HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1924-10-1, Page 2No;
Will Satisfy 1
lines pure, delicious
GREEN TEA H473
The finest afreen tea; produced in
the world. '— Asit fora trial package.
FREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST. "SAMOA," TORONTO
III
THE FRANCHISE,
Inviolable, sacred trust
Committed to our care;
View it with reverence we must,
Misuse, neglect it neer.
This child of Freedom ever stands
With shining, upward glance,
Law, Order, Progress in its hands,
And calls us to advance.
—Isabel R. McKibbin,
RELISHABLE PICKLES,
The best way to get organic acids
is via fruit and vegetables. Pickles
with their indigestible residue are cer-
tainly not good for children but serv-
ed occasionally they add zest to the
diet and produce the tonic effect which
we call "refreshing," especially with
a low meat diet. Not several kinds at
one meaL Not salad and pickles and
acid fruit, for many acids at one
meal are "bad form"
The following recipes are old and
reliable. The first came from the
home of the novelist and shares his
fame.
J. Fenimore Cooper Pickles --S qts.
cucumbers (sliced as for the table),
S large anions (sliced or chopped), 3
sweet peppers (sliced or chopped).
Sprinkle % c. salt between layers
of this mixture. Let stand 3 hours.
Drain, Mix the following ingredients,
pour over the mixture and can in
glass jars: 1 qt. ,vinegar, 1 c. brown
sugar, 1 tbsp. white mustard seed, 1
tbsp, celery seed, 1!s tbsp. tumerie.
Ostego Pickles—Into a stone crock
put the following mixture, cold: 1 gal.
vinegar, ?:o c. ground mustard, VA c.
horseradish (cut in cubes or ground),
2 c, white sugar, lee c. salt, ?, oz.
cabbage leaves, during the cooki.
process. Weigh. For 7 lbs. cucumber
allow: 3 pts, vinegar, 3 lbs. brown
sugar, 1 oz. cassia buds or stick cinna-
mon, 1 oz. each whole alspice and cel-
ery seed,
Boil this mixture well, add cucum-
bers and allow to cook until they be-
gin to seem tender but not soft. Re-
move chunks,.. boil juice until syrup
then pour It over the pickles. Let
stand over night, drain once more,
boil juice until thick and again pour
over the pickles.
Pepper Hash -15 green peppers,
red peppers and large white onions,
lee c. super, 2% tbsp, salt, 1 pt.
The Ghost
HY CLARI*WE MEII,Y,
PART I.. trees carolled. shrilly it was a mostand
The bright sunlight of an April prAs ihe2 came beck to theuringe table, Otu
Book
morning fell through the tali, haat began serving breakfast, All the
• d' 1 ,
Wombold'a breakfast table, placed settled over Mr. Wambold that he en -
curtained windows d' •
neeacross Mr. same a preoceupetion so profound.
just in front of the friendly recess of tirely neglected both the food nhd
the bay window. Outside a rose gar-, Mies Armitage's effortsat converse-
den filjed the air with puffs of per -(tion, Presently he arose, and leaving
fume .that drifted lazily through the, the volume of Mneierlinek behind,
half -raised nosh. The table was set•sauntered out into the garden.
for two, Mr. Wambold having lately Ev,.ih the full aids of sunlight in
formed the practice of breakfasting which Mr, Wombold stood submerged
with his secretary, Miss Armitage. At failed to warm him, or to irradtate
the master's place lay the morning the Berk flood of recollections that
papers neatly folded by Otu, his man-
servant.
The room was empty 'as Mr. Wom-
bold entered. Ile was a tall man whom
accumulated years had bowed, Iean
.4410111111114 ii1111r111111111111111
swept in upon him from a remote lea
past, It had been forty years since he
had seen that monogram. Time and,
success, wealth and long undisturbed!
security ' had given to his censeof
ng, with the ties essness of age, with safety a complete finality, It • had
scant whit hair tri high,
s o a r ngtng a ear- taken him some moments even to re-
row forehead. Deep -sot eyes full of member what the thing was
absent brooding, angular features Now, In miniature imposed by the
touched upon their bony prominences perspective of years, as if he looked
with a pinkish pallor, a mobile mouth through a reversed telescope, he saw
withered by time, all served to fix, the again the quaint, Windle streets of
impression of a recluse who had not the old New England village, with
so much renounced the world as wear- their shading elms, their board side-
led of it. He was dressed with caro, walks their austere, peak -roofed
even daintiness, yet . moved with a dwellings. He saw the little shop
large, slow gesture as if accustomed under its wooden awning, where two
and indifferent to the niceties of at-
youngtire. In his hand he held a volume, men, playfellows and school-
of Maeterlinck his covduxne mates, had bravely started their first
f me recent kexperiments in studies psychic bueiness venture as partners, It seem-,
P y ed to him he could still smell, above
research, which he intended to peruse the odor of the roses, the strange,,
in the garden after breakfast. mingled aromas of that dingy interior -
Mr. Wombold seated himself at the —spices from the tropics, salt fish.
table laid the volume of Maeterlinck P
M star] eek
that carr
vinegar, ted
n r fewgrainsca the
sees.of the ocean,
eg , Ytang
to one
Cover peppers and onions with boil -side, and lifted the newspapers, he the pungent amen new vinegar, red
P PPglancing lily lastat the o e he not. ed e- clean perfume of .linens and"
ing water and let stand 10 minutes. aid aside the one, he noticed be- calicos:
Drain, add remaining ingredients, neath it a small square of cardboard. It head been a store of general me• -
let come to a boil and put into glass It was of the shape, size and texture chandise, and he had been one of its
jars, of the ordinary business card, and proud proprietors. His mane had not
Brine for Pickling—Four ounces bore in its centre a curious monogram been Wombold then. The firm's ini-
salt to one quart water gives a brine composed of the letter H and F. No- rials had been fashioned into a:mono-
"in which an egg will float," To this, thMrg elye app drson tat it, at first,
which had come to stand as its
one-fourth ounce salt must be added gazeddistinctive emblem—almost, one might
ones a week far four or six weeks with the same abstraction and indif- say, its trade -mark. It appeared on
,creeps with which he had handled the its stationery, in its advertising, on
if the cucumbers are expected to keep newspapers; but the card, as if by the sign over the door. It eves one of
Soaking takes the
place of rubbing—
JUST by soaking the clothes in the suds
of this new soap,dirt is gently loosened
and dissolved.
Even the dirt that is ground in• at neck-
bands and cuff -edges yields to a light'
rubbing with dry Rinso. Not a thread
is weakened. The mild Rinso suds work
thoroughly through and through the
clothes without injury to a single fabric.
Rinso is rrtade by the makers of Lux. For the family
wash it is as wonderful as Lux is for fine things.
All grocers and department stores sell Rinso.
in it all winter. Or start the brine some subtle and impelling attraction many things of which the young
with six to eight ounces salt. To pre held his gaze until it graduallfocus-i partners had been so proud—"Ii" and
maaerneummeascezereasemnassolase
Yes, forty years had passed since
LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO
vent formation of mould, cover the a rn alert consciousness. The color "F" combined within a circle.
left is face, which sank lel
h
brine with melted paraffin, or remove e to the sickly
the cucumbers to fruit jars to ex-
clude the air, of air as if he was regaining his
A moment later, a stertorous intake
breath by a determined muscular ef-
TO FILL THE CRACKS.
p excellent
ing cracks in drawers, bins or any, of an electric calball setthe wain -
g e. to answered the,sums, but they had also accumulated
fort, sent the blood surging back Into
Melted araffin is for fill- his neck and face. He rose trembl-
ingly'
an violently presseda button
kind of container that has a crevice scotin at hissr
that would be better filled.
After filling the crack let paraffin.
set, then shave off smooth.
hole cloves.
Into this put dean, dry cucumbers, RIGHT PANTRY SHELVES,
day by day, stirring thoroughly from
the bottom each time a new supply is
added. If the whole quantity is added
at once, stir daily for three weeks.
Other desirable additions for flavor
are 1 bay leaf and 1 oz. cassia buds
or stick cinnamon. According to
taste all spices except mustard may
be omitted.
d 0
he had seen it,
! But for all their pride and all their The Game of Life.
gay young confidante, the firm of Hart
& Frazier had not prospered. It was
, hard to say what had been the matter,
;except that they were too eager, too
confident, too daring. They had done
:.much business, they had handled large
summons. I heavy debts. In the end when failure
Who has been in here?" Mr, Worn -1 became inevitable, they had agreed
bold demanded, glaring at the Jap -'to turn all their assets into.. cash and
anew:
„ pay their creditors pro rata, as much
None, sir."as possible. Then they would work
together, us common laborers if need
be, td settle the balance.
Part of this program, the liquida-,
tion of the assets, had been carried
out. Then, one night, Frazier lad
Coffee tins, jam jars, nut boxes^and Where have you been?
other containers that collect in every "I am attending the preparing
you frit at k
household may be transformed into an Did yyou hen,
put those enewspapers
attractive set of kitchen containers here?"
that will give the pantry shelves a "yes, sir," disappeared, and with him had gone defeat,
very smart appearance, by painting "Where did that come from?" all of the firm's money. Hart was left
them all one neutral color, and then He pointed to the card, but did not to face utter ruin alone. If you stick to the rules of tjie game,
gluing to the front of each container touch it. Otu examined it, and shook Under another namne, with the stolen my friend,
It's a Wonderful game if you play it
right,
If you use every one of your team-
mates white,
If you never cheat and are fair and
square
And learn the lesson of bear and for-
bear;
If you meet with a -failure now •and
then,
To never give up but to try it again,
And through it all keep smiling and
sweet,
Though looking straight in the face of
a figure cat from the same cretonne his head.
money as his capital, and with the
Best Ever Pickles—Drain salted cu- that is used in the kitchen window'., "I net see it" he said. "I dean' experience gained from the failure, in
cumber from their brine, cover with curtains or from wall paper. know. ^ a the generous and fruitful West, for -
cold culd water ami allow to freshen for "Where is Miss Armitage. tune had come to hint, By'
If the cretonne is figured it should "She walk out some El time, Back of will, later by habit, ad at lasts in:
24 hours. Drain, put into a kettle, be cut at the very edge of the design; ver' soon, I guess," ver truth he had forgotten cover itI bri b b l y 1
You're sure of a victory In the end.
While some are unfair, be it said to
their shame,
If you play it right, it's a wonderful
game.
wi r vinegar, ng tote ai then a thin line of the best liquid Mr. Wombold turned from him with And now, like u strange blast of air; —Ida M. Thomas In "Success."
Mg point drain again and throw the glue is placed around its outer edge a growl that sent the Japanese scur- blown out of some cavernous depth
vinegar away. Weigh encumbers and and allowed to stand for a few mo -lying out of the room. He took up of time, had come this monogram. I Too True, Alas, 100 Truol
for every 10 lbs. use: Si lbs. sugar, ments. The glue should then be spread the card very gingerly in the fingers 'Well , reflected the old man, the yi The fancily was discussing t
3 onions, ?4 oz, each whole mace, evenly and the design pressed in place.; of one hand and turned it over. The would have a merry aims trying to stallation of the new minister ,that """" """
cloves allspice, 2 three-inch sticks Let the glue dry thoroughly, then, seaseneran
cardrstoethe sbuffet, whee re carried the
theory of b ackmail. There was comes
morning. -Jimmie took account of in
cinnamon, e. oz. each tumeric, Popper, shellac. ppt�'.Elitr,l,.
mustard, ginger, r/s c, horseradish Cold -clean jars and similar con 1bH laid t th t d light- e
(grated orground),2aRand 1
.,I�i qts, vinegar. � 2sr.,,-.,..,
Slice onions, crack spices (in meat
grinder or in a mortar), mix tumeric,
mustard, ginger and pepper to a
smooth paste with vinegar. Put all
of the sugar and half of the spices
(tied up in cheese cloth) in a kettle
with the vinegar. Put cucumbers,
onions and remaining spices In a
crock in alternate layers. When vine-
gar has boiled 10 minutes add the
paste and pour over the cucumbers.
Cover closely. Ready in a few days.
Chunk Pickles --Soak whole table -
size cucumbers three days, in brine
made by dissolving 2 cups salt in 1
gal. cold water. Drain. Then soak
three days in fresh water. Drain
again, cut into chunks and simmer 2
hours in weak vinegar with 1 tbsp.
powdered alum added, covering, if
possible, with grape leaves or green
` Quite Willing.
An American -visitor to London
stopped to purchase a paper from a
small news -boy, "If I were over in
America," he said, "I should have to
pay double the price of this paper."
"Well, guv'nor, replied Lite urchin
cheerfully, "yer can pay me double 1f
it'll make yer feel at.'ome.",
The Whole Family,
Sunt y -school teacher•—"And you
have no brothers and slsterp?"
Little Marie—"No, ma'am, I'm all
the children we've got."
The conditions of conquest are al-
ways easy. We have but to toil awhile,
endure awhile, believe always, and
never turn back.
Beans and Peas
Send Samples—State Quantities
Morrow & Co., 39 Front St, E.
Phone: Main 1738, Toronto, Ont.
•
onze cigar balder and ash -tray, tiling human, material, normal, and stall,'
He as i on a ray, and, i mid -..t andable about it. Flesh and "Daddy," he said, "does it mean put-
tainers treated in this way will being a match, held the burning wood to blood men did such things, and could ting a minister in a stall and feeding BETTER
useful for the bathroom shelf. Inter -'the cardboard till it was wholly con be dealt with in the flesh. He Was him?" THAN
esting effects may also be obtained by sumed. Then he left the room for not too old to do battle with opponents "No, ,my son," the father replied so•
covering the containers with oilcloth,: the lavatory, where he washed his who could be seen and felt and point-' berly, "It means hitching,him to a EVER
gluing this fast to the jars and cans. ;handa. When he returned, Miss Arm- ed out. They merely roused his Cour-''church and asking him to haul it"
itage was in her 1 t th t bl i
gifts for the housewife. ling. Wombold asked, omitting any, consider, though it was that, he knew,' Edward" Fox Wire.
• preliminary greeting 1 which made the heat f tl
STARCH FOR RAG RUGS. FOX WIRE IN
late Do you know " ' d old Barky who had formerly been
in hie employ, observed that the color•
ed man wore a most unhappy expres-
sion,
"Wifat's. the matter, Uncle emli7"
asked the visitor. -
"Ise }est been done outer' some
money, suh; was the reply "Had a
terrible misery. in may toof, an' went
to a dentist an' got it gelled, an' he
charged me a dollah—a. whole dollahl"
Some motor -car drivers aro inclined
to divide the public into two classes,
'the quick and the dead."—Lord Hew -
art, Lord Chief Justice,
a ter every meal
Cleanses wionth and
teeth and aide digestion.
Relieves that over-
eaten feeling and acid
mouth,
Its l -a -s -t -l -n -g flavor
satisfies the craving for
sweets.
Wrigley's Is double
Wilkie in the benefit and
pleasure it provides.
Sealed in its Purity
Package.
.,1'151.._.
f OX \i-fRL'
p ace n e a e. age and stimulated his energies.
Whole sets of jars and bottles so cov „ That la the secret of the won -
Has anyone called here this morn The other alternative he refused to MIruSrd'a Liniment Heals outs. derful demand for "Prince
eyed and decorated will make welcome �,,,
ea o to sun so His Money's Worth.
"No one that I know of." oddly ineffectual. Ile had dabbled too An Atlanta man, visiting the shop of
"I found a—a business card by my' much in the preternatural and had
MOST DEPENDABLE
If you wish your small washable P Y how it got there? cultivated too far a mystical attitude an
rag rugs to remain flat, stay clean' Miss Armitage drew her pretty of mind, to be oblivious to the occult
longer and wash easter, put them
brows into a slight frown of perplex- implications of the incident. Such
attyl ideas, he realized, grew an one fm -
I athrough a thin starch water after theim sure I couldn't tell you,, she perceptibly.
last rinsing, and hang along one edge, said. "I went out to mail the letters Ile was sorry now that Miss Arnii-f
from the line, using several pins to'yyou dictated yesterday evening. There tags had pointed his attention in the
keep that edge straight. ihas been no one here that I know of." direction of spiritualism and rsyehic
Mr. Wombold stepped into the re- phenomena, though when the eagges-
THE BEND IN THE ROAD, icess of the bay window and looked out tion was made, in the period of ennui
'over the rose garden. The sun was following his retirement from busi
"Wait till the bend in the road, my
dear,"
Grandmother'd say, and our ayes
would peer
Down the road, with its saffron duet
Stretching ribbon-like. Fair things
must
Be awaiting us, well we knew:
Maybe a glad little brook, a view
Of jewel weeds or a thatch of fern,
Something sweet when we mads the
turn(
Grandmother's long since taken her
way
Up to the region of fadeless day.
'Yet even now when my heart grows
sad,
And spring itself cannot make me
glad,
Her voice comes back with its old time
cheer;
"Wait till the bend in the road, my
dear l"
And so 1 do. And the wayside dust
Seems less blighting; some dear thing
must
Ile awaiting ine joy to lend
Just assoon as I make the bond!
--Bertha Gernaaux'Woods.
AN EASY WINDOW CLEANER:
Take a quart bottle; into this . put
two ounces of finely pulverized whit-
ing, two ounces of denatured alcohol,
warm; the flowers glistened with and-' Hess he had welcomed it rather:
I It'was several days later that Mr.'
i Wombold, returning from an after -
two ounces of liquid ammonia and two noon motor ride, found Miss Armitage
ounces of spirits of turpentine. Fill at her desk in
'the
life; a linnet in one of the rose gladly.
THE WORLD''
Shipments received regularly
tram our Mills la England.
Write or wire for samples and 1
latest Price List.
R. T; HOLMAN, Limited,
Summerside, P.E.111
Sales Agents for Ontario
W, H. C. Ruthven J. 1VI, McGillivrayPrineville
Alliston
the library fingering a 551 .'y r o' q •- {
the bottle with water. Shake beforesignificantstip of cardboard. ; 111 titny "�
using. 1 "A ratan called to see you while you
When ready to clean the window,; were out, said the secretary,
sponge with warm, clean water to re -
I Mr. Wombold glanced at the card
move the surface dirt, gettingwell the held out, but made e move to
e -
take it, He received the announc�-
into the camera. Moisten a soft,'mentwithout any visible sigh of alto -
clean cloth with the solution in the tion, merely seating himself heavily
quart bottle. Apply to the window and for a moment staring in silence
and allow to dry. Have ready a soft, :it the wall,
be ontinued•
clean cloth or chamois skin and rub', (Po c )
off the powdery mixture which coats' Map. of The Pas Mineral Area.
the window. Use a brisk, circular
motion, and the glaas will be brit-' A map of The Pas mineral arca has
tient and will remain clean a long' hist been issued by the Topographical
time, Survey of Car... 7a, taking in a district
180 miles eel,: ,Ind 130 miles north
and south, the srutliern edge of.whleh
Is about twontr-live miles north of
The Pas, It Is compiled from surveys
made by the above organization and
by the Geological Survey of Canada
and presents all available geographical
informtlon that may be shown on the
reale used, that. of one inch to six
WilTheles,
inert ntay be nbteined upon ap-
plieation to the Topographical Survey,
Departtnent of the Interior, Ottawa,
For °ore Foe£—N11nArdel Liniment.
NURSES
The Toronto Hns5ne1 tar lneurabies, is
affiliation wllh eallama and Allied Hoaltatl,
New York 0115, offers a three wars' Centre*
ret Training to young women, having M.
required edugation, and desirous el beaominp
ddrsee. This Hospital hes adopted 1h, 001.
Nato IMO,. The pup111; 7,0,1,. uniforms of.
oha. aahool, a phantkiy an0wanee and irareeing'
05001,, tofind from New Work. par 1,5118
(01,0 natlod apply lb the auparintaodent
" ,00(12 No. 39-'24.
BEAUTIFY IT WITH
"DIAMOND DYES"
Perfect hone lye
ing and tinting is :
guaranteed with Dia
mend Dyes. Iwo, dip ;
in cold water la tint;
eft, delicate shades,
or boll to dye rich, 1
permanent color s, 1
Each lb -cent package •
contains directions
so simple any wa-
men can dye or tint'
lingerie, Milts, rib•
bole, skirts, watts, dresses, coats,
stockings, sweaters, draperies, torar-
inge, hangings, everything new. 1
Iliry "Diamond Dyes"—no other klnl
—and tell your druggist whether the. ai
materiel you with to color is wool nr
Bilk, or whether it is linen, cotton. or
I mixed goods.
Qi1 fll
Ke1seyIea'.Bn
is ht Heating
The Kelsey warm airgen•
orator will heat every
room in your house. it ie
easy to operate and costs
less for fuel than any
other heating method.
Seats both small and ladle
houses with equal satisfaction
WRITS roe PARTIcui.ARs
CANADA ream DRIES &CORAINe9.
t,,:,lre0
JA7'(SS SNOT PLANT
611ecKVItts 04T.
HUNGARIANS IN
CANADA
By Merle 0. ]Mail, wiixuiPe$,
One of the least valuable eontrli n•
tions to .the setUemeat of Oenada's
Prnirio Provinoes during tiro past 34
veal's lies taken rho (01115 of 8 gradual
influx of immigrants from Hungary, a
country which trains Ito revel inhabit•
ant to stress the importance of mixed
farming, getting the best .out of small
locations, and to occupy all the spare
time provided by months not devoted
actually to tilling the lend, in the most
fruitful manner possible, following
verlone handicraft arts, for example,
Since 1894 there have been brought
to the Dominion same 42,060 Hungral-
ane, and of this number 98 per sent,.
went right to work on tate land, induct.
Mime capable farmers, Of the new•
comers, 40 per cent. took up their lo-
cations on Saskatchewan's plains,
where they are uow considered a very
real asset to the welfare and advance-
ment of the province. Tbey own and
control vest strips of land in some et
the most soeght•after districts of the
provtuce, among the largest I3ungari-
an'settlements being Punnchl, Hake
yawn, Stockholm, Melville and IEsther-
azy.
Following Mixed Farming Methods.
And not only do the Hungarians own
and control the laud, but they are add-
ing to its value from year to year, by
excellent care, and adaptation to
mixed farming as beet applied to this,
country. Individually they operate
from a quarter section of land to
q an up
as much as throe sections. Practical-
ly each one arrived in Canada with
little or no capital ether than that re-
quired by the immigration regulations,
or actually necessary to get them to
the scene of their present homes. In
duetry, courage and strength saw them
through, and Canada's good dark earth
was quick to respond to their oaten.
tion, rewarding them well for their
struggle.
In addition to the actual tilling of
the soil, spare hours have been turned
to splendid account, as, a visit to the+`e -"""''^'
permanent exhibit: of Hungarian
craftsmanship at St. Andrew's Fresh),
tartan College, Saskatoon, will con-
vince even the most sceptical. At-
tractive as well es useful articles are
there, including samples of weaving,
rug -making, fancy needle -work, ham-
mered brass and wood carving. VIsit,;,
ors to Saskatoon seldom miss the ex-
Isibit, as 1t is reputed to be-exeeptioa- e
ally fine.
Connected with St. Andrew's Coliege
at Saskatoon is ono of the most out.
stetting Hungarians in Western, Cana-
da In the person of Dr. Frank Hoffman,
misefoary for the Prasbytertan C'lmrclh,
whose headquarters are at the college:
Dr, Hoffman has eleven preaching sta-
tions
ta
tions in a circuit of 850 miles. These
"stations," as he rails them, are
Iinancod by the Presbyterian Church
in Canada. Dr, Hoffman visits every"
station between the let of May and
the leant of October. He travels bye sad-
dle tirely and otters is ohligeti to
camp out at night when he cannot get
to a convenient town or village before
darkness seta' in. In addition to lis
wurk as missionary, Dr.}Turfman is a
rest:lent piaster at Sst, . tann College,
where over one bun ilei Hungarian
students follow vitt st�s. to fit them for
profeasloriai and agrituitttral work,
Lured to ,Mexico but Caine Back.
lint not all tyro geli the. 30 years
,late the first Hungarians came to the
Western Prairies have these settlers
been contented "New Canadians,"
Two or three years ago it was rttotor-
ed that the United States and Mexico
ndelit prove more fruitful fields for
their labors. Great fortunes awaited
diose who would move from the
prairie west, it was stated by those
W110 set themselves up as authorities.
Credulous and eager to seize any such
golden opportunity as was described,
many of We Hungarians who Thad al-
ready become well started in Sae
katchewan sold their farms with what
possessions they could' not take with
them and Joiner the trek of foreigners
from the went who were making their
way south across the border,
However, the promised, fields were
prickly with cactus and dot flowing
with milk and honey es had been re.
presented. The wonderful fortunes
were not forthcoming as the farmers
had been led to believe, The result
wes Ihat Canada was once more to
hare an influx of Hungarians, but this
Untie net from Europe. They were
just as "broke" as when they origin,
ally arrived in the West, in palet of
worldly poesesslons, but iniinitelY
^eager in the experience which taught
those who had remained in Canada as
well as arose who had gond south, that
thee Dominion and her prairies, after
all, offered the hest chances to the
hardy industrious farmer who was
willing to work.
II Coal and Water -Power,
A recent study of the total coal con-
sumption for all purposes hs the
United States and Canada, taking the.
average over the past five years, shown
' that the average real consumption per
capita is 20 per cent, lees is Canada
than in the United States, Consider.
usg thee the climate of Canada is cold.
, er than the average of the United
States the apposlte result might be ex
'meted and analeels eltows that this
result 18 mainly due to the saving of
1 coal in induatrlo:i by water -power de.
vetopmeut, The waterpower develop•
Plant in Canada is now 350 h.p. Dor
1,000 of populationagalnst 25 h,p.
In the United lttatedr;
4
k: