" 18 The Guardian. Charlottetown, Thurs. July 80. 1964! ‘1' 1‘ f ‘ ~ Canada Responded Eagerly i.suM To First Great War Challenge in- , U . ~._.,.,... ‘ “ ‘# By BEN WARD and Belgian reservists. Almost Canadian Press Staff Writer leveryone had a neighbor who “fly years 8E0 ihls summer left to answer the mobilization Canada went to war Wth sing- call from his European home- !ng in the streets ‘ land A nation of barely more than - ,Others left on their own to en- 'I.000.000. insignificant as is mil- ' list in Britain. too impatient to “try power, plunged into the wait for the training of the Ca- First World War in 1914 on an 1nadian force. Before the first i upswelling of patriotism and en- f snows of 1914 John Mack ot thusiasm that was almost Carob Brnu'nshllrg, Que, had lost two ,' > val. ‘snn; in France 0. A Critchley. Within hours. thousands of an Alberta rancher. was in the men were clamoring to be (12- front lines With his three polo cruitied. There was betting that. playing boys the war wouldn't last until the l On Aug. 6 the call went out l 0nd of the year. Fear was ex- from Ottawa for recruits to pressed publicly that Canadians gather at \'a~lcartier, a newy wouldn't have a chance to get training camp hacked out of mm the fighting. the bush 15 miles northwest of Only a handful guessed at the Quebec City. Within a month 100 horrors that lay ahead. special trains had poured 32.- Formal word of war arrived 655 volunteers into the camp. It 8:55 pm. EST on the warm Creation of Valcartier almost Tuesday evening of Aug 4 when overnight was a spectacular ‘ a cable from the British gov- triumph engineered by Sir Sam emment was delivered to the Huzhes. the minister of militia Dulce of Gonnaught. then Gov- in Borden‘s cabinet and one of ether-General. 'in session With the most erratic and controver- Prime Minister Robert Borden sial trauma of the war. and his cabinet. CONTROVERSLAL RIFLE CANADA CHEERED Training was rigorous and in- It reported terselry that Brit. tense, consisting mainly of rifle sin—and its Empire----had do and machine-gun practice. clared war on the Kaiser's Gcr- “I want. first of all. men who . many» can pink the enemy every As the news spread across time," Sir Sam told the troops the land. parades and demon- in one of his many speeches. striations erupted in cities. towns often delivered from horseback Ind villages {as he rode proudly about the Crowds jammed doii-niown 1 campsite. He. boasted that the Montreal singing La Marseill- {men at Valcartier had been arise and Rule Briannia. In Tor- ‘ "trained to handle a rifle as no onto. 2.000 volunteers marched men had ever handled it be- dais (Inge Street behind a for-e." Me-and-drum band The Gover- The ride involved was the nor-General's Foot Guards pai- .Rnss, a story in itself. It was aded 350 strong in Ottawa ed ‘ produced in Canada by the Scot- by three bands and cheered by ; fish industrialist Sir Charles MID-SUMMER? RE SALE 1/ 15-000 OnlMRPT‘S; , Ross under a contract oigned by Nobody questioned the tact r the Laiirier government. Even- diat Canada was at war. ltually the army was to have Four years earlier Sir Wilfrid i 342.000 of them L'aurier. then prime minister ' Despite its political ancestry, had stated it plainly in the sn- Sam put up an almost patio House of Commons: iological defence of the Ross ri- "When Britain is at war, Can . fle wth it came under Severe ads is at war. There is no dis. 'crincism a year later. It was . tinction." tan efficient target weapon but1 Borden. then o p p o s l t i o n jammed under heavy use. Cs- !ender. had warmly supported nadian troops in battle began that stand. : throwing it away to pick up the But 1914 was a situation never hardy Lee-Enfields from tailen be repeated. ’I'h Statute or ? 31-min mil-lieu. Yet. it wasn't. Westminster 17 years later EEW.‘ ‘ discarded until mid-1916. Canada her mm voice in the. During the Valcsrtier training world and the right to decide. lDePlOd the original target of for herself whether and when to i moot) men for the first overseas ‘0 *0 W3! contingent was ted to 25,- In 1939. Canada‘s Parliament om and—almost at the last minr voted to enter the Second World qitemto 30000 War a week after Britain‘s de» y ARRan 06', ’ c1ston. l soar ,4 nightmarish loading GRIMI‘Y DETEng operation. the flotilla at 30 Late on the night of Aug 4. ,1.“sz carrying 30321 men. 1914. reports of the patriotic dis the“; how" a n d équimnt Plays poured into Ottawa from i sailed hnfi'Gam garb” opt, every corner of the nation l2~ I, arrived safely M piymm . RWR ma The Governor-General cabled: s d ' Ziiidfid‘mtiflaié‘imoflié 33.95 et "Great. exhibition of patriot» l fie ‘ ' ' ' :3 v hm here. When inevitable fact) ‘ i I . . It wasnt the first Canadian -.( . . ' m * Wm" “M * “'“Y """'°°"‘ ' I ' YUU S ‘ nary before Canadian min. l W d i 5” “H” m“ '° at wussi. mucus iuctuolo, AT nits MAI. mat ., '- i». SIDEWAlKi BICYCLE I I . 256. on? - . the Princess Patricia's Cana- wfll be fit for European war: . , dian Light Infantry, a regiment _ 1 m‘fléwmifi“ 25.33“; formed byveteransofthe South Attractive, lustrous “Fire Chief“ red belied enamel with ' African war who mm from 8“ high-chrome, usy-to-clun rims. Whitewnll tires, 16” x 1%". minimize this, i wo id 5 2;; t ‘ that any proposal ufroi'rlI vtisu pins “(1" Cflflaiiedqmdefam’ 5 h : '21/4” fume, figl'lf *0? your 5 R. . YMI' dd boy “ 7 ‘ gid. Fitted with safety m brain, boll bearing rubber should be accompanied by the - - » “suffice ma' Canadian mm Q nitiative of Capt. A. Hamilton wm go ,0 the m", as w," E, £30811; meMmfl' "Mm?" 2 . I. ‘0 tmd pedals, chain guard, reflector and learner's satay tihezdhagie'fireacheda sufficient hp" slm'dgandvega W 31d bike My h MIC. eta or training." ' ' ' The duke was right. Within 4.; i “W” ".am I" "l" ‘Wmm" Small extra charge, for assembling hours the initial reaction was i 29mm” “FEM” w". hm " was “my”, hv a 1 The Patricias reached Eng. grim determination that Canada i 1"" l" we septemb-er and iwent into the front line the wouldlplay its full role in the ‘ MEN M Jan “.7. 1915 Tm! mm strugg e. i _ . There had been some prep- Ema” m I G" "3mm b", "M mmh' Th9 8" Arrival of the-main Canadian ma] on“)er M war joued 1 body however touched of I most Canadians. who had been iodo‘b'rafion in Plymouth with watching the storm clouds . tghiltthei‘ over Europe for so long ' If ‘15:: finggtmmfigg M114: no longer seemed lm' contingent to reach Britain from 0an '10 davs before not one lb" "verse" Dominic“ 9nd major newspaper in the country Iw'gsflnmchggpnl' megledfiait had carried a front page story t“ n ‘ a 1” ty'ca - about the mounting crisis. MOSI. a)?” * of them played up the famous 2 , Canada “Md: h" M a . timely moment. Paris trial of Henriette Caillaux l .98 1/2 who had shot to death the editor CAM-FED m MUD . of Figaro tor accusations of 3 Th? Cheerful arrival did noth- itreason against her husband. an i “W '0 prepare the Canadian! m" ' ' thP shook ahead. They were . . . ax-premier of France, It was a Ml sizzler. itaken by train to a camp on ARMY I'LL-PREPARED :Sa‘k‘i’m PM“ “‘9” *0 We?" Gum Rid Carburetor Reduced from 7.49 Regular Price 990 Borden “To”, in h“ mpmnm 16 Winter weeks in mud. rsin. I , . ‘ “ e. ii. rained on as Conditioner Deluxe Wash Brush Visor Hold-All 8-poeition adjustable 20 years later‘ "Although the lmld and “c . events . . . had qiiite prepared ,gellirghgefzn:?agéy:vemmgg Active“. low carburetors, fuel Soto-nib: 'ovsl hood. Inn-r Mru'lvo M vinyl :21. ism :1 ma mm mm... m u -- um «- m. w w m- now-m- w at that mm, a‘nficip'aged m, m. blankets and kits.‘ «I- M 14" «ml NIH-Mi in" ind-t rible du ra ti on of the war .Addm‘l to me duct". " '8' u ’Slr Salmns edict anainsstazdet 3::- _ i . . eens was resc n y “50,223,358 Tad“: Ts?" ‘ after heavy pressure from Gen. ' " l A Alderson, commander E‘ "mic mmmry form' The W- i of the list Canadian Division 0 'r. thorlwd Permanent army “as , and despite protests from iem— i, . . Camp Cot —- ideal for relaxation and sleep- lng comfort. Strong. lightweight tubular steel fume; tough Mn and white can- ya. cover. 3,110 men a n d 684 horses, . . mums, engaged in garrison ‘ 1;: e r a n c e organizations beck ' ome. l7 duty and the training of the militia. which had an author- A mismken “m M rind i ind force of 74.000 men and i “"9”th ranks My"; Tran??? ‘ . ' came 0 move on o . ., ms' Nam" w” up m l The division disembarked at “m were an affine” I St. Nasaire 15 In: 'v 1* m almost no transport. two v the memo” M Marc cmof'! British cruisers used as l "V" 4'00." "m? 0' mm be ' training ships and no air force l 'YM" Bms'Gm'er 3“ m“- ‘ n w“ 8 mm”, common. tieres. in northern France near » ‘ the Belgian border. and why not? Canada's main . international event of 1914 was. wattfzgmngfemwfigug: . 3.3135: 2:: {fig $321M routine of trench waflsre. Then ‘ 'AMOU‘ "LAUSON” 2% hp. ENGINE . m m a, ‘ ‘ 0'8"“- , all hell iii-nice loose. The war a M. I dilh cabinet were to call Par— had “med '0' "‘9'" “‘4' mi "I h Wk“ " "W hauler Price of $53.49; Full W. or“, out: 18” swath; convenient throttle control on handh, nan-sin into session for Aug. 18 iW 99 UNIEATAILE VALUE! - TERMS T0 SUN YOUR BUDGET all one: Britain 3 gm of .— i a" pound. of flour. n One, BODY IDENTIFIED we” . OTTAWA 'tCPl—The body of m voted “0.0m_m a woman discovered in the ct- mu nml approved me tawa River Monday was Identi- fiu to um, . mowmn tied Tuesday as Pauline le- m to Fruce. 0' on." Pawn...“ m "m . . ‘mAnmn ment at a hoopttsl. louvre even a hint that !.__.._.__.___..__. ‘ swarm: armour"... CANADIAN TIRE a. 9‘“ mm” m" Johannes Endemsnn. so. in: ~-~A-~~-~-~ -~~——~-———-~~~~ * :Lwaummsmfimugldm to “Matt”: " as; it”? 32:. STEWART and MacRAE [10. “I i 96 QUEEN ST. DIAL 4-8569 Willem Dk'ho.m-Iehllkwyh . . . made: i. rim. will! mtu Mh“