Rare Books
Fiddle Hill
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The spy in the caboose
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"They branded him a saboteur - yet he worked for their good. This is the strange tale of Sam Carvey, a young lad interested in railroading in British Columbia. Sam is typical of the youth who, too young to fight at the battle front against those who would take away their freedom, try to do their bit for their country behind the lines. Such was the case with this young Canadian. Yet, in a most unbelievable manner, he is left friendless and is known as a Nazi spy"--Dust jacket flap.
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Open throttle : stories of railroads and railroad men
Rare Books
They were a hardbitten crew--the men who built the railroads and the men who ran the trains. With a sure hand Phyllis Fenner has chosen ten stories that dramatize different phases of railroading and describe many types of men: those who worked with dogged persistence, and those who tried to come up the easy way; those who were down to earth, and those who indulged in a bit of fancy--to the the confusion of their comrades. Among the authors included are: Stephen Vincent Benét, Sholom Aleichem, and Conrad Richter--Adapted from jacket.
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The Big Ivy
Rare Books
"A novel about railroading in the great days of the steam locomotive"--Jacket.
644065

The battle of Bunker's Hill
Visual Materials
Image of the Battle of Bunker Hill during the siege of Boston, Massachusetts, in 1775 at the start of the American Revolutionary War; British and American soldiers clash in a battle scene with flags raised and men fighting with swords and rifles; dead and wounded men litter the ground; ships firing in Boston Harbor visible in background at right.
priJLC_MIL_001257

Battle of Bunker Hill
Visual Materials
Image of the Battle of Bunker Hill during the siege of Boston, Massachusetts, in 1775 at the start of the American Revolutionary War; British and American soldiers clash in a battle scene with flags raised and men fighting with swords and rifles; dead and wounded men litter the ground; ships firing in Boston Harbor visible in background at right.
priJLC_MIL_001278
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William Morris : his work and influence
Rare Books
William Morris held that art was everybody's business, whether they are themselves artists or not. By art he didn't mean merely pictures or statues, but all the work of men's hands. He made beautiful things for himself and others, feeling that beauty is the result of men who are happy in their work and lives--ugliness is tied to unhappiness. Morris believed that one of the chief ills of modern society was that most people had to work at jobs that were joyless--and it was against that joylessness that he rebelled. His fight was against a barbarism caused by joyless labor, and the discontent that did not know it as a cause.
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