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Tenting on the plains

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First Sentence
"GENERAL CUSTER was given scant time, after the last gun of the war was fired, to realize the blessings of peace."
718 pages
~11h 58min to read
Kessinger Publishing, LLC 1 views
ISBN
9781506158532, 9781463523114, 9781366513496, 9781411468801, 9781411431539, 9780578167251, 1582180520, 9781582180526, 0548269432, 9780548269435, 1587761130, 9781587761133, 1432673939, 9781432673932
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Paperback
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Description

Elizabeth Bacon Custer was just a young girl when she fell in love with one of the most controversial Indian fighters of the middle 1800s, and barely a woman when she defied her father to marry him. She went on to earn literary fame as well as financial independence with her entertaining tales of frontier life as the wife of General George Custer. Her stories of life on the plains are as colorful today as when they first appeared over a century ago. Note: DSI, the publisher of this e-book, is granting readers the right to print excerpts of this book as well as the right to lend/give this e-book to other Glassbook Plus Reader users. Printing: Users can print up to 100 e-book pages every seven days. Students and researchers will find this feature especially useful. To print, click on the menu button in the Glassbook Reader and select the print option. Lending/Giving: We currently have two ways to lend or give a book: you can beam it to a computer if both have infrared ports, or you can send it to a computer on your network. To lend a book to someone else, go to the Library, click a book. Click the Menu button and then click Lend/Give to display the Lend/Give dialog box. Choose a loan period or click Give. To send the book over an infrared connection, click Beam. To send the book to a computer on the network, enter the computer name in the Send To box and click Send. You can either lend the book or give it away. Like a paper book, there is only ever one working copy. Once the lending period expires, you get your rights back and you can re-read the book or lend it again. Of course, if you give it away, it's gone for good (unless the recipient gives it back).

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