Vulgar words in The Young Alaskans on the Missouri (Page 1)
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"Well, our fellows were up in there all alone, weren't they?" exclaimed Jesse.
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About the first man up in there was James Kipp.
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"I can promise you some knotty problems up in there.
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Once in a while a snag of venison; antelope hard to get; no buffalo now, and very few elk; by now, even ducks and geese began to look good, and trout.
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"Well, sir, that was beyond the Lemhi Pass, up in there, thirty miles from here, about.
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I'm promising you she's rough, up in there.
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"Now, we can go by motor car from Monida right to the mouth of Hell Roaring Cañon, at the foot of Mount Jefferson, and up in there, at the head of that cañon, there is a wide hole in the top of the mountains, where the creek heads that everybody now calls Hell Roaring Creek.
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J. V. Brower went up in there with a rancher named Culver, who lived at the head of Picnic Creek, at the corner of the Alaska Basin, and Brower wrote a book about it.
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Now on September 26, 1895, I rode horseback up in there with Mr. Allen, and we rode right on up over Hanson, and down into Hell Roaring, and beyond where they left their pack horse.
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"And then, if we get them up to the Hole, we could camp up in there all night," suggested John.
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"It'll sure be cold up in there, with no tent and not much bedding and none too much to eat.
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I've had fine fishing up in there.