. The Americana : a universal reference library, comprising the arts and sciences, literature, history, biography, geography, commerce, etc. of the world. ;the only woods, those along the streams,—altogether about 7,000 square miles of wood-land, with oak, elm, hickory, black walnut, ma-ple, cottonwood, linden, ash, box-elder, pine, fgMS8»Ss£§§g§§g T M ?i TPinncfra^o I £Briettyri Carm«H «€H )BBIE* ia&s ^ •vfcS t\ L^j A1* Y «2\t-oiEietsourg^s « - t /taaautt — P/L y 77. •Bembn [ V M Bl *m\3 glegro/o lt:,!Ur\it* T Lnnfcuiy ft ?r^/ W __^i i BlaiiV llJMwufu fmuutL, k H E rfB,Y ifiSLiU-^M- GUT H
. The Americana : a universal reference library, comprising the arts and sciences, literature, history, biography, geography, commerce, etc. of the world. ;the only woods, those along the streams,—altogether about 7,000 square miles of wood-land, with oak, elm, hickory, black walnut, ma-ple, cottonwood, linden, ash, box-elder, pine, fgMS8»Ss£§§g§§g T M ?i TPinncfra^o I £Briettyri Carm«H «€H )BBIE* ia&s ^ •vfcS t\ L^j A1* Y «2\t-oiEietsourg^s « - t /taaautt — P/L y 77. •Bembn [ V M Bl *m\3 glegro/o lt:,!Ur\it* T Lnnfcuiy ft ?r^/ W __^i i BlaiiV llJMwufu fmuutL, k H E rfB,Y ifiSLiU-^M- GUT H\R „„. ft*;* .?%&*; j»ifc K-?s!fip,J™ *U3*»*W ^h^u^-a-- ( ,,! •! >, Sffnl- 3T DHAS V, y s iiV i iv, &sf; A R R E ^ IP fBiddv-k> „FTGOMEBTj BftftCMfa />u»4o> ~£fag»r Tr/x/wjr^na^a Utov* I Jay ^~ OscaoU/v Q L a|R KE°r p Smyrni T-., -&r ZkntgUu\ f= PerrfcnS Copyri^W, 1901, 6y Tfte 9(Jt4»e^i;aw» t^nnjwny M //Cr£w CW* MmjvLJ. (1»5J ( Staaberrj^ Longitude- cc« CotncmU* I^tLacj ^^^ftTJ^^fYQfl tfo»flS«i. IOWA cedar, etc. [he eastern watershed, two third:of thr whole Stair, is drained to the Misippi by a serii oi treatns, nearly all ofwhich are parallel and have a southeastwardcourse, [he western part is drained t the \isouri by shorter and swifter rivers, Sowing firstsouthwest and then south as the Missouri turnseastward. The chief .Mississippi affluents are theUpper Iowa, the Turkey, the Maquoketa,the Wapsipinicon, the Iowa, and the Cedar(the main* stream, the Iowa,— 375 miles, itstributary,* the Cedar, 400 miles, the two form-ing the second largest interior system of theState and joining not far from the mouth of theIowa), the Skunk, and lastly the Des Moineswith its numerous affluents, far the greatest andcommercially the most important as well as thefinest scenically, rising in Minnesota and run-ning diagonally across the entire State in acourse of 550 miles, with a basin of 14,500square miles. The State
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidamericanauni, bookyear1903