Author of the article: Beth Wilkins
Publishing date: Mar 08, 2021 • March 8, 2021 • 6 minute read • • 77.801.014 – Although this photograph was not taken of stooks on the Ashworth’s Deadwood farm, but rather that of Bill Plaizier’s Judah Hill land in the 1940s. The stooks were indicative of the time. Joseph, Wilf and Harry Ashworth shared harvesting duties – Wilf in charge of the binder, while Harry and Joseph fashioned the stooks. Photo by SUPPLIED
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After spending time on the telegraph line – more recently on the telephone line, it is appropriate now to call on an individual and her family, who brought character and culture to Peace River. Before delving into the life of another cultural character, it is important to return for a moment to some interesting information regarding the telegraph – news from First World War front lines was at a premium, but Peace River telegraph operators provided a synopsis each night. A cow bell w
Cloning Endangered Species
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Weekly Ponderings: People brought character and culture to Peace River - Part 28
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Washington D.C., Mar 4, 2021 / 02:00 pm (CNA).- The Sisters of Charity of New York have donated several of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton’s relics to the National Shrine of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, it was announced on March 1.
The relics, which include the saint’s religious bonnet, rosary, and crucifix, will be displayed in an expanded museum at the shrine, which is located in Emmitsburg, Maryland. Seton was the first American-born person to be canonized.
The donation “was a surprise,” Rob Judge, the executive director of the Seton Shrine, said to CNA.
“We knew that they had these wonderful artifacts and they've loaned us artifacts at different times,” he said of the Sisters of Charity, “but it was really their generosity they're recognizing that this is a momentous year for the shrine.” Seton died in 1821, and Jan. 4 marked the bicentennial of her death.
The bicentennial “has been an opportunity to share