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GIANT ACTION! GIANT ADVENTURE! THE GUNSMITH GIANT - TROUBLE IN TOMBSTONE Special Giant Edition Ex-gunfighter Dallas Stoudenmire is now heir to a Texas border town that draws the dregs of the West like flies. In El Paso, being honest is a sure way to get yourself killed. And Dallas is smart enough to know that he needs help. But riding shotgun for his friend is just the beginning for Clint Adams...The Gunsmith leaves El Paso behind and teams up with the Earp brothers and Doc Holliday in a showdown against the Wild West's most notorious killers—in a trouble spot called the O.K. Corral... Now, the classic all-action Gunsmith series explodes into even bigger action—in Clint Adams Giant Gunsmith adventure!
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Nearing 60, William D. Street (1851–1911) sat down to write his memoir of frontier life. Street's early years on the plains of western Kansas were both ordinary and extraordinary; ordinary in what they reveal about the everyday life of so many who went out to the western frontier, extraordinary in their breadth and depth of historical event and impact. His tales of life as a teamster, cavalryman, town developer, trapper, buffalo hunter, military scout, and cowboy put us squarely in the middle of such storied events as Sheridan's 1868–1869 winter campaign on the southern Plains and the Cheyenne Exodus of 1878. They take us trapping beaver and hunting buffalo for hides and meat, and drivin...
Before Dallas Stoudenmire accepted the position as marshal of El Paso, there existed no authority except that of the six-shooter, and very little precedent for a peace officer to follow. No one before had held the job for more than a couple of months. Yet, within two years, with the help of Jim Gillett, his young deputy, Stoudenmire had cleaned up the town, a task that earned him many enemies and, in the end, death. This is the story of Dallas Stoudenmire-auburn-haired, fiery-eyed, six-foot, two-inch gunfighter, container of laughter, liquor, and death-during the two tumultuous years in the early 1880’s when he served as almost the only law north of the Rio Grande and west of Fort Worth.
A reprint of the 1899 Publication with two parts bound in one volume.
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