Washington: A Guide to the Evergreen StateUS History Publishers, 1941 - 687 pages |
Contents
3 | |
5 | |
29 | |
37 | |
46 | |
TRANSPORTATION | 56 |
AGRICULTURE | 62 |
INDUSTRY COMMERCE AND Labor | 68 |
TOUR 2 | 199 |
TOUR 3 | 391 |
TOUR 4 | 411 |
TOUR 4A NewportCanadian Line State | 428 |
TOUR 5 | 443 |
TOUR 6 | 487 |
TOUR 8A BellinghamMount Baker LodgeKulshan Ridge State 1 | 502 |
TOUR 8B BurlingtonRockportRoss Dam State 17A | 508 |
EDUCATION | 95 |
RELIGION ΙΟΙ | 104 |
NEWSPAPERS AND RADIO | 114 |
LITERATURE | 120 |
ARTS AND CRAFTS | 129 |
MUSIC | 135 |
THE THEATER | 142 |
ARCHITECTURE | 154 |
ABERDEENHOQUIAM | 165 |
BELLINGHAM | 175 |
EVERETT | 186 |
TOUR 9 | 529 |
TOUR 7 | 568 |
MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK | 576 |
SUMMIT CLIMB Paradise Inn to Summit of Mount | 591 |
PUGET SOUND TOURS | 607 |
ISLAND TOURS | 616 |
mainlandMount Vernon | 622 |
CHRONOLOGY | 637 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 644 |
660 | |
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Common terms and phrases
acres beach Bellingham bridge buildings built cabin camp canyon Cascades cedar church Columbia River Company Coulee County Creek dairy district early east eastern Washington farms feet ferry fishing Fort Vancouver Glacier gold graveled road Grays Harbor highway hills houses Hudson's Bay Company Indian industry irrigation Island junction labor Lake land logging lumber miles mill mining Mount Baker Mount Rainier mountain named National Forest Northern Pacific Northwest Okanogan Olympia Olympic Olympic National Forest Olympic Peninsula operated orchards Oregon Park peaks pioneer plants Port Puget Sound railroad region rock route salmon San Juan Islands sawmill Seattle settlement settlers ship shore slopes Spokane station streams streets Tacoma Territory theater timber Tour town trail trees valley Vancouver Walla Walla Washington Territory Wenatchee western Whatcom Whatcom County winds wood Yakima Yakima River
Popular passages
Page 19 - When they thought his appetite had returned, an old woman presented him, in a bowl made of light-colored horn, a kind of syrup, pleasant to the taste, made from a species of berry, common in this country, about the size of a cherry, called by the Indians shelwel ;" of these berries a bread is also prepared, which, being boiled with roots, forms a soup, which was served in neat wooden trenchers ; this, with some cockles,