. Review of reviews and world's work. A FARMSTEAD NEAR CRYSTAL CITY, MANITOBA, WESTERN CANADA IN 1904. 581. PLOWING NEAR MYRTLE, MANITOBA. 2,985 : France and Belgium, 2,392 ; Russia andFinland, 2,806 ; Scandinavia, 4,208, and 13,470came from various other nations. And of thispopulation so highly desirable at least 60 percent, goes on to the farms. While the hun-dreds of thousands that swarm to our shoresseek the great cities, for the most part the bulk1 ;imulas immigrants speed from the Atlanticseaboard straight across the continent to therich prairies that but await their Midas touchto turn t


. Review of reviews and world's work. A FARMSTEAD NEAR CRYSTAL CITY, MANITOBA, WESTERN CANADA IN 1904. 581. PLOWING NEAR MYRTLE, MANITOBA. 2,985 : France and Belgium, 2,392 ; Russia andFinland, 2,806 ; Scandinavia, 4,208, and 13,470came from various other nations. And of thispopulation so highly desirable at least 60 percent, goes on to the farms. While the hun-dreds of thousands that swarm to our shoresseek the great cities, for the most part the bulk1 ;imulas immigrants speed from the Atlanticseaboard straight across the continent to therich prairies that but await their Midas touchto turn to golden grain. WHY THE AMERICANS MOVE. Practically all of the American immigrants findtheir homes in the cities, villages, and spaciousfarms of the west. As a considerable portionof the British immigration lodges in easternCanada, the American invasion looms relativelylarger in the west than it is, compared with thewhole human influx into Canada. Why dothese Americans, the very cream of the farmingpopulation of the wealthy American west, seekhomes in a foreign country? Briefly, the an-swer is to be fo


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1890