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Word S10 7 – Empathy and History with Betsy Coffeen, Kelly Barnhill and Theodore Wheeler

On this episode we catch up with children’s authors who discuss the importance of empathy and interconnectedness as well as a former journalist who has a page-turning new historical novel about an American reporter who turned into a mouthpiece for Nazi propaganda during World War II. Guest listTucson-based Betsy Coffeen has a new young kid’s book titled “Cate and the Garden

HAPPENINGS IN THE HILLS: Holiday pop-up shop set to open

LITCHFIELD Prime Time House in Torrington gets the Christmas season going Saturday when it opens its Prime Finds Home for the Holidays pop-up store at the Shrine of Lourdes for the second consecutive year.The shrine's Pilgrim Hall is packed with quality donated household goods and furniture on sale

This Was Brainerd - May 22

Owner calls reunion with missing dog a miracle

Owner calls reunion with missing dog a miracle NISSWA When Lydia Gazelka spotted a flyer for a missing dog at Schaefer s in Nisswa Memorial Day weekend she had no idea she would be the one to find the pup. Written By: Sarah Nelson Katzenberger | 9:32 pm, Jun. 5, 2013 NISSWA - When Lydia Gazelka spotted a flyer for a missing dog at Schaefer’s in Nisswa Memorial Day weekend she had no idea she would be the one to find the pup. But she prayed she would be. Five years ago, Gazelka’s dog Luka went missing. “She never came back,” Gazelka said. “I remember how sad I was. I thought about that when I saw the flyer.”

This Was Brainerd - May 24 | Brainerd Dispatch

38 / 50 W.E. Lively, the hustling Maxwell auto dealer, has sold a Maxwell to Joseph Johnson. Pictured is a Maxwell Mascotte Touring 1911 by Lars-Göran Lindgren Sweden - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1526033 39 / 50 This truck belonged to Silas Hall s Transfer Line just after World War I. It was used for hauling freight from the NP (Northern Pacific Railroad) depot to stores around town as well as for other kinds of moving. The picture was taken in front of the railroad freight office. Before the truck, Silas Hal used teams of horses and wagons which he kept at 415 Main (now Washington Street). Source: Brainerd Minnesota 1871 - 1971. Reproduced from the Centennial Edition of the Brainerd Daily Dispatch.

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