SASKATCHEWAN AND ITS PEOPLE



         
JAMES HEPBURN.
James Hepburn, Superintendent of the Government Employment Service of Canada, served his country gallantly during the Great war and was so seriously injured that his right arm had to be amputated. He is one of the most popular men in government service in Prince Al- bert. He was born in Moffat, Dumfriesshire, Scotland, in November, 1891, a son of James and Mary (McNaughton) Hepburn, likewise natives of Scotland. The father was in the plumbing business in his native coun- try until 1909, when he brought his family to Canada and located in Prince Albert. He accepted a position with the city and is now super- tegrity and is highly esteemed. The public schools of Moffat afforded James Hepburn a part of his education and subsequently he attended the Moffat Academy. After leaving school he became an employe of the Union Bank of Scotland, re- maining with this bank until 1909, when he came to Prince Albert with his parents. In 1912 he was employed in a private bank here and then for one and one-half years worked in the Dominion Lands office. In 1915 he put all personal interests aside and enlisted in the Fifty-third Battalion. He went overseas in the spring of 1916 and three months later was transferred to the Forty-sixth Battalion. During the engage- ment in Regina trench, at the Somme front, he was seriously wounded, and was confined to a hospital in France for three weeks and for two and one-half months was in a hospital at Huddersfield, Yorkshire, Eng- land. In the bed next to him in that hospital was a former resident of Prince Albert, at one time a member of the Royal North West Mounted Police, who was then sergeant major with the Australian forces. Sub- sequently Mr. Hepburn was transferred to a hospital at Ramsgate, where he remained for one month, and was then brought home to Canada and placed in the hospital at Whitby, Ontario, from which he was removed to the Toronto Hospital and he received his honorable discharge in Dc- cember, 1917. He immediately returned to Prince Albert and resumed his duties in the Dominion Land office until October, 1919, when he was appointed to his present position as superintendent of the government employment service. He has proven himself the right man for this place and the efficiency with which he meets every demand made upon him has been a dominant factor in his success. Mr. Hepburn is musically inclined and plays the cornet in the local band, of which he was vice president for one year. He is a member of the Electic Club and the Great War Veterans Association. Fraternally he is identified with the Masons, holding membership in Kinistino Lodge, No.1. His religious faith is that of the Presbyterian church. Bibliography follows:


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THE STORY
OF
SASKATCHEWAN
AND ITS PEOPLE



By JOHN HAWKES
Legislative Librarian



Volume III
Illustrated



CHICAGO - REGINA
THE S.J. CLARKE PUBLISHING COMPANY
1924



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