The highway winds mid light and shade along the foaming stream. Twilight through the Great Silent Places to the Land of the Mid- night Sun; the extension of the present highway that stretches from the sun-baked sands of Mexico to Hazelton, in British Columbia, on through the northern portion of the Province to the Yukon, across the rich stretches of that territory to connect with the road system of Alaska and ultimately to the icy straits of Bering. For more than a century these neighbours on the Pacific have lived in peace, harmony, and good-will. No hostile shot has dis- turbed the serenity of their relations—and now, as a monument to that Peace and as an object-lesson to older nations, they propose to construct this mighty highway that spells Prosperity and a continuance of International Amity. And British Columbia, the Western Province of the mighty Dominion, a land of such rare beauty and charm that it has been christened “‘ The Playground for the World,” extends an invitation and the open hand of welcome to adventurers of the modern Covered Wagon to participate in the making of history by travelling the trails of the pioneers to the fringe of settlement in the Land of the Golden Twilight. The famous old Cariboo Road leads to this enchanted country on the rim of civilization. This old highway, modernized and improved to meet the needs of motor traffic, is alive with colorful memories, throughout which are woven the threads of the history of two great nations. “The Cariboo Road begins at Yale, 117 miles by excellent highway from Vancouver. Six