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Country Fried: Episode 3 'Barbara Fairchild'

This week on 'Country Fried,' Ryan talks with Arkansas native and Grammy award-nominee Barbara Fairchild. From her first single, released at age 15, to classics such as the 'Teddy Bear Song,' Barbara has made her mark in country music history. Enjoy her great stories and sense of humor in this country music conversation.

An episode of the Country Fried Podcast podcast, hosted by AETNTV, titled "Country Fried: Episode 3 'Barbara Fairchild'" was published on September 24, 2019.

September 24, 2019 · Country Fried Podcast

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This week on 'Country Fried,' Ryan talks with Arkansas native and Grammy award-nominee Barbara Fairchild. From her first single, released at age 15, to classics such as the 'Teddy Bear Song,' Barbara has made her mark in country music history. Enjoy her great stories and sense of humor in this country music conversation.

This week on 'Country Fried,' Ryan talks with Arkansas native and Grammy award-nominee Barbara Fairchild. From her first single, released at age 15, to classics such as the 'Teddy Bear Song,' Barbara has made her mark in country music history. Enjoy her great stories and sense of humor in this country music conversation.
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Her Herd Jeanna Laurie Welcome to Her Herd, a podcast for rural mums, by a rural Mum. Hi I'm Jen, your host and founder of Her Herd. Thanks so much for joining me. Her Herd is a safe space. A place for rural women to share, learn and feel empowered and supported in their motherhood journey. Each week I'll be chatting to country mums' and health care professionals, bringing you fertility, pregnancy and birth stories to help guide and inspire rural women on their motherhood journey. We'll discuss the complexities of parenting and the influences that develop our mothering. Pregnancy and birth often presents many unknowns, often with limited options, especially in our rural health communities. But as you'll hear, rural mums and resilient. So join me as we explore the narratives, values and experiences that weave together to contribute to our overall being as mothers. Let this podcast be your best friend, sharing your happiness, your grief, and laying out the shit noone tells you.<p style='color:grey; font-si True Fryme Ore-Ida Potatoes Every day across the country, fries disappear without a trace, leaving behind a cold case and some crumbs. ORE-IDA Potatoes developed True Fryme to try to solve those starchy mysteries, and catch the perpetrators behind them. Captain Jim by Mary Grant Bruce Loyal Books This book is about Norah Linton, her brother Jim, her father David and Jim's chum Wally from Australia. They all move to England during WWI because Jim and Wally want to fight in the war.When a Irish friend of the family dies, Norah inherits a big house in Surrey: Homewood. To keep up the Irishman's memory they want to use the house to help the war effort. They turn it into a home for "Tired People"--soldiers recovering from injuries, or soldiers on leave that have no family to go home to, can come here to have a good time and enjoy the country-side, so that they can go back to their regiments fully rested and restored.Unfortunately Jim and Wally are soon called upon to fight, leaving Norah and her father to take care of the Tired People. Protector, The by Harold Bindloss (1866 - 1945) LibriVox Harold Bindloss, while born in England, based most of his novels in western Canada, and The Protector is based primarily in and around Vancouver and Victoria.There is often danger involved in the mining and timber industries north of Vancouver, and there is also danger in the trust given to people who own and operate these mines and timber lands. And finding one's way in locating them can be equally as difficult as well. Wallace Vane and his trusted friend Carroll seemed to encounter these dangers in a seemingly endless journey both for business purposes and for adventure in their search for adequate timber land which they had inadvertently heard of.What is the driving force behind Wallace Vane? Did he regret leaving his home country and the people he knew when he left England, therefore had something to prove, but didn't even realize it himself? Was it simply a secret joy that he received whenever he observed the beauty of his adopted country with its mountains
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