Sort
(1 - 4 of 4)
- Title
- Frank Merriwell's loyalty, or, The land of the lost people
- Author
- Standish, Burt L., 1866-1945
- Publisher
- Street & Smith, 79-89 Seventh Ave.
- Publication Date
- 1911-03-04
- Series
- Tip top weekly
- Number
- Tip top weekly ; no. 777
- Also contains:
- Saved by a horse, Meanings of some common phrases, A tootle, A furlough, Would break the set, Worse and worse, Pills, He was for square business, Self-esteem, That circus parade, Miseries of suburban life, Figuratively speaking
- Title
- Frank Merriwell's daring deed, or, The race for a hundred lives
- Author
- Standish, Burt L., 1866-1945
- Publisher
- Street & Smith, 79-89 Seventh Ave.
- Publication Date
- 1911-02-11
- Genre
- Western stories
- Series
- Tip top weekly
- Number
- Tip top weekly ; no. 774
- Also contains:
- Houdin, the conjurer, Caught, Old things in animal life, Do ants talk?, Dr. Buckup's daily dose of mental tonics, Repaired by nature, Largest loaf of bread, Thirst for knowledge, Jujutsu no use, Playing dead horse, Engineer caught quail, A modern Solomon, Only natural, Learn to listen, He said no more, Against time
- Title
- Frank Merriwell's wit, or, Thwarting a governor
- Author
- Standish, Burt L., 1866-1945
- Publisher
- Street & Smith, 79-89 Seventh Ave.
- Publication Date
- 1911-02-25
- Genre
- Western stories
- Series
- Tip top weekly
- Number
- Tip top weekly ; no. 776
- Also contains:
- False Message, Bear's fall, Tramp at Romer's, Heroes both, About Eskimos, On a buffalo's back, He caught something, Doctor's differ, Beginning a career, A mother's heart
- Title
- Frank Merriwell's intervention, or, The horse thief of the Lazy X
- Author
- Standish, Burt L., 1866-1945
- Publisher
- Street & Smith, 79-89 Seventh Ave.
- Publication Date
- 1911-02-04
- Genre
- Western stories
- Series
- Tip top weekly
- Number
- Tip top weekly ; no. 773
- Also contains:
- Keyser's dream, Why he didn't marry, Extraordinary horse, Colonel's remedy, Why and how we laugh, Timekeeping in other lands, The fate of the stowaway, Lest he forgot