TOURING QUEBEC AND THE MARITIMES 7 it is a carillon of fifty-three bells. The clock is sixteen feet in diameter. The Memorial Chamber directly above the entrance arch is a memorial to the service and sacrifice of Canadians in the Great War. Each one is represented by the badge he wore, while serving in the army. Hanging over the gateway or entrance to the Memorial Chamber is the Mother's Cross. Almost all the stone used in the construction of this Chamber was quarried in the countries of the Allies—France, Belgium, and Britain. The people of France presented Chateau Gaillard stone; the people of Belgium, black marble; and Great Britain the altar stone, ornamented with the Royal Arms , the Arms of Canada and of the Provinces. Enshrined in this Altar will rest the Book of Remembrance, in which are recorded the names of our beloved Canadians who made the supreme sacrifice. The seventeen marble panels in the walls set forth the story of Canadians in the Great War. Their pictorial beauty, magnificent carving, and devices used to illustrate that story, embody the spirit of the people of Canada . On the crockets over the doorway are the arms of the cities of Canada , the doors through which men passed on entering and leaving the Army. In the tympanum is the Recording Angel; the final group represents Motherhood. "All's Well For Over There Among His Peers a Happy Warrior Sleeps." In the Commons Chamber of the Parliament Buildings we saw the Speaker's Chair, a replica of the one used in the British House . The Royal Arms , which surmount the canopy, are carved from the old oaken beams from the roof of Westminster Hall. This chair, which is thirteen feet six inches high, was presented to Canada by the