Minnesota and the Far WestW. Blackwood and Sons, 1855 - 306 sider Oliphant acted as secretary to Lord Elgin during the negotiation at Washington of the reciprocity treaty with Canada. He then accompanied Lord Elgin to Quebec. There he was appointed superintendent of Indian affairsE, and made a journey to Lake Superior and back by the Mississippi to Chicago. |
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Side 2
... population of those farther west - and be better able to appreciate a mushroom city on the Mississippi after visiting a seaport on the Atlantic . It is only natural that Americans should imagine that foreigners visiting their country ...
... population of those farther west - and be better able to appreciate a mushroom city on the Mississippi after visiting a seaport on the Atlantic . It is only natural that Americans should imagine that foreigners visiting their country ...
Side 5
... population within the last fifteen years , and now contains about twenty- five thousand inhabitants . After " the stranger " has followed the advice of the newspaper , and been to inspect the shipping , and the instincts of his own ...
... population within the last fifteen years , and now contains about twenty- five thousand inhabitants . After " the stranger " has followed the advice of the newspaper , and been to inspect the shipping , and the instincts of his own ...
Side 6
... the interior . Indeed these results are no longer matter of specu- lation . Already the magic influence of steam com- munication has made itself felt . The population ACROSS THE BORDER . 7 inhabiting a hundred and fifty.
... the interior . Indeed these results are no longer matter of specu- lation . Already the magic influence of steam com- munication has made itself felt . The population ACROSS THE BORDER . 7 inhabiting a hundred and fifty.
Side 21
... population , has only served to bring out more strongly the favourable points in each , and to create a society of a most agreeable description . The lower town is chiefly devoted to business and the lumber trade , the upper to pleasure ...
... population , has only served to bring out more strongly the favourable points in each , and to create a society of a most agreeable description . The lower town is chiefly devoted to business and the lumber trade , the upper to pleasure ...
Side 25
... population of simple French habitans , whose whole appearance and costume will transport him in imagination to a rural district in that country from which their ancestors sprung ; for the descendants of the Norman émigrés have 26 THE ...
... population of simple French habitans , whose whole appearance and costume will transport him in imagination to a rural district in that country from which their ancestors sprung ; for the descendants of the Norman émigrés have 26 THE ...
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acres afford American arrived bank bark canoe Bonaquum Canadian canoe character Chippeway civilisation cliffs copper cross deep distance dollars emigrant excitement experience favourable Fêve fish Fond du Lac forest formed Georgian Bay Grand Trunk Railway harbour hundred feet Indian village inhabitants interest islands journey Keewenaw Lake Huron Lake Simcoe Lake Superior land looked ment miles mineral Minnesota Mississippi navigable neighbourhood Orillia ourselves paddled party passed population portage prairie present prospect prosperity province Quebec Quintè railway rapid rapidly reached render river rock round saloon Sandy Lake Saugeen Sault Sault Ste scarcely scenery settlers shore of Lake side singular Sioux situated St Anthony St Lawrence St Louis St Paul steamer stream territory timber tion Toronto town traboggin trade trees tribe turn Upper Canada Victoria Bridge voyage voyageurs waggon West western wigwams wild Wisconsin wood Yankee yards
Populære avsnitt
Side 245 - The proceeds of all lands that have been, or may hereafter be, granted by the United States to the State for the support of a university, shall be and remain a perpetual fund, to be called "The University Fund...
Side 309 - There is no map in this noble Atlas upon which we might not be tempted to write largely. Almost every one suggests a volume of reflection, and suggests it by presenting, in a few hours, accurate truths which it would be the labour of a volume to enforce in words, and by imprinting them, at the name time, upon the memory with such distinctness that their outlines are not likely afterwards to be effaced. The