My Canadian MemoriesChapman and Hall, Limited, 1920 - 247 pagina's |
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Pagina
... fact that we are hardly able to grasp intelligently and all at once the story of Canada's progress and the rapidity of its development , and our amazement increases when we realise that this land of broad rivers and streams , with its ...
... fact that we are hardly able to grasp intelligently and all at once the story of Canada's progress and the rapidity of its development , and our amazement increases when we realise that this land of broad rivers and streams , with its ...
Pagina 1
... fact is often ignored by those who have dubbed the British a nation of shopkeepers , but it is one of the things that cannot be too strongly insisted upon when we come to study the lives of those who , in making a country , have made ...
... fact is often ignored by those who have dubbed the British a nation of shopkeepers , but it is one of the things that cannot be too strongly insisted upon when we come to study the lives of those who , in making a country , have made ...
Pagina 18
... facts , " said the Old Timer , " and all those busy young fellows who are taking three little boxes at a time on one little hand truck , their Trade Unionism not allowing them to walk quicker than that lounge with which they are ...
... facts , " said the Old Timer , " and all those busy young fellows who are taking three little boxes at a time on one little hand truck , their Trade Unionism not allowing them to walk quicker than that lounge with which they are ...
Pagina 20
... fact remains that a certain justice prevails , we may say automatically , where employment is concerned . A man may demand high wages , but he cannot demand impossible wages . " " 99 66 And what sort of service are they going to give ...
... fact remains that a certain justice prevails , we may say automatically , where employment is concerned . A man may demand high wages , but he cannot demand impossible wages . " " 99 66 And what sort of service are they going to give ...
Pagina 23
... day , is immediately impressed , not only by their magnificent buildings and by their intellectualism , but by the fact that this is not a country of yesterday . In Montreal there are collections of pictures which would compare 25.
... day , is immediately impressed , not only by their magnificent buildings and by their intellectualism , but by the fact that this is not a country of yesterday . In Montreal there are collections of pictures which would compare 25.
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acres American amongst asked began believe British British Columbia building called Canadian gentleman Canadian Northern Canadian Northern Railway Canadian Pacific Railway Colonel Davidson Company Creek difficult dollars Donald Smith Edward Blake engines enterprise farm feeling Fisk Going very heavy Government hands horses hour and camped hundred Indians interest Jack Fisk Killed another dog land Left camp lives look Lord Strathcona Madame matter miles Montreal mother mountain Mounted Police nation never night nooned one hour North-West North-West Mounted Police Old Timer perhaps prairie Quebec Reciprocity river S.E. wind sailed seems sense settlers ships side Sir Donald Mann Sir John Macdonald Sir William Sir William Mackenzie snow story success talk tell thing tion to-day told town trade trail train traveller Tucker United wanted William Mackenzie William van Horne women wood young
Populaire passages
Pagina 6 - There is a path which no fowl knoweth, And which the vulture's eye hath not seen: The lion's whelps have not trodden it, Nor the fierce lion passed by it.
Pagina 186 - The House will cordially approve of any necessary expenditure designed to promote the speedy organization of a Canadian naval service in cooperation with and in close relation to the Imperial navy, along the lines suggested by the Admiralty at the last Imperial Conference, and in full sympathy with the view that the naval supremacy of Britain is essential to the security of commerce, the safety of the Empire and the peace of the world.
Pagina 105 - But though I could hear each voice as it spoke, I was unable to make out clearly what anyone said. It was an awful time. Each one of us felt as if the railway was our own child and we were prepared to make any sacrifice for it, but things were at a dead-lock and it seemed impossible to raise any more money. We men ourselves had given up...
Pagina 186 - The House expresses its firm conviction that whenever the need arises the Canadian people will be found ready and willing to make any sacrifice that is required to give to the Imperial authorities the most loyal and hearty co-operation in every movement for the maintenance of the integrity and the honour of the Empire.
Pagina 56 - I am inclined -to go further, and inquire whether all these objects would not more surely be attained, by extending this legislative union over all the British Provinces in North America ; and whether the advantages which I anticipate for two of them, might not, and should not in justice be extended over all. Such...
Pagina 204 - ... to a great extent lost. 3. Because it is essential to the continued national unity and development of Canada that no trade relations with any country should be agreed to by Canada on any basis which would check the growth and development of trade between the various parts of Canada with each other, or between' Canada and the various parts of the empire...
Pagina 25 - You may well say that, sir - but our night scenes far exceed those of the day. You would think they were incarnate devils; singing, drinking, dancing, shouting, and cutting antics that would surprise the leader of a circus. They have no shame -are under no restraint -nobody knows them here, and they think they can speak and act as they please; and they are such thieves that they rob one another of the little they possess. The healthy actually run the risk of taking the cholera by robbing the sick....
Pagina 204 - Canada's trade would have become so changed that a termination of the agreement and a return by the United States to a protective tariff as against Canada would cause a disturbance of trade to an unparalleled extent; and because the risk of this should not be voluntarily undertaken by Canada. (7) Because, to avoid such a disruption, Canada would be forced to extend the scope of the agreement so as to include manufactures and other things. (8) Because the agreement as proposed would weaken the ties...
Pagina 89 - Smith urged that it should be wholly regarded as outside party considerations » 90 and stated that nothing short of a guarantee from the Government of interest on the whole amount of the bonds could induce capitalists to embark in the enterprise.
Pagina 205 - Reciprocity which would naturally follow would still further weaken those ties and make it more difficult to avert political union with the United States.
Verwijzingen naar dit boek
Imperial Dreams and Colonial Realities: British Views of Canada, 1880-1914 R. G. Moyles,Doug Owram Fragmentweergave - 1988 |