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Moingona, Iowa (July 6, 1881)

Fifteen-year-old Kate Shelley pulled the sheets from the line. A terrible storm was coming. Kate could feel it in the air. A cold wind rose as she carried the heavy basket back to the house. Black clouds rolled in. The sky grew dark.


Kate stood at the 厨房 window with her younger sisters and brother. They saw lightning flash. They heard thunder crack in the hills. Then the rain came.
As the rain poured down, they watched the water rising in Honey Creek. Soon it overflowed its banks and flooded part of the yard.
"I'm going to let the 动物 out of the barn," Kate said. "If the water keeps rising, they could drown."
"Be careful 你 don't slip in the water," her mother warned.


Kate ran down the hill. She waded through muddy water to the barn. She led out the two 马 and shooed them off to higher ground. She drove the cows up the hill. Then she hurried back to the barn. She picked up some piglets and carried them to the house. 由 this time, she was soaked to the skin.


Kate put on dry clothes and went back to the window. The rain had not let up. The floodwater was coming closer to the house.
When lightning flashed, Kate could see the shining railroad tracks. They ran along the other side of Honey Creek.
Kate peered through the rain, trying to see the railroad bridge over Honey Creek.
How was it holding up in this storm?


After supper, the younger children went to bed. Nine-year-old Mayne wanted to stay awake with her mother and Kate. They sat at the 厨房 table, talking about the dangers of the storm. They were worried about the men out working on the railroad.
At midnight, an express train would pass the Moingona station without stopping. It would 交叉, 十字架 the long bridge over the Des Moines River. Then it would 交叉, 十字架 the bridge over Honey Creek, near Kate's house.
Were the bridges safe?


Shortly after eleven o'clock, Kate and her mother heard an engine chugging slowly down the tracks. Railroad men were checking the tracks and bridges before the express came through. They were heading toward the bridge over Honey Creek.

Suddenly, the engine's 钟, 贝尔 rang wildly. The Kate heard a terrible crack. She knew at once that the bridge had broken.


Kate heard the hot engine hiss as it hit the cold water. She jumped to her feet.
"Oh, Mother," she cried. "They've gone down in Honey Creek. I must go help."

The crash woke the children. They watched silently as Kate pulled on a 夹克 and an old straw hat. Then she lit her father's railroad lantern.


"You can't go, Kate," her mother said. "It's too dangerous."
"I have to go, Mother," Kate answered. "Someone may still be alive in Honey Creek. And I have to stop the midnight express."
"Please, Kate," her mother cried. "Don't go. The floodwaters are almost at our door."
"If that were Father down there, wouldn't we want someone to help him?" asked Kate.
"You're right," her mother agreed. "Go ahead then, but be careful! We'll be praying for you."


Kate could not 交叉, 十字架 the flooded yard to get to the broken bridge. Instead, she started up a path behind her house. She would reach the tracks where they ran through the hills.
Water poured down the hillside. Kate climbed over the fallen trees. Her 短裙, 裙子 caught in wet brambles. Her shoes sank in mud.
But she held her father's lantern before her and kept going.
At last she reached the tracks.


Kate ran along the tracks back to the broken bridge. She looked out over the dark waters of Honey Creek. She could not see the engine 或者 any of the crew. Had they all drowned?
Then Kate though she heard a shout. In the roar of the storm, she was not sure. She listened again.
Yes. Someone was calling.


Lightning flashed. Kate saw someone holding on to the branches of a treetop just above the water. Thunder boomed. As it faded, Kate heard voices calling again.
She could hear two men's voices now, but she couldn't make out their words above the howl of the storm.
"Hang on! Hang on!" Kate shouted. "I'll get help."
Kate swung the lantern back and forth. Now the men would know she had heard them and was going for help.


Kate began to run toward Moingona station. There wasn't much time. She had to get to the station before midnight, before the express.
Kate ran along the tracks. Even before she reached the Des Moines River bridge, she could hear the rush of the floodwater.
She held up the lantern to light her way over the bridge. But as she did, a fierce wind blew out the lantern's small flame.


Kate stared into the darkness. To reach the Moingona station, she had to 交叉, 十字架 this river. The long wooden bridge stretched before her. Beside the tracks was a narrow walkway. Some of its boards were missing. There was no handrail to hold.
Kate was afraid to 交叉, 十字架 this bridge even in daylight. Could she do it now, in this storm, in the dark?


Kate thought of the men in Honey Creek. She thought of all the people on the train speeding toward the broken bridge. She got down on her hands and knees and began to crawl across.
Kate felt for gaps in the walkway so she would not fall through. Nails and splinters cut her hands and knees and tore her skirt. She gripped the steel rail of the tracks to keep the wind from sweeping her over the side.


Trees and logs in the flooded river crashed against the bridge, making it shake. When she reached the middle of the bridge, great flashes of lightning suddenly lit the night. She looked up. A huge 树 was coming down straight toward her. Surely it would crash through the bridge. Kate closed her eyes and prayed.


In the 下一个 moment, the river pulled the 树 down under the water. Kate felt the 树 scrape beneath the walkway. Then it was gone.
Kate was shaking with fear, but she could not stop to rest. She knew it must be almost midnight. She had to reach the station before the midnight express.


At last, Kate's hand touched land. She had crossed the river. The Moingona station was less than a half mile ahead. She got to her feet and began to run. Her 心 pounded. Her throat ached. But through the rain, she saw lights of the station.


Kate threw open the station house door. The men inside turned and stared. Kate's clothes were torn and muddy. Water dripped from her old straw hat.
She tried to speak, but no words came. At last she gasped, "The engine went down in Honey Creek. Stop the express." Then she sagged to the floor.
"The girl must be crazy," someone said.


But the station agent knew Kate. "She means a bridge is out," he shouted. "We must stop the express."
He rushed to the telegraph and tapped out a message to Ogden, the station before Moingona.
STOP EXPRESS...BRIDGE OUT...STOP EXPRESS

Another man grabbed a lantern. Then he ran out to the platform. He would flag down the express if the telegraph message was too late.
The express, with two hundred people aboard, was still speeding toward the broken bridge.


But Kate's warning had come on time. Railroad men stopped the train at Ogden. It was the last telegraph message sent 或者 received that night. The storm knocked out telegraph service for 40 miles along the line.
Someone helped Kate to a chair. Someone gave her a glass of water.
"Two men are still alive in Honey Creek," Kate said. "I saw them holding on to trees in the water."

"Let's try to save them before they're washed away," a man said.
"Would 你 help us, Kate?" another man asked. "Would 你 显示 us where they are?"


Kate rode the engine with the rescue party. They crossed the Des Moines River on the same bridge Kate had crawled over. The engine stopped at the broken bridge on Honey Creek.

Everyone shouted, and the men in the water answered. They were still hanging on. But there was no way to reach them from that side of the flooded creek.


Kate led the rescue party into the hills behind her house. She led them through the woods to a bridge farther upstream.
There, they crossed Honey Creek and at last rescued the two exhausted men.
added by hornean
posted by hornean
Once there was a goat named Gregory.
Gregory liked to jump from rock to rock, kick his legs into the air, and butt his head against walls.
“I’m an average goat,” 说 Gregory.


But Gregory was not an average goat.
Gregory was a terrible eater.
Every time he sat down to eat with his mother and father, he knew he was in for trouble.


“Would 你 like a tin can, Gregory?” asked Mother Goat.
“No, thanks,” 说 Gregory.
“How about a nice box, a piece of rug, and a bottle cap?” asked Father Goat.
“Baaaaa,” 说 Gregory unhappily.

“Well, I think this is a meal fit for a goat,” 说 Mother...
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If 你 give a 老鼠, 鼠标 a cookie,


he’s going to ask for a glass of milk.

When 你 give him the milk,


he’ll probably ask 你 for a straw.

When he’s finished, he’ll ask for a napkin.


Then he’ll want to look in a mirror to make sure he doesn’t have a 牛奶 mustache.

When he looks into the mirror,

he might noice his hair needs a trim.

So he’ll probably ask for a pair of nail scissors.


When he’s finished giving himself a trim, he’ll want a 扫帚 to sweep up.
He’ll start sweeping.

He might get carried away and sweep every room in the house.


He may even end up washing the floors as well!

When he’s...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
The place is Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey. The 年 is 1999. On May 11, after months of careful research and planning, 冬青, 冬青树 Evans launches vegetable seedlings into the sky.


On May 18, the young scientist reports on her experiment. 冬青, 冬青树 intends to study the effects of extra-terrestrial conditions on vegetable growth and development. She expects the seedlings to stay aloft for several weeks before returning to earth.
Her classmates are speechless.


The 日期 is June 29. Shortly after sunrise, a member of the Billings, Montana, Moose Lodge, hiking through the Rocky Mountains, makes a startling discovery....
continue reading...
added by hornean
added by hornean
posted by hornean
My name is Maxi,
I ride in a taxi
Around New York City all day.
I sit 下一个 to Jim,
(I belong to him),
But it wasn’t always this way.


I grew up in the city,
All dirty and gritty,
Looking for 食物 after dark.
I roamed all around,
Avoiding the pound,
And lived on my own in the park.


One 日 a car stopped—
Its tire had popped.
Out stepped a tall man, I could see.
He came over and said
As he patted my head,
“Are 你 lost? 你 can come 首页 with me!”

Did I hear right? Oh, boy!
My tail wagged with joy—
I jumped right up on the seat!
He said, “My name’s Jim,”
I could ride 首页 with him
And he’d give me...
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posted by hornean
你 wake up one morning. But 你 don’t feel like getting out of bed. Your arms and legs ache. Your head hurts. 你 have a fever. And your throat is sore.
“I’m sick,” 你 say. “I must have caught a germ.”
Everyone knows that germs can make 你 sick. But everyone knows how.

Germs are tiny living things. They are far too small to see with your eyes alone. In fact, a line of one thousand germs could fit across the 最佳, 返回页首 of a pencil!
There are many different kinds of germs. But the two that usually make 你 sick are bacteria and viruses.


Under a microscope, some bacteria look like little round...
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posted by hornean
Henry wanted to fly. Everybody in his family had gone up with the balloon, but The Man always declared, “I’m not flying with that cat!”


The Man had been taking pilot’s lessons, and this time he was going to solo.
Henry grumbled and his tail switched, as he watched the people crunch around on the crusty March snow.

The Kid and The Woman open the mouth of the colorful balloon, while The Man blew it up with a gasoline-powered fan. Then the Instructor blasted warm air into the balloon from the burner mounted on a frame below it.
“Watch your fuel gauge,” he told The Man. “You don’t want...
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added by hornean
posted by hornean
I HAVE FEELINGS


WHAT TOM DID

Boy 1: Mrs. Rudolph, come see what Tom did.
Boy 2: Look what Tom did!
Boy 3: All 由 himself.
Girl 1: How did he reach?
Girl 2: Wow.
Girl 3: He must feel proud.
Girl 4: He’s a genius.
Boy 4: That’s some 太空 capsule!
Boy 5: He used up all the blocks.
Boy 6: It’s great, Tom.
Tom: Thanks.
John: I could do that.

WHAT JOHN DID

Boy 3: Poor Tom.
Girl 2: I can’t look.
Boy 2: John’s always doing things like that.
Girl 1: He has no feelings!
Boy 1: Mrs. Rudolph, come see what John did!
Boy 4: He did it on purpose!
Girl 4: You’re mean!
Boy 6: You’re spiteful!
Tom...
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posted by hornean
Cows are grazing in an open window. They are dairy cows, the 牛奶 makers.


Other 动物 make milk, too. But dairy cows make most of the 牛奶 we use.

There are five common breeds of dairy cows. The Holstein-Friesian is the most 流行的 because it can produce 更多 牛奶 than the other breeds.


A cow is able to make 牛奶 when she is two years old and has 给 birth to a calf. Her 牛奶 is the 食物 for her baby. She makes 更多 than her 小牛 will ever need—so we use the extra milk.

A few months after her 小牛 is born, a cow is bred again to have another calf. She will be pregnant for nine months. Two...
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added by hornean
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I live at 165 East 95th Street, New York City, and I’m going to stay here forever.


My mother and father are moving. Out West.

They say I have to go, too.
They say I can’t stay here forever.


Out West nobody plays baseball because they’re too busy chasing buffaloes.

And there’s cactus everywhere 你 look.
But if 你 don’t look, 你 have to stand up just as soon 你 sit down.


Out West it takes fifteen 分钟 just to say hello.
Like this: H-O-W-W-W-D-Y, P-A-A-A-R-D-N-E-R.

Out West I’ll look silly all the time.
I’ll have to wear chaps and spurs and a bandana and a hat so big...
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posted by hornean
Alistair Grittle was a sensible boy.


Every 日 he made a 列表 of the things he had to do.
Then he made a 列表 of things he did not have to do.

He was always on time for school. The school clock was set 由 Alistair’s watch.


He hung up his 夹克 every night and put his shoes in plastic bags.

Alistair took especially good care of 图书馆 books. He washed his hands before he read them so that he would not smudge the pages. And he always returned them to the 图书馆 on time.


One day, when Alistair was returning his 图书 to the library, something unusual happened.


He was picked up 由 a 太空 ship and...
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