You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
None
It helps to hear a few uplifting words to complement our daily lives. Grow a perfect day is written by the inspiring author of Swimming through the reeds. Victoria's words will touch your heart and positively enrich your life. The words within will bring to you a sense of perspective that will encourage you to dispel any negative thoughts or sense of lethargy. Believe you can and you will attract more happiness and goodness. You will find yourself becoming one step closer towards making your dreams and goals come true.
This brilliant self-help book is designed to assist each one of us to conquer our own particular problems, and?'Smile... Just one smile can make a difference'?as Victoria explains.' Throughout this book, a feeling of peace, hope and an uplifting momentum grows with each page and imbues the reader until its genuine calming and morale-lifting impetus is thoroughly absorbed and the healing commences.' Happiness and confidence starts with a wonderful chain reaction in our individual dealings with our own problems and creating a kindness and caring for others that can travel right around the world.' So read this and find your own new and wonderful dreams and achieve amazing things!
The account of a war surgeon who became Principal of McGill University in the midst of political, student and faculty unrest
Our Robertsons was a special project to record the hundreds of descendants around the world who had a unique and very special ancestral distinction. They were descendants of one or both of two brothers who appeared in the Shetland Islands, to the north of mainland Scotland, in the eighteenth century. Those brothers, who lived and raised families in Shetland some two and a half centuries ago, were named Thomas and John Robertson.This book is the culmination of efforts by many family members in Shetland, elsewhere in the British Isles, in New Zealand, Australia, and America, to find and tell the stories of these two Robertson brothers in Shetland and of their progeny around the world for six generations and beyond.
British Origins and Descendants Alexander, Bland, Beall, Berry, Blake, Bocock, Bond, Bonderant, Boone, Bowie, Bradford, BROOKE, Broome, Boyd, Butler, CABELL-HORSLEY, Cadwalader, Carroll, CAVANAGH, Chapman-Pearson, Clagett, Claiborne, COLE, Compton, Cullen, Denwood-Covington, DERING, Dorsey, Dunscomb, DuVal, Eltonhead, Elzey, Eversfield, Ewell, FIELDER, GANTT, Gittings, Glover, Graves, GREENFIELD, Hall, Hay, Heighe, Hilleary, Holdsworth, Keene, King, LEE-FEARN, Lewis, Mackall, Moore-Weems, Nelson, PARKER, Parrott, Perkins, Reynolds, Roberts, Semmes, Skinner, Smith (Highlands), Sprigg, STODDERT, Stoughton-Sloss, Tasker, Tryon, Waring, WEEMS, Wheeler, Wight (White), WILLIAMS, Winder, Wortham, Worthington, Wood, Wright, Young-Smith (Halls-Creek), with 57 Ancestral British Pedigrees.
In 1933, the Boeing Aircraft Company set a new standard for air transportation by introducing the Boeing 247 a graceful, all-metal, twin-engined aircraft that was 50 percent faster than the competition. Van der Linden traces the development of the 247 and the odyssey from its brief period of dominan