ONTARIO 



In thai part of tin- St. Lawn-no- IMMII ^nilli ( .f Lake Xipisvino 



IN tin- triangular peninsula <>f Southern < Mitario. General!) " 



sand) loam, that area i> undulating in surface; rich 



and relent i\e in >d in natural drainage; plentiful in pun- 



sprn;. Ijao-ni t(^ the (in-at Lakes, abundant in 



The soil is capable of \ulding a gnat diversity of the 

 products, pasture grasses for live stock, all kinds of cereals, a wide 

 range of vegetables, many kinds of apples, and the finest of other 

 fruits, such as the grape and the peach. For varied and high 

 agriculture the conditions are ideal. 



In the basin of the rivers flowing north of the Laurentian pla 

 tean is an area of many million acres of as fine farming land aa 

 that of Southern ( )niario, and in some ways more favoured than 

 the dead level clay Stretches of Manitoba. This U the (in-at C'lay 

 IJeli of Northern < Mitario. Of a much lower altitude, and with a 

 better climate than the Laurentian range, that area is finely adapted 

 for the production of cereals, vegetables and grasses for dairying. 

 and the raising of live stock. Cultivated in small part, the country 

 meantime is mainly a vast and valuable region of forests mo: tied 

 with splendid mineral areas, the home of the lumberman and the 

 lure of the miner. It U also a country of lakes, countless lak 

 and many magnificent >t reams. (Write for free hand! 

 "Northern Ontario," to the Director of C'oloiii/ation. Parliament 

 Buildings. Toronto, Canada, or to the < Mitario r,<>\ eminent Agent. 

 Strand. London. England.) 



Niagara Falls. 



