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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 18 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 66993 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 79 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 Washington 10 Mr. 8 Pacific 8 Columbia 7 Seattle 7 Mrs. 6 illustration 6 River 5 County 4 Tacoma 4 Oregon 4 Lake 3 United 3 States 3 Spokane 3 Sound 3 Puget 3 Mountains 3 Mount 3 John 3 Indians 3 God 3 Alaska 2 man 2 come 2 York 2 Van 2 Valley 2 Union 2 Thomas 2 Territory 2 Street 2 Sandy 2 Red 2 Rainier 2 Portland 2 Pettengill 2 Park 2 New 2 Jimmie 2 Industrial 2 Gap 2 FIG 2 Elizabeth 2 Egbert 2 David 2 Cascade 2 Ben 1 water 1 time Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2828 man 2260 time 1975 foot 1689 day 1617 year 1357 mountain 1150 mile 1101 way 1061 water 935 place 923 hand 906 life 882 side 840 night 808 thing 792 part 780 head 771 river 763 eye 747 woman 724 land 720 state 717 county 714 city 711 tree 711 line 689 people 686 face 680 forest 656 one 654 country 650 illustration 641 name 635 house 622 town 620 work 615 length 611 something 588 area 567 coal 563 snow 548 ground 544 home 523 child 522 boy 515 case 503 father 491 point 479 number 479 glacier Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 8017 _ 2711 | 2252 Washington 1271 Mr. 1071 W. 1063 Seattle 837 County 824 River 763 Columbia 691 Pacific 677 Mrs. 577 Mountains 533 Donald 527 Indians 517 Tisdale 497 Oregon 464 C. 463 Mount 462 Lake 460 Nan 459 Daney 451 States 444 Denny 439 Everett 438 . 429 Rainier 427 Sound 427 Puget 407 Park 405 J. 396 New 393 S. 384 H. 383 United 373 D. 369 Laird 369 Ben 368 I. 361 Cascades 359 A. 355 Alaska 343 Cascade 339 John 333 N. 329 B. 324 Port 305 E. 301 Weatherbee 295 T. 294 California Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 12559 he 11083 it 10941 i 5426 you 4970 she 4777 they 3735 him 3040 we 2370 me 1997 them 1670 her 824 us 581 himself 480 ''em 252 myself 203 herself 196 themselves 178 one 163 itself 75 yourself 55 ourselves 41 mine 39 his 30 ''s 29 hers 28 yours 20 thee 17 theirs 10 em 5 ye 5 hisself 4 ours 4 i''m 3 pelf 2 you''ll 2 meself 1 yourselves 1 you''self 1 you''re 1 tself 1 trowbridgii.--this 1 thyself 1 then''--you 1 their-- 1 ownself 1 or\|53.2|113|aug 1 my 1 mann= 1 manger--"couldn''t 1 m''self Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 41865 be 14040 have 4564 do 3932 say 2758 go 2599 make 2427 come 2213 see 2157 get 2124 take 2092 know 1565 find 1387 look 1344 give 1317 tell 1276 think 976 leave 935 seem 792 call 784 stand 762 follow 710 reach 673 show 656 turn 656 keep 642 bring 636 hear 622 want 622 put 587 bear 564 start 559 hold 536 ask 530 try 527 become 525 begin 513 live 506 run 504 pass 493 occur 491 let 481 use 477 set 467 work 467 grow 458 fall 446 feel 433 meet 419 send 419 carry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7446 not 2676 up 2396 so 2028 then 1944 more 1887 out 1664 now 1648 little 1617 other 1599 old 1533 good 1474 only 1436 first 1415 great 1309 long 1302 here 1301 down 1270 well 1259 large 1129 there 1124 very 1060 just 1054 many 1025 back 1008 as 921 much 920 never 891 most 886 about 844 high 842 also 840 small 838 again 826 even 799 few 791 too 783 right 770 off 741 far 735 same 732 last 722 all 719 still 704 white 692 in 683 young 679 on 669 ever 659 own 659 away Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 346 good 300 most 273 least 164 large 89 great 83 high 67 Most 58 near 52 bad 44 fine 43 dalqu 41 old 25 early 24 low 20 young 20 big 18 late 18 grand 17 slight 17 rich 16 deep 14 common 13 eld 12 noble 11 strong 11 hard 11 easy 10 small 10 pure 9 happy 9 brave 8 wealthy 8 dear 8 close 7 proud 7 manif 7 heavy 7 full 7 cold 7 bright 6 southw 6 long 5 steep 5 short 5 lofty 5 light 5 fond 4 wild 4 wide 4 white Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 591 most 60 least 48 well 4 highest 2 southernmost 2 soon 2 near 2 dalquest 1 whimsically--"though 1 remotest 1 openest 1 infest 1 hard 1 darkest 1 characters._--size Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 www.gutenberg.net 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42314/42314-h/42314-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42314/42314-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/4/3/7/14376/14376-h/14376-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/4/3/7/14376/14376-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/mountrainierreco00meanuoft 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 feet are large 5 eyes are large 5 head is large 5 parts are dark 4 man was not 4 men were not 4 parts are reddish 4 washington are more 3 _ is more 3 _ was _ 3 head is small 3 man did not 3 man had ever 3 men do n''t 3 parts are brownish 3 river is navigable 3 washington are not 3 washington is almost 3 washington were probably 2 _ are cosmopolitan 2 _ are not 2 _ did _ 2 _ did not 2 _ got _ 2 _ seems not 2 day is over 2 day was fast 2 eyes did not 2 eyes were closed 2 eyes were large 2 feet are small 2 hands were busy 2 head was well 2 man is dead 2 man is not 2 man thought deeply 2 man was ever 2 man went on 2 men were still 2 mountains are always 2 parts are blackish 2 parts are grayish 2 parts is dark 2 thing was over 2 things ai n''t 2 w. did not 2 w. does not 2 washington are closely 2 washington are little 2 washington are usually Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ has no counterpart 1 columbia is not old 1 man has no belief 1 man has no better 1 man has no right 1 man is no help 1 man is not always 1 man looks no longer 1 man was not slow 1 men are not able 1 men had no further 1 men were not guilty 1 men were not radicals 1 mountains are not easily 1 place was no worse 1 seattle is not only 1 time are not fat 1 w. had no part 1 washington are not numerous 1 washington is not clear 1 washington is not yet 1 woman had no right A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 31994 author = Allen, G. F. (Grenville F.) title = The Forests of Mount Rainier National Park date = keywords = Douglas; FIG; Mount; Rainier; illustration summary = Douglas fir and western hemlock at the lower limits of the type, and fir trees that stand singly on the greensward of the open parks bring to flattened mountain hemlocks, alpine firs, and the white-bark pines The extreme limit of tree growth on Mount Rainier is 7,600 feet above forest of large and old Douglas fir and western hemlock. Mountain hemlock and alpine fir succeed the trees of the lower feet, but is a small and insignificant tree in the high mountains. Next to the Douglas fir the western hemlock is the most abundant tree in Although the western white pine is not a common tree in the park, it is common tree in the park at elevations above 4,500 feet. With the Douglas fir, hemlock, and red cedar it forms the dense forest In the mountain parks it is a handsome tree 50 to 60 feet high. id = 13343 author = Anderson, Ada Woodruff title = The Rim of the Desert date = keywords = Alaska; Armitage; Aurora; Banks; Beatriz; Columbia; Daniels; Dave; David; Elizabeth; Feversham; Foster; Frederic; Hollis; Jimmie; Marcia; Miss; Morganstein; Mr.; Mrs.; Pass; Seattle; Tisdale; Washington; Weatherbee; Wenatchee summary = Tisdale''s voice broke a little; and for a moment he looked off through the "My, yes," piped little Banks, and his eyes scintillated like chippings of Tisdale paused to draw his hand across his eyes and met Foster''s look over "I can trust it with Banks." Tisdale paused a moment, still looking out on "Of course," said Tisdale after a moment, "Mrs. Weatherbee will be eager Tisdale''s hands sought his pockets; his head dropped forward a little and The girl on the platform turned, and Tisdale moved a little to let her and Lighter likes your looks"--the station master gave Tisdale a careful Tisdale turned a little to look in her face. "Yes." The woman''s face worked a little, and she stood looking at him with Tisdale settled back in his chair and, turning his face, looked off the "This looks like my man, sure; but who is Mrs. Green-Banks? id = 10725 author = Chaplin, Ralph title = The Centralia Conspiracy date = keywords = American; Armistice; Centralia; Day; Everest; Grimm; Hubbard; I.W.W.; Industrial; Labor; Smith; Union; Washington; Workers; World; illustration; man summary = four American Legion men by members of the Industrial Workers of the World Legion men were attempting to raid the union hall when they were killed. There is only one body of men in the Northwest who would hate a union hall loggers, organized in the Industrial Workers of the World, had started a unoffending paraders" on Armistice Day. Centralia in appearance is a creditable small American city--the kind of the raid on the Union Hall in Centralia on Armistice Day--and who the lumber interests when they raided the Union hall in 1918. The raid of 1918 did not weaken the lumber workers'' Union in Centralia. A few days before the hall was raided Elmer Smith called at Grimm''s office Merriman by name, that the business men were organizing to raid the hall Centralia an organization of business men to combat this new labor id = 53582 author = Dalquest, Walter Woelber title = Mammals of Washington, Volume 2 University of Kansas Publications Museum of Natural History date = keywords = Amer; British; California; Cascades; Columbia; County; FIG; Lake; Merriam; Microtus; Mountains; Museum; Myotis; National; Oregon; Pacific; Proc; Racial; River; Rocky; Sorex; States; Type._--Obtained; United; Vashon; Washington; Wisconsin; illustration summary = Washington includes faunas ranging from the Upper Sonoran Life-zone to The Blue Mountains of southeastern Washington differ from other ranges of Washington, it is seen that the area occupied by the Rocky Mountain races possessing wide ranges in the lowlands of western Washington. Oregon and Washington (_townsendii_) probably occurred no farther north ranges in Washington, one, _oreas_, is a long-tailed form that seems not deglaciated land, the long-tailed mice of western Washington (_P. The ranges and distribution of the deer mice of eastern Washington are When more than one race of a species occurs in Washington, specimens the long-tailed shrews." In Washington, especially in the coastal area _Distribution._--Mountainous areas of northeastern Washington and eastern Washington but occurs in mountainous areas in northeastern _Distribution._--Western Washington west of the Cascade Mountains. 15, 1939 (type from Badger Mountains, Douglas County, Washington). _Distribution._--Western Washington and the Cascade Mountains, _Distribution._--Western Washington and the Cascade Mountains, id = 39334 author = Denny, Emily Inez title = Blazing the Way; Or, True Stories, Songs and Sketches of Puget Sound date = keywords = Alki; Asselt; Bay; Bell; Boren; Columbia; County; David; Denny; Elliott; Indians; John; Lake; Low; Mercer; Mr.; Mrs.; Olympia; Oregon; Point; Portland; Puget; River; Seattle; Sound; Street; Thomas; Van; Washington summary = Sarah Denny, his wife, looked out and saw the Indians going down the On the 26th, Low, Denny and Terry hired two young Indians of Chief Siwash muck-a-muck" (white man do not like Indian''s food), knowing little children; Miss Louisa Boren, a younger sister of Mrs. Denny; C. Choush, an Indian medicine man, came along one day in a state of When the day came, in the long, dark canoe, manned by a crew of Indians, fishing canoe of old Tsetseguis, the Indian who lived at the landing, County, Pa. His father was John Denny, a notable man in his time, a Denny traveled in a canoe with two Indians from the Seattle In speaking of those early pioneer days, Mr. Denny said: and old Indians show little change often in twenty or twenty-five years, "At the time of the Indian war, he, like Seattle and Curley, was id = 30139 author = Giles, Harry F. title = The Beauties of the State of Washington: A Book for Tourists date = keywords = Columbia; Curtis; Highway; Lake; Mount; Pacific; Puget; River; Sound; Spokane; Valley; Walla; Washington; illustration summary = [Illustration: DEEP LAKE--A TYPICAL SCENE IN THE CASCADE MOUNTAINS. deep; orchards fill its valleys; wheat plateaus extend for miles; salmon (or Mount Tacoma), second highest mountain in the United States proper, [Illustration: SUNSET FALLS AND MOUNT INDEX, 40 MILES EAST OF EVERETT.] [Illustration: TACOMA, THE CITY WITH A SNOW-CAPPED MOUNTAIN IN ITS DOOR Other attractive places are Lake Cushman, a mountain summer resort the state primary highways, leads east to the Sound country, and [Illustration: MOUNT RAINIER--LOOKING ACROSS LAKE WASHINGTON.] [Illustration: ROCK LAKE, 25 MILES SOUTHWEST OF SPOKANE. Columbia River Valley to the north and south is tributary and joins in sections along the river valleys and up into the mountains. largest fresh water lake in the United States, fifty miles east; Hayden Mount Spokane, 5,808 feet, twenty miles northeast of the city. All waters of eastern Washington reach the ocean through the Columbia of another state normal, fifteen miles southwest from the city of id = 15229 author = Howell, Ithamar title = A Review of the Resources and Industries of the State of Washington, 1909 date = keywords = Columbia; County; Northern; Pacific; Spokane; Washington; illustration; page; plate summary = Hops are a large staple product in many counties of the state. THE COUNTIES AND MORE IMPORTANT CITIES AND TOWNS OF WASHINGTON Benton county is able to supply the large towns with fruits and PROSSER, its chief town and county seat, is on the Yakima river river and the Washington & Great Northern railway is projected along county is made up of rolling prairie lands, of great fertility on Timber is the great source of industry at present, the county having the Northern Pacific railway, is the chief town and county seat. [Illustration: Plate No. 49.--View of Spokane River in Lincoln County, Two railroads reach the center of the northern half of the county, Ephrata is the county seat, on the Great Northern railway. northern portion the county is well watered by the Columbia and The Columbia river is the great highway of the county; no railroads State lands, distribution by counties 97 id = 35992 author = Jacobs, Orange title = Memoirs of Orange Jacobs date = keywords = Coast; Columbia; Congress; County; Court; God; House; Indians; Judge; Mr.; Oregon; Pacific; President; River; Seattle; States; Street; Territory; United; Valley; Washington; day; man; time summary = Every night a few, principally old men, would gather at Mr. Parker''s house, and when the door was closed and securely fastened, the two-days'' journey in the hills, finding grass, water and wood in great While out hunting the next day, I came upon the camp of a white man, and the surrounding country, stated the number of Indians residing man had taken possession of their country, had driven the game far away white man to the modes, habits of life and appearance of an Indian, is a At the time Mr. Harding was elected United States Senator for Oregon I it, said: "Judge, I think the Government can stand the increased was a plain man of the common people, came to my father''s house to see It is stated that an Indian chief said to the mountains, had several times started a large buck who passed down id = 13532 author = Kyne, Peter B. (Peter Bernard) title = Kindred of the Dust date = keywords = Agnew; Andrew; Brent; Caleb; Daney; Darrow; Dirty; Donald; Dreamerie; Elizabeth; God; Hector; Jane; Laird; Lumber; Mr.; Mrs.; Nan; New; O''Leary; Pile; Port; Sawdust; Tyee; York; good summary = When Donald came home from school that night, The Laird asked him byword in Port Agnew that Donald was his father''s son, a veritable look, Hector McKaye." And Donald thrust his smiling countenance close When, presently, Donald bade him good-night, Hector McKaye turned off o''clock to his father''s faithful old general manager, Andrew Daney. "Yes; I''m Nan," she replied, "and you''re Donald McKaye. "Come now, old dear; if Nan Brent isn''t a bad woman, just what is your Following his parting with Nan Brent on Saturday night, Donald McKaye to a certain man and one Nan Brent, of Port Agnew, Washington, there son''s case in the hands of God and Nan Brent, The Laird would have following Nan''s hoped-for departure from Port Agnew, Mr. Daney planned Man, can Donald McKaye wed Nan Brent of the Sawdust Pile?" manager sat the young ex-laird of Port Agnew; at Daney''s left the old id = 10751 author = Lomax, E. L. (Edward Lloyd) title = Oregon, Washington and Alaska; Sights and Scenes for the Tourist date = keywords = Agent; Alaska; City; Columbia; Dalles; General; Oregon; Pacific; Passenger; Portland; St.; Tacoma; Ticket; Traveling; Union summary = C.A. WHITTIER, City Ticket Agent, 528 Main St. LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND--23 Water St.--S. Freight and Passenger Agent, Mountain Div. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.--1 Montgomery St.--W.H. HURLBURT, Assistant General Fourth Columbia Tour: Portland to Alaska and return. Fifth Columbia Tour: Portland to San Francisco by boat. miles of changeful beauty all the way to Portland; Multnomah Falls, a in the water could be seen many of the stately trees which the Great The lava formation runs from Portland to Spokane Falls, as far north as there are two night passenger boats from Portland down, the "R.R. Thompson" and the "S.G. Reed," both stern-wheelers of large size, start from Portland; they leave Tacoma for all points on the Sound, and The Ocean steamers sail every fourth day from Portland to San Francisco. State-rooms on the River and Sound steamers are provided with one double hundreds of miles on this new division of the Union Pacific the country id = 37212 author = McWhorter, Lucullus Virgil title = The Discards date = keywords = Bureau; Goudy; Indian; Injun; Mr.; Service; Yakima; water summary = He knows that the white man has no right to the water those of the whites show fine crops, resultant from sufficient water. many years, white man ways of living is no good to me, I hate it As a substance of fact no white man has a right to any of the water from On the Yakima Reservation, Wash., water rights of long Near White Swan, nine Indian eighty acre allotments were receiving water between white settlers and Indians regarding Water rights along Medicine suit against the Reservation Water Hog. During all these weary years, the Indians, who have not died, have been Indian Service has seized upon their forty-one year-old ditch without =INDIAN WATER USERS OF THE PIUTE DITCH IN COUNCIL= Indians used this Simcoe Creek Water for 41 years "Let the white man get all the water he can in this life, for he is id = 40132 author = Ruffner, William Henry title = A Report on Washington Territory date = keywords = Cascade; Coal; Columbia; Falls; Lake; Mountains; Mr.; Pacific; Puget; River; Seattle; Snoqualmie; Sound; Spokane; Territory; Washington; sidenote summary = the beds of coal, iron ore, granite, limestone and marble, and also the Gilman Mines, 127--Seattle Coal and Iron Company, River, 142--Coal south of Puget Sound, 144--Total Guye Iron Mines, which were one mile from the line of the railroad. railroad, which we followed to the Gilman Coal Mines, on Squak, passing November 17.--To Kirke''s Coal Mines on Green River. the Franklin Coal Mines, passing the Renton, Cedar Mountain and Black [Sidenote: Analyses of Washington Territory coals.] [Sidenote: Seattle Coal and Iron Company.] [Sidenote: Snoqualmie Mountain Coal Group.] [Sidenote: Coal under the Great Bend country.] [Sidenote: Total shipments of coal from Washington Territory.] [Sidenote: The great magnetic ore beds of Cascade Mountains.] [Sidenote: The Seattle railway passes five coal fields.] Seattle; the Washington mines, 43 miles; the Raging River, 46 to 50 The coal on the west side of the Cascade Mountains will go to Seattle [Sidenote: Cost of mining coal.] id = 31810 author = Smith, Walker C. title = The Everett Massacre: A history of the class struggle in the lumber industry date = keywords = Beard; Beverly; Club; Commercial; Cooley; County; Everett; Industrial; John; Mr.; Mrs.; November; Park; Seattle; Sheriff; State; Thomas; Thompson; Tracy; Vanderveer; Verona summary = at the depot by Sheriff McRae who asked him what he had come to Everett testimony of prosecution witnesses Donald McRae, sheriff of Snohomish W. members present, followed the deputies to the county jail, demanding The free speech committee sent John Berg to Everett that same day to Everett on Labor Day, got on the box and said, "Fellow comrades----" but to the City Dock at Everett, shortly before two o''clock, the men were In Everett the deputies left the dock when the Verona had steamed out of men on the Verona on the way over to Everett, and answered: McRae said that none of the men taken to Beverly Park were beaten on the deputy sheriff and McRae''s right-hand man. testified that the various men arrested on the picket line in Everett Part of the men were released in Seattle and part in Everett. id = 42384 author = Stine, Thomas Ostenson title = Scandinavians on the Pacific, Puget Sound date = keywords = America; Anderson; John; Mr.; Norway; Pacific; Seattle; Sweden; Tacoma; Washington; illustration; scandinavian summary = that residents who left the city ten years ago, would on their return, On solicitation of prominent Scandinavian-Americans, a year ago, I near Salmon Bay. MARTIN TOFTEZEN.--About two-and-forty years ago, a son of Norway [Illustration: SCANDINAVIAN-AMERICAN BANK OF SEATTLE.] the city of Portland, Oregon, and the same year located in Seattle. In the more recent years, Scandinavians in Seattle have made great Scandinavian society in the city of Seattle, and some of the members Eight Scandinavian churches in the city of Seattle join to born in Norway, and for years resided in Minneapolis. but came to America in his early years, and received a fine education in came to America, 1878, and the same year landed on the Pacific coast. landed in Seattle, 1881, but spent two years reconnoitering the coast country seventeen years ago, landed in Seattle and shortly after settled He came to this city ten years ago, worked id = 14348 author = Wilson, Harry Leon title = Ma Pettengill date = keywords = Arrowhead; Aunt; Ben; Clyde; Cousin; Egbert; Gap; Genevieve; Henry; Herman; Homer; Lew; Minna; Mollie; Mrs.; Oswald; Pettengill; Red; Sandy; Shelley; Vernabelle; Vida; Wee; come; like summary = "Whales was pretty good," says Sandy; "but since the boss got a line on "Now say," says Sandy, "that does look like we got him believing. I said I wouldn''t mind looking what she come up from if she had started said in plain words that to come out here with me would look like come right out and asked her how big her roll was, saying he lived out look in his eyes one night when he said to me--where Vida couldn''t hear: Vernabelle said it was times like this, with a few real people, that she Ben said all right, come over with him and he''d get him started "My report pleased the Old Man all right," says Ben. "Of course it ain''t nice to want men to act like the brutes," said the looked like a good time was going to be had by all present except the id = 14376 author = Wilson, Harry Leon title = Somewhere in Red Gap date = keywords = Alonzo; Angus; Ben; Egbert; Ellabelle; Gap; God; Henrietta; Hetty; Jeff; Jimmie; Lon; Mr.; Mrs.; Nettie; New; Pete; Pettengill; Price; Red; Sandy; Sutton; Time; Tuttle; Wilbur; Wilfred; York; Yorker; come; little; look summary = because he says they ain''t got any kick to ''em like Alaska eggs have awfully good looking, but do you think he''s sincere?'' And even Mrs. Judge Ballard comes along and says: ''What a stimulus he should be to us "''Good for you,'' I says, having got word that Eddie is outside with his "But I was saying about this new look in Chester''s eyes, kind of far-off and this funny old man must have heard me--he looked like one of them like one of these fly city dames,'' says Snowstorm, who was a knowing old wasn''t doing right by the little one, bringing him up in a hole like New old man, getting in and looking more then ever like a dissolute working It sure looked like he was right for once in his life; so I says: look thirty or forty years old, like all New York men, and he had the id = 38132 author = nan title = A Hundred and Sixty Books by Washington Authors Some Other Writers Who are Contributors to Periodical Literature; Lines Worth Knowing by Heart date = keywords = Alaska; Mrs.; Pacific; Seattle; Tacoma; Washington; William; author summary = Glimpses in Pioneer Life on Puget Sound.= (1903.) Same author. History of Puget Sound Country.= (1903.) Colonel William Farland History of Washington, The Rise and Progress of an American State.= The author is son of Rev. Cushing Eells, founder of Whitman College contains a good account of the Seattle fire of 1889. Seven Years on the Pacific Slope.= (1914.) Mrs. Hugh Fraser and represents ten years'' work by the author. Political Primer for New York City and State.= (1900.) Same author. says "It is the only story that tells accurately of the early life of books she wrote are Stories of Montana, Men Two Counties, besides experiences in the sage-brush country where the author lived the life written several books on Alaska under the nom de plume May Kellogg general editor of a Sunday edition and author of feature stories in this book published in Tacoma. Writers'' Club of Seattle, 20 Writers'' Club of Seattle, 20 id = 42314 author = nan title = Mount Rainier, a Record of Exploration date = keywords = Allen; Carbon; Cascade; Cowlitz; Creek; Family; Glacier; Gray; Greene; Hooker; Indians; Longmire; Mount; Mountains; Mr.; Nisqually; Paradise; Park; Piper; Professor; Rainier; River; Sluiskin; States; Stevens; Tacoma; Takhoma; Trump; United; Van; Washington; White; foot summary = snow on the summit of the mountain adjoining Rainier on western side Falls; the stream we named Glacier Creek, and the mass of ice whence and White River glaciers, falling in distinct ice cascades for about peak rising about 3000 feet above the glaciers at its foot, so steep formed little mountain ridges having peaks nearly 100 feet high. This glacier forks near the foot of the steeper mountain slope, and than 10,000 feet below the summit of the mountain, the place of its falling on the lower slope of Mount Rainier is the Paradise Glacier. Rainier is the Carbon Glacier, the great ice river on the north side, on the lower slopes of the mountain, the Carbon Glacier is not wholly To these extensive valley glaciers the ice flows of Mount Rainier In wet places at 7,000 feet altitude near Nisqually Glacier. Glaciers on the west-central slope of the mountain.