Minnesota; Its Character and Climate
Minnesota; Its Character and Climate
Likewise Sketches of Other Resorts Favorable to Invalids
Together with Copious Notes on Health; Also: Hints to Tourists and Emigrants.
Book Excerpt
l of their old ones. On the contrary, the general tendency is to
drop southward, desiring to escape as much as may be the protracted cold
of winter; forgetting, or never knowing, that the isothermal lines have
a general northwest direction as they cross the continent. Many, also,
as before mentioned, who seek solely a fertile soil, or those who wish
to engage in a purely pastoral life (where the open and unreclaimed
country is so favorable), move, as a rule, to points south of a due west
course; thus leaving the more northern latitudes to such only as have an
eye for them on account of their varied attractions, and who are quite
willing to exchange a few dollars of extra income for a few pounds of
extra flesh, and who count health as first-rate capital stock and the
full equivalent of any other kind which a settler can possess.
Notwithstanding this general tendency of things, we believe the net increase in both population and wealth, for the last decade, to be relatively as great in the State of Minnesota
Editor's choice
(view all)Popular books in Travel, Health, History
Readers reviews
0.0
LoginSign up
Be the first to review this book