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It's Christmas Eve. Have you been good? Santa's packed up all the presents and is headed your way! With the help of a certain red-nosed reindeer, Santa flies over many landmarks in Kansas! "Ho, ho, ho!" laughs Santa. "Merry Christmas, Kansas!"
A new holiday series that features the Jolly Old Elf heading south from his home in the North Pole and flying to locations around the United States and Canada to deliver presents and good cheer.
It's Christmas Eve, Have you been good? Santa's packed up all the presents and is headed your way! With the help of a certain red-nosed reindeer, Santa flies over: Swan Lake • Owasso • Owen Park • Midtown • Broken Arrow • Blue Dome District • Brookside • Riverside • Lortondale • Red Fork "Ho, ho ho!" laughs Santa. "Merry Christmas, Tulsa!"
IVY TOWERS-TUCKER IS LOOKING FORWARD TO HER FIRST CHRISTMAS AS A MARRIED WOMAN. . . . But a few days before December 25, Ivy and her husband Amos are awakened by noises on their rooftop. Amos's joke that Santa Claus must have arrived early loses its humor when a body goes flying past their second-story window. A look outside reveals two legs covered in red velvet trousers and black boots sticking out of a snow bank! Ivy and Amos are even more surprised to find they belong to a dead man dressed as Santa Claus. The story circulates quickly through the small town of Winter Break that Ivy and Amos have killed Santa. Who is the dead man and why was he on their roof? Ivy has a Christmas mystery to solve that will bring a satisfying conclusion to the Ivy Towers Mystery series.
It's Christmas Eve. Have you been good? Santa's packed up all the presents and is headed your way! With the help of a certain red-nosed reindeer, Santa flies over many landmarks in Nova Scotia! "Ho, ho, ho!" laughs Santa. "Merry Christmas, Nova Scotia!"
It's Christmas Eve, Have you been good? Santa's packed up all the presents and is headed your way! With the help of a certain red-nosed reindeer, Santa flies over: •Sprint Center •Country Club Plaza •18th/Vine sign •Kansas City Museum •Crown Center •Giralda Tower •Liberty Memorial •Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art •American Jazz Museum •Cathedral of Immaculate Conception •Hereford Bull Association •Central Library "Ho, ho ho!" laughs Santa. "Merry Christmas, Kansas City!"
It's Christmas Eve, Have you been good? Santa's packed up all the presents and is headed your way! With the help of a certain red-nosed reindeer, Santa flies over: • Rexburg Idaho Mormon Temple • Boulder Mountains • Craters of the Moon National Monument • Shoshone Falls • Bronco Stadium • Selkirk Loop sign • Perrine Bridge • Museum of Idaho • Silver Mountain Gondola • Coeur d'Alene • Yellowstone Bear World Sign "Ho, ho ho!" laughs Santa. "Merry Christmas, Idaho!"
It's Christmas Eve, Have you been good? Santa's packed up all the presents and is headed your way! With the help of a certain red-nosed reindeer, Santa flies over: •Kansas State Capitol, Topeka •Memorial Hall, KCK •Sedgewick County Historical Museum •Orpheum Theater, Wichita •Kansas History Museum, Topeka •Dodge City Sign •Rosedale Arch, KCK •Anderson Hall, KSU •The Keeper of the Plains, Wichita •McPherson County Courthouse "Ho, ho ho!" laughs Santa. "Merry Christmas, Kansas!"
This book was written largely for the benefit of the writers children and grandchildren so they would know something of the life and hardships faced by their pioneering ancestors. It was inspired by their questions about our childhood and youth and their own memories of many visits to the Kansas farms of their grandparents and great grandparents. However, we think many other readers will enjoy learning something about what it was like growing up on a midwestern farm in the 1940s and 50s. A time that was in many ways much simpler but certainly not easy. We had the privilege of knowing personally grandparents and great grandparents who had lived through the many profound changes that occurred around the change of the century. Automobiles, tractors and telephones had only arrived on the farm about 30 years earlier and the grandparents’ barns and garages were still filled with horse-drawn equipment and harnesses from an earlier era. Electricity and graveled roads only occurred after WWII in our memory and running water and indoor bathrooms were still not common on many farms as late as 1955. It was a different and changing world of which we were privileged to be a part. Almost all our relatives lived nearby, and neighbors all knew us and didn’t hesitate to let our parents know if we were up to any mischief. We were expected to take responsibility, work hard, always be truthful, stay out of trouble, study hard and plant straight rows. All are excellent traits that unfortunately are not as valued today as they were then. In the book we have shared some history of the area and some stories of incidents from our lives that were not uncommon among farm families. We hope readers enjoy learning about us and our families.