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                   June 1829 near Dufftown, Banffshire, Scotland, son of William Stephen, a carpenter, and Elspet Smith, a crofter’s daughter; m. first 8 March
                  ; m. 3 Aug. 1882 Elizabeth Smith in Hamilton, Ont., and they had four sons; d. 29 July 1926 near Olds, Alta. Michael Clark was educated at Elmfield
                  , son of Dr Allan Ruttan and Caroline Smith; d. unmarried 19 Feb. 1930 in Montreal. Robert Fulford Ruttan’s mother was an ardent churchwoman and she may
                   U Ranch [see Frederick Smith Stimson
                   
                  . Andrew Loggie was a great-grandson of Robert Logie (Loggie), a fisherman from the River Spey in Morayshire, Scotland, who emigrated with his wife and several children around 1780 and settled on the south
                  . 1883 Margaret Smith (d. 1915) in Montreal, and they had one son and four
                  MATHISON, ROBERT, newspaperman, office holder, educator of the deaf, and administrator of a fraternal order; b. 9
                  settled on the Shetland island of Fetlar in the 12th century. As he would explain in a letter to his uncle Robert Tait in 1905, “[Teit] is the real old original and proper way of spelling the name
                   
                   Aug. 1859 in Huntingdon, Lower Canada, son of Alexander Robb, a farmer, and Jenny (Janet) Smith; m
                  PARKIN, Sir GEORGE ROBERT, educator, imperialist, and author; b
                  Smith. Lew was not above using his role as a go-between for personal gain. A promissory note written in 1908 indicates that he was
                   
                  mp Henry Robert Emmerson*, minister of railways and canals, as one of the individuals in question and went
                  that of George Monro Grant* and George Robert
                  3.2 per cent. He was not the first person at McGill to use antiseptic techniques: Robert Craik and others had done so in the previous decade, but had not adhered strictly to Lister’s methods, so their
                  in 1925. He had been vice-president of the General Board of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, and had acted as chair when Daniel Robert Drummond, an opponent of union, resigned shortly before it
                  educated at the Collegiate School in Fredericton, where George Robert Parkin was headmaster, and at the
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