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Leigh Aberdeen is one of the top players on her Alberta hockey team, the Falcons. But as a Métis and the only girl on the team she's different--and not everyone is happy about that. To top it off, she doesn't think her mother wants her to play hockey, so Leigh hasn't told her about the Falcons. Soon she's getting threatening messages on the phone, the Falcons'captain tries to get her kicked off the team, and her mother wants Leigh to go to a dance recital on the same night as the finals. When the pressure becomes too intense, Leigh has to face some hard decisions. Hat Trick is a suspenseful, action-packed story about a young woman who learns the price of living a double life--the hard way. [Fry Reading Level - 4.2
Leigh Aberdeen is determined to win the hockey championship with a new, all girls team, the Chinooks. So when the coach adds a know-it-all boy to the mix, Leigh is furious. To make matters worse, the team goalie -- Leigh's best friend -- starts mysteriously dropping out from practices just as the Chinooks show they can win. With humour, action, and suspense, Jacqueline Guest weaves these threads together to their surprising conclusion.
USA TODAY BESTSELLER • In the debut of a delightful cozy mystery series, Sarah Fox introduces a charming new heroine who finds herself in a sticky situation: stacking pancakes, pouring coffee, and investigating murder. Bonus content: includes original recipes inspired by the Flip Side Pancake House menu! When Marley McKinney’s aging cousin, Jimmy, is hospitalized with pneumonia, she agrees to help run his pancake house while he recovers. With its rustic interior and syrupy scent, the Flip Side Pancake House is just as she pictured it—and the surly chef is a wizard with crêpes. Marley expects to spend a leisurely week or two in Wildwood Cove, the quaint, coastal community where she use...
Daniel Mckenzie was born in about 1756 in South Carolina. He married Rebecca and they had six children.
George Henry was probably born about 1755/56 and moved to the western part of Virginia about 1785. Contains the lineage of one of his sons, Brice Henry (ca. 1785-ca. 1825/26), who died in Springfield, Sangamon Co., Illinois.
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Peter Mattern (1706-1782), his wife Maria Anna Catherina and their family, emigrated in 1732 from Germany (via Rotterdam) to Philadelphia. They settled in Upper Hanover Township, Northampton (now Montgomery) County, Pennsylvania. Descendants and relatives lived in Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Washington, D.C., North Carolina, Ohio, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Oregon, California and elsewhere.