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Books published by publisher Donohue Brothers, Chicago, IL

  • Frontier Sketches

    Frank W. Calkins

    Hardcover (Donohue Brothers, )
    None
  • Donovan: A Modern Englishman

    Edna Lyall

    Hardcover (Donohue Brothers, Chicago, )
    Donohue Brothers Edition
  • Queenie's Whim

    Rosa N. Carey

    Hardcover (Donohue Brothers, March 15, 1900)
    Series for young women
  • The Book of Bow-Wows

    Elizabeth Gordon

    Hardcover (M. A. Donohue, Chicago, IL, March 15, 1913)
    None
  • The Confessions of Harry Lorrequer

    Charles Lever, None

    Hardcover (Donohue Brothers, March 15, 1900)
    None
  • THE YOUNG BUGLERS

    G. A. Henty

    (Donohue Brothers, July 6, 1899)
    None
  • Aesop's Fables

    Aesop

    Hardcover (Donohue Brothers Chicago, Aug. 16, 1880)
    8" x 10" x 1", heavy board cover, 160 pages of Aesops Fables brought to life. Photo in listing is photo of actual book offered for sale. Approximately publish date is 1870-1880. Heavy card pages, profusely illustrated, hundreds of fables to ponder and enjoy
  • The Prairie, a Tale

    J. Fenimore Cooper

    Hardcover (Donohue Brothers, July 6, 1901)
    published between 1901-1902 Greyish green cloth stamped black and orange with winged figure in a circle
  • Christmas Stories From Household Words and All the Year Round

    Charles Dickens

    Hardcover (Donohue Brothers, July 6, 1900)
    A variety of Christmas stories written by Charles Dickens, including: A Christmas Carol, The Chimes, The Cricket on the Hearth, The Battle of Life and The Haunted Man.
  • St. George for England : A Tale of Cressy and Poitiers

    G. A. Henty, Gordon Browne

    Hardcover (Donohue Brothers, Aug. 16, 1950)
    From PREFACE: "My Dear Lads: In the following story I have made no attempt to give anything like a general history of the long struggle between the brave tribes of New Zealnad and the forces of England and the colony. That struggle lasted over a period of some years, and to do justice to its numerous incidents in the course of a single volume would have left no space whatever available for the telling of a story. It was divided into two distinct epochs. In the first the natives of the north of the islands fought for their independence and their right to have a king, and be governed by their own laws. Nothing could exceed the courage with which they struggled for these ends, and it needed a very strong force of British troops to storm their pahs or fortified camps, and overcome their resistance. The second epoch embraces the sturggle brought about by the conversion of a portion of the tribes to the fanatical belief called the Pai Marire (literally 'good and peaceful'), whose votaries were generally known as the Hau-Haus. During the earlier war the natives behaved with great moderation, and there were but few cases of the murder of outlying settlers. The slaying of all whites was, however, the leading feature of the Hau-Hau religion, and many cold-blooded massacres occurred during the struggle. The British troops had been for the most part withdrawn before the commencement of the Hau-Hau troubles, and the war was carried on by bodies of constabulary raised by the colonists, and with the aid of tribes that remained friendly to us. The massacre of Poverty Bay, which forms the leading feature of my story, and the events that followed it, are all strictly in accorcdance with facts. Yours sincerely, G. A. Henty"
  • THE YOUNG BUGLERS

    G. A. Henty

    (Donohue Brothers, July 6, 1899)
    None
  • The Aeroplane Boys Flight or A Hydroplane Roundup

    John Luther Langworthy

    Hardcover (Chicago, IL M.A. Donohue & Co, March 15, 1914)
    None