... had
penetrated along the easy pathway of the plains.
South of the great granaries of North America and Eurasia the plains are broken, but
occur again in the Orinoco region of South America ... portions of North America, Europe, and Asia. A
second side is the Pacific Ocean with the great ridge of the two Americas on one hand
and Asia and Australia on th...
... Canada alone, but in reality a number of the tribes of
the plains, like the well-known Apaches, as well as the Hupas of California and the Navahos, belong to the
Athapascans. In Canada, the Athapascans ... into
a passage leading to China. But after the discovery of the North Pacific ocean and Bering Strait the idea that
America was part of Asia, that the...
... tempting was the foreign war trade, that a fleet of them was sent across the Atlantic
until the American Government barred them from the war zone as too easy a prey for
submarine attack. They therefore ... had
served in armed merchantmen and who in times of nominal peace had fought the
marauders of Europe or whipped the corsairs of Barbary in the Strait of Gibr...
... available the wonderful riches of the inland
country, across the Appalachian barrier and around the Great Lakes, into which American pioneers had
already made their way.
Those immemorial pathways, ... the
Pennsylvania hills, the epic of the ore, the epic of the railroad, the epic of the great city; and, in general, the
subjugation of a continental wildernes...
... to the railroad magnate; quite naturally, therefore, the
farmers attempted to use their new organizations as a means of eliminating the one and controlling the other.
As in the parallel case of ... expected,
because in most of the States they had to be brought on the initiative of the injured shipper, and many shippers
feared to incur the animosity of the railr...
... because 'It will please your whole army, as it shows them the way to gain by
their gallantry the hearts and affections of the Ladys.' And even a city of the 'Great Awakening,' ... hogshead of the best Jamaica rum for the garrison of the Royal Battery, won him a
great deal of goodwill, in spite of the fact that his 'Admiral's eighth...
... towns, and many indentured servants. A few were
of the aristocracy, such as Lady Arabella Johnson, daughter of the Earl of Lincoln, Sir Richard Saltonstall,
Lady Deborah Moody, members of the Harlakenden ... the
Governor-General of Acadia or Nova Scotia as lieutenant of the region east of the St. Croix, and another,
Charles de Menou, Sieur d'Aulnay-Charnisé, a...
... hundred miles east and west. This is the Great Slave Lake; Hearne
speaks of it as Athaspuscow Lake. The latter name is the same as that now given to another lake (Athabaska
of Canadian maps) the ... dread at the great waves of the open ocean. All that Franklin saw of the
Arctic coast encouraged his belief that the American continent is separated by stretches of sea...
...
Senate. A week later the Senate ratified the nomination, and on the 4th of February
Marshall accepted the appointment. The task despaired of by Jay and abandoned by
Ellsworth was at last in capable ... Marshall was thrown into occasional
contact, and that was his father's patron and patron saint, Washington. The appeal
made to the lad's imagination by the...
... Maclay as a lawyer's wrangle. The bill was put into shape by the Senate,
and reached the House toward the close of the session when the struggle over the site
of the national capital was ... regarded as the corner-stone of American public
credit, excites the admiration of the reader by the clearness of its analysis, the cogency
of its argument, a...