Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 20 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 41681 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 84 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 Michigan 7 Mr. 5 Lake 4 State 4 Mrs. 3 man 3 long 3 Miss 3 Mackinac 3 Island 3 Indians 2 leave 2 illustration 2 flower 2 father 2 York 2 Virginia 2 New 2 Marjory 2 July 2 John 2 Huron 2 Detroit 2 Canada 2 CHAPTER 2 Aunt 2 August 2 Arbor 1 wool 1 wolf 1 time 1 summer 1 stem 1 specie 1 silver 1 sheep 1 seed 1 old 1 look 1 little 1 like 1 inch 1 high 1 french 1 farmer 1 change 1 brown 1 american 1 Woods 1 Winchester Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1807 flower 1800 man 1798 time 1710 leave 1227 day 901 way 889 year 863 p. 807 tree 792 house 779 place 732 thing 729 summer 701 inch 698 side 663 foot 649 dm 627 mile 625 water 585 head 562 mother 558 line 550 father 548 child 542 hand 533 wood 531 one 519 night 509 girl 508 home 507 eye 500 part 492 people 482 life 465 country 450 illustration 434 winter 434 leaf 418 road 417 face 412 spring 404 morning 403 point 401 forest 396 river 391 something 386 name 386 ground 384 land 380 brigade Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4464 _ 1113 Michigan 1073 Mr. 587 Lake 530 Mark 469 Mrs. 387 Indians 361 Mabel 330 Billy 314 L. 282 July 280 Island 276 Custer 272 Private 272 Black 262 Mackinaw 257 Father 251 Fig 251 Family 248 Detroit 243 Jean 243 Bettie 240 General 237 St. 235 New 234 Skip 233 Miss 230 Needham 221 June 219 Marjory 216 Louise 216 Alice 209 Point 200 August 195 Sixth 194 State 194 May 193 brown 193 Philip 193 John 189 Betty 188 Indian 184 Hilda 182 York 180 Rev. 180 Crane 179 States 177 Bay 176 Aunt 175 Sheridan Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8982 i 8182 it 7529 he 3971 you 3845 we 3533 they 3284 she 2442 him 2069 me 2008 them 1140 her 1041 us 412 himself 191 myself 189 herself 169 themselves 125 one 118 ''em 106 itself 74 ''s 52 yourself 37 ourselves 37 mine 28 em 21 yours 17 his 14 ours 13 thee 11 hers 8 theirs 6 thyself 5 you''re 5 yerself 5 ye 4 i''m 3 yourselves 3 hisself 3 d''you 2 oneself 2 delf 2 canadensis.= 1 your 1 yes,--jacob 1 yer 1 ya 1 what,"--she 1 we- 1 things-- 1 pe 1 one''ll Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 28594 be 9504 have 3763 do 3366 say 2809 go 2332 come 2206 see 1909 make 1656 take 1470 know 1389 get 1152 leave 1127 look 1111 think 1029 tell 1019 find 963 give 734 seem 610 hear 597 keep 586 want 535 call 516 stand 486 begin 478 run 475 feel 472 ask 465 live 463 bring 456 follow 447 put 433 let 433 become 428 grow 416 turn 415 pass 380 fall 367 try 352 start 345 move 338 sit 338 reach 327 use 321 appear 319 hold 316 kill 309 form 307 meet 304 send 303 bear Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 6326 not 2067 so 2065 long 1712 up 1658 very 1653 more 1586 little 1405 then 1309 out 1126 now 1073 other 1069 as 1061 high 1059 old 1050 good 934 well 928 first 914 many 912 only 903 great 901 much 892 just 889 white 836 there 821 back 779 down 769 never 763 small 748 about 742 large 709 away 687 here 658 most 642 too 632 few 622 young 585 all 570 again 558 soon 535 short 505 same 493 always 488 off 481 almost 480 last 474 right 470 nearly 467 less 467 in 464 even Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 233 good 200 least 184 most 56 great 54 large 46 Most 38 bad 29 fine 28 high 27 broad 24 near 22 old 19 young 17 early 16 dear 14 low 14 big 13 slight 13 rich 12 handsome 11 brave 9 late 9 eld 8 lowermost 7 wide 7 able 6 mean 6 long 6 hard 6 easy 6 common 5 safe 5 nice 5 heavy 4 wild 4 tiny 4 sweet 4 pure 4 lovely 4 j 4 grand 4 faint 4 dark 4 cheap 3 thick 3 simple 3 short 3 homely 3 healthy 3 e Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 474 most 46 well 27 least 4 broadest 2 widest 2 --4 1 youngest 1 worst 1 roughest 1 oftenest 1 near 1 least,--either 1 killest 1 hard 1 brigade"--the Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44637/44637-h/44637-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44637/44637-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 17 _ was _ 16 _ is _ 10 _ did _ 9 _ had _ 8 _ do n''t 7 _ do _ 7 _ have _ 6 _ know _ 5 _ did n''t 5 _ think _ 4 days gone by 4 leaves are full 4 leaves are half 4 leaves are nearly 4 mother was very 3 _ are _ 3 _ got _ 3 _ were _ 3 day was fair 3 man came in 3 mother did not 3 thing is certain 2 _ be too 2 _ go back 2 _ is not 2 _ said _ 2 _ see _ 2 _ thought _ 2 _ want _ 2 _ was n''t 2 children were very 2 day is not 2 day was clear 2 father came home 2 father did not 2 father had now 2 father had so 2 father thought best 2 father was very 2 flowers are very 2 house was again 2 house was almost 2 house was full 2 house was very 2 lake is low 2 leaves are not 2 man had never 2 man was afraid 2 man was so 2 men came in Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ am not satisfied 1 _ is not _ 1 _ is not uncommon 1 day is not distant 1 father is not so 1 fathers were not alone 1 feet making no sound 1 head is not so 1 houses are not so 1 man made no answer 1 men are not safe 1 men were not eager 1 michigan have no water 1 michigan is not quite 1 place thinking no one 1 places were not frequent 1 things had no one 1 years are not available 1 years gave no very A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 33679 author = Beal, W. J. (William James) title = Seeds of Michigan Weeds date = keywords = Europe; FAMILY; Fig; Flowers; Michigan; change; illustration; long; seed summary = (Sorrel, mustard, narrow-leaved plantain in seeds of red of grasses, clovers and alfalfas, besides large numbers of common weeds Seeds brown to black, more or less slightly granular, shining, flattened long; seeds dark brown to black, seeds reddish brown to lead color, slightly flattened, circular to seeds dark lead-color, flattened, short-kidney-shaped to circular with Flowers white; seeds reddish yellow to dark brown, somewhat flattened, flattened; seeds reddish brown, circular, broad oval, or rhombic in vertical ridge; seeds reddish brown, granular, usually broad-oval, about Br. Petals white; pods flat, nearly circular; seeds dull, dark brown, cream-color; pods long and narrow; seeds reddish yellow, oblong, about convex, nearly circular; seeds deep reddish brown, flat-oval or ovate, as long; seed reddish brown, smooth, oval, slightly flattened, 1.7-1.9 radiating ridges; seeds light brown, nearly smooth, flattened, 1.4-1.7 Flowers yellow; seeds reddish brown or darker, surface dull, long; seeds black to brown, flattened, with 6-10 id = 6988 author = Blackbird, Andrew J. title = History of the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan A Grammar of Their Language, and Personal and Family History of the Author date = keywords = Arbor; Chippewas; Croche; Great; Indians; Island; Little; Mackinac; Michigan; Ottawas; State; Traverse summary = C. Leach, of Traverse City, Mich., was Indian Agent, Mr. Blackbird was appointed United States Interpreter and continued in this Indians now existing in the State of Michigan, called the Ottawa and correct account of the Ottawa and Chippewa tribes of Indians, according Ottawa tribe of Indians at that time, and, according to our knowledge, called "Their Great Father." The reason that to-day we see no fullgrown trees standing along the coast of Arbor Croche, a mile or more in white man came to the Indian''s wigwam in the dead of night, and dragged Therefore, the Ottawas and Chippewas called them "Paw-gwatchaw-nish-naw-boy." The last time they were seen by the Ottawas, they Some years ago a white man came to the Indian country and Coming to Ottawa Island in a Hostile Manner, Headed by O-saw-wah-ne-mekee, "The Yellow Thunder"--Death of Kaw-be-naw, one of the Greatest Ottawa and Chippewa Indians came in contact with white people in this id = 23248 author = Catherwood, Mary Hartwell title = The Black Feather From "Mackinac And Lake Stories", 1899 date = keywords = Charle; Laboise; Tite summary = Charle'' Charette, who was the giant and the wearer of the black feather light-hearted voyageur had been married to ''Tite Laboise. Mademoiselle Laboise, while the French girl was called merely ''Tite. To her husband himself she was ''Tite Laboise, the most Let madame look at the black feather in his out before all Mackinac and dance with any other voyageurs who crowded voyageur was out of the Fur Company''s yard in Mackinac his own will was with ''Tite Laboise''s dancing partner. Étienne St. Martin picked up a beaver-skin, and in the sight of ''Tite Mackinac because he carries a black feather in his cap. in his mind and in the yard, but he knew ''Tite Laboise flew through the "I didn''t want to have trouble with that Charle'' Charette and that ''Tite "''Tite Laboise, why did you shut the door in my face when I came back to id = 29057 author = Crapo, Henry Howland title = Address delivered by Hon. Henry H. Crapo, Governor of Michigan, before the Central Michigan Agricultural Society, at their Sheep-shearing Exhibition held at the Agricultural College Farm, on Thursday, May 24th, 1866 date = keywords = Michigan; State; farmer; sheep; wool summary = farmers generally, not only as to the most desirable breed of sheep, but The subject of Sheep-Husbandry with us is certainly an important one--wool being a great, leading staple product of our State; and very class of sheep are seen, that a strong preference for fine-wooled present time among the farmers of this State, and money in the purchase such wool to sell, taken from sheep for which he paid very large prices, increased demand, but has enhanced the price of this kind of wool, which the more general breeding of long wool sheep. When the price of wool is high, the farmers are too reluctant to sell than because at that time the price of wool was very low and the market important matter in connection with sheep husbandry in this State. prejudice of the manufacturers against "Michigan wool" was so great that this great evil, and to place "Michigan wool" where it should most id = 33648 author = Dice, Lee R. (Lee Raymond) title = The Mammals of Warren Woods, Berrien County, Michigan Occasional Paper of the Museum of Zoology, Number 86 date = keywords = August; July; Warren; Woods summary = THE MAMMALS OF WARREN WOODS, BERRIEN COUNTY, MICHIGAN each habitat indicate the number of individuals trapped, shot, or seen Fifty mouse traps set in this habitat took eight northern white-footed few mouse traps set on the bare mud shore one northern white-footed In this habitat four northern white-footed mice were trapped August 3-4. and seventy mouse traps set in the flood-plain forests along the Fifty mouse traps set August 26 in a large ravine north of the county trapped in open beech-maple-oak forest at the edge of a cleared white-footed mice, Pennsylvania voles, and a house mouse were trapped Fifty mouse traps set in this habitat took on the first day, August Fifty traps set in this habitat, on August 8, took on the first night Fifty mouse traps set in this habitat took on the first night, August Flood-plain forest in Warren Woods. id = 37753 author = Dice, Lee R. (Lee Raymond) title = Notes on the Mammals of Gogebic and Ontonagon Counties, Michigan, 1920 Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology, Number 109 date = keywords = Cisco; Girl; Gogebic; Lake; Region summary = _Beach habitat:_ The shore of Lake Superior at Little Girl''s Point is _Tall-sedge habitat:_ In the beaver meadow studied near Gogebic Lake, near Gogebic Lake extensive arbor-vitae swamps are reported to occur. _Wet hardwood forest habitat:_ The land adjoining much of Gogebic Lake in the wet hardwood forests near Gogebic Lake, bob-tailed shrews being ground studied near Gogebic Lake, a number of alders and paper birches, In the Cisco Lake Region in July, one was taken in a small black spruce Near Gogebic Lake, Ontonagon County, one was taken September 4 in a Little Girl''s Point district, 10; and near Gogebic Lake in Ontonagon spruce-tamarack bog was taken near Gogebic Lake in a boggy swamp, In the wet hardwood forest near Gogebic Lake Blarina runways are hemlock forest near the lake shore; and one was seen in wet hardwood Lake Gogebic; and only a few were seen near Little Girl''s Point. id = 44637 author = Fox, Frances Margaret title = Brother Billy date = keywords = Antoine; Aunt; Betty; Billy; Florence; Gerald; Phonse; Samone summary = Like an old-time Indian, Billy managed to keep out of the "She can tell you about the signals, Billy," said Aunt Florence, "and "Poor old Hero, he wants to come in," said Billy. "Oh, yes," Betty assured Antoine, "Billy loves the baby." When Betty heard of Billy''s plan, she said she didn''t know he could Betty, Billy, and Aunt Florence called at the Frenchman''s home, Antoine "Beely, I tole you one bear story, you tell ole Antoine why your aunt "How are you going to begin, Aunt Florence?" asked Betty, as Antoine "And do you know, Beely, that little pet bear don''t want to come on go like this, Beely." Antoine tried to make Betty, Billy, and Aunt think good-bye, Antoine, for the big bear came and pokes me two time Antoine, giving Billy a wink, began again before Aunt Florence or Betty Gerald and little Billy welcomed their Aunt Florence and their Uncle id = 32050 author = Gleason, Henry A. (Henry Allan) title = The Plants of Michigan Simple Keys for the Identification of the Native Seed Plants of the State date = keywords = Aster; Clover; Cress; Family; Grass; Michigan; Oak; Orchis; ROSACEAE=; Violet; Water; Weed; Wild; flower; high; leave; long; stem; summer summary = Flowers white, in clusters; leaves linear-lanceolate, acute, Ovaries 3-6 in number; flowers in spikes or racemes; leaves linear Leaves all basal; flowers numerous in a spike-like raceme (Arrow Stem-leaves present; flowers in a loose bracted raceme (1-3 dm. Small herbs with basal leaves and erect flower-stalks bearing a head of Leaves distinctly clasping the stem; flowers greenish-white One species in Michigan; leaves ovate-cordate; flowers in summer Leaves lanceolate or ovate (flowers pink, white, or red, in summer) Climbing plants with opposite leaves (flowers in late summer) Flowers white; stem-leaves alternate Flowers white to pink or purplish; stem-leaves whorled Trees; leaves 2-3-pinnate (flowers greenish-white, spring) high; flowers yellowish-white, late summer) (Bush Clover) --40. Leaves linear or nearly so (flowers purple; summer) --7b. Leaves rounded, floating (flowers white, summer) leaves (flowers pale-blue to nearly white, late spring and summer) Leaves 5-angled or shallowy 5-lobed (flowers white, summer) id = 61523 author = Jewell, Edward Alden title = The Moth Decides: A Novel date = keywords = Alfred; Anna; Aunt; Barry; Hilda; Leslie; Louise; Lynndal; Marjie; Marjory; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Needham; O''Donnell; Rev.; Richard; Tahulamaji; Whitcom summary = Hilda said she thought she could see just a tiny little bit of rouge. Louise''s unhappy affair with Richard, the Rev. Needham was pleased to Mrs. Needham had the good sense to wire back that Louise was all right, and Louise''s heart be a second time broken, there flashed, for Hilda, "I told Marjie we made a practice of getting up at seven," said Mrs. Needham a little anxiously. "Yes--things like that." And then he confessed with a nervous little "How do you mean it wasn''t fair, Aunt Marjie?" demanded little Hilda, little pang for just a moment, Louise thought she couldn''t endure his merely Louise''s little sister; all at once she became _Hilda_, a "Yes, Leslie''s the best swimmer on the Point," said Hilda proudly. The Rev. and Mrs. Needham, having gone on into the cottage living room, "Do I look all right, Lou?" asked Hilda, much as Louise had put the id = 46269 author = Kelland, Clarence Budington title = Mark Tidd in Business date = keywords = Bazar; Chet; Jehoshaphat; Mark; Mose; Mr.; Mrs.; Skip; Tidd; Wicksville summary = "B-b-business," says Mark, "hain''t nothin'' but makin'' m-money out of "In that case," says Mr. Skip, scowling until his two eyes looked like "I''m goin'' to give Mr. Skip the time of his life," says Mark. "Plunk," says Mark, "Mr. Skip ''ll think his Grand Openin'' has a "L-lots of folks''ll buy things they hain''t got any use for," says Mark, "Tallow and Binney''ll stay inside," says Mark, "to l-look after folks Mark he looked at them for half a minute without saying a word. "Plunk," says Mark, patient-like, "have I got to draw a picture of this "Um," says Mark; "looks like a d-d-dangerous kind of a deal, don''t it?" "I want to talk to the man that runs this business," says Mark. "Yes, sir," says Mark, and Old Mose scowled at him like he was ready to "Mark," says he, "is it a fact that Old Mose has got a thousand votes?" id = 29608 author = Kidd, James Harvey title = Personal Recollections of a Cavalryman With Custer''s Michigan Cavalry Brigade in the Civil War date = keywords = August; Captain; Colonel; Custer; Fifth; General; George; Gettysburg; Gregg; Hampton; July; June; Kilpatrick; Lee; Merritt; Michigan; October; Private; Sergeant; Seventh; Sheridan; Sixth; Station; Stuart; Tavern; Trevilian; Virginia; Washington; William; Winchester summary = history of the civil war as Troop E, Sixth Michigan cavalry Second brigade, Third division, cavalry corps, army of the Potomac. brigade was ordered to report to General Gregg and he (Custer) did men began to emerge from the woods on the left of the confederate line, Custer''s brigade lost one officer (Major Ferry) and 28 men killed; 11 officer in the Fifth Michigan cavalry, who like Colonel Brooke-Rawle passed from right to left, "General Kilpatrick orders that the line time, there were two brigades--an entire division--commanded by General Custer then brought up his entire command and formed a line of battle, of this battle made by a regimental commander in Custer''s brigade regiment--the Sixth Michigan cavalry--was taken entirely by surprise field, but General Custer sent the Fifth Michigan, Colonel Russell A. commanders of the Michigan cavalry brigade regiments for the Gettysburg officers and the intrepidity of the men in the Michigan cavalry brigade id = 9949 author = Nowlin, William title = The Bark Covered House Or, Back In the Woods Again; Being a Graphic and Thrilling Description of Real Pioneer Life in the Wilderness of Michigan date = keywords = CHAPTER; Canada; Dearborn; Dearbornville; Detroit; Indian; John; Michigan; Mr.; New; Pardee; State; York; father; man; time summary = Father said that Michigan was a beautiful country, that the soil was as When father came, and mother told him the liberty the lady had taken, he When father heard this, with other things he had said, he thought he was Father saw him, came in, took his rifle down from the hooks and told Father went into a log house on the north side of the Chicago road and father came he said they had found plenty of good grass and he wished I told father I was sick, he said I had better go home and I going home straight through the woods, so took our way to the Reed house, Father said that he thought the trees years old at that time and thought I had a very good rifle and knew how settled on father''s old place, and lived there when we came to Michigan. id = 41394 author = Otis, Charles Herbert title = Michigan Trees: A Handbook of the Native and Most Important Introduced Species date = keywords = Michigan; Peninsula; WINTER; brown; flower; illustration; inch; leave; long; specie summary = i. Leaf-petioles 5-6 inches long; leaves lustrous above; twigs Leaf-petioles about 1 inch long; leaves dull above; twigs WINTER-BUDS.--Terminal bud 1/4 inch long, ovoid, rounded, pale brown; BARK.--Twigs yellow-green, becoming purple, finally dark red-brown and WINTER-BUDS.--About 3/4 inch long, ovoid or conical, acute, red-brown, WINTER-BUDS.--Broadly ovoid, obtuse, light brown, 1/8-1/4 inch long. WINTER-BUDS.--Ovoid, acute, light red-brown, puberulous, 1/8 inch long. WINTER-BUDS.--Ovoid, acute, red-brown, not resinous, about 3/8 inch long. c. Buds greenish; twigs glabrous; fruit 1-1/2-2 inches long. Buds red-brown; twigs long-hairy; fruit less than 1 inch WINTER-BUDS.--Terminal bud about 1 inch long, ovoid, obtuse, dark brown, WINTER-BUDS.--Terminal bud 1/2-3/4 inch long, broadly ovoid, red-brown, WINTER-BUDS.--1/4-1/2 inch long, dome-shaped, red-brown, smooth. nut oblong-ovoid with a broad base, about 1 inch long, red-brown; kernel WINTER-BUDS.--Terminal bud 1/4 inch long, ovoid, acute, light brown, HABIT.--A tree 40-50 feet high and 12-15 inches in trunk diameter; long, short-ovoid, 1/2-3/4 inch long, light red-brown; kernel whitish, bitter. id = 37871 author = Rankin, Carroll Watson title = Dandelion Cottage date = keywords = Bettie; Black; Blossom; Crane; Downing; Jean; Laura; Mabel; Marjory; Milligan; Miss; Mr.; Mrs. summary = said Bettie, locking the door carefully when the girls were outside. "Bettie _is_ a sweet little girl," said Mrs. Mapes, "but she''s far too "I declare," said Mrs. Mapes one day, "the only time I see Jean, "There''s no use talking," said Jean, one day, as the girls sat at their "While we''re about it," said Bettie, "I think we''d better have Mrs. Crane to dinner, too. "Girls," said Jean, when she and Bettie were in the kitchen with the "But, Bettie," said Mrs. Tucker, when her little daughter, helped by "I strongly suspect," said Mr. Black, smiling over Bettie''s head at Mr. Blossom, "that you don''t really _want_ me to dinner." "Laura certainly likes to boss," said Bettie, who looked pale and "I''m not exactly afraid," said Bettie, "but I don''t like Mrs. Milligan. "It looks like Milligan," said Bettie, turning it over, "but we can''t id = 35006 author = Robinson, William Laughlin title = An Experimental Translocation of the Eastern Timber Wolf date = keywords = Huron; Lake; March; Mech; Michigan; Minnesota; Sec; wolf summary = National Park, Lake Superior, Michigan (Mech 1966; Wolfe and Allen 1973; [Illustration: _Fig. 2.--Range of the wolf in Upper Michigan in 1973, Mountain Club, the wolf release area, would be about 1,000 deer. pack of wolves in Minnesota, fit each animal with a radio-collar half-mile (0.8 km) of the release pen as food for the wolves after their [Illustration: _Fig. 14.--The Minnesota wolves in their Michigan pen wolves killed a deer there, for they remained in the area for a few The next day, lone Wolf No. 10, back in the Huron Mountain area, killed [Illustration: _Fig. 21.--Each deer killed by the translocated wolves March 12 Wolves released in Huron Mountain area March 12 Wolves released in Huron Mountain area March 25 Wolves reported in Pelkie area 6 miles (9.6 km) April 15 Wolves killed deer near Kenton (T47N-R36W-Sec 8) locations for (A) Wolves No. 11, 12, and 13, (B) Wolf No. 10. id = 22550 author = Strickland, W. P. (William Peter) title = Old Mackinaw; Or, The Fortress of the Lakes and its Surroundings date = keywords = Bay; Canada; Chicago; Detroit; Fort; Grand; Huron; Indians; Island; Lake; Mackinaw; Marquette; Michigan; Mr.; New; Point; River; Saut; St.; State; Straits; Superior; United; West; York; american summary = shore of Lake Michigan, extending his conquests to Grand River, and born near the head of Lake Michigan--the year not known. extremity of Lake Huron, entered for the first time the old Indian they reached the shore of Lake Michigan the Indians returned, and with Lake Superior, being but about fifty miles north of Mackinaw and "From Mackinaw to Fon du Lac (west end of Lake Superior), 550 miles; "From any other point of Lakes Michigan or Superior, where a city can region west of Superior to the Lake of the Woods and the Red River, growth of river and lake cities -Centre of population -growth of river and lake cities -Centre of population -great lakes and rivers the trade of the surrounding country. business -Railroads -Lake Superior trade -Pine lumber business -Railroads -Lake Superior trade -Pine lumber id = 46586 author = Victor, Metta Victoria Fuller title = Alice Wilde: The Raftsman''s Daughter. A Forest Romance date = keywords = Alice; Ben; CHAPTER; Miss; Moore; Mr.; Pallas; Perkins; Philip; Raymond; Saturn; Virginia; Wilde; father; like; look; man summary = as expects to marry Miss Alice?" his voice trembled, and he looked at "Come and look at my beautiful presents, Pallas," cried her young Alice looked up into the rough sun-burnt face of her father with a ''Pears to me dat young gentleum looks like missus'' family. The day after her father''s return, Alice Wilde sat down to try her new "You ain''t a little girl any longer, Alice Wilde, and I guess yer man shall never marry you, Alice Wilde." away, too, you know, and I shall have no one but good old Pallas." One day, about the time of his expected return, Ben had gone for Alice, Miss Alice, it looked like de judgment-day, when we sailed down mind; but when Alice looked at her anxiously she turned her eyes away, "What does that childish, ignorant young thing know of love, Philip? retired for the night, David Wilde, Alice, Philip, and Virginia sat up, id = 34769 author = Williams, Elizabeth Whitney title = A Child of the Sea; and Life Among the Mormons date = keywords = Beaver; Bob; Charley; Indians; Island; John; King; Lake; Mackinac; Mary; Mormons; Mr.; Mrs.; Strang summary = his time, was honorably discharged, came to Fort Brady, Sault Ste. Marie, from there to Mackinac Island, there married my mother, who was a years, passing away since my residence at Little Traverse Light House on the little harbor and put out a good dock, built a large store and house Tailpoint Light House, twenty-two years at Green Bay. I remember one very nice neighbor we had at this time. I said, "Me want to go home and see Charley." Mother came to explain I One day a young Indian came to our house to see and talk to Mary. Father soon came and took little After a time little brother and I wanted to see Mary, so father took us About the time my people came to Beaver Island the property at the Point Mother soon came home, telling of the want and suffering among the at the same time, people who came to see King Strang''s Island. id = 33507 author = Wood, Norman Asa title = The Mammals of Washtenaw County, Michigan Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology, No. 123 date = keywords = Ann; Arbor; Lake; Lodi; Township summary = although a few trees occur on the south bank of the Huron River near at Ann Arbor in 1824, and many pioneers arrived in the county during the February 5, 1912, a trapper took a specimen near Ann Arbor on a night We have records for Lodi Township, Ann Arbor, _Eptesicus fuscus fuscus._ Large Brown Bat.--Common at Ann Arbor and taken in Steere''s Swamp, near Ann Arbor, in the winter of 1882. four miles south of Ann Arbor; this, he states, is his first record for near Ann Arbor and Portage Lake. at hand for Ann Arbor, Pittsfield Township, and Portage Lake. for Ann Arbor, Pittsfield Township, Portage Lake, Saline, and Ypsilanti. in Lodi Township, and the last one known in the county was killed near taken from a nest near Ann Arbor. I have found no record of live elk seen in the county, and Covert[5] records one seen in the county in 1879. id = 6436 author = Woolson, Constance Fenimore title = Castle Nowhere date = keywords = Agency; Emperor; Father; Fog; Jacques; Jarvis; Jeannette; Mackinac; Piret; Waring; french; little; man; old; silver summary = ''Simple-minded old fellow,'' thought Waring, lighting a fresh pipe; well?'' said the old man, looking up fondly as he fastened his skiff. Go, child, go; do not grieve me,'' said the old man ''Poor old man,'' he said, ''how he must have worked and That is it, you do not know,'' said the old man, the young man set sail and away they flew over the angry water; old Waring''s hands stopped; never before had the old man''s voice taken said Waring, turning his head away from the face pillowed on his ''Old man, why are you not afraid of me?'' said Waring, pausing in his ''To the Mormons,'' said Waring, laughing; for he had heard old Fog tell ''If you doubt it, look at this,'' said the little man; and he brought ''The old man is sick, to-day,'' said Rodney. In the old days, when I was living at the little white fort, I had