INTRODUCTION. The English Constitution and the Constitution of the BN different North American Colonies at the time furnished Constitu- many suggestions which were embodied in the Act of Union, Ho The House of Lords was taken as the type of the Senate or Upper House, nomination for life being substituted for the hereditary principle. The practice of introducing money bills in the House of Commons on the advice of a minister was adopted, and the procedure of the British Parliament was followed as to the manner and method of passing bills. No important change was introduced in the constitu. tion of the executive or legislative bodies of the provinces, except that the province of Canada was divided into the provinces of Ontario and Quebec, and a separate constitution was given to each. During the years immediately succeeding the Union the Legisla- Dominion was chiefly engaged in the work of organization. ty of Different departments of state had to be created and appro- Dominion. priate duties assigned to each minister. From 1870 to 1878 arrangements were concluded that resulted in the admission of British Columbia, Prince Edward's Island, and the North West Territories into the Union, in the formation of the province of Manitoba, and in the organization of a govern- ment for the Territories. Under the term North West Terri- tories was included all territory not within the jurisdiction of a province, and it embraced not only lands bordering on the Arctic Seas, but lands between the Eastern boundary of Ontario and the Western boundary of British Columbia, and extending as far south as the boundary of the United States. The acquisition of the Territories gave the Dominion juris diction from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and rendered possible the physical union of the provinces by means of the Canadian Pacific Railway. In 1875 the Dominion established a Supreme Court, but such Court, it should be remembered, is not “supreme” in the American sense of the term, as an appeal may lie, if 1—92