Dobie, J. Frank
On the open range J. Rank Dobie; Illustrated by Benn Carlton Mead - Dallas, TX Banks Upshaw and Company 1960 - 312 p
Daniel Boone, the wild gobbler -- Wild life: game animals.
Prairie chicken eggs -- Other wild life.
The buffalo stampede -- "Bars" and "bar" hunters.
El matador -- Longhorns.
El señor coyote -- Mustangs.
The fiddler and the wolves -- Horse stories.
Slowtrap's panther -- Rides and riders.
Prairie dogs, paisanos, and rattlesnakes -- The Kansas Kid: "a cowboy for to be".
The David Crockett tradition -- The language of brands.
The grizzly and Hugh Glass -- Indian captives.
The bear that Pablo Romero roped -- Stories that names tell.
When the peñasco ran bear's oil -- Buried treasure.
Sancho -- Lost mines.
Old Blue, the bell ox --
Mustangers --
A mustang hunt --
The pacing white steed --
Mistus and the panther --
Shanghai and Selim, Indian fighters --
A race and a whinny --
Saved from a stampede --
The Pony Express --
A cowboy with a money belt --
In a Wyoming blizzard --
The Spaniard without a head --
Greatest of all Comanches --
The crane's drumstick --
"Me Cynthy Ann!" --
The boy hermit --
The river of lost souls --
Los Brazos de dios --
Stampede mesa --
The mezcla man --
The rider of Loma Escondida --
Nuggets in the sand --
The Breyfogle in Death Valley --
Bowie's secret.
Not a history in the formal sense, this book teaches the truest history of all in the anecdotes and narratives of the open range, which includes all of the great unfenced land, the people who lived and worked on it, and the animals which played so big a part in their lives. Of course, there are stories of superb mustangs and cow ponies, longhorns, and the wild life of the range. There are also chapters devoted to Indians, cattle branding, lost mines, buried treasures, and all the other appurtenances to a "sure 'nough" picture of the Southwest in all its glamour. There is pathos in the tales of white captives brought up among the Indians, humor in such stories as the predicament of Uncle Dick the fiddler, beset by music-loving wolves, and fascination in the exposition of true Western cowboy lore. The Old West is one of the two great romantic eras of this country, and it is part of the heritage of every child and grownup. To the completely uninitiated and to the most West-wise person, On the Open Range will be a source of infinite pleasure and pride in our American pioneer stock -- Book jacket.
--Southwest, New
978 Dob 48
On the open range J. Rank Dobie; Illustrated by Benn Carlton Mead - Dallas, TX Banks Upshaw and Company 1960 - 312 p
Daniel Boone, the wild gobbler -- Wild life: game animals.
Prairie chicken eggs -- Other wild life.
The buffalo stampede -- "Bars" and "bar" hunters.
El matador -- Longhorns.
El señor coyote -- Mustangs.
The fiddler and the wolves -- Horse stories.
Slowtrap's panther -- Rides and riders.
Prairie dogs, paisanos, and rattlesnakes -- The Kansas Kid: "a cowboy for to be".
The David Crockett tradition -- The language of brands.
The grizzly and Hugh Glass -- Indian captives.
The bear that Pablo Romero roped -- Stories that names tell.
When the peñasco ran bear's oil -- Buried treasure.
Sancho -- Lost mines.
Old Blue, the bell ox --
Mustangers --
A mustang hunt --
The pacing white steed --
Mistus and the panther --
Shanghai and Selim, Indian fighters --
A race and a whinny --
Saved from a stampede --
The Pony Express --
A cowboy with a money belt --
In a Wyoming blizzard --
The Spaniard without a head --
Greatest of all Comanches --
The crane's drumstick --
"Me Cynthy Ann!" --
The boy hermit --
The river of lost souls --
Los Brazos de dios --
Stampede mesa --
The mezcla man --
The rider of Loma Escondida --
Nuggets in the sand --
The Breyfogle in Death Valley --
Bowie's secret.
Not a history in the formal sense, this book teaches the truest history of all in the anecdotes and narratives of the open range, which includes all of the great unfenced land, the people who lived and worked on it, and the animals which played so big a part in their lives. Of course, there are stories of superb mustangs and cow ponies, longhorns, and the wild life of the range. There are also chapters devoted to Indians, cattle branding, lost mines, buried treasures, and all the other appurtenances to a "sure 'nough" picture of the Southwest in all its glamour. There is pathos in the tales of white captives brought up among the Indians, humor in such stories as the predicament of Uncle Dick the fiddler, beset by music-loving wolves, and fascination in the exposition of true Western cowboy lore. The Old West is one of the two great romantic eras of this country, and it is part of the heritage of every child and grownup. To the completely uninitiated and to the most West-wise person, On the Open Range will be a source of infinite pleasure and pride in our American pioneer stock -- Book jacket.
--Southwest, New
978 Dob 48