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Sadie Beckham missed her best friend, Grace, terribly. Her friend had gone to a town in the west called Clover Creek as a mail-order bride, and though Sadie knew Grace was looking for a husband for her, it seemed it would never happen. Stanley Gabriel had lost the love of his life, leaving him with three small children. His mother helped as much as she could, but it was difficult to be a full-time farmer and a part-time father. He needed someone who would marry him in name only. Someone he would never love. When Sadie received a telegram from her friend Grace inviting her to come to Clover Creek as Stanley’s mail-order bride, Sadie jumped at the chance. Upon meeting him, she was unsure she was doing the right thing. Together, Sadie and Stanley must find a way to create a family full of love. Sadie was certain Stanley could ever love again. Would she be able to convince him that he both loved and needed her? Or would Sadie spend the rest of her life in a loveless marriage?
'Dad there's something under my bed, ' Josh said as the forced his Dad's eyes open, 'Dad please wake up because there's something under my bed and it's making funny noises and it sounds like it's talking to itself, ' and when they looked there was something but it was a good something and Josh's Dad knew it was a good something because it was the same something that had been under his bed when he was Josh's age but why had Stanley come back and will Josh be the hero his Dad wa
A Visit to Stanley's Rearguard at Major Barttelot's Camp On the Aruhwimi: With an Account of the River-Life On the Congo
Far below the waves a little fish called Stanley lived with the rest of his shoal. They were the brightest, sparkliest fish in the whole of the deep, dark sea. One morning Stanley woke up rather late. "Coo-ee! It's me-ee!" he called to his friends as usual. But the reef was strangely quiet!
World War II did not end in 1945 at least not for the Dwyer family of Hastings, Nebraska Nayeli Urquiza and Dardis McNamee, The Vienna Review For decades, Kay Hughes was unaware of her family s unresolved mystery. After her grandparents, Harold W. and Ellen Dwyer, received a telegram stating that their son 2nd Lt. Stanley Dwyer had become MIA over Austria on May 10, 1944, they began a relentless search. Left with only unanswered, nagging questions, they endured a lifelong private grief. Years later, one question would rekindle the search which, in turn, led Kay and her father, Harold E. Dwyer, Stanley s brother, on an intriguing journey across two continents and generations. In their quest t...