. The Varsity war supplement 1916. hildren mustspeak English. Immi-gration under otherconditions will rapidlybecome will happen tothe many women whohave filled the places of men during the war? How can weput to ordinary uses the skill in organization, engineering,invention, workmanship, division and co-ordination oflabour learned in making munitions of war? How can wepreserve the new relations between the state, the employerand labour, and thus begin to build a better social structurethan the world has ever known? How can we preserve thepresent conviction that production is a
. The Varsity war supplement 1916. hildren mustspeak English. Immi-gration under otherconditions will rapidlybecome will happen tothe many women whohave filled the places of men during the war? How can weput to ordinary uses the skill in organization, engineering,invention, workmanship, division and co-ordination oflabour learned in making munitions of war? How can wepreserve the new relations between the state, the employerand labour, and thus begin to build a better social structurethan the world has ever known? How can we preserve thepresent conviction that production is a duty to the state aswell as to the individual, that personal expenditure has arelation to the state as well as to the individual, and thatextravagance may be a national crime even if we are able topay for it? How can we preserve that attitude of mind whichnow gives money freely for anything connected with theconduct of the war, so that war taxes for a generation to comewill be the cheerful offering of a people thankful for liberty. Women operating Cartridge Case Presses in Canada preserved and for the blessings of a peace which was other-wise impossible? It is easy to ask questions especially as I donot intend to try to answer them. What I wish to im-press on all University men is that upon the good orbad solutions of these and other cognate problems will depend the futureof Canada and thatfrom the men of ourUniversities morethan from any othersource will be providedthe leadership underwhich good or badsolutions will be this is true, everysuggestion that ismade regarding theduty of Canada afterthe war—and theair is filled with them—should be studiedmost carefully andpromptly so that wemay not be unprepared when our boys come home. Our responsibilities are enormous. We have been put incharge of one-third of the British Empire in area. We havein racial origin, land, climate, laws, society, industrial energyand moral quality such an opportunity as has seldom come toan
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