Some include their place of origin.Biographies of over 2,200 architects who worked in Canada.A database containing data on the vessels, captains and crews of Great Britain and Atlantic Canada. miles), Athabaska Lake (4,400 sq. There were, therefore, 4043,499 persons in the total population of 5,371,315 who could read. system, the Drummond co., Que., and P. E. I.

boards of arts and manufactures; and under the head Primary all the elementary and model schools. gallons, and of distilled, 17,745,182 imp. The hills and plains are covered with bunch grass on which the cattle and horses live all winter, and its nutritive qualities are said to exceed the celebrated blue grass and clover of Virginia.In Nova Scotia, apples, plums, pears, quinces, cherries, etc., are easily cultivated; grains and root crops do well and Indian corn will ripen. The really cultivable area of the United States is confined within much smaller limits than is generally supposed, from the fact that immense and wide deserts are found in place of cultivable territory, with comparatively very little exception, over all the region west of the 100th degree of west longitude, to the base of the Rocky Mountains. There are also lands which have been granted to Railways, and which sell upon advantageous terms to bona fide settlers.Government.—The system of government of the Dominion of Canada is monarchical in its most popular form. Graves can be searched by a name index.This database contains death and burial information for Canadian military personnel who died during and as a result of the world wars.A growing index, regularly updated, containing abstracts of over 1 million obituaries, including names of relatives.Indexed images of over 400,000 obituaries of Germans from Russia who died in North America.A small number of short obituaries of notable Canadians.A searchable edition of a book listing descriptions of settlements, regions, geographic features etc.A collection of books detailing important facets of the country, including government, immigration, vital statistics, health and welfare, resources, labour and more.One of the earliest attempt to form a comprehensive dictionary of places in The Americas.Over 60 million historic photographs and documents submitted to Ancestry.

$7,000; and those of British Columbia, $9,000, per annum. The chief products include gold, the yield of which in the year named amounted to $18,834,490; silver, yield of in 1902, 4,291,317 ounces, valued at $2,238,351; coal, which yielded a value of $15,957,946; copper, $5,728,261; nickel, $5,002,204; Portland cement, $1,090,842; lead, $762,660; coke, $1,663,725: iron ore, $922,571; asbestos, $891,033; petroleum, $922,672; and pig iron, $707,838. Quebec.—The Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench and 5 Puisne Judges and the Chief Justice of the Superior Court and 29 Puisne Judges. Upon the acquisition of the country by Great Britain, the English Constitutional and Criminal Laws were introduced, the English form of wills allowed, and English rules respecting evidence in commercial cases established. In British Columbia, no religious dogma may be taught, and, while in the remaining Provinces religious exercises are permitted, no children need be present against their parents' wish.In 1871 the Legislature of Ontario made all common schools in that Province free, to be supported by Provincial grants and local taxes, and made the education of children compulsory on parents and guardians. The most easterly is St. Peter's Canal leading into the Bras d'Or, Cape Breton; distance 2,300 feet.