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Books published by publisher Bobbs-Merrill company

  • George Washington, boy leader

    Augusta Stevenson

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill, March 15, 1959)
    None
  • Robert E. Lee: Boy of Old Virginia

    Helen A. Monsell, Clotilde Embree Funk

    Hardcover (Bobbs Merrill, Jan. 1, 1937)
    Previous owners name on first fly leaf else good, orange cloth
  • Augustus Flies

    Le Grand

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill, March 15, 1944)
    None
  • When the Frost Is on the Pumpkin

    James Whitcomb Riley

    Hardcover (The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Feb. 25, 1911)
    None
  • Eli Whitney, boy mechanic

    Dorothea J Snow

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill Co, March 15, 1948)
    6" x 7 1/2", 187 pp., orange boards with black lettering on front cover and spine.
  • Daniel Boone Boy Hunter

    Augusta. Laune, Paul, Stevenson

    Paperback (The Bobbs-Merrill company, March 13, 1943)
    None
  • Bambi's Children

    Felix Salten, Erna Pinner

    Hardcover (The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc., March 15, 1939)
    Meet the new fawns in the forest: the descendants of Bambi discover the woods in this sequel to "Bambi." Twin fawns Geno and Gurri are the children of Faline and Bambi. The pair must grow up and navigate the world of the woods with the help of their mother and Bambi, the new Prince of the Forest. But for young fawns, the wild can be dangerous. Gurri is injured by a fox and has a run-in with the most dangerous of creatures: man. Geno is challenged by rival deer and worries about the impending fight. But when the family begins to fall apart, it is the familiar presence of Bambi who tries to set it right again.
  • Abigail Adams

    Jean Brown Wagoner

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill Company, Aug. 16, 1949)
    None
  • Squanto, young Indian hunter

    Augusta Stevenson, Nathan Goldstein

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill, March 15, 1962)
    None
  • Abdallah or The Four-Leaved Shamrock

    Mary L. (trans.) Lefebure-Laboulaye, Edouard Rene; Booth

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill Company, March 15, 1905)
    Abdallah is the son of a Bedouin woman, widowed before his birth. Hadji Mansour, a wealthy and avaricious merchant of the neighboring town of Djiddah, confides to her care his new-born son Omar; and fearing lest the evil eye shall single out his child, he charges her to lay the boys in the same cradle and bring them up as brothers. An astrologer is summoned to the house. He grants Mansour's three wishes: that Omar shall be healthy and wealthy, and love no one but himself. On Abdallah he lays a charge to seek the four-leaved clover. Omar is reclaimed at fifteen by his father, and immediately begins a career of selfish and heartless greed. To Abdallah a wise Jew explains that the four-leaved clover was a mystic flower, which Eve had hastily snatched on her expulsion from Paradise. One leaf was of copper, one of silver, the third of gold, and the fourth a diamond. Eve's hand trembled as the fiery sword touched her, and the diamond leaf fell within the gates of Paradise, while the other three leaves, swept away by the wind, were scattered over the earth. The deeds by which Abdallah seeks to win the successive leaves-and especially the crisis of his fate when revenge against Omar, who has irreparably injured him, is weighed against the diamond leaf-form the material of the story.
  • War, or, What happens when one loves one's enemy

    John Luther Long, N. C. Wyeth

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill Company, March 15, 1913)
    None
  • Raggedy Ann and Andy and the kindly Ragman

    Johnny Gruelle

    Hardcover (Bobbs-Merrill Co, March 15, 1975)
    None