| Samuel Orchart Beeton - Commerce - 1873 - 304 pages
...transported for 1,050 paces. This is only separated from the second Portage de Cerise by a mud-pond (where there is plenty of water lilies), of a quarter of a mile m length ; and this is again separated by a similar pond, from the last Portage de Cerise, which is... | |
| Samuel Orchart Beeton - 1875 - 648 pages
...transported for 1,050 paces. This is only separated from the second Portage de Cerise by a mud-pond (where there is plenty of water lilies), of a quarter of...enter on the Mountain Lake, running north-west by west six miles long, and about two miles in its greatest breadth. In the centre of this lake, and to the... | |
| Minnesota - 1898 - 622 pages
...thousand and fifty paces. This is only separated from the second Portage de Cerise by a mud pond (where there is plenty of water lilies), of a quarter of...similar pond from the last Portage de Cerise, which is four hundred and ten paces. Here the same operation is to be performed for three hundred and eighty... | |
| Minnesota - 1898 - 618 pages
...separated from the second Portage de Cerise by a mud pond (where there is plenty of water liliee), of a quarter of a mile in length; and this is again...similar pond from the last Portage de Cerise, which is four hundred and ten paces. Here the same operation is to be performed for three hundred and eighty... | |
| Alexander Mackenzie - Explorers - 1902 - 378 pages
...thousand and fifty paces. This is only separated from the second Portage de Cerise, by a mud-pond (where there is plenty of water lilies), of a quarter of...similar pond, from the last Portage de Cerise, which is four hundred and ten paces. Here the same operation is to be performed for three hundred and eighty... | |
| Minnesota - 1908 - 416 pages
...four hundred and ten paces. Here the same operation is to be performed for three hundred and eighty paces. They next enter on the Mountain Lake, running North-West by West, six miles long, and about two miles in its greatest breadth. In the centre of this lake, and to the... | |
| Alexander Mackenzie - Algonquian languages - 1927 - 544 pages
...thousand and fifty paces. This is only separated from the second Portage de Cerise, by a mud-pond (where there is plenty of water lilies) of a quarter of a...similar pond, from the last Portage de Cerise, which is four hundred and ten paces. Here the same operation is to be performed for three hundred and eighty... | |
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