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8 октября 2019, Выставка и конференция, посвящённые старцу Кириллу Павлову / 8 October 2019, Exhibition and conference devoted to the elder Kirill Pavlov

Remembering Gwyn and Tyreesha

 

On July 25, an early morning fire in their West 18th Street apartment claimed the lives of Gwyneth Henry, 44, and Tyreesha Richardson, 31.

 

The devoted couple had been together for several years. They leave behind seven children. On July 30, 2010, friends gathered for a benefit in their memory at the Booker T Washington Center, 1705 Holland St, Erie PA.The event included a DJ and food. Photos are by Deb Spilko for Erie Gay News.

 

There is also a memorial page for Tyreesha and Gwyn. at www.eriegaynews.com/news/article.php?recordid=201009gwynt.... Please feel free to contribute photos, prayers, comments, poems, memories or anything else you wish to share.

 

Funds have been set up for the children at local banks. Donations may be made to the Gwyn Henry Memorial Fund at any at any First Niagara Bank location, and the Tyreesha Richardson Memorial Fund at any PNC Bank. You can also contact Kara Onorato at (814) 602-5297 with any questions about donations or fundraising.

 

WICU Story & Video: Family Members Continue to Mourn Fire Victims (7/28/2010) www.wicu12.com/news/index.vnss?newsid=10076&type=News

 

Vigil attendees grieve women killed in Sunday westside fire 7/29/2010) www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100729/NEWS02...

 

Obituary for Tyreesha Love Richardson (published 7/30/2010) www.legacy.com/obituaries/erietimesnews/obituary.aspx?pag...

 

Obituary for Gwyneth Elaine Henry (published 7/30/2010) www.legacy.com/obituaries/erietimesnews/obituary.aspx?pag...

 

Article: Benefit honors women killed in Erie fire (7/31/2010) www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100731/NEWS02...

 

Editorial: Erie comes together to help bereaved children (8/3/2010) www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2010308039997

 

Letters to Editor: Benefit organizers grateful for support (8/7/2010) www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100807/OPINIO...

Rosary Cemetery, Norwich

Devoted to Lady Gaga's arrival in Russia

The garden is largely devoted to a green parterre of gravel and lawn populated with statues and centred on a large octagonal basin of water, with a central jet of water; in it children sail model boats. The garden is famed for its calm atmosphere. Surrounding the bassin on the raised balustraded terraces are a series of statues of former French queens, saints and copies after the Antique. In the southwest corner, there is an orchard of apple and pear trees and the théâtre des marionnettes (puppet theatre). The gardens include a large fenced-in playground for young children and their parents and a vintage carousel. In addition, free musical performances are presented in a gazebo on the grounds and there is a small cafe restaurant nearby, under the trees, with both indoor and outdoor seating from which many people enjoy the music over a glass of wine.

The École nationale supérieure des Mines de Paris and the Odéon theatre stand next to the Luxembourg Garden.

 

[From the Wiki entry: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jardin_du_Luxembourg ]

3 February 2015

Members of the Saeima at the meeting devoted to the European Semester held in Brussels.

 

Photo: Juris Vīgulis, Chancellery of the Saeima

 

Disclaimer & copyright: saeima.lv/en/copyrights

Pregnancy safe skincare can be super difficult and confusing. I have an entire guide devoted to what products are safe to use while pregnant including information on what ingredients to avoid while pregnant and a huge list of pregnancy safe skincare products. The list has gotten so large that I’ve decided to start listing brands in their own individual posts. Here you’ll find every pregnancy safe skincare product from iS Clinical as of 6/14/2019. If it is not safe, I’ll tell you why. All of the products meet my pregnancy safe criteria. If they release a new product that is not listed here, please comment below and I will add it. Note I will link to every product directly to avoid confusion. You’ll know exactly which product I mean. Please note that iS Clinical had a lot of ingredients listed as “key” ingredients that do not appear in actual ingredient lists. Some of this might be due to extracts containing what they consider to be a key ingredient. That wasn’t always the case though. I verified ingredient lists in several locations. Please don’t put much thought into the listed key ingredients, check out the actual full ingredients list. Please note, it can take up to an hour to re bit.ly/2wWtXYMPhấn nụ bà tùng

Phấn nụ

Phấn nụ hoàng cung

Phấn nụ cung đình

số 12 đường C12 (662 Cộng Hòa) P. 13 Q. Tân Bình

bit.ly/2K4eu1a bit.ly/2XfQonf

35th annual Rosary Sunday draws thousands devoted to Mary, holy rosary

 

Story by Gina Keating

Photos by Ambria Hammel

The Catholic Sun

 

In a kaleidoscope of colors, sound and movement, more than 6,000 faithful in the Phoenix Diocese gathered to honor Mary in the most anticipated Catholic event of the year, Rosary Sunday.

 

Under her title Mary, Help of Christians, the 35th annual celebration continued its traditional offerings of confession, adoration, benediction and recitation of the rosary.

 

The downtown Phoenix Convention Center opened its doors Oct. 10 to ethnically diverse members of the Body of Christ whose public prayers in different tongues paid homage to Mary, especially for her protection of the unborn.

 

Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted was greeted with a standing ovation from an enthusiastic crowd that filled the seats, as others searched for open spots.

 

“Today, we see how Mary is the mother of all of us,” Bishop Olmsted said in his bilingual address.

 

Auxilary Bishop Eduardo Nevares, recently back from a trip to Rome, delivered an apostolic blessing from Pope Benedict, which was received with a round of applause.

 

Christy O’Gara said she attended the event for the second year with her six children so they could “see all those that love Jesus.”

 

“Now, more than ever, we desire to be together as witnesses to the world,” O’Gara said.

 

More: www.catholicsun.org

 

ORDERING INFORMATION

Looking for a glossy/matte copy of this photo? Please call 602-354-2140 or send an e-mail for ordering information. Please note the photo's title when ordering. Download the order form here.

 

Copyright 2006-2010 The Catholic Sun. All rights reserved. This photo and all photos on this Web site credited to The Catholic Sun are provided for personal use only and may not be published, broadcasted, transmitted or sold without the expressed consent of The Catholic Sun.

The elaborate and exquisite ancient Santi Cosma e Damiano, a minor basilica devoted to Cosmas and Damian, two brothers who were reportedly doctors, martyrs and saints. The history of this church is one of the most fascinating in Rome. It is located in a very prominent location, opposite the Roman Forum in the historic rione Monte. It is actually comprised of two ancient Roman structures, one originating in the forum. For an extended period they formed a single church until the late 19th century when they were again separated. The primary structure is now accessed from an area of what once comprised the Temple of Peace, located on the southeast part of the Imperial Fora, now along the Via dei Fori Imperiali. It was where the famous marble plan, the Forma Urbis Romae, was once displayed. The entrance to the church at one point was located via the circular temple identified as the Temple of Romulus, whose actual identity and purpose is disputed. During the medieval era, however, the Roman forum became a neighborhood resembling the densely packed Subura of ancient Rome, which, along with flooding and possible landslides led to a gradual filling in of the area, resulting in the ground level rising so much that it required another entrance. The medieval neighborhood was cleared from the area in the 16th century but until that time the main door and entrance remained below ground level. Several other important churches also occupied former Roman structures in the Middle Ages, including Mamertine Prison, which became San Giuseppe dei Alegnami, and Sant'Adriano, the former Senate House. The most famous of these is probably the Colosseum itself: it was eventually christened Santa Maria della Pieta al Colosseo.

 

This church was founded in 527 when Theodoric the Great, the king of the Ostrogoths (acting as agent of the Emperor Justinian I who was residing at that point in Constantinople) and his daughter Amalasuntha donated two buildings to the church during the reign of Pope Felix IV. It was reportedly the first Christian church in that particular area, as much of the elite of Rome was still hostile to Christianity. It was not a titular church, but it was intended to be part of the church's charitable activities because of the association with the identical twin brother doctors. The pope united the two buildings and donated the complex to the brothers Cosmas and Damian, but also possibly to serve as a contrast to the ancient cult of Castor and Pollux, worshipped on the other side of the forum. The association with the two doctors was also something of a juxtaposition (and incorporation) of the tradition of the Asclepeion, as it was believed in the Middle Ages that an infirm person who slept overnight in the church could experience a vision which would lead to a cure.

 

The artwork is simply stunning. The decoration spans many periods, but the apse of the new church featured a mosaic representing the parousia of Christ. The church was further embellished by Pope Sergius I in the late 7th century and Pope Adrian I in the 8th century. Some have observed that the apse appears somewhat odd and even disproportional, as it is quite large for the still-ample room, but there was actually a height reduction of the structure in the restorations of the 17th century. On the bright side: one should actually be standing more than 20 feet below it, so it now provides a much closer view of the exquisite mosaic than actually intended. It features Christ at the parousia, or Second Coming at the End Time, set against an orange sky at dawn adorned in golden robes. He is holding a rolled scroll of the Torah. The Saints making an appearance are Peter and Paul, who are shown introducing Cosmas and Damian, depicted with martyrs' crowns. Pope Felix, to the far left, holds a model of the church. This figure was restored in the 17th century, and was thus altered under Pope Gregory XIII, but it was later restored. The other figure featured is another martyr, St. Theodore. The figures all stand in front of the Jordan river flanked by date palms, the left one also depicting a phoenix, the symbol of resurrection. The sheep represent the Lamb of God, accompanied by twelve others representing the Apostles. The Lamb appears standing on a hill overlooking Jerusalem on the left and Bethlehem on the right, from which flow the Twelve Rivers of Paradise.

 

In terms of its other features, the choir stalls are set against the curved wall. The frescoes on the walls and ceiling date to the 17th century, and are mostly anonymous works. The ceiling is made of carved and gilded wood, and it is also adorned with the crest of the Barberini family (Pope Urban VIII) which features bees. The high altar is Baroque, created by Domenico Castelli in 1637. It features a 12th-century icon of Our Lady as the altarpiece. The ceiling fresco was executed by Marco Montagna, and there is a paschal candlestick consisting of a twisted marble column to the right of the altar. There are also seven side chapels. This church is one of the most magnificent in Rome, and as it is located to the most popular area in the heart of the city it is also highly accessible and well worth a visit.

Cherished memories of a devoted wife mam and grandma Celia Ellen ( Nellie ) Mason died 3rd July 1983 aged 70 years

A devoted husband dad and grandad William Mason died 30th August 1988 aged 79 years

" forever in our thoughts "

3 February 2015

Members of the Saeima at the meeting devoted to the European Semester held in Brussels.

 

Photo: Juris Vīgulis, Chancellery of the Saeima

 

Disclaimer & copyright: saeima.lv/en/copyrights

27th February 2014. Hopelessly Devoted by kate Tempest with Paines Plough at The Garage . Photo Credit ©Richard Davenport

Jennel is devoted to bringing the game of golf to young kids in Los Angeles as she teaches junior a game of honesty and patience. In an after school program she teaches the basics of the game and the fundamentals of the swing.

 

Transcribed Interview:

 

"I am an Assistant Proffesional at a private country club and we run the junior camps. So we teach kids ages 6-13. We give them fun games and activities to play while learning golf to make it easier for them to undersand and make it more fun.

 

I am a really big advocate for promoting sports. I think that, you know, through sports you can establish a lot of friendships. You can kind of socialize yourself. I think kids who are involves in sports can socialize themselves much much better. They have a life outside of their school. I think that is really important too and also the activity. A lot of people dont think that there is a lot of physical activity involved in golf, but there is. You are practicing everyday outside in the sun. You know if you are playing for a high school team or something you are walking, caring your bag, it may not be the same as playing basketball or something like that, but it is still tough. I think it is really good for anyone really, not just kids but to stay heathly and fit.

 

I started playing golf when I was ten or eleven and I just think that through golf it opened a lot of opportunities. You have things like scholarships and things that some kids that aren't involved in sports, not just necessarily golf but any kind of athletics that other people wouldn't normally have, really important things that can open things for your future.

 

We just run certain camps during popular seasons like the summer and spring. I know for a fact that a lot of them are involved in another sports like swimming and basketball.

 

I really like teaching kids because they are a lot of fun. When I do my individual lessons sometimes I have adults that want to take lesons they have already established some hitches or glitches in their swings and they think they know the right way and they are kind of stubborn. Kids are just a lot easier to teach for me, especially ones that haven't been introduced to the game yet, I can kind of mold them and they listen to what I say and they can improve a lot quicker I think."

...come in all shapes and sizes. Hypoblemum albovittatum [Salticidae] on her eggs. She is about 8mm long

This window is devoted to the story of St Mary Magdalene, but the legendary version which was widely known in the Middle Ages. It arose from a sermon of St Gregory the Great preached on 21st September 591 on the passage Luke 7:36-50 in which Jesus is at dinner in a Pharisees' house when a sinful women comes in, anoints his feet with ointment and wipes them with her hair. Gregory identified this woman with Mary of Bethany, sister of Martha and Lazarus and also with Mary Magdalene from whom Jesus driven out seven devils. Thus Mary Magdalene became for the Middle Ages a symbol of penitence and also of the contemplative life (Mary of Bethany). The legend was further developed at Vezelay (which claimed to possess the relics of Mary Magdalene) to claim that Mary and a number of other of Christ's disciples were, as a result of persecution, set adrift in a rudderless boat and washed up in Provence at Marseilles where Maximin, one of their number, became bishop. Mary died, after years of living in penitential seclusion.

35th annual Rosary Sunday draws thousands devoted to Mary, holy rosary

 

Story by Gina Keating

Photos by Ambria Hammel

The Catholic Sun

 

In a kaleidoscope of colors, sound and movement, more than 6,000 faithful in the Phoenix Diocese gathered to honor Mary in the most anticipated Catholic event of the year, Rosary Sunday.

 

Under her title Mary, Help of Christians, the 35th annual celebration continued its traditional offerings of confession, adoration, benediction and recitation of the rosary.

 

The downtown Phoenix Convention Center opened its doors Oct. 10 to ethnically diverse members of the Body of Christ whose public prayers in different tongues paid homage to Mary, especially for her protection of the unborn.

 

Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted was greeted with a standing ovation from an enthusiastic crowd that filled the seats, as others searched for open spots.

 

“Today, we see how Mary is the mother of all of us,” Bishop Olmsted said in his bilingual address.

 

Auxilary Bishop Eduardo Nevares, recently back from a trip to Rome, delivered an apostolic blessing from Pope Benedict, which was received with a round of applause.

 

Christy O’Gara said she attended the event for the second year with her six children so they could “see all those that love Jesus.”

 

“Now, more than ever, we desire to be together as witnesses to the world,” O’Gara said.

 

More: www.catholicsun.org

 

ORDERING INFORMATION

Looking for a glossy/matte copy of this photo? Please call 602-354-2140 or send an e-mail for ordering information. Please note the photo's title when ordering. Download the order form here.

 

Copyright 2006-2010 The Catholic Sun. All rights reserved. This photo and all photos on this Web site credited to The Catholic Sun are provided for personal use only and may not be published, broadcasted, transmitted or sold without the expressed consent of The Catholic Sun.

Graves in Brompton Cemetery

Photoshoot for 'Devoted 2 Vintage' based in Boxmoor, Hemel Hempstead

A guillemot stands with its youngster on Staple Island, The Farne Islands.

On the 26th September I finally visited this museum. After seeing it many years living in the south of England I had never been to visit it. Even though I was in the Royal Navy myself. The Fleet Air Arm Museum RNAS Yeovilton,Ilchester, Somerset. BA22 8HT is devoted to the history of British naval aviation. It has an extensive collection of military and civilian aircraft, aero engines, models of aircraft and Royal Navy ships ( including aircraft carriers ), and paintings and drawings related to naval aviation. It is located on RNAS Yeovilton airfield, and the museum has viewing areas where visitors can watch military aircraft ( especially the helicopters ) take off and land. It is located 7 miles ( 11 km ) north of Yeovil, and 40 miles ( 64 km ) south of Bristol. The cafe area was a bit like it was detached from the rest of the museum and I found staff there quite hard work, I went in at 03.00pm and they said they had no hot food they were closing in 15 minutes! Even though the opening time on the website said ~ Please note our Restaurant will open everyday unless otherwise stated, ( there were no signs otherwise ) 0930-1700 for the duration of our summer opening hours. The staff on reception in the Museum were great, helpful also. Sadly after waiting so long to visit this place I found it all a little tired and lacking interest in the place like Haynes International Motor Museum I went to last week.

The history of the Royal Navy is preserved for the benefit of today's and future generations by the National Museum of the Royal Navy ( NMRN ) which includes four museums of the Royal Navy ( NMRN ) Portsmouth & HMS Victory, Royal Navy Submarine Museum, Fleet Air Arm Museum and the Royal Marines Museum. Together they tell the story of the Royal Navy - on the Sea, under the Sea, in the Air and on the Land.

As much an attraction as it is a museum, the Fleet Air Arm Museum is where Museum meets theatre. You’ll fly by helicopter to the replica flight deck of the aircraft carrier HMS ARK ROYAL where you‘ll see fighter aircraft and two enormous projection screens showing a Phantom interceptor fighter and a Buccaneer strike bomber. You’ll experience the thrills and sounds of a flight deck, and feel the wind in your hair so to speak and will even see a nuclear bomb! The Museum has the largest collection of Naval aircraft anywhere in Europe and the first British built Concorde which you can go on board and view the cockpit.

Ticket TypeTicket Tariff

Adult (16-59 years old)£14.00 per ticket

Carer 1:1Free

Child (5-15 years old)£10.50 per ticket

Child (under 5)Free

Concession£12.50 per ticket

Family (1 adult & 3 children)£30.00 per ticket

Family (2 adults & 3 children)£42.50 per ticket

Military Service PersonnelFree

The Fleet Air Arm Museum offers a day out guaranteed to thrill the whole family. You’ll be up close and personal among Europe’s largest collection of Naval aircraft, plus you can step on board the first British Concorde and see the cockpit first hand. More than a museum, The Fleet Air Arm Museum is an exciting experience revealing the history of Naval aviation. Situated alongside Europe’s busiest military air station, you may even see military aircraft going through their training procedures.

This window is devoted to the story of St Mary Magdalene, but the legendary version which was widely known in the Middle Ages. It arose from a sermon of St Gregory the Great preached on 21st September 591 on the passage Luke 7:36-50 in which Jesus is at dinner in a Pharisees' house when a sinful women comes in, anoints his feet with ointment and wipes them with her hair. Gregory identified this woman with Mary of Bethany, sister of Martha and Lazarus and also with Mary Magdalene from whom Jesus driven out seven devils. Thus Mary Magdalene became for the Middle Ages a symbol of penitence and also of the contemplative life (Mary of Bethany). The legend was further developed at Vezelay (which claimed to possess the relics of Mary Magdalene) to claim that Mary and a number of other of Christ's disciples were, as a result of persecution, set adrift in a rudderless boat and washed up in Provence at Marseilles where Maximin, one of their number, became bishop. Maryt died, after years of living in penitential seclusion.

www.dvdsetshop.com/products/One-Tree-Hill-Seasons-1-6-DVD...

www.dvdsetshop.com/products/One-Tree-Hill-Seasons-1-6-DVD...

www.dvdsetshop.com/products/One-Tree-Hill-Seasons-1-6-DVD...

This series follows the eventful lives of some high-school kids in Tree Hill, a small but not too quiet town in North Carolina, where the greatest source of pride is the high school basketball team, the Ravens, since living memory coached by old Whitey Durham. Its greatest talent ever was Dan Scott, who now runs a successful car dealership. The present talents are his two sons, Nathan Scott, a beautiful and popular athlete, the absolute star, who was molded and stifled by his proud dad, ambitious Dan Scott, who pushes him harder then even the coach approves of, but rather neglected by his spoiled, impulsive mother Deb, an alcoholic, and Lucas, abandoned at birth with his devoted mother, hard-working café-owner Karen Roe, who grew up with Dan's older but poor brother Keith as substitute father as a social reject, only playing hoops on a public yard in the park with street-kids, his passion being reading; when an incident forces the coach to replace suspended players, Lucas soon proves the revelation, and after a while gets accepted and develops a dynamic, in the long run good relationship with his brother, who turns on his dad. Of course the teenage boys have friends, and especially a confusing series of usually short-loved 'eternal' love affairs with musical talents Peyton and Haley, also a tutor, and irresistible man-eater Brooke...

 

27th February 2014. Hopelessly Devoted by kate Tempest with Paines Plough at The Garage . Photo Credit ©Richard Davenport

Behold the Cerberus Sisters, the world's only Siamese striplets from 'The Vaudevillains' by Les Enfants Terribles.

 

The sisters are played by: Emma Fraser; Nicola Hawkins; and Philippa Hogg.

 

To find out more about the show and to book tickets:

 

www.assemblyfestival.com/event/374/

 

My thanks are due to James Seager from Les Enfants Terribles, and Jasmyne Chung and Emma Koubayssi from the Assembly Press Office.

Photoshoot for 'Devoted 2 Vintage' based in Boxmoor, Hemel Hempstead

Strong devoted loving heart

Trusting in me fully to do him no harm

Burnished copper coat glints in the sun

Like the love that shines in his eyes.... By Barbara, BlackGrouse's wife.

 

We had this dog for eleven glorious years. It's been about four years since he's been gone. He was known as the Boz, Bozzman, Bozzerama, Bud Dog. Have you ever heard of a Bayou dog? That's the kind of dog that has to be "by you" all the time. Boz was truly a "by you dog." When we first got him I put him in the back yard where my previous dog was content to stay. Boz would have none of that. He was little then and could wiggle out of places where my previous dog was too big to get through. First he was kept in the washroom, then the entry way, then the kitchen, then the whole house. He was a German shepherd-chow mix with a most pleasant reddish tint to his coat which was highlighted with a black cape that grew thick in the winter, and also a black muzzle and black highlighting his eyes, finishing with a black tipped tail, like it had been dipped in black ink.

I did take him to obedience training but he was still a little high strung. When people came to visit us he of course thought they had come to see him. He would just as soon set in the visitors lap if I did not put him on leash. He loved people, he loved my family, but he was devoted to my wife. We were camping on the Olympic Peninsula in our favorite camping place when Bosley passed away. He was sleeping at our feet in our tent, got up and stood by my wife's side and then collapsed. He loved to fetch sticks and was a very strong swimmer. He loved to ride in my truck where he sat in the seat next to me and would put his paw on my arm which meant that I needed to scratch his chest. I never had experienced grief until he died. When he died I was afraid that I would forget what it felt like to pet his back or rub his chest but even today I remember all of the things that I loved about this treasured dog.

 

"You think there will be no dogs in heaven? I tell you they will be there before any of us." Robert Louis Stevenson

Devoted to Amelie. The best movie ever.

35th annual Rosary Sunday draws thousands devoted to Mary, holy rosary

 

Story by Gina Keating

Photos by Ambria Hammel

The Catholic Sun

 

In a kaleidoscope of colors, sound and movement, more than 6,000 faithful in the Phoenix Diocese gathered to honor Mary in the most anticipated Catholic event of the year, Rosary Sunday.

 

Under her title Mary, Help of Christians, the 35th annual celebration continued its traditional offerings of confession, adoration, benediction and recitation of the rosary.

 

The downtown Phoenix Convention Center opened its doors Oct. 10 to ethnically diverse members of the Body of Christ whose public prayers in different tongues paid homage to Mary, especially for her protection of the unborn.

 

Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted was greeted with a standing ovation from an enthusiastic crowd that filled the seats, as others searched for open spots.

 

“Today, we see how Mary is the mother of all of us,” Bishop Olmsted said in his bilingual address.

 

Auxilary Bishop Eduardo Nevares, recently back from a trip to Rome, delivered an apostolic blessing from Pope Benedict, which was received with a round of applause.

 

Christy O’Gara said she attended the event for the second year with her six children so they could “see all those that love Jesus.”

 

“Now, more than ever, we desire to be together as witnesses to the world,” O’Gara said.

 

More: www.catholicsun.org

 

ORDERING INFORMATION

Looking for a glossy/matte copy of this photo? Please call 602-354-2140 or send an e-mail for ordering information. Please note the photo's title when ordering. Download the order form here.

 

Copyright 2006-2010 The Catholic Sun. All rights reserved. This photo and all photos on this Web site credited to The Catholic Sun are provided for personal use only and may not be published, broadcasted, transmitted or sold without the expressed consent of The Catholic Sun.

Jäger Bomb: three part Red Bull, two part Jägermeister, one part memory loss...

© 2019 Mike McCall

_Devoted to Leary_

Georgia Highway 37

Philip Edward Boyd (1833-1906) Memorial

Leary, Calhoun County, Georgia USA

 

Inscription:

Philip Edward Boyd

1833-1906

 

A brave Confederate soldier,

An enterprising citizen,

A generous friend,

A noble spirit.

 

Thirty-three years

1873-1906

Devoted to Leary.

 

The noblest work of God,

An honest man.

These are my tenants; Little Joey and May. They are completely devoted to each other and are the very best tenants anyone could ask for.

 

Joey is about 4 years old and one of his recent relatives was a papillon. May is a little older and most her relatives live back east.

A devoted father and his young daughter. She proudly told me that her father corn rows her hair, which on that day was rather impressively styled for man hands.

Seen in a bridal store in Palma.

27th February 2014. Hopelessly Devoted by kate Tempest with Paines Plough at The Garage . Photo Credit ©Richard Davenport

About 80% of Georgia's population identified themselves as Georgian Orthodox.

 

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media. Use without permission is illegal.

 

© Frank Janssens

www.frankfocus.com

  

i got drunk & hungover in 4 hours. thank you tequila.

my husband also got this sweet tattoo. fuck yeah.

 

okay, it's not real. but wouldn't be awesome if it was?!?!?!

 

schmobist info - ghetto ass ikea light to the left of subject at... uh... well, it's on.

 

170/365

Ancaster Weatherbed and copper

35th annual Rosary Sunday draws thousands devoted to Mary, holy rosary

 

Story by Gina Keating

Photos by Ambria Hammel

The Catholic Sun

 

In a kaleidoscope of colors, sound and movement, more than 6,000 faithful in the Phoenix Diocese gathered to honor Mary in the most anticipated Catholic event of the year, Rosary Sunday.

 

Under her title Mary, Help of Christians, the 35th annual celebration continued its traditional offerings of confession, adoration, benediction and recitation of the rosary.

 

The downtown Phoenix Convention Center opened its doors Oct. 10 to ethnically diverse members of the Body of Christ whose public prayers in different tongues paid homage to Mary, especially for her protection of the unborn.

 

Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted was greeted with a standing ovation from an enthusiastic crowd that filled the seats, as others searched for open spots.

 

“Today, we see how Mary is the mother of all of us,” Bishop Olmsted said in his bilingual address.

 

Auxilary Bishop Eduardo Nevares, recently back from a trip to Rome, delivered an apostolic blessing from Pope Benedict, which was received with a round of applause.

 

Christy O’Gara said she attended the event for the second year with her six children so they could “see all those that love Jesus.”

 

“Now, more than ever, we desire to be together as witnesses to the world,” O’Gara said.

 

More: www.catholicsun.org

 

ORDERING INFORMATION

Looking for a glossy/matte copy of this photo? Please call 602-354-2140 or send an e-mail for ordering information. Please note the photo's title when ordering. Download the order form here.

 

Copyright 2006-2010 The Catholic Sun. All rights reserved. This photo and all photos on this Web site credited to The Catholic Sun are provided for personal use only and may not be published, broadcasted, transmitted or sold without the expressed consent of The Catholic Sun.

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