great man rewarded party friends and | ‘Genius And Dictator’ ere Duplessis Labels PS Post - dev was anti - Duplessis feeling. in night customer of the Montreal| He grew up jin a political war elopments and! sis was first of ali the builder of : ‘ : : ; : ma ; ,|der which more than $200,000,000/ mounting budgets favored a far- Montreal and Quebec . where| village of Mysini in eastern Crete By THE CANADIAN PRESS to high religious or civil rank} Forum where Montreal Cana-| mosphere. Two uncles e i ai hing buildi new roads, bridges, schools, hos- rapid growth and uncovered emetery Sean called Maurice Duplessis} and took many verbal swipes at|diens of the National Hockey| members of the legislature—one bas ) to farmers - siice are. pitals. He is Sees are 8 © ean ie a political genius and saviour of Quebec. Others called him a dictator. Some—hailed him as a while others de crushed foes. He. made no bones about his views on government affairs. He called the system of letting out tenders for contracts “disguised hypocrisy.” He said of - govern- ment purchases it was his policy to encourage ‘our friends first” and to buy elsewhere when nec- essary. He said his government paid the highest retail prices for many goods because it believed in en- couraging small business, as well . as big wholesale organizations. : : ___ | tion defeat, and turned himself | Special delivery service available between 8:30 |. In the 1956 election campaign,| His standard election campaign | into a master of politics. | DILLON & SPILLETT LTD od re aan ry . he told voters in one riding they | Platform was’ based on provincial} A victir of diabetes, he ate oe, ° | a.m. 700 a.m. if your paper is late — or melid wat oot 2 ed bridge | autonomy. Some opponents called | simply and observed regular hab- CHICK HATCHERY missed. unless they elected a Union Na- tionale candidate to the legisla- high-placed persons who «dared to disagree with him. He chided French premiers about the instability of their gov- written statement flayed Can- ada’s federal goveremest lead- ers. e As attorney - general, he ex- pressed dimpleasere with deci- sions of the Supreme Court of Canada in cases which felt in- volved Quebec's judicial author- ity. However, he quietly paid court-ordered damages for car celling the liquor permit of Frank Roncarelli, ‘Montreal rest- aurant owner who put up bail for arrested members of the Wit- nesses of Jehovah sect. his autonomy ery “‘poliical auto- He was a New "York Yankees baseball fan and at one time dis- appeared from his office every autumn to attend the world ser- ies. He was a regular Saturday League performed on weekends. His spoken French had an earthy flavor responsible for part of his popularity with voters and slight accent and French turn of phrase. In his younger days he was a hard-living, hard - driving politi- cian who once joked that he would trade 200 years of purga- tory for a few years of political power. He smoked cigarets, drank champagne and his good looks attracted the ladies. — DIABETES SUFFERER He gave up alcohol in 1942, three years after his Union Na-. tionale, party's only general elec-| its though he got only about six The institution of the plain- clothes guard dated back to times when threatening letters found their way into Mr. Duples- sis’ mail. Mr. Duplessis was born at Trois-Rivieres April 20, 1890. His ber of the Quebec legislature for eight years. ! POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT. sat on the government benches with the Liberals when Mr. Du- plessis was first elected—and a sister married the son of J. A. Bureau, lo Rivieres’ and lat . senator. Mr. Dusletiie cf” Marpoiition teeth in municipa! elections, working for a Liberal. When: he ran as a Conservative in the 1923 provincial election, the 33-year- old Duplessis went down to de- BEST ROUND STEAK father was a conservative menr| short | Bureau, long-time Liberal mem-| ber of the Commons for Trols-| IN TOWN. hours sleep after his busy day.! from Conservative leader to leadef of a coalition which he campaign with a remark about “participation” interpreted as in- dicating opposition to the war ef- called }'Union Nationale was a_| fort. The two most talked - about pieces of legislation to emerge from his 1936-39 administration were the Farm Credit: Act, un- 1937, and the Padlock Law, which empowered the attorney-general to order any premises padiocked for one year if he was satisfied they were used as Cemmunist law has been ruled invalid: DEFEAT BY LIBERALS Federal Liberals joined forces with the provincial Liberal party to defeat the Duplessis oo ment a few weeks after out- break of the Second World War. Quebec voted Liberal on’ that occasion but elected Mr. Duples- sis’ Union Nationale in 1944 when the war was in its closing stages. His government enacted un- usual and drastic legislation—es- tablishing a redefinition of free dom of worship aimed at re- atricting the activities -of Jeho- » & provincial lot- tery, television censorship, news- @rint controls—but ‘much of it re- mains a dead letter. sessment ~ ATTENTION HOG RAISERS Special One Week Only = : Bay for instance, eg promulgated — the Criminal Code is amended. . His anti-margarine legislation, in effect for the last seven years, was held up as evidence that the Union Nationale government con- centrates its attention on rural constituencies. A BUILDER To Quebec voters, Mr. Duples- ssociated with -pro- gress and development. He was the man who gave Quebec a flag) —— +a white cross on an azure field with four white fleurs-de-lis. Ungava's gi St. Lawrence River te carry elee- tricity to the dormant Gaspe Pen- insula; roads that opened the northern regions’ of barren Chi- bougamau and sparsely-inhabited Lake Sf. John to an era of boom: ing growth—these were achieve- ments of the Duplessis adminis- tration. Rural districts with new high- ways and school overwhelmingly supported the premier but there given rise to increased social and labor problems. - parrr to date from about 1300 BE. a NEW DELHI on a Thirty long-playing records sweats by the “late Indian leader handas K. Gandhi are being placed on sale by All-India Radio, the government broadentam agency. ANCIENT CEMETERY HERAKLION, Crete (Reuters) ' A farm tractor working. near the == ing development; Bersimis, Man- icouagan, Chute-au-Diable, and other hydro - electric projects; high-voltage cables laid under the MASTERMIX HOG GROWER 10 Bag Lots—Cash $3.35 cwt. . 78 Queen St. Charlottetown Dial 3626 ' IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE... OR MISSED DIAL and a paper will be delivered right to your door. 6561 | mad A GOOD MEAL AT BIG SAVINGS. TOP QUALITY BRANDED MEAT, ture. They elected a Liberal and the bridge-was not built. It was only in recent years,| On Wednesdays, he left his; | that Mr. Duplessis occasionally SYSTEM WORKED —_—Phe—-sa elsewhere to new coods | or hos- pitals. “If you-approve, let_us_ know by your vote,” he said. His system worked. He was the first Quebec pre- mier to serve five terms of office | —four of them consecutive. His | absented . himself during legisla- ture sittings leaving the conduct of affairs to subordinates. . NO HEIR APPARENT From time to time, the men- tion of an heir to his leadership spread around but the premier gave the talk no encouragement. Different names cropped up. at, oneer suite in the Chateau | ac _at Quebec and ac- companied by a provincial police | officer in plain clothes attended | ~ 6 a.m. mass at the Roman Cath-| lic basilica. I General elections, byelections | and all his important political | moves were undertaken on Wed-; mesdays, a day of. special-.devo- | tion to St. Joseph. HERE’S A BUY—FRESH ROASTING > ~ <o m: | _DIAL / For the Fastest Service in Town, c4ll ED'S TAXI 6561 On fine days, Mr. ‘Duplessis | walked the 10-minute distance frim the hotel to his legislature offices with his police companion different time. Premier Duplessis remained “le Chef,” as party man called him. He dressed nattily, was or- = Union Nationale party held at one time more seats in the legis- lature—82—than any other be Charlottetown € 178 Great George St. are May 16, 1957, Premier Du- derly in the oe = ~ Somme. <0 anyone ‘. we to red : by: McBRINE @ CHRISTIE. © CARSON Ed’s Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those whom we ~ plessis: observed the 30th: _am-/ rete oe adbrvansash his office’ and) gage Che premier 9 undesired || GOOD FOR EATING OR COOKING and other famous lines. serve — the goal for which we strive!” niversary of his first election to, 5 LB. BAG ISLAND ss . eae : i the legislature as Conservative. ae a_ carefully thought out if DEVELOPING oo nl _~ SaaninnaanmnaaannaNGROS =a member for the newsprint-mak- ing_city of Trois-Rivieres._Four| His campaign against what he days later, he set a record of| called encroachment by the fed- | 5.818 days in office, one.day more ¢ral powers was methodical and b Your Films for 20 Years Ia Today—Out Tomorrow GARNHUM PHOTO APPLES 4 i Moore_& McLeod Ltd. than the provincial. mark of cas to a ee out of aa STUDIO late Alexandre Taschereau. ional hospital insurance pian. |? 435 Kest St Ch’town E the months that followed. he far| Federal: provincial tax - sharing Jou PICKLING is PRESERVING _ outdistanced the term of the| agreements, the system ‘of fed- | - -, : once-powerful Liberal whose re-| eral grants to universities and IT’S PICKLING AND. PRESERVING TIME AND WE HAVE the trans-Canada highway gime he brought crashing down pro- | tashion | NWarvest! A GOOD SUPPLY OF— co im 1996 gram j Mr. Duplessis, alwavs a skilled He recognized that rural” ae i - manager of people, formed anj|ings outnumbered urban ridings | | ONIONS ont CUCUMBERS — PEPPERS gihance of rebel Liberals, Con-| in the legislature and his success-, | : PEACHES and PLUMS servatives and nationalists to ac-| ful election campaigns in 1936, | complish the overthrow, ending-a | 1944; 1948, 1952 and 1956 laid’ 38-year Liberal reign in Quebec.| heavy emphasis on appeal to Once installed at the govern- | farmers. ‘ GT oe om DOLLAR. Be MORE SPECIALS. — At the same time he negotiated | ] successfully with big business | and his long reign ae | . é Es panied by unprecedent ndus- | DOMINATED HOUSE trial development which gave He used flashing oratory to Quebec an industrial instead of a praise the works of his own gov-| farming outlook in less than a ment leader's desk in the legisla- ture, Premier Duplessis domin-- ated proceedings. Imadequate electrical wir- img is inconvenient, costly aed dangerous. Let us check FALL ELEGANCE DEMANDS ACCESSORY DRAMA _:ernment and _ seathingly attack | generation: : — eee right-} aivd | 3 a ! D gra. cabioct ministers er tear| la private Ie, Maurice LeNe | 7REE Esrinate = [] Pa . was q Ae || The smart simplicity of falt-costumes call for the dramatic accent of | bers, got into hot water in the| blet Duplessis was a quiet-living, House, the premier motioned to| hard-working bachelor with in-| them to sit down and he took} numerable acquaintances but few over eagerly. trusted friends. _ He —_ only slight attention a occasionally sow hed a wist- carefully chosen Becaeneria toppers, in colorful array ! i ‘i PHONES 8543-8544 || PALMER ELECTRIC | WARM AIR PIPELESS HOMART OIL FURNACE woe SMTS 6 ROOMS COMPLETELY INSTALLED with 200 GAL. 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