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Books published by publisher SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO

  • Rum-Tum-Tummy The Elphant Who Ate

    Holling Clancy Holling

    Hardcover (Saalfield Publishing, Co., March 15, 1936)
    Vintage children's book
  • The Pony Rider Boys in the Ozarks

    Frank Gee Patchin, Illlustrated

    Hardcover (Saalfield Publishing Co., March 15, 1910)
    Hardcover with dust jacket.
  • Wild animals as I know them

    Klara E Knecht

    Hardcover (Saalfield Pub. Co, March 15, 1933)
    animals
  • On the Railroad, No. 2124

    Robert S. Henry, Otto Kuhler, F. L. Weiland, H. L. Barham

    Paperback (Saalfield Publishing Co, March 15, 1936)
    None
  • The sugar-plum tree: And other verses,

    Eugene Field

    Hardcover (The Saalfield publishing company, March 15, 1930)
    Pictorial Cover. Book Condition: Good +. No Jacket. Fern Bisel Peat (illustrator). First Printing. 4to - over 9Âľ" - 12" tall. Former owner's name on inside blank endpaper. No Writing, tight bright clean copy, full color and charming black and white illustrations executed by Fern Bisel Peat. Unpaginated, Edgewear,. Not this is NOT an exlibrary copy.
  • Rilla of the Lighthouse

    Grace May North

    (Saalfield Publishing Co., July 6, 1936)
    None
  • One Mother to Another: This Is Just Between Us

    Melissa Mowry

    eBook (SCM Publishing Co., June 7, 2016)
    It’s no secret that parenting books are a dime a dozen. Certain books will tell you what type of fruit your baby most resembles this week or the best method for calming a colicky newborn. Others will teach you how to potty train your toddler in three days or convince your four-year-old to eat something other than ketchup. But what about the rest of it—all the other million little moments that make up being a parent? Known for her wit and honesty about raising young children through her popular blog One Mother to Another, Melissa Mowry brings us a collection of stories about those little details—the kinds of things you whisper to a mom friend over a glass of wine but rarely hear anyone talk about out loud. In a relatable style that’s both funny and raw, Mowry tackles subjects that span pregnancy loss and marital growing pains to mom guilt and the occasional desire to run away from home. If you’ve ever read a parenting book and wished for a little more, you’ll find One Mother to Another to be a fresh new take on the world’s most talked-about subject.
  • The Mystery Hunters at the Haunted Lodge

    Capwell Wyckoff

    language (THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY, March 5, 2015)
    Example in this ebookCHAPTER I The Mystery HuntersThe High School at Cloverfield was quiet as the hands of the clock approached the three-o’clock hour. Then a gong pealed out and the building became a very beehive of sound. The thump of many feet and the hum of voices was heard. Healthy, wholesome young boys and girls poured out of the side doors and swarmed over the campus. Overcoats were pulled tighter as the nip of the keen Vermont air was encountered.Two boys had come out together, and they paused to wait for two others. The boy with the clean-cut, manly face and the sparkling eyes was Barry Garrison, an outstanding boy in the Cloverfield High School. He had been the right halfback on the school team this year and had helped to lead it to a glorious record of no defeats and first place on the Conference list. He was an all-around athlete and stood well in his senior-year studies. Although Barry Garrison would have turned the idea aside with a good-natured laugh, he was the most popular boy in the high school.His lifelong chum was Kent Marple. Kent’s father owned the local hotel, and the boy had enjoyed many advantages in life. He and Barry had been friends ever since they had been small boys. Young Marple was broader than Barry, with a heavy shock of black hair and a chin that was a trifle determined. He had played fullback on the football team during the past season.These two boys did not seem to be in any hurry. Barry leaned against a maple tree and whistled softly, while Kent glanced from one side door of the school to the other.“The twins must have been kept in,” Barry observed.“Maybe they are clapping erasers for the teacher,” Kent grinned.“If they are, they’ll clap ’em clean,” Barry laughed. “The Ford twins always finish what they start. Here they come now.”Two boys came springing down the steps of the school building and looked around for Barry and Kent. When they had seen their particular friends, one of them waved, and then both boys dashed across the hard ground toward the boys under the trees. At first glance there was little to distinguish between Mac and Tim Ford. They were both the same height and build, stocky young fellows who had made splendid ends on the team. But at closer range some differences were apparent. Mac was sandy-haired, and Tim was gifted with a light brown mass of hair that sometimes managed to stay combed. Both boys had attractive, lively countenances and were well liked by everyone in the small town. They were often the leaders in the fun and could always be counted on to join in any kind of a lark. With Kent and Barry, they made up a quartet that was widely known.Mac Ford beat his brother to the maple tree by a yard. “Thought we never would get out,” he panted. “Took Tim’s advice in a problem, and it was wrong. Had to do it over.”“The trouble is that you didn’t take my advice,” Tim denied. “I tried to show you how to work it, but——”“Never mind,” Barry interposed, thrusting his hands deep into his sweater pockets. “Let’s move along. It’s cold today.”“It ought to be,” Kent observed. “Christmas is almost here.”Two high-school boys and a girl passed them and nodded and smiled. “There they go,” the girl cried. “The mystery hunters!”“Four Sherlocks, the locker-room detectives!” chimed in one of the boys. When this trio had passed on, the four chums looked at one another.“They seem to keep calling us the mystery hunters,” Barry smiled.“Just because we found out who was stealing things out of the lockers,” grunted Tim. “That wasn’t such a big job.”“Anybody could have done it, if he had taken the trouble to,” Kent said.“The biggest surprise about the whole thing was the fact that a boy like Carter Wolf was doing it,” Mac put in.To be continue in this ebook
  • Real Tales of Real Dogs

    Albert Payson Terhune, Diana Thorne

    Hardcover (The Saalfield Publishing Company, March 15, 1935)
    This enchanting book tells the stories of twenty-four different dogs and is accompanied by many beautiful etchings done by Diana Thorne. The contents include: Aeroplane, the Dog who Turned Wolf; Satan, the War Dog; Abdul Hamid, the Dog who Was Not; A Nameless Mongrel, who Repaid a Kindness; Flash, Pointing a Mile-Distant Pheasant; Wotan, the Police Dog who Fought a Leopard; Roger, the Church-Going Bloodhound; Grip, the Eighteenth Century Canine Thief; Halil, the Saluki Hero of a Strange Contest; Wolf, Our Great Little Collie; Vigi, the Hero Dog of the Vikings; Mafeking, a War Dog of South Africa; Wallace, Glasgow's Immortal Fire Dog; Bobbie, the Three-Thousand-Mile Collie; Sport, A Battle with Wolves for a Baby's Life; Karroo, the Terrier Named for a Desert; Lory the Lurid, a Right Disreputable Dog; Rex, Missing for Six Weeks; Gengisk, the Dog Who Saved a King; Fang, the Seventeenth Century Dog Detective; Pegeen, the Dog who Learned to Reason; Trick, a Lurcher with a Queer History; Hector, the Mischief Dog; and Paddy, a Mongrel, but a Great Little Dog.
  • THE BANNER BOY SCOUTS OR THE STRUGGLE FOR LEADERSHIP~1912

    GEORGE A. WARREN

    Hardcover (SAALFIELD PUBLISHING CO, March 15, 1912)
    RARE COPY~GOOD STORY EASY TO READ~COLLECTORS BOOK`
  • Billy Whiskers: The Autobiography of a Goat

    Frances Trego Montgomery

    Hardcover (Saalfield Publishing Co., March 15, 1902)
    The escapades of that mischievous goat, Billy Whiskers.
  • The Talking Totem Pole: The Tales it Told to the Indian Children of the Northwest

    lurline mayol

    Hardcover (Saalfield Publishing Company, March 15, 1930)
    Ten stories. 9.5x7", 142 pp, illus. by Edward Morgan.