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Books published by publisher Frederick A Stokes Company

  • Doctor Dolittle's Post Office

    Hugh Lofting

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes Company, Sept. 3, 1934)
    None
  • Lives of Busy Neighbors

    Inez N. McFee

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes Company, March 15, 1924)
    None
  • Dawn O'Hara

    Edna Ferber

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes Company, March 15, 1911)
    1911 hardback. Grosser and Dunlap publishers. Cover and pages are tight.
  • Love & Friendship and Other Early Works: Now First Published from the Original MS.

    Jane and G. K. Chesterton Austen

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes Company, July 5, 1922)
    None
  • The glory of the conquered: The story of a great love

    Susan Glaspell

    (Frederick A. Stokes Company, July 5, 1909)
    Susan Keating Glaspell was an American Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, actress, novelist, and journalist. With her husband George Cram Cook she founded the Provincetown Players, the first modern American theater company.
  • The golden eagle mystery,

    Ellery Queen

    Hardcover (Fredericks A. Stokes Company, Jan. 1, 1942)
    Stated First Edition in original unclipped dust jacket. Clean bright orange cloth boards with brown eagle in flight, brown lettering on cover and spine. Tiny dent at base of front board, otherwise unworn. Binding is tight and square, hinges are sound, no cracking. Pages and edges are clean with illustrated endpapers; very tasteful previous owner custom bookplate on front pastedown. Illustrated with drawings by E. A. Watson. 272 pages. Clean dust jacket has slight wear at upper spine corners and one corner tip, not price clipped (2.00 on front inside flap), one short closed edge tear. Enclosed in new archival quality removable mylar cover. The boy who begaqn his career as amaqteur detective in the exciting chase of "The Black Dog Mystery" has a new adventure with his Scottie dog in an American east coast village.
  • The Story of Doctor Dolittle

    Hugh Lofting

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes Company, July 6, 1920)
    John Dolittle is a kind-hearted country physician who keeps goldfish in his pond, rabbits in the pantry, white mice in a piano, and a hedge-hog in the cellar. He also has an unusual gift: he can talk to animals-a talent that comes in handy, since he prefers treating animals, rather than humans, as his patients.
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  • Jack the Young Cowboy: An Eastern Boy's Experiance on a Western Round-up

    George Bird Grinnell

    eBook (FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY PUBLISHERS, Jan. 5, 2015)
    Jack's cowboy life began just as a great change was sweeping over the cattle range. Cattle had first been brought into the country only a few years before—old-fashioned long-horns driven up over the trail from Texas.In those days the people in the West were not many. Towns were small, farms almost unknown, wagon roads few. Except about the pastures of the larger ranches, there were no fences. Over most of the land the cowboy roamed alone.His seemed a life of romance. Free as the birds, he wandered over the wide range, going when and where he pleased. But this romance was only apparent. No man worked harder than he, or for less reward. His toilful days and short broken nights; his small pay and his poor food were recorded in the songs that he sang as he rode about the cattle. This was in the early days of the cattle industry.A little later, on the plains came a change from pioneer conditions to those approaching luxury.The earlier cattlemen in the North—those who ranged their stock on the Platte and the various forks of the Loup River—made great profits. Yet as time went on they saw competition constantly growing sharper and ranges being overstocked. As the news of their profits drifted eastward many young men, allured by the romance of the cowboy's life, and ignorant of its actual conditions, came into the cattle country. These believed that success with cattle was to be attained by riding about and watching the cattle increase and grow, and shipping them to market when they had grown. They were glad to be interested in a business at once so agreeable and so profitable; and many a one exchanged his money for a herd, a brand and some log buildings, and rode over the range awaiting the advent of his riches. Many of the early cattlemen sold their herds to the newcomers, who, somewhat later, discovered that with the cattle they had bought also much experience.These changes were in operation when Jack entered on his cowboy life.
  • The Owls' house,

    Corsbie Garstin

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes Company, July 6, 1924)
    None
  • Wild Flower Book for Young People

    Alice Lounsberry

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes Company, Aug. 16, 1906)
    None
  • The head of the house of Coombe,

    Frances (Hodgson) Burnett

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes company, Jan. 1, 1922)
    None
  • Kaleidoscope

    Eleanor Farjeon

    Hardcover (Frederick A. Stokes Company, July 5, 1928)
    None