| George Wesley Atkinson - 1876 - 366 Seiten
...tinge to the brine and salt. " This Kanawha salt soon acquired a reputatitih for its strong, pungent taste, and its superior qualities for curing meat,...reddish color, came to associate the two in their mind, in the relation of cause and effect, and orders used to come from far and near for some of 'that... | |
| 1904 - 654 Seiten
...dipped the brine with a bucket and swape, as it oozed and seeped through the sands below. In this crude rough and ready way, Brooks managed to make about...Almost the only mode of transporting salt beyond the neighborhood in those early days was by pack horses, on the primitive, back-woods pack-saddle. So much... | |
| Richard Urquhart Goode - 1899 - 426 Seiten
...reddish tinge to the brine and salt. This Kanawha salt soon acquired a reputation for its strong, pungent taste, and its superior qualities for curing meat,...Almost the only mode of transporting salt beyond the neighborhood in those early days was by pack.horses, on the primitive, back.woods pack-saddle. So much... | |
| West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey - 1899 - 424 Seiten
...reddish tinge to the brine and salt. This Kanawha salt soon acquired a reputation for its strong, pungent taste, and its superior qualities for curing meat,...Almost the only mode of transporting salt beyond the neighborhood in those early days was by pack-horses, on the primitive, back-woods pack-saddle. So much... | |
| Israel Charles White - 1904 - 652 Seiten
...now coming from the many thrifty settlements throughout the Ohio Valley. During the elder Ituffner's life, however, he had leased to one Elisha Brooks...Almost the only mode of transporting salt beyond the neighborhood in those early days was by pack horses, on the primitive, back-woods pack-saddle. So much... | |
| West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey - 1904 - 676 Seiten
...dipped the brine with a bucket and swape, as it oozed and seeped through the sands below. In this crude rough and ready way, Brooks managed to make about...Almost the only mode of transporting salt beyond the neighborhood in those early days was by pack horses, on the primitive, back-woods pack-saddle. So much... | |
| |