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FOUR-FOOTED AMERICANS 



sadden you. But we know at best they are useless to 

 us, and trouble the Fur Seals by worrying them and 

 disputing their breeding grounds, so the Aleuts are 

 welcome to them. 



" Another waterman there is that, even now, you may 

 see for yourselves some day about a rocky harbor or 

 river mouth. He wears hair and no fur, and he is the 

 true Seal, not the Sea Bear. He is, or was, common to 



Harbor Seal. 



all coasts, and has many names, — Sea Dog, Hair Seal, 

 t'ommon Seal, or Harbor Seal." 



" Harbor Seal is the name that Wise i\Ien prefer," 

 said Dr. Roy ; " and when my father was a young man 

 these Seals haunted the rocks of New York harbor in 

 great numbers. Bobbins Reef, that we have so often 

 passed, <_)live, was called after these Seals by Dutch 

 sailors, robyu meaning Seal in their language." 



"I knew not that," said Olaf ; "but in spring they 

 herd about Newfoundland, having their young in jMay 

 and June, but going to the warmer sea islands in 



