ONTARIO 



43S3 



ONTARIO 



THE FACTORY C 

 Flour, Grist 

 Log Products 

 Foundry,Machineshop 

 Iron, Steel 

 Meat Packing 

 Farm Implements 

 Butter.Cheese 

 Lumber Products 

 Women's Clothing 

 Leather 

 Men's Clothing 

 Bread ortfectionery 

 Smelting 



ONTARIO PRODUCTS CHART 

 Figures Based on Canadian Government Reports 



Mil lions of Do I lars Annual ly 

 10 20 30 40 50 



Knit Goods 

 Furniture 

 Shoes 



PrHing,Bookbindrng 

 Slaughtering 

 Electrical Goods 

 Railroadcars repai 

 Printingpublishing 

 Automobiles 

 Oib 



Electricity 

 Canned Goods 

 Rubber Goods 

 PhjmbingJTnsmithr 

 Musical Instrument 

 Boilers ,Engines 



THE FISHERY 

 Whitefish 

 Trout 

 Herring 



THE MINE 

 Copper 

 Gold 

 Nickel 

 Silver 



THE FARM 

 Sugar Beets 

 Rye 

 Beans 

 Alfalfa 

 Berries, etc. 

 Spring Wheat 

 BucKwheat 

 Peas 



Orchard Fruits 

 Barley 



Animals slaughtered 

 Husking Corn 

 Turnips, Beets, etc, 



Potatoes 



Butter 



Fodder Corn 



Fall Wheat 



Milk 



Oats 



May, Clover 



Livestock sold 



70 60 50 40 30 



The farmers find it more profitable to feed 

 tli<-ir hay and grain to stock than to sell it, 

 consequently Ontario is noted for its fine horses, 

 cuttle and sheep. Dairying is an important 

 branch of animal industry, and large quantities 

 of butter and cheese are made. More cheese 

 is exported from Ontario than from the entire 

 United States; as a cheese producer, however, 

 tli, -i ,t, Q| Wisconsin is ahead of the province. 

 Large quantities of condensed and pow<! 

 milk arc manufactured. There are over 300,000 

 colonies of bees in the province, and the an- 

 nual output of honey exceeds 2,000,000 pounds. 



It was formerly supposed tint th. region 

 north of the Great Lakes was not suitable for 

 tillage, but it has been demonstrated that tin- 



great area contains millions of acres of fertile 

 land as well suited to tillage as any other in 

 the province. Hay, potatoes and the hardier 

 small grains can be raised in abundance. Along 

 th. lines of railway this lamf : is being taken by 

 immigrants. 



Government aid is given the farmers through 

 the Department of Agriculture, which gives as- 

 sistance by conducting fairs, forming local 

 boards of agriculture, winding out. trained agri- 

 culturists, conducting farmers' institutes, aiding 

 in establishing courses of agriculture in the 

 public schools and using the resources of tin. 

 Department to make rural life more attractive. 



Manufactures. Ontario possesses unlimited 

 water power, an abundance of raw material and 



