11th Canadian Ministry - Ministers

Ministers

  • Charles Ballantyne
  • John Babington Macaulay Baxter
  • Louis-de-Gonzague Belley
  • R. B. Bennett
  • Pierre Édouard Blondin
  • Edmund James Bristol
  • James Alexander Calder
  • Charles Doherty
  • Henry Lumley Drayton
  • John Wesley Edwards
  • George Eulas Foster
  • Hugh Guthrie
  • Albert Edward Kemp
  • James Alexander Lougheed
  • Fleming Blanchard McCurdy
  • Robert James Manion
  • Arthur Meighen
  • Rodolphe Monty
  • Louis-Philippe Normand
  • John Dowsley Reid
  • Gideon Robertson
  • Arthur Lewis Sifton
  • Edgar Keith Spinney
  • Henry Herbert Stevens
  • John Alexander Stewart (politician)
  • Simon Fraser Tolmie
  • Rupert Wilson Wigmore
  • James Robert Wilson

Read more about this topic:  11th Canadian Ministry

Famous quotes containing the word ministers:

    ... the black girls didn’t get these pills because their black ministers were up on the pulpit saying that birth control pills were black genocide. What I’m saying is that black men have exploited black women.... They didn’t want them to have any choice about their reproductive health. And if you can’t control your reproduction, you can’t control your life.
    Joycelyn Elders (b. 1933)

    Only men of moral and mental force, of a patriotic regard for the relationship of the two races, can be of real service as ministers in the South. Less theology and more of human brotherhood, less declamation and more common sense and love for truth, must be the qualifications of the new ministry that shall yet save the race from the evils of false teaching.
    Fannie Barrier Williams (1855–1944)

    This was the Eastham famous of late years for its camp- meetings, held in a grove near by, to which thousands flock from all parts of the Bay. We conjectured that the reason for the perhaps unusual, if not unhealthful development of the religious sentiment here, was the fact that a large portion of the population are women whose husbands and sons are either abroad on the sea, or else drowned, and there is nobody but they and the ministers left behind.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)