(HAP. T] THE DOMINION OF CANADA 767 of any moneys appropriated by Parliament for the Territories as the Commissioner in Council is authorized to expend. (p) Generally, all matters of a merely local or private nature in the Territories! The Commissioner in Council can also if authorized pass Ordinances as to education, subject to the same restrictions as in the case of the Yukon, and any Ordinance whatever may be disallowed by the Governor-General in Council within two years. The laws of Canada, unless otherwise specified, apply to the North-Western Territories, but power is given to the Governor-General in Council in the case of legislation as to liquor and to arms and ammunition and judicial matters. Further, the Governor-General in Council may apply to the Territories Acts which would not otherwise be in force. It may be added that the Canadian Parliament could confer powers larger than those of the provinces on the Legislatures of the Yukon and the Territories, if it thought fit, but naturally that step is out of the question. The Yukon is a part of the old North-Western Territories given a separate constitution and with a separate history as a specifically mining territory. In the Yukon Territory there was from 1898 (61 Vict. ¢. 6, as amended by 62 & 63 Vict. ¢. 11) until 1909 a Council of the Yukon Territory consisting of not more than eleven members, five of whom were elective and the remainder appointed by the Governor- General of Canada under his Privy Seal. An Act of 1908 (c. 76) altered the position, and in 1909 the first purely elective council of ten members was chosen. The Council lasts for three years subject to being dissolved by the Com- missioner. Annual sessions are required.2 The Executive Government is conducted by a Commissioner who is subject to the directions of the Governor-General in Council, and responsible government does not yet exist. But the Commissioner is expected to adapt his policy to the desires of the Legislature, especially since it is now purely elective. ! So far the Commissioner’s powers have not been exercised. See Canadian Annual Review, 1907, pp. 614-16; 1909, pp. 594, 595.