. if!“ {$337. WINNI Winnipeg‘s new City Hall “.55 005,39 un- new, day. The PEé’S NEW trad:- up 1‘ the '7‘»: build:th ‘_.~ n. her? replarc—s 2 auaint 4 ,. Alcture hulli 1!! 183.. gnaw “dz-m...“ _ CITY HAL was demolished ‘c make way for *he new "2‘" Strut com. pier; Wrephofc‘. Ev C—EILLRD McNEIL QUEBEC to? — When the dians Quebec landed Boulogne. France. Sept. 15, it was lil'e Kelly‘s return 1.. SI (‘3 II) I1 in Raucouri no" .73 al members of fhe 223d Battalion that later be- came the Royal 'Zan Regimen: -—-tl-.e Van Docs —— remembers be surprise of the French pop- ulation— at heerlu their cu": language spoken by troops in ‘ ' :sarle uniforms, m. 1 e s speak were saw :1 singing the old songs—'11 y a longtemps que je f’eime. Jameis je ne t'oubherai' -nnd they joined us.“ Mr. Ran~ court recalLs. had the French spoken in H in the French .. Pica-(1y. But old were struck In Nor- ‘l'he morale of French alike was lifted II trou- The Van D005 later Rah—comb a bi . oheeuful oak of grandfather whose eucestors came to Quebec in 1648, enlisted Oct 21. 1914. two days after recruiting began for the French-Cumin 222d bat- tellon He clearly remembers its birth 50 years ago. as do such other originals as Governor- C~enerel Georges Vanier. 78 and retired Quebec politicia! S_ Bouz-que. 70. of Sher- brool-te. PRES—SE!) BORDER’ The End had to fight its way Lnto being Late summer of 1914 found prominent Montreal offic— ers Ln bttaura tndug to convince Sir Robert Bo 4 en should be raised. The Flu-st World We: seemed to be racing toward a conclu- 51021 and Laureat beside h m15si- young nionemason m pinned down by the mortar th was going into a Roman Catho- Lio church at St. Louis de ouraslse. As the first Canadians m In DOGS -and Kelly's Re urn lo Cork in. gln ou're - me: Laureat‘s holding back two weeks pay until the church left for contractor was was finish . Ottawa gave the go-ahead for the 3231'! met as the last sfone I and the cheers as Laurie: and Sir r1 ii: told a Montreal the new: echoed to St u as flaflcfl’ ll’ufrid Louis Stonemaso: off in the enough to say goodbye to family. then headed for Mont- real to en st But from his seat he saw 2 recruitui in Sherbroolze later pounded Lhe office of Sgt. Johnny Bourque to become Pie. Raucourt. ‘TWIS’I' THEIR TONGUES’ He was schooled Lu the ways of War by Georges V exile: then 4.- heutenanf who had left a Montreal law practice to enlist When the Van Docs arriv in Rumour! stopped Beaucc Valley long Im- a“: ered British sergeant s male! growled: "They got me. these blokes They imis’r their tongues to right and they speak French They twist them to the leff and they speak English" later Lord Bowel-brook. caught the signifi- cance of the 1915 landing at BOulogne L" a. book titled “The to the return of those who. “nth Champlain. in the first years of the l h cen- tury founded Port Royal an. Quebec. and site:- three centur- ies of absence. of which " years were spent under another . came back to fight again for the soil of their ancestors. ‘ ___-- beg-2n the Royal 22nd Regiment Fifty veers _-. .uLl béttalions and three Ln re- serve. the Van Doos sue usually e or th n t__eir lion t . . has _ . . year on UN duty In Cyprus. DEDICA’I‘E MEMORIAL Governor — General Vanier. a a former commander of the regi~ England in May. 1.915. a flusl~‘ later. with three' training cemp at, ' The 15!, bal-I France nel. The colonelin-chi f is he Queen. who will dedicate morial within the walls Citadel. fhe regiment’s quarters here. when she Visits Quebec Oct 1" In their half century the Van oos .J'e won battle honors Ln. two World Wars as well 35 Korea. But the tone of the regi- csl‘ I- -.. _, was cc. _ _ *32ce during the teens. Such figures as Georges Vanier. Johnny Boutque. Ln u r e a t Rancourt, Maj..C-en Thomas Tremble . Pfe. Joseph Keable, Lieut. Jean Brillaut infused fie infant bef- falion with their spirit Mir. Rencourt, who retired from the Van Docs in 1946 with the rank of warrant officer first class. recalls Maj-Gen. Trem- ‘bley commander durig much lot the First World War, as a jsmiling figure seldom de- pressed by trench warfare. ‘ "Look here. boys. we‘re all iFrench-Canadinue and we have ltc do this. Come on " This was the Trembley ap- proach and the. camaraderie of t .e unit—the bond between of» ti ers and men and their cheer 11. any situation-now is 12- gendary - LEE!) ROSS RIFLE Sam Boss’s :..e couldn't get them down. "Actuallv I liked t. :- er Raucour’t “We ‘ hunters Ind it was a 3‘11 In‘imous were an w. great rifle lfor accuracy ' Aifl bcol: mentions - .‘6!’ end _. Ran- irt for a , patrol which ihey blew up a machine- n nest in no man‘s Im‘d Co in :ourf and two fathers spent I: (5 u r- c then r corporal ire, -= -- :cgrted 15 pounds of gun cotton l—later withdrawn from use be- lclus. it was so dangerous—— ; icy fields and the lieut- ; set the charge ' ut. Venier won the Mili- Gross and Cpl. Raucourt Mflitarv Medal for the ex- '9. 9.91 mg. Worth!!! .AlanJ .s, attheRayalCa: “Captioned muddle on “anymor- amulet- um meni. now is its _.nigh+ly Colo de WON VCS men were bled and 105 0‘2!— .cers 32" 2,. _ men nded. At C h 5 ti 5 y in 1918 the i ‘ “."‘"!‘id6d Valuer was being carried from the field when a .shell killed 1.- stretcher bearer and pracucauy were killed or wounded and only 40 of the i emerged unhui‘t. Johnny Bourque was wounded at Vim}? and left the field a major He later became one of the most popular figures in the cabinet of the late Maurice Jplessis. Two Van Docs won the Vic-l l tone Cross. Joseph Keable. 3‘ young mechanic. died the day lafter holding a posuion alone, lomwohodomhumc.19u Election Campaign Revives 0ch Foods In Noth Ireland By COLIN PROS! , BELFAST IAP' . Vic-- !ence in Northern Ireland dur-l lug the British election cam-: peign has vevn'ed nld feuds.l thaf responsible leaders of all had hoped werel Irish parties dying ‘ For the first time in many; years. the lines in Belfast's‘l back streets were drawni sharply between Roman. Catlin-l lies and Protestants Afferl three nights of rioting Ff‘flf‘FF ofl persons lay lniurnd or were un-' der arrest So far the vmlence has been; confined to . few blocks of a; predominantlv C a t h o l i c with working class district in west Belfast The weapons haw beenl rocks and “Menu cocktailsl from the rioters. balms and blackthorn canes from the po’ -ce. But the fight Is in fact an- other violent chapter in an a - gument that has lasted cen- turies. 0n the one side is the? among Roman Fatho-l '1 do, .a d _ . lics for the end of the partition of Ireland The Protestants in- sist on continued union with; ‘dIVISIDnB diminished. Police in advocate of Irish home rule—— near a lynching from Prote tam mobs on Belfast's Royal . enue. In the depression of the 19- 305. mob violence erupted al- most weekly, usually splitting on religious lines After the second world war Irish nationalist bomb and ma— chine-gun raids forced Northern Ireland's police to 0 my arms, something unheard of In I111 rest of the United Kingdom. In the last few years these country districts shed their arms. Independence left the six pre- dominantly Protestant counties of Northern Ireland still part of the United Kingdom. They have their own Parliament but send 12 members to Britain‘s House of Commons. All 13 seats are held by Un- ionists loyal both to the Queen and to the British Conservative pa No responsible leader believe! the gain: of the last few years ll be slime- by a few nights of street fighting. § Britain. 3 If ls ifh"s 5!! er-ttension. of the! Battle of the Bovne Fiver "N Ireland in 1690 where the Prof»E estant “in? William III de—l leafed the Catholic James, Irish supporters. shill chalk 'Remem-l s w.-. . . Billy on the walls of Catholic areas. It also is an extension of thel fight: that break out in Glas- gow every .7 Year’s Day when Irish divide in support of heir religions and their rival football teams. And it Is an extension or! the (1- .home rule battle that in 1912 brough. the young Winston Churchill—flier! a Liberal and greet waves. fired 18.760 shells Edegpite multiple milunes‘ i“, l 1!! LI’IYGP dal’S t0 file!!! ’cludlng a brolzen leg. againsi [The 31031-5” were Cherry {ed waves of attacking Germans. ‘Whe‘? he « Ordered 9" 9—"? meg. _;__ g, ‘ also died ;“uiitil they are white.” .wluiuiig the honor. On Aug. 9,’ llFlflil—‘V W!" 00314 5” like 1919‘ 1.3 was wounded 13 #h- shadow of the shells p35‘L’1_ left 33.!!! “tut-i“ through the barrels. ’l‘he b"- machiue-gun'alone, but refused to leave his company, He then led a grenade and bayonet at- tack capturing 15 machine- guns and 150 prisoners, between Roziere and Vrily Despite fur- ther injuries, he led an attacz on e four-inch German gun He was struck in the abdomen during the 800-yard charge but led his men 200 yards farther. his hand covering the wound. before falling. In the Second World War. the VanDoos went through Sicin with the lst Division in 194.3. landed at Reggie. Italy. in Sep- and fought gt rtona 'm Vol-res. after a look at a field map showing the Van 05’ position. told Lt -Col. (later Mal—Gen.) Paul Ber- c..ez: l The information on that no. lsitlon csn’t be right rels had expanded to the point Where the shells were dropping beck among us, We lied to step.“ éy then the Americans had counter-attacked and the Van os again had done their ice. DECORATED BY IKE- Theee wars produced such fighting men as ILL-Gen. Jean- Victor Allard, 51, regiment commander in 1944. and later chief of the 6th Canadian In- fantry Brigade in Holland. He also commanded the 5th Infantry Brigade in Korea. re ceived the Legion of Merit from President Eisenhower. and rep- ly came the 4th division of _, of the Rhine the first tune a had led a Baboons Delinquency No Problem EDMONTON (C?) -— Baboon: have a juvenile delinquency problem, says a University of Alberta zoologist, but they seem to know how to handle If. e of be _ -- . "They got out of step but they never tool: on adults." he said. “There seemed to be respect for the status of an adult. They seemed to techno the mature males could at them just completed a year-long sway n5 1 enya up. 1):. Altman also said the b1- ed their delh'quency of their own up.- boo_.s con..!: to members cles. The :oologist. Who camped with his wife and flu-ee-yeu-OM son among wildhfe an the Au:- bosel; use reserve. 100 miles southeast of Nah-obi discovered “striking .vanflaz-itles” between the human and baboon beha- vlor "We were able to watch every. thing these nnlmak did—a1! u- pects of their llves.” Dr. Altmann, who plan to write a. book on his findings. went to Africa last fall on l -ant from the U.& National Science Foundation. resented Canada when the ar- mistice was lgned in Pan- mun ' In 1961 com- !AELY EYDROFOIL Telephone invenfor Alde Graham Bell conducted tests with a hydrofoil-type are! 1!. 1919 and nttelned speeds a! el— apost ’71 miles an hom- fo so! a viorld irecord at that time. :Germaus all around if “That’s the way it is," re- plied the laconic colonel. who this month succeeds Governor- Generel Vanier as regimental colonel At, Cesa _ anuet. .. . fo . the VC. found half his company dead or wounded. the rest sur- rounded. MOVE-D FORWARD "There are enemies us. behind us and on flanks“ he told them Bererdi. .- v.4 only sure place is our objec- tive " ‘- He led an attack ,het tool: the ' I ' . the , asa- Berardi. where with two: 1 ate? on to e to Belgium, the Van e were forbidden: lto speak French for security; reasons, _.. were so well' known by then that their move» .I CA 7. T 894-8132 (Ar\J!'\[i|/\ll ' 11 mm: ME B] A GENT 00.4 Y I SERVICE - SA V/NGS - SffilIfi/TY Dave Murphy M E B I T [Mil/BANE! 1‘34 Richmond St. AUTO 0 HOME merit might have given fhei show -‘ufil. .‘ The 22nd reached full regi-l nt strength for the Korean ‘3! and its three battalions rotated on duty between 1951 and 1953 A Hfll 22? 40 Van Docs with six mortars held on for three - ovember days until the Amer-v loans could regroup to take b vital peak near tnz. Inchon River. g Maj, Charles Forbes, 40. who recall; the Chinese attacking in} l on Taking of the PLANNIN PICTURE QUEEN’S VISIT G . 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