| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford - 1832 - 650 pages
...shores of the Atlantic, the confines of the lakes, and the banks of the Mississippi, with a certainty that they can dispose of their own produce, and supply...themselves with every article they require. It is here, too, that strangers and travellers congregate, as the place • of departure to every part of the world,... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth - 1832 - 626 pages
...of the lakes, and the banks of the Mississippi, with a certainty that they can dispose of theirown produce, and supply themselves with every article they require. It is here, too, that strangers and travellers congregate, as the place of departure to every part of the world,... | |
| Encyclopaedia Americana - 1832 - 620 pages
...of the lakes, and the batiks of the Mississippi, with a certainty that they can dispose of theirown produce, and supply themselves with every article they require. It is here, too, that strangers and travellers congregate, as the place of departure to every part of the world,... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth - 1835 - 620 pages
...shores of the Atlantic, the' confines of the lakes, and the banks of the Mississippi, with a certainty that they can dispose of their own produce, and supply...themselves with every article they require. It is here, too, that strangers and travellers congregate, as the place of departure to every part of the world,... | |
| Jesse Olney - 1841 - 334 pages
...banks of the Mississippi, with a certainty that iliey can dispose cf their awn produce, and lupply themselves with every article they require. It is...New York, on the west end of Long Island, has grown witiiin a few years' to an important city. It ia rapidly increasing in population and trade. Its situation... | |
| Jesse Olney - 1844 - 306 pages
...shores of the Atlantic, the confines of the lakes, and the banks of the Mississippi, with a certainty that they can dispose of their own produce, and supply...central point for the commerce of the United States. \ Hall. Brooklyn, directly opposite to New York, on the west end of Long Island, has grown within a... | |
| Dictionary - 1844 - 412 pages
...shores of the Atlantic., the confines of the lakes, and the banks of the Mississippi, with a certainty that they can dispose of their own produce, and supply...themselves with every article they require. It is here, too, that strangers and travellers congregate, as the plane of departure to «very-part of the world,... | |
| Jesse Olney - 1849 - 334 pages
...shores of the Atlantic, the confines of the lakes, and the banks of the Mississippi, with a certainty that they can dispose of their own produce, and supply themselves with every article they require. It IB here that strangers and travellers assemble as the place of departure to every part of the world.... | |
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