Welcome to this, a genuine happy place. In Happy, authors Bill and Em Johnson present the simple truths about being happy. They show you how to turn impossible dreams into realities, gain more faith than fear, more trust than suspicion, and be filled with rich experiences rather than poor excuses. Through quotes, tips, advice, and anecdotes from professionals, authors, historic figures, and the Bible, Happy communicates that the garments of love and happiness never fade and that genuine love and happiness is cheap enough, even though we pay dearly for its counterfeit. It demonstrates how the happiest people think happy, look happy, talk happy, walk happy, and act happy, and it returns to them in abundance. An open door that invites you into lasting happiness, Happy provides a host of basic principles to guide you to becoming a happy persona special gift to others.
Welcome to this, a genuine happy place. In Happy, authors Bill and Em Johnson present the simple truths about being happy. They show you how to turn impossible dreams into realities, gain more faith than fear, more trust than suspicion, and be filled with rich experiences rather than poor excuses. Through quotes, tips, advice, and anecdotes from professionals, authors, historic figures, and the Bible, Happy communicates that the garments of love and happiness never fade and that genuine love and happiness is cheap enough, even though we pay dearly for its counterfeit. It demonstrates how the happiest people think happy, look happy, talk happy, walk happy, and act happy, and it returns to them in abundance. An open door that invites you into lasting happiness, Happy provides a host of basic principles to guide you to becoming a happy person a special gift to others.
The British officer class in 1914 benefited from the discipline instilled by public schools. Thomas Morland was one such officer. Born in Canada, he was orphaned at the age of five. He became a widower with two daughters at a young age. In October 1914 he went to France to command the 5th Division, then south of Ypres. Morland served on the Somme and Messines & Third Ypres, and in 1918 he commanded a corps during the victorious 100 Days campaign. Morland’s diaries record the above events and his comments thereon, every day for four years, beginning at the Battle of La Bassee, near Ypres. He was parachuted in while the battle was raging and held the shaken division together during the second half of October. A modest man, he was surprised by his promotion to lieutenant-general in 1915. Morland led X Corps at the beginning of the Somme campaign in July 1916 but was replaced by General Gough, his army chief, who thought Morland was not sufficiently decisive. During 1917 he took part in the successful Battle of Messines on 7 June, a ‘Red Letter’ day, and the attrition of the Third Battle of Ypres from July to November. Morland ended the war in pursuit of the retreating Germans, in November 1918. A sense of realism permeates his diary, with comments like 'The war has simply become a process of attrition' in 1915 and 'We cannot expect men to advance to attack in mud up to the waist!' in 1917. During his time away from home, he wrote regularly to his daughters, in whom he confided his hopes and fears. His love for them shines through the pages, reflecting the man behind the uniform. Morland – Great War Corps Commander is the first book to publish the papers of an officer of his rank. With many original accounts of major battles, this is a book that will appeal to military history enthusiasts everywhere.
Distributed by the University of Nebraska Press for Caxton Press Historian Bill Gulick, uses the accounts of newspaper reporters who covered the chase to paint a fascinating portrait of the criminal Harry Tracy- the first of a new breed of publicity seeking badmen that surfaced at the beginning of the 20th century.
Former physician Jake Horn becomes the target of a vicious gang when he investigates the suspicious death of a young cowboy in the third book of this thrilling series. Original.
Now in its 13th edition, this handbook continues to act as an almanac for all the baseball action that happened on the playing field the previous season. Includes a sneak preview of 2002 with exclusive player projections.
A collection of daily devotions for teenage boys, dealing with such issues as death, soul winning, cults, secular humanism, physical appearance, temptation, money, and humbleness.
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