___________________________Legislative Awumhlj___________________________ Some Member : Who put them there? Honourable Robert E. Campbell : The Federal Government, Sir . Do you want any more answers? Well anyway, we will start out at Tignish with nine taking a boat-building course and twenty-one taking an upgrading course. We have in Alber- ton twenty-four taking automotive courses, we have twelve taking Carpenter courses, all paid by the Federal Government. We have fourteen taking carpenter courses in Alberton , we have twenty-two in upgrading courses, we have twenty-seven taking night courses, we have fifteen taking welding courses. I couldn't go on like this last year. Now this is a chance for the man that said everything was going to pieces to get up and contradict it. In , that is down in a district that is repre¬ sented by two very fine men, I will say, there is twelve taking carpenter courses, no this is O'Leary , there are twelve talking carpenter courses, and there are eight taking plumbing courses, we have an upgrading course starting in O'Leary on the 1st. of September. We have a farm mechanic course that will be going on in O'Leary that will take six weeks, and in there are thirty taking carpenter courses. This is very dry, folks, but I am just trying to show up the Member that said every¬ thing was falling to pieces, and there are thirty more taking carpenter courses, eleven more, all in . I can go right along to Mount Carmel , go to Kensington , to Wellington. We have cooking courses and everything like that, but sometimes we have a lot of stuff going on in the First District of Prince and I was told that it was because we have two good Members representing First Prince. Now, we have Winter Works going on all over the Island and some people will say that there is money being wasted and I will agree with them that there is quite a bit being wasted. But it Is helping the people of Prince Edward Island . In short courses we have, or in Winter Works, we have over three million dollars to be spent on Prince Edward Island , $652,000 will be spent in the First District of Prince and we can go right down through, I think there is somewhere around 165 or 170 pro¬ jects that we have on Prince Edward Island and I think this is a wonderful thing. The Member from the of Prince, he is not here to-night, he mentioned that it wasn't being handled the best. Well I ask some of you people to go back and tell him that it is being handled a little better than it was last year. This winter we are taking everybody on, there is nobody slighted: it doesn't make any difference whether you are white, black, yellow, Conservative, Liberal, New Party or what you are, we are taking them all on and I think that is a good thing. Then we will go down to the Replacement Committee. If my good friend was in his seat to-night I would tell him not to feel bad about the letter that was tabled here in the House because we had that replacement, the Conservatives had this re¬ placement committee in the First District of Prince in 1959 and they had it all over the Island. Men who had worked for twenty years, with wives and families, were kicked off and then it was an awful thing because there was some laid off in 1966. They will get up and they will blow. The man that does most of the blowing wont listen to me to-night. He is hearing it all, I guess. For this was all over the Island and I will say that in the First Distinct of Prince after the election and we took office on July 28th, yes, there were some Conservatives moved. But what happened? We got them a job somewhere else and they are all happy, and when an election comes up again, they know who they are going to vote for, the man that looked after them. The man that looked after them. I will now move the adjournment of the debate. (Applause) —156—