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                  . Another unusual design was the one he conceived for Winnipeg’s city hall (1883–86). His earlier civic works had included the town hall in Emerson (1881) and the Winnipeg police station (1883). Whereas the
                  could therefore be traded on an open market. On 24 Nov. 1887, in the office of the Winnipeg Board of Trade at City Hall, 11 leading grain merchants, Bawlf among them, created the enduring Winnipeg
                   
                  Quebec, the agency submitted an original plan for a multi-purpose building that would include a conservatory of music, two concert halls, offices, and shops. The proposal was not accepted, but shortly
                  (regal, sociable, and active in good works) dispensed their legendary hospitality from two residences, Stadacona Hall in Ottawa, the large stone house formerly occupied by Sir John A
                  while teaching public school; according to obituaries, for a time in the 1860s she and her sister Dorothy conducted a private school for girls in the temperance hall in Milton. Members of a strongly
                  . John Boyle, like his blacksmith father before him, greatly valued education, and saw to it that young David attended Mason’s Hall School in Greenock and, later, St Andrew’s School in Birkenhead
                  BROCK, JEFFRY HALL, businessman; b. 6 Jan. 1850 in Guelph, Upper Canada
                  study law at Osgoode Hall, Toronto, in 1876. Until that time he may have signed Colin C. Campbell, but on entering law school he changed his middle
                   
                  Health. This board, the first body in Canada responsible for the systematic protection of public health, initially consisted of doctors William Oldright, Cassidy, Charles William Covernton, John Hall
                  . J. Hall, Clifford Sifton (2v., Vancouver and London, 1981–85), 1. Manitoba Culture, Heritage and Recreation, Hist. resources branch, Thomas Mayne Daly ([Winnipeg], 1982). R
                  . Bicha, The American farmer and the Canadian west, 1896–1914 ([Lawrence, Kans], 1968). Can., House of Commons, Debates, 19 July 1904: 7042. D. J. Hall, Clifford Sifton
                  Essex, was drainage litigation. In 1900–5 he practised in partnership with his son Frederick Homer Alphonso, a graduate of Osgoode Hall in Toronto. (Their relationship may not have been harmonious: after
                  1890’s,” Sask. Hist., 7 (1954): 51–55. V. C. Fowke, The National Policy and the wheat economy (Toronto, 1957). D. J. Hall, “The Manitoba Grain Act: an
                  Larue*], which was owned by the estate of George Benson Hall*. The transaction was concluded that year in return for assumption
                  ” Indians, a view he confirmed with some satisfaction after an outburst of unseemly religious enthusiasm followed the preaching of the newly arrived Reverend Alfred James Hall at Metlakatla in
                  mandate to restore order and decorum to social life at Rideau Hall. They enforced punctuality, curtailed entertainment, and purged guest lists. Consequently, Lord Minto’s first years as governor
                  . 3 Jan. 1855 Ann Jane (Jean) Hall (d. 1888) in Peterborough, Upper
                  Hall, a boarding-house for female employees. Applicants for rooms had to provide a letter of reference from their minister. Ganong was a staunch
                  store with a capacious upper-storey hall which also served as a Methodist meeting-house until January 1873, when an elaborate new church was dedicated. This “little edifice,” standing on a hill
                   
                  bookbinding firm of Samuel Edward Hall and then with Davis and Henderson, Glockling was a president of the Bookbinders’ Benevolent Association. On 25 Feb. 1886 it was reorganized as Hand-in-Hand Local
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