The pre-motor flyer on Cariboo Road. ‘The awesome grandeur and majestic beauty of this country must be travelled to be appreciated. It has been described by travellers as one of the great scenic and inspiring drives of the world. In that stretch of country along the Fraser were many river-bars where gold was panned and rockered. Road-houses and stopping-places provided accommodation for the traveller of old, and accommodation for the traveller of to-day can be found at convenient distances. Lytton, at the confluence of the Fraser and ‘Thompson Rivers, is an old historic town. Here the blue waters of the Thompson and the brown flow of the Fraser merge. Accommodation for the motorist and traveller can be obtained. ‘There is much of interest in the locality. At Lytton the road divides, offering two routes to Cariboo. One is via the Fraser benches to Lillooet; the other by way of the Thomp- son and Spences Bridge to Ashcroft. “The former is 47 miles and the latter 52 miles. Both have gratifying scenic attractions and are meheim a storied past, From Lillooet, a delightful little town occupying bench lands shadowed by the mountains, the road winds from the Fraser, crossing north-easterly to Clinton via Pavilion, 47 miles. From Ashcroft the highway follows Bonaparte Valley through Cache Creek and Hat Creek to Clinton, making a journey of 34 miles. “There is a connecting road through the Marble Canyon to connect up with the Lillooet-Clinton Road. A rare old place is Ten