William Macleod Raine To Ride the River With Grosset Hardcover 1939 Western

$ 5.28

Item Weight: 4 Oz Personalize: No Product Group: Book Personalized: No Original Language: English width: 6.3 in Genre: Drama, Fiction Number of Pages: 224 Pages Publication Year: 1939 Item Length: 9.3 in Author: William Macleod Raine Era: 1930s Language: English Narrative Type: Fiction Signed: No IsTextBook: No Vintage: Yes Binding: Mass Market Paperback Weight: 0 lbs Inscribed: No Topic: fiction, Westerns height: 1.4 in Country of Origin: United States Item Width: 6.3 in Type: Novel Ex Libris: No Intended Audience: Young Adults, Adults Item Height: 1.4 in Publisher: Grosset & Dunlap Book Title: Ride the River Format: Hardcover

Description

William Macleod Raine To Ride the River With Grosset Hardcover 1939 Western. William Macleod Raine, To Ride the River With, Grosset Hardcover 1939, Western, Has four pages with scribble, see photos, general wear, no dust jacket, good condition. Chiswick rode into the tough town and read the riot act to his old enemy, Sherm Howard, whom he suspected (and rightly) of being the big boss of the gang. William Macleod Raine, To Ride the River With, Grosset Hardcover 1939, Western, Has four pages with scribble, see photos, general wear, no dust jacket, good condition IN the picturesque lingo of the old West, "a man to ride the river with" was one who could be trusted in any emergency. Whether Jeff Gray was such a man became a serious question when he rode into Tail Holt and tangled in a shooting affray. Cattle had been rustled from the L C Ranch, owned by Lee Chiswick, one of Arizona's biggest cattlemen. Chiswick rode into the tough town and read the riot act to his old enemy, Sherm Howard, whom he suspected (and rightly) of being the big boss of the gang. On a dark street somebody took a pot shot at Chiswick. Jeff Gray fired in the direction from which that shot had come, approached Chiswick's party with a smoking gun in his hand, was mistaken for the bushwhacker and had to run for his life. Chiswick's daughter, Ruth, with him at the time, had been the first to call Gray "murderer," but gradually it was borne in upon her that her father's life and her own happiness depended upon what kind of man this crook-nosed stranger was.