Skid Road

Highlights
- alternate approaches that a writer can follow. It was Malcolm (Location 339)
- so that strangers in town were sometimes startled to have a cello or a tuba swoop past them on the street. The (Location 367)
- Indian house, long deserted and partly overgrown with wild roses, standing near the present corner of First Avenue South and Yesler Way. (Location 716)
- The showplace of Seattle was the house that Captain Felker built, two stories high with a wide porch and three chimneys and hardwood floors and good white paint and a white picket fence. (Location 850)
- The Kenworthys built a big frame house at Fifth and Union, (Location 1498)
- David S. “Doc” Maynard in 1864 in his second-floor studio over a drug store and variety store where the Merchants Cafe now stands on Yesler Way. (Location 2117)
- At the corner of his orchard, which touched First Avenue and Cherry Street, he built a one-story, 30 × 100-foot hall (Location 2285)
- A more ingenious evasion of the law was the creation of a play in which a celebrated pugilist acted the part of the hero and in the final act clashed with a local heavy. John L. Sullivan, Jim Corbett, Bob Fitzsimmons, and Jim Jeffries, the championship dynasty of the nineties, all appeared in Seattle in plays suited to their abilities. (Location 2312)
- Second and Washington musicians from the People’s Theater (Location 2449)
- Crystal to open a more pretentious establishment at Second and Seneca in 1904. (Location 2855)