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medical laws, it had the notable effect of assigning more importance to clinical training in faculties of medicine. Martigny joined several other medical societies, including the Association Française de
 
Country backing in parliament. The law officers in London denounced the court as illegal, but recognized that a similar institution was necessary. They recommended to the government that legislation be
 
became the property of her son-in-law, Charles-Christophe Malhiot*. While Montour
 
/4159, no.42/408; 4/4287, no.29/1; 4/4495, P59; X624A: 48–53. Bibliothèque de la ville de Montréal, Salle Gagnon, fonds Ægidius Fauteux. Mitchell Library (Sydney), ms coll., A1296: 197–203, dispatches to
, an industrial city of 41,712, the second largest in Ontario. On 1 November, at a salary of $1,600, he took over the 44-man force, which was overseen by a board of police commissioners. The city
 
. Emily —, and they had one daughter; d. 1 Nov. 1903 in St John’s. In July 1887 two officials of the Norwegian fisheries
 
grown locally. Encouraged by Governor Sir Richard Goodwin Keats*’s relaxation of laws inhibiting the development of commercial
 
. Precise and meticulous, he first put the registers of seigneurial dues into order. In 1818 he had his territory mapped by his son-in-law. Then he listed the full names of the tenants in a large register
” about the possibility of dying after giving birth. She nevertheless maintained a sense of humour. During her first labour she was told that her sister-in-law, through whom she had met James, was
continuing his theological studies. Ordained priest in Montreal on 1 June 1901 by the archbishop of Montreal, Paul
Prescott, and his son-in-law Thomas Bridge were Mauger’s men. Yet in the 1770s Mauger’s agents John Butler and
 
additional waterfront real estate valued at £2,500. As the firm expanded Stairs brought in two of his sons, William J. and John, the latter being replaced by a son-in-law, Robert Morrow, in 1854. Stairs
Craigie. Again in 1801 Sir Robert Shore Milnes* named him a member of the commission appointed to apply a law providing relief
 
acres. The duties of the king’s printer were to print proclamations, speeches, copies of laws, and commissions, but the principal responsibility was the
). Hall. Clifford Sifton, vol.1. [J. W.] G. MacEwan, Sitting Bull: the years in Canada (Edmonton, 1973). R. C. Macleod, The NWMP and law enforcement
 
Dr. Lyman C. Draper: Toledo and vicinity, 1863–66,” Hist. Soc. of Northwestern Ohio, Quarterly Bull. (Toledo), 5 (1933), no.4: items 175–76, 181–82. Indian affairs: laws and
sciences and humanities, and received a ba in 1869. He read law briefly in 1869–70 and went on to receive an ma from Toronto in 1870
principal in the firm when, in 1856, their father retired to England with his wife and several of the younger children. Daniel meanwhile had begun the study of law and, like his almost exact contemporary
de Beauvais in Paris under the direction of Charles Rollin, La Galissonière became a midshipman in Rochefort on 1 Nov. 1710; he had his first active service on
 JAMES ALEXANDER, carpenter, lawyer, businessman, and politician; b. 1 Sept. 1854 in Brampton, Upper Canada, son of John Lougheed and Mary Ann
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