is "to provide for granting increased areas to present holders."
Accordingly, see. 3 enabled the holder of any homestead selection,
any settlement lease, any original conditional purchase, to apply
for additional land to be held by him as an additional holding
under the same class of tenure. Also, the holder of an original
or additional conditional purchase was enabled to apply for a
conditional lease. These new privileges, as well as certain old
privileges, the legislature intended to extend to married women,
by see. 17. If she has acquired by purchase from another person
a homestead selection, she may now acquire an additional home-
stead selection. If she has acquired, by such purchase, a settle-
ment lease, she may now acquire an additional settlement lease.
If she has acquired, by such purchase, an original conditional
purchase, she may now acquire an additional conditional purchase,
or additional conditional lease. Secs. 3 and 4 use the words
"original" and "additional" as applicable to all these tenures.
It is probable that sec. 17 also allows a married woman to exercise
such powers as that of converting part of land held under a
settlement lease into a homestead selection ; and this may explain
the omission of the word "additional" before the words "con-
ditional purchaser, homestead selection or settlement lease
sec. 17, But it is not necessary, in the present case, to decide
what are the limits of the powers conferred by the section. It is
enough to say, generally, that if a married woman has already
become, by virtue of a transaction with some party other than
the Crown, the holder of land on which a secondary application
to the Crown might, if the land were not held by a married
woman, be based, for some further or other holding, she may
make that secondary application, and acquire land thereby. But
the prohibitions as to application for original holdings still apply
(sec. 14 of the Act of 1895; sec. 24 (v.) of the Act of 1895; see.
47 of the Act of 1889). It is true that there is some difficulty in
applying this theory to the case of a conditional lease. Con-
ditional leases are not granted except in connection with
conditional purchases; and it is asked, what can be meant by an
"original" application for a conditional lease? But even if the
word "original" in this sense cannot be applied to a conditional