| J Cadillac J Loose Leaf Supplies Office Supplies ALASKAN HOTEL

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

| J Cadillac J Loose Leaf Supplies Office Supplies ALASKAN HOTEL if bobs out * —-- a Gov. Hadley’s early political career would have grow long really go 1 of so-called of style." f PROFESSION A L PROFESSION A L a tendency to intrigue the interest f T T Alaska a-■ Fraternal Societies I Daily Empire "Progressive Republicans.'' He was floor leader ALONG LIFE’S | Not to Mention Costs for the Roosevelt forces in the Republican Con- jr----rs JOHN W. TROY EDITOR AND MANAGER < Headline) and at one time he was pro- vention in 1912, DETOUR IT PAYS TO TRAVEL. DES. KASER & FREEBURGER Gastincau Channel 1 the pirWBhed e,«fcry evening except Sunday, by number r.f the conservative ele- Main pos'd by a large I,\i} IH'J PRINTING COMPANY at Second and By SAM HILL DENTISTS Juneau, Alaska. ment of (he convention as a compromise candidate In a Sad State ibticc-*. 1 O. ELK3 1 President. Had Roosevelt not refused his I ! “Isn't it almost time to put on 1 end 3 Goldstein Bldg. Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class for •K—---5 Meeting Wed nr II- IB at § matter. of the proposition it is likely that he a Modesty Week?” asks a con- PHONE 56 day evening* ^8 approval o’clock. Elks’ Hail. They're Always Cheerful Wh;r Hi u.-s 9 H m. to 9 p. m. ^B SUBSCRIPTION RATES. would have been nomniated. He is a finished temporary. GEO. B. Are RICK. m carrier in Juneiu. Douglas. Treadwell and They We fear the poor thing Is too Exalted ■ Delivered by a scholar, possesses a most Rule; *. Thane f«r $1.20 month. oratoT, profound I' per If you are. you're unpopular— weak to stand a week, bet’?.1 M. H. SIDES, B it?*1! postage paid, at the following rates: and char- By pleasing personality unimpeachable find that's true: Seer eta -y. One year, in advance $!*» i#i*: six months, in advance Alack, you'll make it a half day. > ^B Brothers welcome. 8 9C.00; one month, in ao<antv $1.25. acter. But when it comes to skies the> ! T i Subscribers will confer a fever if tl ?y will prompt y Dr. Charles P. Jenne or are CP. notify the Business Office of fny failure irregularity Miss Caroline Todd who are visiting DENTIST 3o-Crdinate BotZi** 8 In the delivery of their paper- In advice to Americans Liked best when they are blue. More or Less True 3M. PIANO HARMONY Telephone for Editorial and Business Offices, one t.< of Freemasonry ^ 8 France this* summer someone has said that Fleas evidently exist only 1 9 Class and Private Instruction Rooms 8 ant! Valentine Scottish F.iti f 8 make uncomfortable. And a MEMBER Oh ASSOCIATED PRESS of the problems over then* will be to make sure dogs Building Sixth and Gold Streets Regular meeting* t 8 Press is excli 'vely entitled to the Observations of Oldest Inhabitan1 lot of seem to j | The Associated before tip a hotel that the drinking ! two-legged pests Phone 5703 Telephone 17G eeond Friday etch of ail ws credited to putting | | jS use for repuhlication .iispatches It's been many a day sine any have been born for no other rea- nonth at 7 i». » also the ■-.- -■ 8| or ii"» otherwise credited in this paper and water is there is no French j -■ It good. However, i. Odd Fellows’ fl 1 has hoard a woman ask it other ii..-.. local m am published herein. body son than to make people law one to drink water, and it is A? compelling her was on bat straight. uncomfortable. WALTER B. HEISEL. 8 said the French themselves use Secetary. LARGER pretty generally Yvomen like the freed >:n ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE J may Dr. A. W. Stewart THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION a substitute for it. modern clothes give hot they’d The Ananias Club DENTIST rather be in style than h com LOYAL ■ I “Hurrah!" shouted the bay fever OF MOOSE ■Pussyfoot" Johnson says he is going to fortable, and if the fashions Ilnurs 9 a. m. to G p. m. 8 victim, "the golden rod is in BUILDING iune.iu Lodge No. 700 British Columbia and help make the Province change the corset, the high store SEWARD HB^B I Meets every Monday bloom again and we’ll have soup Office Phone Hen. Phone i7G Dry. He lost an eye trying to help in London. and long skirt manufacturer s 4C9, night, nt 8 bouse now ^B real bouquets in the Dictator; 18 He may not lose it hut he will certainly waste aren't going to starve to death. n, 7T. MAO spaDDwN, R. H. HTKVF.N’S Secretary. 8 Ills voice in British Columbia. Another thing hard to under- .,_____. _ Explained Easily stand is why the people who Blinks: “He looks had.” MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 IB that think they are better than we are F. & A. M. u The circumstance English-made whiskey Jinks: been Dr. W. J. 8 “Yes, he’s bavin; not in Pigg Second and Fourth Mon- Bl it is in the booby hatch with the is cheaper in New York than England too times.” jay of each month in L v\ M many good nuts who think are PHYSICIAN be- that Great Britain is get- they Napoleon. Ddd Fellows’ Flail, ^B is another reminder o lock. I The reason father never en it5rining at 7:.'Pt \Y/,\ j/f ■ Office—Second and Main Mae- \ ting revenue from liquor consumed in that coun So Runs the World Away RALPH C. MIZE, ■ | theses much over Tennyson's ter. CHAS. E. NAGHKL In the United States pay the Channel Telephone 18 try while bootleggers Swimming English of the is Secretary. IB Charge Light Brigade ---———" and are a source of very large National now gets about as much publicity V- no taxes because when it comas to charg- Order o’ ,j8 as across the front lawn. SThR H and State expense. walking he will nt-ck his EASTERN ing famin', and Fourth Tue*- IB And flying across the sea also is Second against all comers. Dr. IT. Vance days of each month, a*. ^B for the of o’clof 1 O O. F FB of the Atlanta heading glass "ordinary Two absurdities of the are 8 •., John W. Snook, Warden peni- day Osteopath—2<»1 Goldstein Bldg. Hall. MAE WJL.LTAM'j SB events." --B THE ALASKA BOUNDARY DISPUTE tentiary. whom tile Associated Press says lias tht still speaking of street cars as Hours: 10 to 12; 1 to 6; Worthy Matron. A LIFE IB 7 to 8 or oy appoinmont BROV'X, Secretary. 8 RECALLED. most lot of of any rapid transit and what girls wear distinguished guests prison Huh! as clothes. FIRE ALARM CALLS IiiceBhPl Osteons thin Physician wafden in the country, is a iirst cousin of former Office 1671. “ “A host of people look up to Phone: KNIGHTS OF Trade If skirts are to he worn ions The proposal of Sir Hugh Denison, United States Attorney Shoup. He was a Deputy 1-3 Third and Franklin. Resident** Oa itineau Hotel COLUMBUS me, but m.v wife's people certainly Seghera Potfncil No. 1Yf»0. Commissioner from Australia, for the interna- again, as predicted, a lot of stock I 1-4 Front and Franklin. United States Marshal in Alaska under his uncle 'ook down on me.” he remarked. M< etirigs second and last ~« ings that have been made a tote! 1-5 near __ at 7:3fl nt. tionalization of the port of Skagway recalls M. who Front, Ferry Way. Monday p. the late James Shoup, died recently. “Yes?” inquired his victim, poli- broiln*.** loss under present conditions by 1-0 front, opp. Film Exchange, Transient urged was the of ---- that Skagway principal objective tely. "What are you?” Dr. Geo. L. Ilarton to attend. Cowocd Cham- a little darn or runner can Ik 1-7 Front, opp. City Wharf. -'d. the j hc rs. Fifth Str I1— the Canadians in Alaska-Canadian boundary “A steeple Jack," he explained. CHIROPRACTOR, Hellen*hal Bids- k. n. SB Shirt Sleeve Diplomacy. put back into service again. 1- 8 Front, near Saw Mill. lpw. m. McIntyre, i. dispute that occupied attention beginning shortly 2 1 Gro. Office Hours 10 to 3 to 7 to II. TI’RNER, Secretary. If Dame Fashion hands the.b.b VG’tougl'by at Totem 12; 6; |n after the start of the Klondike stampede and, Passing Observation 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cole Barn. 3; anil by appointment. Phone 269 (Cincinnati Enquirer.) its hat. its gonna be a safe bet j Pm-TRI.S OF 8 The door will 2- 4 Front and Seward. CHIROPRACTIC AUXILIARY, continuing for a half-dozen years. It was finally, Tile Prince of Wales is revolving never not Britain's only that all the long hair we’ll see is not tin* practice of Medicine, ALASKA, IGLOO No. 6. SB as as old- 2-5 Front and Main. settled the Alaska Boundary Tribunal, sitting become popular the Surgery nor Osteopathy. second u* by super-advertiser. Prime Minister Stanley Bald- for the next year will he false. 2-8 Second and Main. Meeting every Friday jB fashioned swinging door. each month at 8 o’clock p. in. CartJo 8 in London in 1903, which gave Skagway to win, with his cherry-wood pipe and in his shirt The old-fashioned woman wm 2-7 Fiftli and Seward. n;.d refreshments. At Moose Hall ifB Alaska.
Recommended publications
  • Alaska Boundary Survey, Bill Rupe, and the Scottie
    KING GEORGE GOT DIARRHEA : THE YUKON -ALASKA BOUNDARY SURVEY , BILL RUPE , AND THE SCOTTIE CREEK DINEH Norman Alexander Easton Yukon College, Box 2799, 500 College Drive, Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada Y1A 5K4; [email protected] ABSTRACT The imposition of the international boundary along the 141st meridian of longitude between Yukon and Alaska has separated the aboriginal Dineh of the region into two separate nation-states. This division holds serious implications for the continuity of identity and social relations between Native people across this border. This paper examines the history of the establishment of this border along its southern margin through the Scottie Creek valley, comparing the written record of the state surveyors with the oral history of the Scottie Creek Dineh. I argue that the evidence supports the notion that the Dineh of Scottie Creek, like elsewhere in the Yukon and Alaska, were both aware of and resistant to the implications of the boundary and refused to cede their rights to continued use and occupancy of both sides of the border. Concurrent with this history is that of William Rupe, the unacknowledged first trader in the Upper Tanana River basin, and his role in mediating the negotiations between gov- ernment surveyors and Dineh leaders. Despite the difficulties imposed by the border, Natives of the region continue to formulate a strong identity as Dineh, holding and practicing distinctive values and social relations that collectively are known as the Dineh Way. Keywords: Upper Tanana, aboriginal-state relations, 141st meridian, Yukon-Alaska history PRELUDE It is July 1997. I am atop Mount Dave, Yukon, just east guage.
    [Show full text]
  • The Alaska Boundary Dispute
    University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository University of Calgary Press University of Calgary Press Open Access Books 2014 A historical and legal study of sovereignty in the Canadian north : terrestrial sovereignty, 1870–1939 Smith, Gordon W. University of Calgary Press "A historical and legal study of sovereignty in the Canadian north : terrestrial sovereignty, 1870–1939", Gordon W. Smith; edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer. University of Calgary Press, Calgary, Alberta, 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50251 book http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 International Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca A HISTORICAL AND LEGAL STUDY OF SOVEREIGNTY IN THE CANADIAN NORTH: TERRESTRIAL SOVEREIGNTY, 1870–1939 By Gordon W. Smith, Edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer ISBN 978-1-55238-774-0 THIS BOOK IS AN OPEN ACCESS E-BOOK. It is an electronic version of a book that can be purchased in physical form through any bookseller or on-line retailer, or from our distributors. Please support this open access publication by requesting that your university purchase a print copy of this book, or by purchasing a copy yourself. If you have any questions, please contact us at ucpress@ ucalgary.ca Cover Art: The artwork on the cover of this book is not open access and falls under traditional copyright provisions; it cannot be reproduced in any way without written permission of the artists and their agents. The cover can be displayed as a complete cover image for the purposes of publicizing this work, but the artwork cannot be extracted from the context of the cover of this specificwork without breaching the artist’s copyright.
    [Show full text]
  • A Historical and Legal Study of Sovereignty in the Canadian North : Terrestrial Sovereignty, 1870–1939
    University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository University of Calgary Press University of Calgary Press Open Access Books 2014 A historical and legal study of sovereignty in the Canadian north : terrestrial sovereignty, 1870–1939 Smith, Gordon W. University of Calgary Press "A historical and legal study of sovereignty in the Canadian north : terrestrial sovereignty, 1870–1939", Gordon W. Smith; edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer. University of Calgary Press, Calgary, Alberta, 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/1880/50251 book http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 International Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca A HISTORICAL AND LEGAL STUDY OF SOVEREIGNTY IN THE CANADIAN NORTH: TERRESTRIAL SOVEREIGNTY, 1870–1939 By Gordon W. Smith, Edited by P. Whitney Lackenbauer ISBN 978-1-55238-774-0 THIS BOOK IS AN OPEN ACCESS E-BOOK. It is an electronic version of a book that can be purchased in physical form through any bookseller or on-line retailer, or from our distributors. Please support this open access publication by requesting that your university purchase a print copy of this book, or by purchasing a copy yourself. If you have any questions, please contact us at ucpress@ ucalgary.ca Cover Art: The artwork on the cover of this book is not open access and falls under traditional copyright provisions; it cannot be reproduced in any way without written permission of the artists and their agents. The cover can be displayed as a complete cover image for the purposes of publicizing this work, but the artwork cannot be extracted from the context of the cover of this specificwork without breaching the artist’s copyright.
    [Show full text]
  • UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Yanks are Coming Over There: The Role of Anglo-Saxonism and American Involvement in the First World War Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5cc4h9md Author Buenviaje, Dino Ejercito Publication Date 2014 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE The Yanks are Coming Over There: The Role of Anglo-Saxonism and American Involvement in the First World War A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History by Dino Ejercito Buenviaje August 2014 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Brian Lloyd, Chairperson Dr. Roger Ransom Dr. Thomas Cogswell Copyright by Dino Ejercito Buenviaje 2014 The Dissertation of Dino Ejercito Buenviaje is approved: Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside ACKNOWLEDGMENTS It is truly a humbling experience when I consider the people and institutions that have contributed to this work. First of all, I would like to thank my committee chair, Dr. Brian Lloyd, for his patience and mentorship in helping me to analyze the role of Anglo- Saxonism throughout American history and for making me keep sight of my purpose. I am also grateful to my other committee members such as Dr. Roger Ransom, for his support early in my graduate program, and Dr. Thomas Cogswell, for his support at a crucial point in my doctorate program. I also would like to thank Dr. Kenneth Barkin for his suggestion that I add a German-American chapter to my dissertation to make my study of American society during the First World War more well-rounded.
    [Show full text]
  • Abdallahi Ibn Muhammad, 139 Abdelhafid, Sultan of Morocco, 416
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-108-48382-7 — Learning Empire Erik Grimmer-Solem Index More Information INDEX Abdallahi ibn Muhammad, 139 extension services, 395 Abdelhafid, sultan of Morocco, 416 horticulture, 47 Abdul Hamid II, sultan of the Ottoman Landflucht, 43 Empire, 299 livestock, 43, 55, 72, 229, 523, 564 Abyssinia, 547 maize, 155, 229 acclimatization question. See tropics milling, 70, 240 Achenbach, Heinrich, 80–81 oil seeds, 55 Adams, Henry, 32, 316 peasants, 55–56, 184, 272–73, 275, Adana, 363, 365 427, 429, 433, 559–60 Addams, Jane, 70 reforms of, 429 Addis Ababa, 547 rice, 88, 105, 529 Aden, 87, 139, 245, 546 rubber, 408–9, 412, 414, 416, 421, Adenauer, Konrad, 602 426, 445 Adrianople, 486, 491 rye, 55, 273, 279, 522, 525 Afghanistan, 120, 176, 324 sugar, 55, 78, 155, 204, 380, 385, Africa, German 411–12, 416, 423, 445 See also Cameroon, East Africa; tea, 412 Herero and Nama wars; Maji tobacco, 76, 152, 204, 379–80, Maji rebellion; Southwest 412–14, 416, 423, 445 Africa; Togo wheat, 43, 46–47, 49–50, 53, 55, 59, Agadir Crisis (1911), 376, 406, 416–17, 69, 71, 229, 520, 522, 525, 528, 437, 456–57, 479, 486, 500 561, 579 Agrarian League (Bund der Landwirte), See also colonial science; cotton 469, 471, 473, 477 industry; inner colonization; agriculture rubber industry; sugar industry; barley, 47, 55, 523 tobacco industry cacao, 152, 155 Ahmad bin Abd Allah, Muhammad, 139 coconuts, 218 Alabama, 378 coffee, 145, 152, 155, 204, 273, 412 See also Calhoun Colored School; copra, 218 Tuskegee Institute cotton, 67, 74–75, 151, 158, 204,
    [Show full text]
  • 2. Construction of a Keystone
    University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository University of Calgary Press University of Calgary Press Open Access Books 2020-01 The First Century of the International Joint Commission University of Calgary Press Macfarlane, D., & Clamen, M. (2020). The First Century of the International Joint Commission. [pps. 1-625.] University of Calgary Press, University of Calgary, AB. http://hdl.handle.net/1880/111575 book https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca THE FIRST CENTURY OF THE INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION Edited by Daniel Macfarlane and Murray Clemen ISBN 978-1-77385-108-2 THIS BOOK IS AN OPEN ACCESS E-BOOK. It is an electronic version of a book that can be purchased in physical form through any bookseller or on-line retailer, or from our distributors. Please support this open access publication by requesting that your university purchase a print copy of this book, or by purchasing a copy yourself. If you have any questions, please contact us at [email protected] Cover Art: The artwork on the cover of this book is not open access and falls under traditional copyright provisions; it cannot be reproduced in any way without written permission of the artists and their agents. The cover can be displayed as a complete cover image for the purposes of publicizing this work, but the artwork cannot be extracted from the context of the cover of this specific work without breaching the artist’s copyright. COPYRIGHT NOTICE: This open-access work is published under a Creative Commons licence.
    [Show full text]
  • The Role of Institutions in the Changing Arctic
    THE POLAR BEAR IN THE ROOM: THE ROLE OF INSTITUTIONS IN THE CHANGING ARCTIC A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE INTERSCHOOL HONORS PROGRAM IN INTERNATIONAL SECURITY STUDIES CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND COOOPERATION FREEMAN SPOGLI INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES STANFORD UNIVERSITY BY ELLE STUART MAY 2014 ADVISORS: PROFESSOR KENNETH SCHULTZ AND COMMANDER DAVID SLAYTON Abstract This thesis focuses on the role of international institutions in the Arctic. Specifically, it examines the two main governance structures in the Arctic—the Arctic Council and the United Nations Law of the Seas Treaty (UNCLOS)—in light of the changing Arctic environment. It evaluates to what extent these two governance structures have been effective at keeping the peace in the Arctic, and whether this cooperation is likely to continue in the future. While the Arctic—and its institutions—are frequently cited as a model for geopolitical cooperation, this thesis finds that predictions that this cooperation will continue are overly optimistic. This conclusion is based on two overall findings. The first is that the Arctic Council, the preeminent forum for cooperation in the Arctic, is unlikely to adapt to upcoming issues, as it is limited by its primarily environmental mandate. The second argument concerns the role of UNCLOS, and finds that, despite its effectiveness in bringing states to the negotiation table for some territorial disputes, it has generally been unable to mandate long-term solutions. By showing the limitations of the Arctic Council and UNCLOS in regards to their ability to provide cooperative governance, this thesis questions the existing literature about the Arctic and raises the question of what other structures—perhaps economic or security related—are needed to ensure that the Arctic remains a peaceful sphere of cooperation in the future.
    [Show full text]
  • The Arctic Policies of Canada and the United States 3 Ing Administration of President Barack Obama and Is Considered Largely Bipartisan
    SIPRI Insights on Peace and Security No. 2012/1July 2012 THE ARCTIC POLICIES OF SUMMARY w The melting polar ice creates CANADA AND THE UNITED a fundamentally new geopolitical situation in the STATES: DOMESTIC MOTIVES Arctic that warrants attention at both national and AND INTERNATIONAL international levels. While the United States is just waking up to these changes, Canada has CONTEXT made the Arctic a top political priority. kristofer bergh Both countries need to pay attention to the challenges in the Arctic but should also be wary of how their domestic I. Introduction posturing in the region is affecting their international The Arctic ice is melting. If current trends continue, there will be dramatic relations, including with each changes in the region, with far-reaching implications. At the same time, the other. The abilities of Canada receding ice opens the region to economic development, including through and the USA to pursue their the exploitation of previously inaccessible hydrocarbons and minerals. In interests in the region will rely on them cooperating closely, September 2011, both the Northern Sea Route (along Russia’s north coast, not least because from 2013 formerly known as the Northeast Passage) and the Northwest Passage they will hold successive (along the northern coasts of Alaska and Canada) were open for some time, chairmanships of the Arctic potentially creating shorter shipping routes between Asia, Europe and Council. 1 North America. Increased human activity in the sparsely populated and Canadian–US relations will inhospit able Arctic requires new initiatives to achieve safety and security thus be an important factor in for the region’s environment and its inhabitants and visitors.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Download
    Northern Exploration, Boundary Surveys, and Borderlands: Reports, Documents, and Maps from the United States Congressional Serial Set John D. Kawula Abstract: Significant interdisciplinary scholarship exists concerning the unique economic, social, and political culture of international border and frontier areas. Notable themes of Alaskan and northern Canadian history also include discovery, exploration, and boundary issues. Primary literature concerning these topics is dispersed in many sources. One such source, the United States Congressional Serial Set, has been re-indexed and digitized, allowing online access to the full text documents and high-resolution images of the accompanying maps and illustrative material. This version, covering the years 1817–1980, was searched for citations pertaining to the discovery, exploration, and boundaries of Alaska and northern Canada. Summary level bibliographic records were reviewed for all entries, represented by thirty- three subject and geographic index terms (nineteen northern expeditions as listed under the broad category of “Discovery and Exploration” plus fourteen additional subject and geographic terms selected from the cross-references and related topics presented by the software). Numerical counts and examples of complete citations are provided. Results illustrate the usefulness of the digitized Serial Set, available to patrons of numerous US and Canadian libraries, in researching these topics in a quick and efficient manner. The set also provides additional opportunities for northern research. Many of the explorations and surveys contain historical scientific data and observations that are difficult to extract from modern sources. Viewing northern affairs broadly, the set concerns the entire northern US border areas and their historical, political, military, and diplomatic relations with Canada.
    [Show full text]
  • Canadian Pacific Railway
    l'llv,k,olh<1lo,i - ~Nf< ■ v,.,, .,"'"'"'M•u t.:l ... ,.. .,,,,,i., - ~•;JI•--.. , - ~~ .............. "'" \,. in ..,,...,.,...,u, __ ~·-D, ....,. hn,,<K,'I~ (M·3'• """-;-"' ~ .. ~·_;;,·?·.,-.... ':$! r:,t .:f~ Traditional Locations of Indigenous Peoples, Contact Era AR CTI C OCEAN ,:t:''?,t KEY OF,eoch ,.t71F 0 Bri!ii:h •v{' -, ,~1/,\~v' ~._,,--. 0Ru<;~;in \ ,r-, □ Dutch ~{-,')_i:>& 0Spani5h f",~l f ,::?;, ,.-,•~--J D TerrilOfYur.:laimed byEurop~am --- Colooialor ~~- territorial border 0 SOD km A.l .... rhal- !qu~lk~~ Proj«l"I) "'), '-}.• - ,· ; - r : ,- { >...\ , ___ :, ,.-~--" ( PACIFIC \ OCEAN f._ NEW SPA IN ATLANTIC OCEAN North America: European Territories and Colonies, 1608-1763 ATLANTIC OCEAN KEY Colonial or territorial border 1000 km Azimuthal Equal Area Projection Division of North America After the Seven Years War and the Royal Proclamation of 1763 ©P ~~" ) ;~ ': \ ,. ,,,.. I l \ /'_,/ ~ ,/ , / / ~ ;() '\ / .....,o ~ \., ,,.. ... 7 - ..... __ ,.. 1 uebec City ~ 0 ontreal ,,;. ATLANTIC -~ -· I """ OCEAN A fL AN f/C O 500km OCEAN Azimuthal EqualArea ProJection LOUISIANA Upper and Lower Canada, 1791 Gulf of Me -.:ir:o KEY 0Britishcolony --- Colonial bordf! r -Provinclalbordef North America After the Quebec Act, 1774 .. -lntematlonalborde r 0 1000km AtlrnuthalEqualAruf'rojKtion KEY I O BritiY!colonies 0 Rupert'sland(B1itish Tenifl1ry) Olndian Ttrritory --- Co1onlalorterritorfalborder The 1erm "lndianTerrltory"lshis1orlca l. "- Today,weuse"FirstNations.· ~ O 1000km Azhn.WIEqw!AmProjffllo,, UNITED STATES i ,I Canada,1880 ' j PACIFIC ATLAN TIC OC EAN OCEAN North America: British Territories and Colonies, 1791-1866 PACIFIC OCEAN UNITED STATES Present-Day Canada 63 ©P ©P I I The American Revolution I : I ' ,n'hJ•il Causes of t he American Revolut ion Acts of British Parliament, 1763-1775 1763 Proclamation of 1763 American colonists not permitted to settle west of Appalachian Mountains.
    [Show full text]
  • The Squaw Creek- Rainy Hollow Area
    BRITISH COLUMBIA DEPARTMENT OF MINES HON. R. C. MACDONALD,Minister JOHN F. WALKER,Deputy Minister BULLETIN No. 25 THE SQUAW CREEK- RAINY HOLLOW AREA Northern.British Columbia By K. DeP. Watson 1948 4 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS . Geological Map of Squaw Creek-Rainy Hollow area ............................................... an pocket Fig. 1. Key-map of north-western British Columbia, showing 1oc:ation of Squaw Creek-Rainy Hollow area................................................................................................. 9 Fig. 2. Map of part of Squaw Creek........................................................................... In pocket Fig. 3. Geological map of part of Maid of Erin' claim facing 42 Fig . 4 . Cross-sections of part of Maid of Erin claim ......................................................... 45 Fig . 5 . Geological map of part of State of Montana claim ............................................. 49 Fig . 6. Geological map of part of Adamsclaim 51 Fig . 7. Geological map of part of Victoria claim .............................................................. 54 Fig. 8. Geological map of part of Lawrence claim ............................................................. 56 Plate I- A . Coast Mountains; view eastward across head of Clayton Clreek ...................... 63 B . View up valley of Inspector Creek toward Nadahini Mounta.in .......................... 63 Plate II- A . Looking south-westward from Lawrence claim, Rainy Hollow.......................... 64 B . Looking north-westward from Maid of Erin claim,
    [Show full text]
  • Bourassa's Anniversary Speech Touched on Many of the Criticisms Directed at Him Over the Last Five Months
    Bourassa’s War: Henri Bourassa and the First World War by Geoff Keelan A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in fulfilment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2015 © Geoff Keelan 2015 Author’s Declaration I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. ii Abstract This dissertation examines the perspective of French Canadian nationalist Henri Bourassa during the First World War from 1914-1918. Bourassa was one of the best-known voices rejecting the war’s purpose and value in Canada. He consistently offered detailed and in-depth analytical critiques of the war. He first accepted Canadian participation from August 1914 to January 1916, but his position gradually shifted from cautious support to outright rejection. This dissertation argues that Henri Bourassa has traditionally been understood as a domestic commentator in Canada, but during the war years he wrote in the pages of his newspaper Le Devoir to address a wide variety of international issues. He was one of a few Canadians who looked out to the world and interpreted global events for his readers. Historians have already recounted in detail his thoughts about the Ontario bilingual schools crisis, conscription, the December 1917 election, and the Easter Riots of 1918. This work examines Bourassa’s thoughts on diplomacy between the belligerent nations and that of Pope Benedict XV, international events like the Easter Rising in Ireland and the American entry into the war.
    [Show full text]