Recently added books

Going Some

Creator: Beach, Rex Ellingwood, 1877-1949
Translator: -
Contributor: -
Editor: -


Brand new books:


Instantly Speed saw the direful consequences of such a procedure, and summoned his courage to say: "No. It's very kind of you, but I shall give up training." "_What!_" "I mean training on the road. I--I'll run indoors." "Not a bit like it," declared Stover. "You'll get your daily run if we have to lay off all the punchers on the place and put 'em on as a body-guard." "But I don't want a body-guard!" cried the athlete desperately. "We can't let you get hurt. You're worth too much to us." "Larry and I will take a chance." "Not for mine!" firmly declared the trainer. "I don't need no mineral in my system. I'm for the house." "Then I shall run alone." "You're game," said Willie admiringly, and his auditor breathed easier, "but we can't allow it."
From Canal Boy to President

The present series of volumes has been undertaken with the view of supplying the want of a class of books for children, of a vigorous, manly tone, combined with a plain and concise mode of narration. The writings of Charles Dickens have been selected as the basis of the scheme, on account of the well-known excellence of his portrayal of children, and the interests connected with children--qualities which have given his volumes their strongest hold on the hearts of parents. These delineations having thus received the approval of readers of mature age, it seemed a worthy effort to make the young also participants in the enjoyment of these classic fictions, to introduce the children of real life to these beautiful children of the imagination. With this view, the career of Little Nell and her Grandfather, Oliver, Little Paul, Florence Dombey, Smike, and the Child-Wife, have been detached from the large mass of matter with which they were originally connected, and presented, in the author's own language, to a new class of readers, to whom the little volumes will we doubt not, be as attractive as the larger originals have so long proved to the general public. We have brought down these famous stories from the library to the nursery--the parlor table to the child's hands--having a precedent
"I--I'd rather risk my life than put you to so much trouble." "It's only a pleasure." "Nevertheless, I can't allow it. I'll run alone, if they kill me for it." "Oh, they won't try to _kill_ you. They'll probably shoot you in the legs. That's just as good, and it's a heap easier to get away with." Speed felt his knee-caps twitching. "I've got it!" said he at last. "I'll run at night!" Stover hesitated thoughtfully. "I don't reckon you could do yourself justice that-away, but you might do your trainin' at daylight. The Centipede goes to work the same time we do, and the chances is your assassin won't miss his breakfast." "Good! I--I'll do that!" "I sure admire your courage, but if you see anything suspicious, let us know. We'll git 'em," said Willie.