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F.O.B. murder
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Jack London's dog
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This is a fictional tale of Jack, the dog who was a real-life friend to Jack London during the 1897 Yukon Gold Rush and the model for Buck in his 1903 book, Call of the wild. This story imagines what might have happened when Jack was left behind by Jack London, and what adventures he might have had.
645621
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One-way ticket
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Vic Moine was an investigator for a big railroad in Los Angeles. His new case started with forged freight claims signed by a phony but poetical character who called himself Byron U. Davidson. But it led to elements that weren't at all routine; the "accidental" death of a loyal friend; the victimizing of helpless people; and the tangled clues left by a young mother and an exotic, ruthless woman--Adapted from jacket.
644156
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Colección de noticias pertenecientes á la traslación de Nuestra Madre y Señora María Santisima de Guadalupe de México
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Pamphlet featuring news of what happened in Mexico on December 10. Description of festivals held in Mexico City and after in Puebla de los Angeles with descriptions of the Church and various ceremonies.
653905
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The race of the rails
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"Paul Barrow had a comfortable fortune, but he had earned it. When he found that money prevented him from being liked on his own merits he did what any normal American boy would like to do. The results were not quite what he expected. The story of Paul's adventures as a railroad builder in the wilderness does not neglect the fortunes of his brother Bob or of Captain Sam Martin"--Page [1].
644150
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The emperor's snuff-box
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Beside the dead body of Sir Maurice Lawes are the shattered fragments of a snuff-box that once belonged to Napoleon. These fragments tell a tale, or rather two tales, one true and one false. Now, an English expert in criminology forces the evidence to tell the truth about what happened and to point out the real murderer.
660798
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Joseph Cross letters
Manuscripts
Two autograph letters from Joseph Cross to his parents. The first letter, dated Dec. 7, 1806 (HM 62947), was written from Fort Michilimackinac. Cross describes an expedition in which he and a group of soldiers searched for and rescued nine soldiers who went missing while taking supplies to Fort Saint Joseph. Cross found the men on a "desart island," starving to death and contemplating "the horrid plan of killing and eating one of their number." He then proceeds to list the adventures that he had since his last letter home, including traveling "396 miles up Lake Michigan among the Indians," descending "the celebrated Falls of St. Mary in an Indian canoe," being shot at by two Indian "centinels" and "blown up in a gun room" after the stored ammunition caught on fire. He was injured in the last incident, but "owing to the skill and great attention of our Surgeon and good health and constitution" made full recovery, "without a scar."
mssHM 62947-62948