A CITY OF LIGHT-A GAS AND OIL FIGHT-A HINT FOR GREENOCK-CHICAGO-CATTLE
GRAZING ON A LARGE SCALE-THE NOBLE INDIAN-IN THE MORMON COUNTRY -OGDEN-A
RIDE ON THE UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD- AMONG THE MORMONS-THE FINEST CITY OF
MODERN TIMES-SALT LAKE CITY-A HINT FOR PLANNING MODERN PUBLIC
BUILDINGS-SURROUNDING LOCALITY, WHAT IT WAS AND WHAT IT IS.
OUR next journey was to the City of Akron, in the State of Ohio, a busy,
thriving community of about 20,000 inhabitants. The Akronites are a
go-a-head people, and don't stick at trifles; have their eyes open for all
improvements, and the brains to take advantage of them. A gas company had
the lighting of the city, but the Corporation and the public were not
satisfied with the prices charged, so they got discontented with their gas
company for charging too much, and the Corporation hung the city with oil
lamps, and lamps and gas burned lovingly side by side for several nights,
to the great satisfaction and enlightenment of the inhabitants. The gas
company were beat, the lamps were victorious; but dull oil did not suit
the tastes of the Akronites; they went in, head over heels, for the
electric light, and got it too; and when all the lights are fixed up,
Akron will be a city of light—not a light hid under a bushel, but a blaze
of light in the midst of darkness.
The city stands on about two square miles, and two lights are already
erected. One of the two is placed on an iron pillar of huge proportions;
it is about two feet in diameter at the base, erected on a strong, solid
foundation, and rises to the great height of 220 feet above the surface of
the ground. The spire of the Mid Church in Greenock is about 16o feet or
thereabouts, an estimate can thus be formed of the height of this huge
iron pole. The other light is placed on a tall wooden mast fixed on the
top of the College—for Akron boasts of a College also— and these two
lights illuminate a large section of the city. We could read newspaper
print with the greatest ease at a considerable distance—say as far as from
the railway station to Cathcart Square, or about 300 yards from the light.
When the eight lights are in full operation, Akron will be the best
lighted of all cities. It is asserted that the electric light will be as
cheap, if not cheaper, than gas, and water power not being handy, the
electric machinery is driven by steam power.
Sir William Thomson recently pointed out Greenock as the most favourably
situated town in regard to water power being applied for lighting by
electricity. In the recent report by Mr James Wilson, C. E., of the Water
Trust, the same idea is ventilated, and as deputations have become so
common of late, a deputation of the Police Board might be despatched to
Akron to look about them, and on their return report on what they saw! The
deputation would enjoy the trip; whether the ratepayers would, is another
question.
Akron is a most energetic, thriving, busy city. We visited a very large
work, the Buckeye Agricultural Implement Manufactory. At the time of our
visit they were manufacturing one hundred and five reaping machines daily,
and sending out daily one hundred and thirty, thus reducing the stock they
had accumulated during the winter months. The same company have another
work equal in extent, and doing as much business, in another city. All the
labour in these manufactories is done by the piece, and the workers make
good wages. We also went over an extensive carriage factory, in which the
average weekly out-put of "buggies" ranges about thirty. One marvels much
where they all go to, and who buys them.
We left this city of light for Cleveland, from where, the same night, we
took the steamer and crossed Lake Erie for Detroit. Arriving there the
following morning, we went straight on to Pontiac, about thirty-five miles
distant, and then proceeded to the residence of my apprentice master, who
had for a considerable time carried on business in Greenock as a
contractor, and though it was over thirty years since he left, we still
continued to keep up a friendly correspondence, and to visit him was one
of the objects I had in view when I left Scotland.
I remembered that he used to have a great antipathy to book canvassers and
pedlars. When any of these entered his premises, if he was present they
were very soon shown the way to the door, so I arranged with my travelling
companion that he was to keep a little behind while I introduced myself to
my friend as a pedlar.
He met me at the door, and asked me to enter. His features were little
changed from what they were thirty years ago, with the exception that his
hair was now white. Seeing him so little altered, I imagined that it was
the same with myself, and that he would at once recognise me. However, in
that I was mistaken. I produced a pair of spectacles, which I offered for
sale, saying that he would find them a decided improvement to anything he
had been in the habit of using, as they would have a tendency to renew his
youth, and bring former days to his recollection. He now became as
obstinate with me as he used to be with the pedlars. He would neither
listen to me nor would he look at my spectacles, but began to denounce all
hawked goods as trash, and took out of his pocket the pair he was using,
and said he had lately bought these in Detroit for a quarter of a dollar,
and he would defy me to produce as cheap and as good a pair out of my
whole pack. I tried them, and said they were very good, but mine were a
great deal better, and if after trying them he did not admit that it was
so, I would make him a present of them. At last he put them on, and I
handed him my card, saying that, as it was small print, it would be a good
test. Looking at the name, he exclaimed, "What is this ?" Looking again,
he says, "Greenock !" then looking at me, he said, "You are not the man
named here." I assured him that I was. He said, " No, no, that cannot be."
Re-asserting that I was no other, he walked out of the room, and instantly
returned, and, standing at a distance, he eyed me from top to toe as if he
had been taking my measure, at the same time saying, "You may have got my
address from him, but one thing is certain, you are not the man whose name
is on this card."
I then related to him several incidents of our former days, all of which
he remembered and admitted to be perfectly correct, but still he had
doubts as to my identity. While this was going on, I could not help saying
to myself—May not the Claimant have been the right man after all? All this
time we were standing; my friend now asked me to be seated, and brought in
my companion and introduced us to his good lady and granddaughter, and
made all haste to get his horse and buggy ready to go for our baggage.
The knowledge I had of his personal affairs in former times enabled me to
dispel all doubt as to my identity, and the greater portion of the next
few days was spent in answering questions, and relating the many changes
and important events that had taken place in Greenock during the past
thirty years, which appeared to be much appreciated by my old friend. He
occupied a nice cottage about a mile distant from the town of Pontiac. The
plot on which it is built is bounded at the back by a mill pond, in which
there is a plentiful supply of fish and small turtle, which we frequently
saw basking in the sun on a little eminence in the centre of the pond.
Beyond this pond was a marsh, from which came a variety of sounds—some as
if from a wild bull, while others were hoarse and short, as if you had
struck a coarse table bell and instantly put your hand on it and stopped
the sound. We were told that it was the cry of the bull-frogs. We went
down several times, but could never see them. We were anxious to see the
little animal that could send forth such a volume of sound. Pontiac, which
is in the State of Michigan, is a busy market town where farmers come to
make purchases and dispose of their produce. In the main streets there is
a row of stakes from six to eight feet apart, and about five feet high,
extending along the kerb on both sides of the street. These are common to
any one to tie up his horse while he attends either church or market. My
companion often gave free expression to his feelings on the cruelty of the
people in leaving their horses so long exposed under a scorching sun.
Our friend was much delighted in pointing out to us everything in which he
knew they were ahead of us in the old country. A day was set apart for
visiting places of interest, among which was the Michigan State Asylum for
the Insane, which is a very imposing structure situated about three miles
distant from Pontiac. In the portion of the building that is completed
there are over three hundred patients, so that the Americans, along with
all the good things they enjoy, have a pretty fair share of lunatics
amongst them.
Our friend having considerable experience of the delay, expense and
annoyance connected with purchasing or transferring a piece of land at
home, was anxious that we should accompany him to the Government Land
Agent's Office and to the Registration Office, where we would see the
expeditious, simple and economical method of transacting business as
practised by the Yankees.
On a previous occasion, while in 'Toronto, I had an opportunity of
witnessing how expeditiously a land transaction there can be completed. I
accompanied Mr Smith, who went to take off a new township (which, if I
remember right, is ten miles square) of forest land, to clear it of the
growing timber. The object of our visit was stated. The agent produced the
map, pointed out the limits, stated the terms, and the transaction was
completed with as little delay or ceremony as we would have here in
purchasing a barrel of flour.
At the Register Office the books were produced, and we were shown the
various stages through which several plots of ground had passed from the
original purchase through a number of transfers, with mortgages and
searches, some of which had been done without the assistance of an agent.
The following is what was given to us as the items of expense :-
The whole amount for title deed, mortgage and registration is seven
dollars twenty-four cents, being under thirty shillings of our money—a
mere fraction of what it would cost for similar documents at home.
It was during our stay here that the attack was made on the life of the
President; the sad event caused great excitement, people driving in from
the country to get the latest particulars. The morning following the
dastardly attempt we were awoke about one o'clock by loud knocking at the
door: this was one of the neighbours with the latest news, to the effect
that there was still hope of the President's life.
Much to our regret, we had to make our stay short, and, parting with our
old friend, we returned to Detroit and purchased railway coupons right on
to San Francisco, taking the first train to Chicago, where we spent only
two hours, as we intended spending a few days there on our return.
For many miles after leaving Chicago the fields are covered with various
kinds of crops, but as we proceeded on our journey the principal crop
grown is Indian corn. Orchards are plentiful, and occasionally vineyards
were visible.
We arrived at Omaha, thus completing a third of our long journey in
comfort and safety, and having stopped to change carriages, we travelled
onwards. In a short time we gradually got into the midst of immense fields
where cattle were seen grazing in thousands. The herdsmen are all mounted,
and in several instances they had the cattle gathered in large groups, but
for what object we could not learn. As seen in the distance the group of
cattle reminded one of a fox-cover in Renfrewshire, the mounted herdsmen,
the sportsmen round the cover and the stray dogs outside, kept up the
resemblance. In some cases, where the cattle were not so closely tended by
the herdsmen, and a stream or pool of water near, the cattle were to be
seen standing in the water, nothing visible of them but their backs and
heads, and seeming to enjoy their cold bath.
Along the railroad were to be seen great numbers of prairie chickens and
huge butterflies, some of them of most beautiful colours. We were now
running along the level prairie lands, where there was nothing to break
the monotony of the view save a solitary tree now and then, or perhaps a
farm hut away in the distance, reminding one of the ocean with a ship
appearing occasionally on the horizon.
There are many villages along the line where the trains stop, some of
which are kept up by the railway company,
and at most of them there is a refreshment room or dining saloon, which is
generally attended by black waiters. In some instances the blacks had
given place to Chinese waiters, and everything in the shape of refreshment
is served expeditiously, and on the shortest notice. At some of the
stations there were to be seen Indians with their families—a wretched,
dirty lot, quite different from the "noble red Indian" of the novelist.
They did not beg, but merely sat in their dignity and dirt, and looked on.
Some of their children, who had bows and arrows, were kept very busy by
the passengers placing a coin on a peg, when the boy who struck it off
with his arrow claimed it. At this work, the boys, who were from eight to
ten years old, were remarkably clever, and the certainty of their shooting
quite astonished the onlookers, The Indian dwellings were situated outside
of the villages. They are called "dug-outs." The roofs of them were very
like the potato pits on a Scotch farm.
At Larmie city we came across what was to us a singular spectacle. It was
a train decked out in mourning. Some of the carriages had three huge black
and white rosettes placed on each side of them, and black and white
pennants and festoons hung from the roof on each side of the rosettes.
This strange mourning display was said to be on the occasion of the death
of one of the "conductors" of the line.
We were now far beyond the bounds of civilisation, save what was clustered
in the villages along the line. The bones, white and bleached, of numerous
cattle that had died, lay on each side of the rails. They lay in clusters
here and there—some fresh looking, as if the animals had died but this
season, and others as if they had lain for years.
We had traversed a great distance of level and undulating prairie land.
Each little village along the line seemed the outposts of civilized life;
and in the future this vast expanse will probably be a cattle-rearing,
grain-growing country, whose surplus products will be carried by railway
to the seaboard for shipment to other countries.
This Union Pacific Railroad is a great undertaking—a mighty agent in
colonising and developing the vast resources of the lands through which it
runs, and every year adds to the population, wealth, and trade of this
portion of the United States.
Having been now two days on the train after leaving Omaha, and running a
distance of about 940 miles, and 7,500 feet above the sea level, we passed
from the territory of Wyoming into Utah. About twenty miles further on we
arrived at Evanston, where the train stopped half-an-hour. This is. a
thriving village, with about 2,000 inhabitants, where there are extensive
sawmills and coal mines. The Railway Company own some of the mines, and
also extensive engineering workshops, which employ a number of inhabitants
all the year round. This station was very much admired by the passengers,
most of whom dined at the Mountain Trout Hotel, where they were very
expeditiously served by Chinese waiters, who were all dressed in their
native costume, and wore their "ques." They all spoke good English, were
very polite, attentive, and anxious to give information to all who asked
it. The Chinese have a settlement here, with their Joss-house and other
native attractions. On leaving the dining-room, our curiosity was excited
by a number of Indians who had come upon the scene, with their children,
some of them very gaudily dressed with shining trinkets, furs, and
feathers, and their faces daubed over with red paint. They did not beg,
but there was a vacant stare in their countenances which told its own
tale; when anything was offered them, they took it as if with reluctance,
and turned their faces away, putting one very much in mind of the look of
a dog to which you had offered a large piece of bread.
While the train was stopped at one of the stations, a gaudily-dressed,
tall, masculine-looking female Indian took up a position on the platform
of our car. In her hand she carried a fine little tomahawk, very highly
polished, and the handle decorated with rings and round- headed brass
tacks. One was driven into the end of the handle, fixing a rosette of
various coloured ribbons. The weapon seemed more ornamental than useful.
When spoken to she did not answer. She was handed a coin, and asked if she
could speak English, but she gave no symptoms of hearing, when one
remarked that she was perhaps a dummy. The engine-driver, who had been
looking on, said if we gave her two or three glasses of whisky we would
very soon hear her speak English like a politician. He said the greater
number of the Indians who frequented the stations pretended they had no
English until they get drunk, and then they could speak English very well.
The Railway Company on this line allow the Indians to travel free upon all
freight trains, so that it is quite common to see Indians and their
families perched on the top of a truck of goods or in cattle trucks. Some
of them travelled short distances by our train, but did not mix with the
passengers. They kept on the platform outside. It is said that the Railway
Company have got the Indians under the impression that they only have the
right to ride free, because the railway belongs to them. Under this
impression, they do their utmost to protect the line from being injured.
It is well for the safety of the trains that the Indians should remain in
that belief —were they to take up a position antagonistic to the railway,
the consequences might be serious for both the Railway Company and the
passengers.
From this point on to Ogden is about eighty miles, the line having a
gradual fall of over 3,200 feet. This is the grandest, though the wildest
and most dangerous, part of the journey. It is difficult to say whether
there is most danger from the treacherous-looking narrow ledges, deep
chasms, and sudden turns that the train has to follow along the margin of
the Weber River, or from the shattered overhanging mountains which you
imagine the vibration of the train would set in motion at any point. The
close proximity of the mountains above and the rapid flowing of the river
beneath give an apparent velocity to the train that is terrific. This
feeling is intensified by the rushing sound of the train and the steam
whistle, the echo of which is heard overhead reverberating from cliff to
cliff as if you were in the midst of a thunder storm. Here the curves of
the line are so sharp that the passengers in the front carriage are for a
moment just within speaking- distance of those in the last carriage, when
all of a sudden the front carriages turn in the opposite direction, and
the train, which is over seven hundred feet long, assumes the form of the
letter S. This exciting scene continues for more than thirty miles, until
we pass the Devil's Gate and Slide, where we emerge into the open country
where cultivation is carried to great perfection by the Mormon settlers.
In a short time we arrive at Ogden City, where all have to change
carriages, this being the western terminus of the Union Pacific and the
eastern terminus of the Central Pacific Railway.
After an hour's delay, we take the train on the Utah Central Railroad to
Salt Lake City—distance, thirty-two miles. The fare is about threepence
per mile, and it is one of the best paying lines in the States. This
railroad was one of the enterprises of Brigham Young. When the Union and
Central Pacific Railroads were completed they met near Ogden, their
combined length being 1,914 miles. Necessarily a great deal of material
was left over, which was purchased and used in the construction of this
line, which is thirty-two miles in length from Ogden to Salt Lake City, it
being completed within nine months from the time the ground was broken.
There was little cutting or filling up required, as it passed through a
level track of country from five to six miles broad, having the Salt Lake
within a mile and a-half on the right and a mountain range about four
miles to the left.
There are several stations and villages along the line, the inhabitants of
which are chiefly employed in agricultural pursuits. Arriving at Salt Lake
City, and taking a run over it, we came to the conclusion that, with one
exception, it was the finest city that we had yet visited, the streets
being 130 feet wide, all set off at right angles and at such a distance
from each other as to give ten acres to each building block. Some of these
blocks are again sub-divided into four building plots, and those in the
workmen's district are again sub-divided into eight building plots, giving
one and a quarter acres to each plot. The ground is generally used as an
orchard, and the houses are all placed back at a uniform distance from the
line of the street, so that there are invariably fruit trees between the
streets and the houses. Four of these blocks, containing over forty acres,
are walled in and set apart for religious institutions. On one of these
plots stands the Tabernacle, a large, rough-looking building, about two
hundred and sixty feet long by one hundred and fifty feet wide and eighty
feet high, with semi-circular ends, and covered with a dome roof,
supported on a succession of stone abutments, each about ten feet broad
and three feet thick.
The thickness of these abutments and the spaces between them, all of which
are doors, form the exterior of the building. The breadth of the abutments
runs in towards the centre of the building and forms the support for the
back of the gallery, which is carried round the two sides and one end. At
the other end is a platform, whereon the grand organ is placed, on each
side of which are the seats for the choir, which numbers about four
hundred voices—the one side being occupied by females and the other by
males.
In a line right in front of the organ there are three pulpits, each being
at a lower elevation as they recede from it. Elevated a little above the
area beneath the third pulpit is the elders' bench. On each side of the
pulpits are seats for those who take an active part in Church matters, and
who occasionally address the audience. In the area there is a passage all
round next to the external walls. Other three passages run the whole
length of the area. In the middle passage, and right in the centre of the
building, there is a grand ornamental fountain, from which, during service
in summer months, there is a flow of iced water. In the roof there are
several cupolas, and the ceiling is a complete network of festoons, formed
of evergreens and flowers. Each panel on the front of the gallery has a
shield or ornamental design, in the centre of which a letter is placed.
These letters give the motto, "God Bless our Mountain Home."
Though there is accommodation in this building for thirteen thousand
people, yet there is never any crushing or inconvenience on entering or
leaving; those on each side of the centre passage walk along towards the
exterior, and a door faces them at whatever point they reach. Three
minutes are sufficient at any time to evacuate the whole building. The
Tabernacle is used for worship during the summer season only, it being too
large for artificial heating.
In the winter season the meetings are held in the assembly hall, which is
a beautiful granite building erected on the temple block alongside of the
Tabernacle. It has a centre tower, two spires and a great many minerets,
is heated by steam, lighted with gas, and has a grand organ, and is seated
to hold about three thousand people. On the east of the same block a
temple on a grand scale is at present in course of erection. The mason
work is about forty feet above the surface. Judging from what is already
done, this promises to be the most substantial and picturesque building in
the city.
On the occasion of our visit, had we not known that we were in the Mormon
Tabernacle, we could not have observed the difference from a Presbyterian
Church by either the rendering of the service or the matter of the
discourses, which, after the usual prayer and praise, were delivered by an
occasional layman, who left his pew and ascended one of the pulpits. At
the close of the service the President stated that since his last
intimation eighty- one thousand dollars had been subscribed towards the
erection of the new temple, and there were now only five thousand more
required for its completion. There was no money collected at either of the
diets.
There is a general impression that Salt Lake City is inhabited by Mormons
only. Such is not the case now, though it was so at first. It is said that
there are twenty-one thousand Mormons and about seven thousand Gentiles,
who are of various religious denominations. The Methodists, Episcopalians,
and the Presbyterians have each their places of worship in the city.
After dinner, we resolved to have a view of the city and its surroundings
from Ensign Peak, that being the mountain at the base of which the city is
situated. Shortly after starting, we had a friendly chat with one of the
settlers, to whom we made known our intention. He asked how long we
expected it would take. On telling him, he advised us to go no further,
assuring us that the distance was three times what we anticipated, and it
would probably be dark before we reached the peak. We took the hint and
postponed our trip till the following day, when we set out a-new, and long
before arriving at the summit, we found we were much indebted to our
adviser of the previous evening, and were forced to the belief that our
vision as to distance was much more deceptive than usual, which defect we
attributed to the rarified atmosphere and elevated position of the
country.
Ascending towards the peak, the ground was literally teeming with animal
life, of which every step gave an indication, by the efforts of numerous
insects springing to the side as if to make way for us, conspicuous
amongst them being the grasshopper, but very different from those we are
accustomed to at home. Some of them were larger than the humming bird,
their flight seldom exceeding more than from thirty to forty yards. We
made several unsuccessful attempts to capture one, but, whenever we came
within reach, it took a spring and repeated its flight with as much vigour
as before, so we gave UI) the chase. There were indications of an old cart
road a long way up the steep incline. This somewhat puzzled us, until we
observed at various places little artificial mounds, one of them within a
few yards of the summit. These had been thrown up by the original settlers
when exploring the mountains for gold. The cart track referred to was that
along which the workmen conveyed their implements as far up hill as that
mode of conveyance would permit. No mineral having been found of
sufficient value to remunerate the miner, Ensign Peak has been spared the
indignity of being subjected to disfiguring operations, and is now likely
to be left alone in its natural beauty.
Fatigued and out of wind, we arrived at the summit, and were amply
rewarded for our labour in the magnificent and impressive scenery that lay
stretched out before us. A little to the left, and apparently at our feet,
stood the city, which is about three miles square, the ponderous
Tabernacle and the half-built temple forming prominent features in the
foreground. At the base of the mountain, and just in front of us, is the
plain through which we had passed on arrival, beyond which is the green
marsh land receding in the distance till it merges into the Salt Lake,
whose water is seen reflecting, like a vast mirror, the different objects
on its shores. To the left, and beyond the city, is the rich valley of the
Jordan, covered with crops and studded with farm-houses, which seem like
specks in the distance, and ultimately are lost to view before reaching
the base of the mountains which enclose the valley on each side.
Some of the deep gorges and fissures on these bleak mountain sides are
covered with snow, giving them a pleasant variegated appearance, in
beautiful contrast to the alternately green and yellow fields in the
plains beneath. The dissolving snow forming little streamlets, trickles
down the slopes which, in former times, found their way through the barren
plain into the Jordan, leaving little streaks of verdure along their
course. What a contrast is the present scene with the past!
Thirty-four years ago, the evicted Mormons came upon the scene, claimed
this desert as their home, and with firm resolution and willing hands
turned Nature's stores to their own purposes. Having fixed on a pite for
their city, they set to work to form ponds in the creeks, and to cut a
canal along the sides of the mountains, intercepting the streamlets a
little way above the plain, and leading the water to such points as were
most advantageous for the irrigation of the plain. Descending from the
peak, we stood for a little on the bank of the canal right over the city,
and contrasted the barren sage- covered land above with the gardens and
orchards of the city beneath and the rich, fertile fields beyond, and had
to confess that whatever may have been the faults or failings of the
Mormon settlers, the scene before us showed an amount of industry and
perseverance that it is doubtful if it can be equalled anywhere else. They
have, in very truth, made the "wilderness to bud and blossom as the rose."
From this point we descended into the city, and had a pleasant stroll
through the streets, where we found much to engage our attention. From the
canal we had just left there was a stream of water flowing down on both
sides of each Street. The channel-ways for this water were about eighteen
inches wide, nine inches deep, and formed of wood, with little sluices at
points suitable for diverting part of the water into the gardens; its
chief use being for irrigation and flushing of gutters, the domestic
supply being brought in iron pipes from the water works at City Creek
Canon, which is at such an elevation as gives sufficient pressure for
extinguishing fires, and for that purpose there are stand-up hydrants
placed at short distances along the sideways.
To these hydrants are attached the hose for watering the carriage-ways,
which, during the summer months, is done every day except Sunday, this
being part of the duty of the men of the fire brigade. Outside of each
footpath, between the water course and carriage-way, there is a fine row
of shade trees, while on the other side of the footpaths the trees of the
orchards overhang the pathway, forming a pleasant, cool, shaded grove to
walk under—the pleasure being much enhanced by an abundance of flowers,
and all kinds of fruit overhead, quite within arm's-reach, and in many
cases considerable quantities lying on the footpaths. None of the citizens
are tempted to pull them, as everyone has an orchard of his own, in which
there are apples, pears, cherries, peaches, apricots, grapes, &c. Every
kind of fruit seems to grow to perfection, except the gooseberry, which is
very small, hard, and covered with small thorns.
Tramway cars are run in every direction from the centre of the city to
nearly three miles distant, the driver acting the part of guard. The cars
are drawn by mules, each of which is branded with the letter Y, the latter
being at one time the property of Brigham Young.
Not having observed any policemen in our rambles, we inquired how it
was—if they were dressed in plain clothes? We were informed that there was
no such official required; that the city was divided into wards, and each
ward had a surveyor or master who attended to its interests, and intimated
to the inhabitants when their labour was required to carry out any public
improvement. There was no evading this intimation; each had to turn out or
send a substitute, and had at all times to take the responsibility of
protecting his own property. Our informant stated that formerly they had
neither lawyers nor publicans, but now that a great many Gentiles had
settled amongst them, both these occupations had got a footing.
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