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Get Oregonized: Oregon's History -- People, Natural Resources, Agriculture

by Rod Fielder Dona Coon

Get Oregonized is a history book written for students in grades three, four and five studying Oregon's history and regions. The text is designed to help students understand and appreciate the rich history, people and natural resources that shaped the state of Oregon.

The Sign of the Crooked Arrow (Hardy Boys Mystery Stories #28)

by Franklin W. Dixon

With only the slender clue of an arrow-shaped tie clasp, Frank and Joe Hardy pick up the trail of a cunning gang of thieves responsible for a wave of jewelry-store holdups.

Susie and the Ballet Horse (Susie the Young Ballerina #5)

by Lee Wyndham Jean Macdonald Porter

Ballet student Susie wins a scholarship to a summer dance camp, but she becomes homesick. What helps is her friendship with Ballerina the Lipizzaner, and her owner, the Captain, who has forbidden campers near his property. Can she help the Captain enjoy the campers again?

The Terrible Churnadryne

by Eleanor Cameron

Siblings Jennifer and Tom were visiting their grandmother in Redwood Cove for the summer when they heard the stories of Mr. Looper seeing a large sea creature two years before and were determined to see it themselves.

New World History & Geography: In Christian Perspective (Fourth Edition)

by A Beka Book staff

This text presents the history and geography of North and South America from a Christian perspective, including both the native American and European heritage of the New World. It includes a chapter on Canada. It follows an organized, regional progression as it leads students on a tour of the western hemisphere.

For Love of a Horse

by Patricia Leitch

When Jinny and her family move to the Scottish highlands, her hopes are that she'll finally have her own pony. But a Highland pony isn't enough for Jinny after she falls in love with an abused Arabian mare that has escaped into the highland wilderness.

I Wanted a Pony

by Diana Pullein-Thompson

When Agusta visits her cousins for the summer at Treetops Farm, she finds them rude, but figures they must be right that she's "queer." They all ride horses, and Augusta has no horse. They are not willing to lend her a horse, or allow her to ride one of their bikes, so she reads about horse-riding. The summer seems lost, until Augusta finds a way out of a day-trip to buy her cousin a horse, and sneaks into town to buy a horse of her own.

A Horse in the House

by William Corbin

Melanie Webb was one of those girls who can't live without a horse. She wouldn't have minded if it had been a scrubby little pony, so long as she had one, but the horse she had was a winner, a white palomino stallion called Orbit. Orbit had been given to Melanie when she was ten and he was only three months old, and they had been growing up together ever since. Orbit was never out of her thoughts, and he waited all day for the moment she came home from school to ride him. Then Mom and Pop went away to San Francisco for a week, giving Melanie the perfect opportunity to put her cherished plan into action--her secret wish to bring Orbit inside the house. And any worries she had about the suspicious horse-dealer who had been haunting the neighbourhood were pushed to the back of her mind. Then one night Melanie went out to the barn to say good night to Orbit. But when she got there, there was no one to say it to. Orbit was gone, and the unoccupied stable was intolerably desolate and empty. Melanie felt useless, like a captain without a ship. Yet somewhere, somewhere in this nightmarish world, Orbit existed. And somewhere, she was sure of it, locked in her head was some little memory, a shred of a clue to the thief.

The Brown Fairy Book

by Andrew Lang

Classic collection of 32 less familiar folk tales narrated in clear, lively prose. Different enough to capture all imaginations, the tales are drawn from many different cultures: the American Indians, Australian Bushmen, African Kaffirs, and from Persia, Lapland, Brazil, and India.

Born to Race (Cherrydale Farm #1)

by Blanche Chenery Perrin

When Whickery is born, Suzy knows this Thoroughbred is a winner. She has to be, as Cherrydale Farm has had serious setbacks and needs its racing luck to change. The future of Cherrydale Farm depends on Whickery. No other horse on the farm is good enough for the big races. To make matters worse, there is a thief on the farm--expensive feed is mysteriously disappearing. Suzy sets out to do two things--to catch the thief and to help Whickery become the race horse she was born to be! An exciting true-to-life story by an insider whose family bred and raced Secretariat and Riva Ridge.

The Native

by Ben Bache

A story about the first settlers in South Carolina, and their first interactions with the Native Americans.

Observing God's World (4th Ed.)

by Gregory Rickard Gregory Parker

A textbook designed to train children and young people in the Christian way of life.

Houseboat in the Woods

by Gladys Baker Bond

A family-loving homebody -- that is Trilby Scott, age eleven. And that is all she wants to be. (Except maybe something of an artist -- she does like to draw.) Her chief interest is in her baby brother, especially his safety: he is just at the age to get into everything. Between him and her reckless older brother, who is always looking for excitement, she has never a calm, nor a dull, moment. The great upset of her life comes when the family moves out to a wild part of Idaho. The big country seems so formidable and anything but homelike -- until she discovers on the beach of a mountain lake a houseboat that looks like Noah's Ark!

Tom Swift And His Giant Cannon (Tom Swift #16)

by Victor Appleton

Tom Swift has gone through four series and through generations of the Tom Swift family. Quiet Vision has republished the first twenty five titles in the original Tom Swift series. The original Tom Swift series is referred to as Tom Swift Sr. Quiet Vision tracks Tom Swift from "His Motor Cycle" to "His Electric Locomotive." Many characters reoccur through the series including: Mary Nestor, who Tom eventually marries, Mr. Damon who is always blessing almost everything, Eradicate Sampson and his mule Boomerang who is braver and more intelligent than assumed and many others. Called an inventor, Tom Swift is more of a talented mechanic with a special love for airships and airplanes.

Cotton in My Sack

by Lois Lenski

Picking enough cotton to fill the long sack means more money to spend in town on Saturday. Joanda knows what fun it is to spend the money she has earned herself; but she knows, too, what it means when the money is gone. Whatever happens, Joanda always shares in her family’s ups-and-downs, even when it means facing the mysterious loss of the load of cotton that was to mean the beginning of independence for the family.

The Something-Special Horse

by Lynn Hall

Chris' daddy bought horses to sell to the slaughterhouse, but when he bought a beautiful mare Chris realized she was a special horse. After riding her one time he began to plot to spirit her away. With his dad and the police on their trail, they attempted a 40 mile trek to try to save the 'something-special' horse. Good story for the entire family.

Working With Words Grade 5: Vocabulary Workbook

by Pathway

This course contains 42 lessons, 2 pages per lesson, with lessons divided into 3 sections: A) match 20 words with definitions; B) use word list to fill in the blank; C) various exercises. Every 4th lesson includes a review section instead of section C. Every 8th lesson includes a test after the review. There are a total of 5 tests, found in the back of the book, which may be cut out and reserved.

A Man of the Family

by Elizabeth Burleson

As far as Speck was concerned, being the baby of the family was a disadvantage. Now that he had just passed his thirteenth birthday, he was bound and determined to prove to his mother, father, two older brothers, and sister that he was well on his way to becoming a man of the family. But being a man around a Texas ranch is hard work. This Speck learns when, trying to pen the stallion Big Red, he accidentally lets the other horses get away, and must bring them back to the corral by himself. All the same, Speck loves his ranch and everything connected with it. And he is thrilled when he is finally allowed to take part in the excitement of horse breaking, sheep marking, and other adult jobs. When Speck’s older brother Ab is thrown from a horse and seriously injured, Speck is given more responsibility around the ranch. He experiences many new and exciting things, such as hunting for wolves, herding sheep by himself, earning the big stetson hat he has always wanted, and catching a runaway thoroughbred horse. Speck tackles all his new tasks with enthusiasm and finds — despite having to learn about mortgages, drought, floods, and other serious problems of a ranch — that it feels very good to be included as "a man of the family.”

Summer's Turning

by Ruth Harnden

Mark’s summer with his aunt, doing remedial reading while the rest of his family were away, could have been a dull one. But when he met Tony, Mark found himself doing a great deal more than reading. It was bad enough that Tony could do many things better than Mark--what made it worse was that Tony had a sharp tongue. But what really annoyed Mark was that Tony was a girl. Despite the fact that the two didn’t have much patience for each other in the beginning, their mutual attraction and fondness for the wonderful and wise old Sam brought them together for hours at a time, day after day. Sam--independent, uneducated yet discerning--lived on a house boat and spent his time mending and building canoes. Without preaching he helped Mark to realize a lot about both himself and his female rival, as well as giving him such practical information as how to build a canoe. It was Mark alone, however, who competently rescued Tony from an animal trap in which she had caught her foot. By the end of his stay, Mark gained confidence in his own abilities and Tony, too, matured and began to lose her need to compete and criticize. Best of all, a friendship evolved between the two.

Danny Dunn and the Anti-gravity Paint (Danny Dunn)

by Jay Williams Raymond Abrashkin

It's 1956, and in school, Imagining piloting a rocket and having adventures in space gets Danny Dunn in trouble for not paying attention. He even has to write hundreds of sentences that say, "Space flight is a hundred years away." Danny's mother is the housekeeper and cook for Professor Bullfinch. They live with him and the professor welcomes Danny to help with his experiments. When an accident causes blobs of a test liquid to scatter across the floor, antigravity paint is born and soon Danny finds himself on a journey that proves his teacher's line about there being no space flight completely wrong. It's all very exciting until Danny realizes no one on the space ship knows how to get back to earth! Another Danny Dunn adventure

The Secret of the Red Scarf (Kay Tracey Mystery #1)

by Frances K. Judd

#1 The Secret of the Red Scarf Kay Tracey regards the pale young man in electrified silence when he stares at her and cries out, "Sis! Sis! At last I've found you!" These strange words are the beginning of a baffling search by Kay for clues that will restore the memory of the appealing youth to whom she gives the nickname of Bro. This unexpected guest in the Tracey household, a victim of total amnesia, knows only that he must find his beautiful sister Helene. Kay's striking resemblance to the missing girl is to lead her through many risky episodes, but the young sleuth is determined, even against threats, to assist the unhappy boy. Kay has few clues. Why does Bro become frantic upon catching sight of a red scarf Kay plans to wear to a masquerade? And after its disappearance, Kay is plunged even deeper into the dangerous mystery. Her goal is to disprove certain sinister accusations, about which she learns, against Bro and Helene and to bring the brother and sister together.

Ginnie and the New Girl

by Catherine Woolley

[from the back cover] ""What does Marcia think she's doing!" Ginnie fumed aloud. "Geneva's my best friend, not hers!"" It was true. Ginnie and Geneva had been "best friends" for a long time. Then Ginnie saw Geneva walk home from school with Marcia. All of a sudden Ginnie felt like an outsider. But in the next few weeks, many things began to happen. ..."

Jake Gaither, Winning Coach

by Wyatt Blassingame

He always did his best. This is an inspiring biography of a man who worked hard, excelled at sports, and survived brain cancer.

The Flamingo Feather

by Kirk Munroe

It was 1564. Young René de Veaux had just passed his sixteenth birthday. A month before, the terrible fever had swept France. René's father and mother had died René was their only child. Only old Frank, his father's servant, was left.

Tall Tales of America

by Irwin Shapiro

Enjoy these stories: Pekos Bill; Anthony and the Mossbunker; Old Stormalong; Johnny Appleseed; Davy Crockett, the Yaller Blossom o' the Forest; Sam Patch's Last Leap; Paul Bunyan; John Henry; Joe Magarac The Steel Man.

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