Legislative Assembly Walter R. Shaw : Oh; Yon must be staying awake at night with this Dorgan fellow. (Laughter) I never saw a person that was so concerned about one man down in his district called Dorgan. Honourable M. Lome Bonnell : Don't you know him? Walter R. Shaw : Mr. Minister of Health, you had better keep quiet I might mention something that will hit you. No, I wont do it. I regard your feeling so I will keep that quiet. Now, let me see, that Minister of Public Works over there; I will have to say something about him by the way. Some Member : Good man; Good man. Walter R. Shaw : He gave a T.V . address after he came in and said I was shocked to find that we were behind in our appropriations, I dont know, > mUHon and a half or something like that He must have remained in a state of shock be¬ cause naturally you would expect that if he found that deplorable condition, he would have immediately curtailed the building of roads, but what did he do? He went out on his own, he rushed pell mell out to the country without any tenders or anything else called. This was the man that was so fussy about having tenders called. I remember him espatiating on this side of the House, and yet he put in about twenty- five miles on his own after he found that too much had been done. But he can¬ celled out and broke the contracts of the previous Government with people that were in bad need of those roads, and it was a strange thing that most of it was in my district Honourable George J. Ferguson : You got more than your share. You got more than your share. Walter R. Shaw : He cut out and I'm telling you.... Some Member : Did he cut out your (inaudible)? Walter R. Shaw : He cut out one road and another road that we started in the program three years ago. Honourable Keir Clark : It took you a long time building it Walter R. Shaw: And we are trying to get this finished to open that country up. He cut out a road through to Emyvale and he has demands this year to get this road. Even the tractors are getting stuck in there, and that is a thickly pop¬ ulated area. Then he went out and he built a road where there were few people, and without any hestitancy at all to see if the base was right he planked the pave¬ ment down. Then he went out into another area and he planked down another mile. He never did anything down on the Victoria shore there for tourist prospects, but he opened a road away out beyond, then a wonderful piece of art He certainly re¬ mained in a continuous shock for a long time because those extra twenty-five miles that he put in would cost up to a million dollars. Mr. Speaker , that's the fellow that was so concerned with the roads and he said another thing; "When I get in, I am going to see that roads are properly adjusted and allocated to each part of the province." (Applause) Hnourable George J. Ferguson : You will get your share to. Walter R. Shaw : I want to tell you, Mr. Premier , you had better not chip toe suddenly; sometimes the figures here will sting those hands of yours without hitting the desk. Here is the record. Now, let us see, this might hold my Honourable friend from First Prince, from 1949 to 1968 you got twenty-wo tmiles up there. Honourable Robert E , Campbell: Oh; that's terrible. Walter R. Shaw : It is terrible, now just wait a minute, from 1960 to 1966 you got seventy miles, now what do you think of that?