HUNTING AND WISHING 153 



more surprised to learn that thousands of people in Toronto nite never seen 



the Falls. 



Ontario . hat many remarkable scenes as well as Niagj 



es are associated with Ontario, and along their 

 especially pernapl in the Georgian Bay region, and in the 1401 

 hes of the St. l<arc . Ontario has a wonder! 



ere are other and as bewildering scenes of beamy. Itehoai is 

 the resort during the summer of hordes of t'n: 



ronto which afford the most charming sylvan 



viral landscape . and thr , c and Stony Lake 



tor sport an<! :>g arc unrivalled, and then aa> 



^ and Renfrew G.t: to be found cencs as strange a 



lywhcrc on the continent, iut.ide the mountain ranges. The Ottawa 



,: 





 r marvels oi 



for mam canoeists and others 



Park, and beyond this, north and west, are the 



Timagami and Timiskaming. while the trip up the Montreal River & one 



to be forgotten. All of these places are not outside convenient rang*. 



s Nipigon. and bevond that the wonders of the Rainy 



ic poets have confined themselves chiefly t the 



but lit soon attt -n I he 



have a boundless store before them in thc*c endless millions of i 



Before the recent accession of territory < < same si as 



the German Empire. It is now more than half as large again. A snore 

 fertile land does not exist on earth. The forests of Ontario have paid the 

 people's taxes for some gcncrat: -he forestry department hopes to 



the record. Water j.<> in abundance. The only thing 



that is scarce is people. If Ontario people would make haste to get 

 acquainted with Ontario, all over its 400000 square miles, they would soon 

 have the rest of the world spending their vac.r and totally settling 



down in residence. Then would be fulfilled the saying, uttrred twenty years 

 ago by a ll'orld man. that the centre <>f the British Kmpire thai) yet move 

 over to Canada. ll'orld. June is. i>> 



HUNTING AND I IMI 



is a most alluring fu-ld. 1 : . 



innumerable, game and fish abundant, in a province j ! j time* 



the size of the Old Land. \\ ith ..n f people, and just 



about a week's sail from British shores. Think of it. How grand 



the opportunity! Thrilling pleasure to the sportsn mcnt 



and sustenance to the settler. More than that. It is not limited 



en of the strong, adventurous type. It is within the reach of 



the ordinary man. For magnificent railways penetrate these 



Old and New Ontari rand Trunk, the Canadian 



he Canadian Northern, and the National Transcontinental. 



t and speeding-out with comfort and ease for thousand* 



he " Highlands " and other parts of Old Ontario are 



at their comr th multitudes of deer; great numbers of dock; 



and plentiful shoals of fish: black bass, brook trout, maslcinonfe 



(30 Ibs. weight) and others of the finny tribe. So also arc 



Timagami and Timiskaming (by T. ft N. O R.> on the 



