370 THE WEST SHORE. tract of land, nnJor the name of " timber limiU" These are in m ml cases remote from the settlements, and much ability and foresight are required to make adequate pro vLwn for tLo Lrjo Ijdits of men, horses nnd oxen, n b employed in cutting down and preparing the timber for the market, and transporting it to suitable points for rafting. Much capiUI in accordingly embarked in the trade. Mnny thouiwndii of men are buHy through the whole winter fulling the tree, cutting them into log or hewing them ink) squared timber, and traimorting them over the anow to auilablo pointa for flouting them down the riven to the mills, or directly to the plooe of export Aa the riven are in many place interrupted by fulls of a character unfitted to the sofo passago of timber over them. Urge sums are expanded in coiiHtruuting timbor alidee, and on aomo of the main channels, as on the Ottawa, the construction and maintenance of the chief timber-slide are undertaken by the Government It is erroneously supposed by many, who are unfamil iar with the character of the Canadian foroHt, that the w irk of Uie lumberer result in the clearing of the laud. Duly the fluent full-grown trees are selected for the lum Iwrer's axe, ami it is calculated that tho same district may be gone over by the lumWor every twelvo or fifteen years. Hence if the destructive fires which from time to time do such immense injury cau be guarded against, and the operations of the luinWmen are carried on with due care, under proor oversight, there is no reason why the forest of Canada should not remain a pemmiieut source of national wealth. In the new clearing, in tho vicinity of lumlwing districts, the farmer finds a ready demnnd for all bis produce, and employment for himself, his horse and his oxen during tho leisure of winter. In this way the lumbering business helps to promote the settlement of new districts, and attracts a imputation to localities which otherwise might long remain a wilder nee. Looking to the native fauna of Canada in an economio point of view, it is abundantly evident that the animal life of it soss and riven is one of its great and inex haustible ource of wealth. Alike on the sea coasts, in the estuaries, and throughout its great inland lakes and river, the moot valuable fish almund, and on tho Labra dor coast and those of Newfoundland tho seal fisheries ars another annual source of wealth. Tho sturgeon is caught in Caualian waters, frequently reaching mam moth prvxrtiou. the finest salmon abound Uth in the eastern river emptying into the (lulf of St Lawrence' and in thoaeot British Columbia; lake trout are caught in Urg quantities, weighing from 10 to 40 pounds, and the smaller riven and lakes Uvtu with beautiful iookled trout, frequently weighing from 4 to (1 pounds. The whit fish and makiuonge are esteemed for their deli, cacy and riohn of flavor; cod, haddock, mackerel, her ring, salmon, halibut and white fish abound in Canadian water. Valuable oyster bed exist on the Pacific coast of the Dominion. The salmon fishery promise, if rightly protected and regulated, to prove a valuable brauob. of industry. Id Ui ret lake and riven of Manitoba the white fish are no less abundant, and they constitute an important source of supply of food in cer tain seasons of the year throughout the whole Northwest The Mai value of the yield of the fisheries of the Do minion are estimated at not less than $15,000,000 anna ally. Connda has boon esteemed from its earliest discovery for it valuable fur-bearing animals, and has been the trapping and hunting gronnd for two centuries for the groat Hudson's Bay Company and rival organizations. There still remains not only a vast extent of unoccupied territory in which for many years to come the hunter and the trapper will find undisturbed sway, but the regions around tho Hudson's Bay, and stretching westward to Alaska and northward to the pole, must ever remain a shelter for fur-bearing animals and a resort of the hun ter. All the furs collected for the great fur company are shipped to London; in part from their factories of York Fort and Moose Kiver, on the Hudson's Bay, which are visited by a ship from England every year, and in part from Montreal and Victoria. Canada is pre-eminently a country 'of yeoman farm ers. The laud is hold in possession and tilled by the settlor on his own account; and with every addition to the numbers of its industrious population, fresh acres are recovered from the wilderness and added to the pro ductive resources and the wealth of the Dominion. By patient industry and frugality it is in the power of every Canadian to become owner of a house and proprietor of whatever amount of land he can turn to profitable Ac count, while the character of the population resulting from this condition of things checks the accumulation of extensive landed estates in the hands of single proprie tors. The majority of the farms are small, tilled by the proprietor with his own hands, with the help of his sons and occasional hired labor in the busy season of harvest ing. But capital is also successfully applied to farming, and beautiful large stock farms are now entering into rivalry with those of the United States and even of Eng land. Besides the grand staple of the cereal grains, the Canadian farmer derives large returns from his crops of hay, clover, and gross seeds, carrots, mangel-wurzel, beans, hops, flux, hemp and tobacco. The total value of the grain and othor agricultural produce of Canada ex Krted annually is about $40,000,000, having doubled in tho lost decode. But a false estimate of the actual agri cultural resources of Canada is apt to be produced by testing them by it exports. Canada is country of yeo man farmers tilling their own lands and living in abun dance on tho produce. The requirements for the table of the farm laborer are on a scale consistent with the re sources of the country. The home consumption is ac cordingly groat as compared with the number of the population, and it is therefore impossible to estimate, even approximately, the total annual value of all kinds of produce resulting from agriculture within the Dominion. In the matter of education Canada holds an advanced position. There are normal schools for the training of