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Chatham Meat Co. Brings ‘Pasture to Plate’ Mission to Siler City
When his grandfather fired up the smoker, Chris Beal’s mouth would begin to water. The smell of the pork wafted throughout the Goldston farmhouse. The nostalgic bliss of that first bite is what led to Beal’s career in hospitality. Now, he’s bringing that feeling back to his roots.
AskBio CEO Sheila Mikhail has new mission after cancer diagnosis
Sheila Mikhail has arguably been the Triangle's most successful CEO in recent years, guiding Durham's AskBio to production and sealing its $4 billion acquisition from pharmaceutical giant Bayer. But a recent breast cancer diagnosis — and the difficult journey to get it — is pulling her out of the laboratory...
14 best things to do this spring in Raleigh
The spring is the best time to explore the Triangle's natural beauty or hang out at a festival — before the summer's humidity strikes with its full might. Driving the news: Spring officially kicks off on March 20. Read below for a snapshot of what's happening around town. Festivals...
Capital Mall Triangle to become ‘more people-oriented’ over next 20 years
In a meeting on March 16, the Olympia Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee discussed an update on the Capital Mall Triangle Subarea Plan and the environmental impact statement. The area known as the Capital Mall Triangle was developed in the 1970s and 1980s. High-density, mixed-use, multi-family zones and low-density residential...
‘Food is a right’: Triangle’s first community fridge sees success in Durham
DURHAM, N.C. — The Triangle’s first community fridge is proving to be a success in Durham. The concept is sometimes known as a “freedge” because it’s a fridge with free food inside. Asheville, Charlotte and Greensboro also have community fridges and the idea has taken...
STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA. INFORMATION ON LIVESTOCK MARKS AND BRANDS, BRAND INSPECTOR AND ESTRAY LAWS. COMPILED BY DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND LABOR
Normanden Publishing Co., State Printers, n. d. (ca 1925)., [Grand Forks: 1925. First edition. 8vo. Pictorial wrappers, n. p. (12 pp. including covers). On the front cover are the brands used by Theodore Roosevelt during his ranching ventures in North Dakota."In 1882 Theodore Roosevelt came to Medora, Dakota Territory, a cow town on the main line of the newly built N. P. Railway, and established himself as a rancher along the Little Missouri River there. His ranches were the Maltese Cross and the Elkhorn, the brands being symbols of these names. Roosevelt also used the Triangle brand. The earliest brands of record in the office of Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor at Bismark showing brands used by Roosevelt were filed October 11, 1890, soon after North Dakota was admitted as a state; facsimiles of these brands are shown on the front cover." Included in the booklet are laws for marks and brands, the shipment of branded animals, and estray laws for North Dakota. An additional typed page dated 1925 mounted to the rear wrapper contains updates to the laws compiled within. Wrappers lightly used, tiny chip to bottom corner of the front cover, mounted typed page is age-toned with a short tear along (not affecting text), else a very good, bright, clean copy of an elusive ranching item. OCLC locates only one copy at the Amon Carter Museum. Rare item.
Defensive adjustment helps Deer Lakes defeat Neshannock in PIAA Class 3A quarterfinals
Down by six points at halftime, Deer Lakes coach Albie Fletcher didn’t exactly throw the kitchen sink at Neshannock. Just some junk. Deer Lakes threw a junk defense — triangle-and-two — at Neshannock in the second half. And when the final horn sounded, Deer Lakes was looking square at a historical moment.
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