SI.OVAK WOMi-;N IN EVKRY-DAY COSTUME 



Photo by A. W. Cutler 



They may frequently be seen with immense packs of fodder on their backs for their cattle 

 and pigs. Often the babies are carried home in the pack 



NO CITY SO LITTLE REPRESENTS THE 

 PEOPLE 



Xo city in the world is so little rep- 

 resentative of the psyche of the nation. 



That Budapest may be great, may rank 

 with the other great capitals, Agram, 

 Debreczen, and Szeged must be starved. 

 The passion for Teutonic centralization, 



as foreign as anything could well be to 

 the true Magyar genius, has concentrated 

 in the city all the intellectual, political, 

 scientific, and artistic life of the nation. 

 A Manchester school of politics, an Edin- 

 burg school of medicine, a New England 

 school of literature, a Leyden school of 

 art would not be sufifered to exist. In 



360 



