CHAPTER I. | | | PAGE | | The North Polar Practical Association | 7 | | CHAPTER II. | | To Syndicate or not to Syndicate | 19 | | CHAPTER III. | | The North Pole is Knocked Down to the Highest Bidder | 27 | | CHAPTER IV. | | Old Acquaintances | 34 | | CHAPTER V. | | The Polar Coal-Field | 40 | | CHAPTER VI. | | A Telephonic Conversation | 47 | | CHAPTER VII. | | Barbicane makes a Speech | 59 | | CHAPTER VIII. | | Like Jupiter | 70 | | CHAPTER IX. | | Sulphuric Alcide | 75 | | CHAPTER X. | | A Change in Public Opinion | 80 | | CHAPTER XI. | | The Contents or the Note-book | 87 | | CHAPTER XII. | | Heroic Silence | 91 | | CHAPTER XIII. | | A Truly Epic Reply | 98 | | CHAPTER XIV. | | The Geographical Value of x | 106 | | CHAPTER XV. | | Interesting for the Inhabitants of the Terrestrial Spheroid | 107 | | CHAPTER XVI. | | The Chorus of Terror | 114 | | CHAPTER XVII. | | The Works at Kilimanjaro | 117 | | CHAPTER XVIII. | | The Wamasai wait for the Word to Fire | 126 | | CHAPTER XIX. | | J. T. Maston regrets he was not Lynched | 129 | | CHAPTER XX. | | The End of this remarkable Story | 136 |
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