Under the Crown Lands Act 1884, sec. 4, the term "Population Boundaries" includes lands within areas bounded by lines bearing north, east, south and west as defined by proclamation in the Gazette, and distant not more than ten miles from the nearest boundary of any city, town, or village. The same Act exempts from conditional purchase under Part III. thereof (inter alia) lands reserved or set apart for town or suburban lands or for village sites, and lands within population areas as above defined. [Sec. 21, sub-secs. (iv.) and (vii.)]. Sec. 18 of the Act of 1889 gives power to the Governor in Council to proclaim and set apart by notification in the Gazette, any lands within the suburban or population boundaries or population areas of any cities, towns, or villages. Such lands (without cancellation or revocation of such boundaries or areas) are, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the principal Act, to be open to conditional purchase. Under this section certain lands within the suburban and population boundaries of the City of Armidale were, on the 10th of March, 1900, set apart by Gazette notification as a "special area" for conditional purchase, and under the terms of the notification the appellant, on the 30th of May, 1901, took up within the special area an original conditional purchase of 20 acres 2 roods 1 perch, and on the 25th of June, 1903, he took up an additional conditional purchase of 32 acres. The Act of 1895 provided for the classification of Crown lands; and that this might be properly done, the Governor in Council was by sec. 10 empowered to notify in the Gazette that the Crown lands in any tract or area described in the notification should be set apart for holdings of the kinds specified whether by way of purchase, lease, or otherwise. No lands within any such tract or area were, after the notification, to be available to satisfy applications for holdings of any kind other than the kind specified. The same Act made provisions for new kinds of holdings, among them homestead selections and settlement leases, and secs. 13 and 24 provided for the setting apart of tracts of Crown lands for the purposes of these holdings respectively, subject to the provisions of and under the powers conferred by sec. 10; that is, within the areas classified under the last-mentioned section. Under the two sections mentioned, certain lands were, by Gazette notifications of the 8th December, 1897, and the 5th July, 1899, set apart for homestead selections. Some of these lands had been included in special areas, since revoked; and they were also within the suburban and population areas of the City of Armidale. In December, 1903, the land laws were further amended by an Act which took effect on the 1st of January, 1904. Its third section provided [His Honor read sub-sec. (a) of that section.] Endeavouring to share in the advantages offered by this enactment, the appellant, as the holder of an original conditional purchase, applied on the 7th of January, 1904, for an additional conditional purchase of 64½ acres and a conditional lease of 160 acres, both within the limits of the lands which had been set apart for homestead selection by the two Gazettes of December, 1897, and July, 1899.