While this inquiry arose out of the temporary closing of a mill at Sherbrooke, attributed by the management to the fear of Japanese competition, the Dominion Government called for “an investigation much more searching and extensive than is possible at the present time either by officials of any of the Government departments or by the Tariff Board.” The Honourable W. F. A. Turgeon, a judge of the Court of Appeal of Saskatchewan, was appointed a Royal Commissioner to make this investigation as speedily as possible. The completion of the report was delayed by the Government's decision to requisition the services of the same commissioner for a further study of the wheat problem, which occupied several months and necessitated investigations in England, but after two years' work and the collection of nineteen thousand pages of evidence, the report was laid before the Minister of Finance on January 20, 1938. It is an important document, which will undoubtedly be quoted, especially as a source of factual data, in discussions of the textile industry for years to come.
Conforming with the terms of reference, the Commissioner sought information with respect to tariff protection, volume of production, investment, costs, profits, wages, salaries, and bonuses, and such other matters as might help the Government to arrive at conclusions “regarding the position of this and other branches of the textile industry in relation to British and foreign competition, and in particular, the extent to which the employer can reasonably and properly be expected to maintain employment over periods of temporary difficulty.”