Nebraska

Nebraska, one of the west central States of the American Union, has Dakota on its N. and Kansas and Colorado on the S., is 1½ times the size of England; in the E. stretches of fertile land yield abundant crops of grain (maize chiefly), hemp, flax, sugar-beet, and tobacco, while in the W. rich prairie pastures favour a prosperous stock-raising; the Platte, Niobrarah, and Republican Rivers follow the eastward slope of the land; Omaha and Lincoln (capital) are the chief centres of the manufacturing industries; climate is dry and bracing; wolves, foxes, skunks, &c., abound, chiefly in the “Bad Lands” of the N.; Nebraska was incorporated in the American Union in 1867.

Population (circa 1900) given as 1,058,000.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Nebiim * Nebulæ
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Naxos
Nayler, James
Nazareth
Nazarites
Neagh, Lough
Neal, Daniel
Neal, John Mason
Neander, Johann August Wilhelm
Neath
Nebiim
Nebraska
Nebulæ
Nebular Hypothesis
Necker, Jacques
Nectar
Needle-gun
Negative
Negativity
Negritoes
Negroes
Nehemiah