ZOOMER Magazine

This Way Up Peaks and valleys in the journey. Plus, culture and books

THE PEAKS AND VALLEYS IN THE JOURNEY

- By Mike Crisolago

Canada’s first prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, appeared on the only $500 bill ever issued in Canada, wearing a formal shirt and fur-collared coat In other words, he was dressed exactly like someone you’d expect to be carrying around a $500 bill.

What feuds between politician­s and media looked like before cable news In 1910, a Saskatchew­an newspaper boy famously blew off a conversati­on with Canada’s seventh PM, Sir Wilfrid Laurier. The boy grew up to be Canada’s 13th PM, John Diefenbake­r.

In 1923, PM Lester Pearson’s Oxford hockey team won the inaugural Spengler Cup Though Pearson didn’t look like a future Nobel Peace Prize winner as he pulled an opposing player’s jersey over his head and rocked him with uppercuts.

This explains the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane posters they found at 24 Sussex Drive after she left Canada’s first female PM, Kim Campbell, is also Canada’s first baby boomer PM.

He predicted our PM 40 years early but couldn’t muster the slightest premonitio­n about Watergate? U.S. President Richard Nixon, during a 1972 state visit with thenPM Pierre Trudeau, famously exclaims, “I’d like to toast the future prime minister of Canada – to Justin Pierre Trudeau.”

“This,” uttered a despondent royal chef, “will do no favours for the reputation of British cuisine” PM Sir John Thompson, 49, dies of a heart attack while lunching with Queen Victoria at Windsor Castle in 1894.

Stephen Harper, the only PM known to employ a personal stylist, refused to disclose her taxpayer-funded salary The stylist developed his trademark “Legoman hair and dark suit” esthetic, which is in fashion whether you’re out on the campaign trail or proroguing Parliament.

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