He re-enlisted and was posted to the
United Kingdom. As a major-general, he commanded the
3rd Canadian Infantry Division from 14 March 1941 until 7 September 1942, when he became the Overseas Commissioner of the Canadian Red Cross Society. In that post, which he held until the war ended, he strove to ensure that all Allied
prisoners of war received equal benefits, including one large
Red Cross parcel per month containing the best food available (white-flour biscuits; butter instead of oleomargarine, etc.). In 1944 he joined
John Bracken's team as the
Progressive Conservative candidate in
Saint-Antoine—Westmount, and lost to the
Liberal incumbent
Douglas Charles Abbott by just 60 votes in the
1945 federal election. Later he retired and moved to Knowlton. with a grandchild (
Diana Weston), 23 August 1965. ==Sources==