An illustrated history of Skagit and Snohomish Counties; their people, their commerce and their resources, with an outline of the early history of the state of Washington .. . l cause of its discontinuanceabout 1895. THE EDMONDS CHRONICLE, which was discontinued in lS9-i, upon the com-plete destruction of the property by fire, appearedfirst in the spring of 1890, published and editedby Hartnell & Lintz. At that time Edmondswas enjoying its great boom, and it was throughthe activity of the town-site owners, the Minne-apolis Realty & Investment Company, thatHartnell & Lintz were led to enter the


An illustrated history of Skagit and Snohomish Counties; their people, their commerce and their resources, with an outline of the early history of the state of Washington .. . l cause of its discontinuanceabout 1895. THE EDMONDS CHRONICLE, which was discontinued in lS9-i, upon the com-plete destruction of the property by fire, appearedfirst in the spring of 1890, published and editedby Hartnell & Lintz. At that time Edmondswas enjoying its great boom, and it was throughthe activity of the town-site owners, the Minne-apolis Realty & Investment Company, thatHartnell & Lintz were led to enter the field atthat point. The plant occupied a handsome,substantial, two-story frame building, erectedfor its use by the Realty & Investment the two years of its existence, theChronicle won for Messrs. Hartnell & Lintz acommendable reputation as capable newspapermen. Following the abandonment of the Chronicle,came the LYRE, another weekly, whose initial number appeared inJuly, 1893. J. Hartson Dowd was its founderand publisher. However, the Lyre could notweather the financial storm of that period andsoon sank to rise no more. ™^^, ^ts Ox. TULALIP AND SIWASH INDIANS CHAPTER IV INDIANS OF SKAGIT AND SNOHOMISH COUNTIES There are in Skagit, Snoliomish and adjoiningcounties five small Indian reservations, four uponthe shore of the sound and one somewhat inland,yet so near the coast as to be subject to essen-tially the same conditions. The leading one ofthese reservations, being the headquarters for theagency and its schools, as well as being thelargest both in area and population, is the Tula-lip. The Tulalip reservation is immediatelynorth of Port Gardner bay, its entire southernand western line bordering that bay and theadjoining portions of the sound. The easternline of the reservation just reaches the city of^Marysville. The Swinomish reservation occupies thesoutheast peninsula of Fidalgo island, separatedfrom the town of La Conner by the Swinomishslough. The Liunmi


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidillustratedh, bookyear1906