AGRICULTURAL REVIEW OF THE WEEK. Canada means to obtain a larger share than she has at present of the British food supply. She sends us half the cheese which we import, and has made a beginning in sending increased quantities of butter under official supervision. Now a great effort is to be made to capture a greater share of the meat trade. The Canadian Government propose to purchase about 500 cattle a week, to slaughter them at Montreal, and to ship the meat in chilled (not frozen) condition to the principal cities and towns of Great Britain, where they are to be disposed of to consumers through shops which will be opened for Canadian produce only. It is believed that this trade will be more advantageous to Canadian meat-producers than the existing traffic to live cattle. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The American National Wool Growers' Association held a great meeting the other day to demand the reimposition of the duty on wool. Their industry, they declared, was being ruined by free imports. The poor men have been so long coddled by Protection that they cannot compete with men who have been obliged to exercise the utmost enterprise in improving their flocks for wool-production. Otherwise, it is not easy to see why wool cannot be grown in the vast tracts of free land in Texas, Montana, Arizona, and Washington Territory as cheaply as in Australia or the Argentine Republic. Yet one speaker from Texas declared that there were millions of acres in that State almost valueless, except as sheep pasturage, and that Texas could carry 30,000,000 sheep, instead of about 2,000,000 if wool were at a paying price. ==========================================