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, 22 Sept. 1892. Toronto World, 14 Sept. 1892. Cyclopædia of Canadian biog. (Rose and Charlesworth), vol.2. Univ. Laval, Annuaire (Québec), 1886–87: 78; 1887–88: 58
 
, an end to arbitrary action by foremen, and the passage of a government-sponsored bill reducing the maximum work week from 60 to 58 hours and raising the minimum age for cotton workers from 13 to 14
: 135. Hist. of Middlesex, 957–58. D. J. Hughes and T. H. Purdom, History of the bar of the county of Middlesex . . . ([London, 1912]), 7, 49.
 
; some account of men and things in London before it became a city (London, Ont., 1921), 64. History of the county of Middlesex (Brock), 220–21, 957–58. London and its men of affairs
chieftainship; history, evolution, and culture of the Blood Indians; origin of the sun-dance (Lethbridge, Alta., [1953]), 116, 133, 136, 157–58. J. W. Schultz
. Thompson (Edmonton, 1983), 1–24. Desmond Morton, “Sir William Otter and internment operations in Canada during the First World War,” CHR, 55 (1974): 32–58. W. D. Otter, Internment
 
, Dictionnaire. P.-G. Roy, Inv. coll. pièces jud. et not., I, 90–99; Inv. jug et délib., 1717–1760, I, 58, 145, 273, 334; II, 96; IV, 42, 65, 90
 
de La Chesnaye. Pinaud died at the age of 57 or 58, and was buried in Quebec on 19 Aug. 1722. Very few of his papers seem to have
 
, 58, 80, 103. P.-G. Roy, “Le sous-constructeur Cressé,” BRH, LII (1946), 131–35.
 
51, 57, 58, 110. Collection Lafontaine (Sir George Williams University), Registre de la cure de Montréal. Documents relating to Canadian currency during the French period (Shortt
 
; 21822: 58–59, 68–69, 200–4; 21828: 30–35; 21838: 71–81; 21862: 195. Quebec Gazette, 11 July 1793, 24 May 1810, 6 June 1811. “Papiers d’État,” PAC Rapport
 
proc., 1855–58; Journal and proc., 1859; Statutes, 1866, c.90. Acadian Recorder, 1875, 1884. British Colonist (Halifax), 1858. Evening Express (Halifax
 
Montreal. Between 1724 and 1727 he again worked at Yamachiche, Rivière-du-Loup, and Maskinongé. In the years 1729–35, 1744–53, and 1755–58 he was parish priest at Trois-Rivières, while serving again as
58 times. The Péans then went to live at Orzain, near Blois, on property Péan had purchased upon arrival in France in 1758, and for a time they
 
mark of his local status during the 1850s was his captaincy in the 2nd Battalion of London militia. In 1856–58 Ridout spent nearly $20,000 on the
 
Canada; a memorial to Francis Stephens Spence (Toronto, 1919). A. J. Birrell, “D. I. K. Rine and the Gospel Temperance Movement in Canada,” CHR, 58 (1977
(Toronto, 1968); “John A. Rittinger,” American-German Rev. (Philadelphia), 23 (1957–58), no.6: 18–20; “A word about Joe Klotzkopp,” German-Canadian Rev. (Galt [Cambridge], Ont.), 10
 
directory, 1857–58. C. E. Goad, Atlas of the city of Montreal from special survey and official plans showing all buildings & names of owners (2nd ed., 2v., Montreal, 1890
 
business, which had suffered severe losses in the 1857–58 depression following the collapse of the London, England, timber market, continued to decline, leading to the loss of his Frontenac timber limits and
 
), Murray (1848), Belmont (1852 and 1856), Draper (1857–58), Carden (1858), and Laxton (1859); and finally a road line from Bobcaygeon to Lake Nipissing (1859
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