The local business has been passed through four generations and has pride about serving famous individuals in the past
Cambridgeshire is well known for its historical sites, picturesque villages, and unique shops. But one village located near Huntingdon is home to a business considered one of the oldest family-run businesses in the area.
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Kimbolton is a village home to a variety of charming shops and some highly recommended places to eat. One local shop, however, has been run by the same family for more than 150 years, spanning multiple generations.
Abingtons Menswear is a tailor and outfitter located in the heart of Kimbolton and originally opened in 1858 in East Street. This family-run business proudly boasts of serving famous individuals over the course of its life, including the late Prince William of Gloucester, Guy Gibson, Ernie Wise, H.E. Bates, Clark Gable, and John Major.
Four generations of the Abington family have reportedly provided professional men’s tailoring for the shop, which was originally founded by Edwin Ebenezer Abington before relocating from London to Kimbolton.
In present times, the business is run by Richard Abington and his wife, Karen, and is believed to be the oldest family business running in Huntingdonshire. The shop’s stock has evolved over the years to cater to both formal and casual wear, and an in-house tailor on hand to tailor garments perfectly to each individual.
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This business is not the only place in the village with an interesting backstory. The village is also home to a famous landmark, Kimbolton Castle. The castle was once the final residence of Queen Catherine of Aragon, the first wife of Henry VIII. It dates back to a wooden motte-and-bailey castle in Norman times, and is now an early 18th-century masterpiece.
Kimbolton boasts some lovely shops, including La Cote d’Or, an antique shop in the centre of the village, and The Kimbolton Flower Shop, dubbed by a Google review as the “very best florist in the world”.
If this didn’t tempt you enough to pay a visit, Kimbolton is also home to a refurbished pub called The New Sun Inn, offering an à la carte menu, an extensive wine list, and a rustic charm that entices you in. The pub boasts about thoughtful cooking with “flavours that feel both familiar and exciting”.
The establishment is not short on high recommendations either. The New Sun Inn holds an overall 4.3 rating out of five on Tripadvisor and has seen some truly raving reviews. One happy diner wrote: “Great traditional pub with brilliant staff, the food couldn’t have been better.” They added: “They have one hell of a chef there” and “I would recommend this place to anyone.”
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Another reviewer wrote: “Another delicious dinner at The New Sun Inn in Kimbolton. Proper chips, fantastic fish in crunchy batter and gorgeous homemade puddings.”
Marseille sporting director Medhi Benatia has resigned from his role amid reports of a falling out with former Manchester United forward Mason Greenwood.
Marseille sporting director Medhi Benatia has stepped down from his position following recent reports of tensions with former Manchester United striker Mason Greenwood.
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The Ligue 1 chief has departed the club as pressure mounts at Marseille during a turbulent spell, which has also seen Roberto De Zerbi exit. De Zerbi left following their 5-0 hammering by rivals Paris-Saint Germain, with the club in fourth place, and after missing out on the next phase of the Champions League in dramatic circumstances.
Benatia, a former Moroccan international who enjoyed a distinguished playing career at clubs including Bayern Munich, AS Roma and Juventus, confirmed his departure amid the ongoing issues.
He said in a statement: “Since arriving at the club, I have always acted with heart and a single obsession: to restore Olympique de Marseille to its rightful place. I know this club, I know what it demands and the passion that drives it.
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“Today, we are still in the running. The objective of qualifying for the Champions League is clearly within our reach, and we are still in contention to bring the Coupe de France home.
“Despite recent setbacks and some cruel twists of fate, the project is progressing on the pitch, but I cannot ignore the current climate.
“I sense a growing dissatisfaction, a breakdown in communication that I deeply regret. In Marseille, results are the only true measure.
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“You know my frankness and transparency. Therefore, given the tensions surrounding the management, I have indeed submitted (not offered) my resignation, because in my opinion, the club will always come before individuals, and I do not want my presence to become an obstacle or a burden to the organisation and its development.
“I leave with the feeling of having done my utmost professionally, but with the regret of not having been able to calm the atmosphere around the team, which, in my opinion, is more than capable of achieving the set objectives.”
Reports suggest Benatia clashed with Greenwood. The English forward has been with the French side since 2024 and has become a pivotal figure for the club, and whilst De Zerbi was publicly supporting him, it has been claimed that Greenwood and Benatia’s relationship had deteriorated.
L’Equipe reported that the two would deliberately blank each other, whilst the 38-year-old was understood to be openly critical of the attacker both on and off the field.
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The reports allege that Benatia was frustrated by Greenwood’s disregard for commercial obligations last summer, showing little care for the ramifications. De Zerbi now finds himself amongst available managers, though this comes at a fascinating time with both Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur searching for permanent bosses.
The Italian has previously been linked with the Old Trafford position, and it was reported that he was under consideration for the United role following his impressive tenure at Brighton, before the club chose Erik ten Hag.
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“We have had people play here from every contingent except Antarctica, we’ve even had people from cruise ships pop in and watch”
A weekly chess group at 2 Royal Avenue is seeing people of all ages enjoying the ancient game in a friendly atmosphere. The social meet-up hosts chess players of all levels and is held for free from 2pm to 5pm on Sunday afternoons. Children under 16 years old must be accompanied by a parent or guardian.
Chess has been around for over a thousand years and is a strategic, two-player board game played on an 8×8 grid with 64 alternating light and dark squares. Each player controls 16 pieces — one king, a queen, two rooks, knights, bishops, and eight pawns — with the ultimate goal of checkmating the opponent’s king by placing it under inescapable attack. It is a turn-based, no-chance game, which can trace its origins in seventh-century India.
Paul O’Connor, 62, from Bangor, who is a chess enthusiast said: “If you can learn to ride a bike, you can learn to play chess.
“Chess is a great game because it is language independent, you don’t need to speak English to play it. There is an international language and it is chess. We have had people come and play from every contingent except Antarctica, from many countries around the world.
“Cruise ships come into Belfast and people come from there to watch us play. I wish I had a penny for everyone that told me there was nothing like this in their city. They are amazed to see it happening here, on a Sunday afternoon, for free.”
Paul added that the game sees people from all backgrounds, genders and ages play together for fun. He said it was a social experience that brings people together.
He said: “We’ve had six-year-olds come into play, we’ve had 96-year-olds come into play. Chess is far more simpler than people give it credit for, they think it is very complicated and you have to be intelligent. But, you really don’t, there are a few simple rules you have to learn and you just deal with what is in front of you on the board.
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“It is almost a form of mindfulness because you can’t really think of anything else while you are playing a game. This experience gives people who play a lot on the phone a social element. Playing over the board, you play a real person, you can talk to them or not, it is up to you.
“For people who have social challenges, come in anyway, you don’t have to talk to people or it can also help you interact if you want, every chess player is a chess player. And this is regardless of your skill level, you learn how to deal with defeat and you learn how to deal with success. It is exceptionally good for mental health and helping young people develop their social capacity.”
Benjamin Netanyahu has condemned an “extreme minority” after two female IDF soldiers were rescued from riots in an ultra-Orthodox Israeli city.
Video footage from Bnei Brak, just east of Tel Aviv, shows the two soldiers being hurried away by police as thousands of ultra-Orthodox men run after them.
In a post on X, the Israeli prime minister said: “I strongly condemn the violent riots in Bnei Brak against female IDF soldiers and Israel police officers.
“This is an extreme minority that does not represent the entire haredi community.
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“This is a grave and unacceptable matter.”
“We will not allow anarchy,” the post continued, “and we will not tolerate any harm to IDF servicemen and security forces who carry out their duties with dedication and determination.”
Image: A recycle bin for papers set on fire during the protests. Pic: AP
Many in the ultra-Orthodox community in Bnei Brak have staged frequent protests amid anger over proposed laws that may force them to serve in the Israeli military.
At least 22 people were arrested on Sunday as protesters set police motorcycles on fire, overturned a police vehicle and attacked officers, authorities said.
Roughly 1.3 million ultra-Orthodox Jews make up about 13% of Israel‘s population. They oppose enlistment because they believe studying full-time in religious seminaries is their most important duty.
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The broad exemptions from mandatory military service have reopened a deep divide in Israel, especially during the war in Gaza.
Image: Israeli police detain a man during the protest. Pic: AP
It comes as hospitals in the Gaza Strip said at least 11 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire in the enclave in the last 24 hours.
The dead included five men in their 20s, who were killed in an Israeli strike in Khan Younis, according to Nasser Hospital, which received the bodies.
The Israeli military said it had carried out multiple strikes in response to several ceasefire violations near the Yellow Line, which separates Israeli-controlled areas from the rest of Gaza.
Manchester City goalkeeper James Trafford returned to the club in summer but was quickly displaced by Gianluigi Donnarumma
James Trafford said that he had no idea Manchester City were signing Gianluigi Donnarumma when he agreed to move to the Etihad. Trafford could leave after just one season after finding his ambition of regular football for club and country dashed inside a month.
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Newcastle were confident making Trafford their No.1 last summer and offered Burnley a fee that the Premier League newcomers would have accepted. However, City had a clause from when they sold the goalkeeper that allowed them to match any bid and they duly did, leaving the decision in Trafford’s hands.
The 23-year-old ultimately opted for a return to the Etihad as his best chance of meeting his ambitions to become a No.1 at the highest level for club and country. However, before the transfer window closed City brought in Donnarumma from PSG and declared the 26-year-old as a signing for the next decade.
Donnarumma has said he was aware of City’s interest before the summer transfer window started and that contact strengthened after the Club World Cup – a month before Trafford was signed. According to Trafford, while he wasn’t definitively told he would be No.1 when he picked City over Newcastle he wasn’t told about Donnarumma either.
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“It wasn’t that, but it wasn’t what happened [either], so it is what it is, it’s football,” he said. “It is what it is, you’ve got to keep grafting every day and the games that come, play as hard as you can. It’s just another experience to add to my career and yeah, it has been good learning.”
Donnarumma instantly came into the team when he signed in September and Trafford has not played a Premier League game since, having to be content with cup competitions for a chance to shine. He has taken his opportunities, making important stops in the Carabao Cup semi-final against Newcastle as well as the FA Cup win over Salford on Saturday.
His lack of game time has put his England place in jeopardy for the World Cup though. Rather than pushing to be No.1, he was left out of the last squad altogether before being belatedly called up when Nick Pope picked up an injury.
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The Carabao Cup Final will see Arsenal v Manchester City at London’s Wembley Stadium this March.
Trafford is trying to make the best of his situation, but did not sound upbeat when he stopped to speak after the Salford game. Having looked to leave City in the January window, he did little to play down the idea that an exit is on the cards for the summer as he admitted that he hadn’t spoken to anybody at England about his hopes of going to the World Cup.
“I haven’t spoken to them [about] if that’s enough, but I play as well as I can and train every day very hard and it’s just down to me. Obviously everyone knows what’s going on with me, so I’ve just got to, whenever I play, play as well as I can.
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“I’ve obviously got a contract, so yeah, I don’t know what happens next season. I just know that I’ll just take it a day at a time and try and improve.”
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Returning from a day out with the family, Dez Thomas expected nothing more dramatic than unpacking the car. Instead he arrived back at the old chapel he’d just bought up in flames. Such was the damage he wouldn’t be able to return properly for 18 months.
“It didn’t feel great,” Dez, from the village of Llanrug in Gwynedd, said of the old chapel named Capel Mawr which he now credits with changing his life. “It was the springboard for everything that came afterwards.”
An ex-Royal Welsh Fusilier hailing from Cemaes Bay on Anglesey, Dez departed the Army in the late 1980s to pursue carpentry training in Wrexham. He embarked on a career fitting out shops and restaurants, which took him across the globe, from Austria to London and New York.
In 2004, whilst operating a garden decking business, he stumbled upon a listing for Capel Mawr. Capel Mawr – the “Great Chapel” – has stood at the heart of Llanrug since 1798, reshaped and rebuilt as the village grew on the back of slate and revivalist zeal. By 1867 it had been reborn in Romanesque style, a monument to faith and ambition.
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Long after the hymns faded, it found new life as a television studio for Welsh-language broadcaster S4C, thanks to actor Dyfan Roberts who inserted a mezzanine for offices and dressing rooms while preserving much of its original fabric.
Dez ended up buying it 22 years ago for £80,000. “The price of a terraced house,” he reflected in conversation with North Wales Live. “It seemed too good an opportunity to pass up.”
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When Dez acquired the property he found that it was scarcely liveable. “I slept on a mattress upstairs,” he recalled. “It was really quite bohemian.”
He eventually managed to get hold of a proper bed – but disaster struck with the fire. During his forced time away Dez resolved to use his expertise and restore the building himself. He started with the upper floor.
“When he converted the chapel to a TV studio, Dyfan Roberts had been careful to retain as much of the building’s original fabric as possible,” he said. “I was the same – I re-used wood panelling from the reception area to create the apartment.”
In 2007 Dez returned and began restoring the chapel’s vestry and school room. These spaces had once been gathering points for local residents attending film screenings.
Following completion in 2010 he began letting the upper apartment as holiday accommodation. But the chapel’s main space remained untouched and, with regional tourism flourishing, Dez made the bold decision to renovate this section too. Finance for the project came from selling the vestry.
He enlisted family support. His eldest son Jake, a joiner by trade, and youngest son Morgan joined the team. By 2019 a second holiday rental – Basement 19 – was welcoming guests. Visitors were captivated by the expansive space and premium finishes in the Manhattan-inspired loft flat.
“I’d worked on a property owned by the Lehman Brothers investment bank in Manhattan,” said Dez, 61. “I was inspired by that.”
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During the post-Covid surge revenues rocketed to £117,000. They’ve since stabilised at £85,000 annually, maintaining a robust occupancy rate exceeding 75%.
Nevertheless, Dez has grown tired of the journey from Benllech on Anglesey, where he currently resides, to greet guests and manage cleaning and upkeep.
He’s also eager to embark on another substantial restoration scheme. “I’m looking to provide unique places for couples to stay,” he said. “Somewhere that offers glamping with yurts and shepherd huts. I’m also planning to convert an old helicopter into an Airbnb.
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“I’m currently refitting a coffee shop in Four Mile Bridge on Anglesey. For the next project I’ll need funds so I’m reluctantly letting the chapel go.”
Twenty-one years after acquiring Capel Mawr he’s listed the property on the market for just under £1m. The estate agents are Williams and Goodwin The Property People.
They characterise Capel Mawr as a “truly unique opportunity”. The lower flat contains five bedrooms, whilst the upper one boasts four.
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The layout is open-plan and, as one visitor observed, “photos don’t do justice to this absolutely stunning property”. The estate agents described the ground floor flat as offering an “almost cavernous open plan living space”.
They’ve identified various potential uses beyond maintaining the holiday rental business. Splitting the space into two separate dwellings is feasible, or purchasers could “create a home with an income”.
A second home is now also permitted following Cyngor Gwynedd’s unsuccessful appeal to maintain its Article 4 direction, which previously prevented change of use without planning permission.
A premium kitchen fitted with contemporary appliances sits adjacent to a dining space featuring a table that “easily seats 14 guests”.
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The layout flows seamlessly into the sitting area designed for unwinding. Alongside a utility room the ground floor contains a bedroom with bunk beds and a contemporary shower room.
Four of the lower flat’s bedrooms are located on a galleried landing that overlooks the principal open-plan living area. Access is via an open-tread timber staircase. Each of these double bedrooms features fitted wardrobes and high-end en suites.
The upper flat follows a more conventional style. The agents noted: “This has been painstakingly restored and modernised to a style that enhances many of the original features with feature windows and impressively restored ceiling roses. A bespoke craftsman timber kitchen is second to none.”
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The layout is also rather distinctive – reflecting Dez’s international travels. The apartment’s open space is circular in design and has been divided to create three separate zones for the kitchen, lounge and dining areas.
Various rooms branch off from the open-plan living space and spacious entertainment area. These comprise two double bedrooms and a dining space that’s cleverly concealed “almost at a mezzanine level”.
There’s also a principal bedroom which features a substantial dressing room that could serve as a fourth bedroom. Its bathroom is “full of Victorian elegance” and timber craftsmanship.
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At the property’s front sits a generous gravelled parking and turning area with room for multiple vehicles. The wisteria-adorned front door creates an impressive entrance, with a lobby providing private access to both apartments.
“It’s been fantastic sharing the properties with visitors,” said Dez. “I’m very attached to the place and I’ll be sad to let it go.”
Whenever US federal immigration agents pull up to a location in Minneapolis, people take their whistles out, start blowing them and start filming.
In December 2025, the US government sent more than 2,000 Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents into Minnesota as part of Operation Metro Surge. They joined more than 700 agents already present in the state – their mission to find and deport people the Trump administration calls “worst of the worst illegal alien criminals.”
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The residents of the metropolitan area known as the Twin Cities – Minneapolis and Saint Paul – quickly came together to try to prevent their neighbours being caught up in ICE raids. As well as monitoring ICE activities, block by block, people are organising mutual aid for neighbours fearful of going out in case of immigration raids.
Since their arrival, the Trump administration claims ICE agents have arrested more than 4,000 people in Minnesota. They have also killed two American citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
In this episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast, we speak to Daniel Cueto-Villalobos, a doctoral candidate at the University of Minnesota, who lives in southern Minneapolis and studies race, religion and social movements. He tracks the neighbourhood groups that have sprung into action in response to the ICE presence back to mutual networks set up during the 2020 COVID pandemic, and in the wake of the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis policeman.
“What it did was force us to talk to each other in the most basic sense, and get together as a community to develop these networks that we see really playing out today,” says Cueto-Villalobos.
This episode of The Conversation Weekly was written and produced by Katie Flood, with production assistance from Mend Mariwany. Mixing by Eleanor Brezzi and theme music by Neeta Sarl. Gemma Ware is the executive producer.
Listen to The Conversation Weekly via any of the apps listed above, download it directly via our RSS feed or find out how else to listen here. A transcript of this episode is available via the Apple Podcasts or Spotify apps.
Everything you need to know as Natalie McNally murder trial set to begin | Belfast Live
Need to know
The trial of Stephen McCullagh, who has denied murdering Natalie McNally in Lurgan in December 2022, will commence on Monday 16 February
The trial of the man accused of murdering Natalie McNally is set to begin on Monday
Everything you need to know:
The trial over the murder of Natalie McNally is set to commence on Monday, 16 February, after barristers agreed to exempt the case from the ongoing strike.
Ms McNally, 32, died after she was stabbed at her home in Lurgan, Co Armagh, on December 18 2022. She was 15 weeks pregnant.
Stephen McCullagh, 35, from Woodland Gardens, Lisburn, has denied murdering her.
The case faced potential delays due to strike action by criminal barristers, which began in January amid a long-running dispute over the fees paid for legal aid work.
The industrial action effectively halted Crown Court cases involving people who required legal aid. However, the striking barristers have agreed to an exemption in this case.
Last month, prosecuting barrister Charles MacCreanor KC sought February 16 as a start date for the trial. He said this date had been chosen in consultation with the family, the defence, investigating police and witnesses.
The trial was initially due to begin last November but was adjourned after a large volume of new evidence was presented to the defence.
A powerfulstorm system has unleashed severe weather across the southeastern United States, triggering tornado warnings in Mississippi and Louisiana before advancing towards parts of Georgia and Florida. This turbulent weather front arrives as the Northeast enjoys a welcome reprieve from weeks of bitterly cold temperatures.
The most intense storms were reported near Lake Charles, Louisiana, where high winds from a thunderstorm caused significant disruption. A horse trailer and a Mardi Gras float were overturned, an airport jet bridge sustained damage and a metal awning was ripped from a house, landing in power lines. These incidents were documented by National Weather Service employees who surveyed the area.
Further reports from the weather service indicated snapped and toppled power poles near the Louisiana towns of Jena, Cheneyville, and Donaldsonville.
While no fatalities or serious injuries have been reported, the storm system continues its trajectory, placing parts of south Georgia and the Florida Panhandle under tornado watches throughout Sunday.
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The Northeast has begun to thaw after a weeks-long stretch of uncommonly cold weather.
Meanwhile, the Northeast was beginning to thaw after a weeks-long stretch of uncommonly cold weather.
Boston was running nearly 7 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 14 Celsius) below average for February by midweek, and the city was on pace for its coldest winter in more than a decade. Boston remained cold on Sunday, but the week’s forecast called for temperatures climbing into the high 30s and low 40s, which is closer to the seasonal average.
Elsewhere in the U.S., parts of California were bracing for showers, thunderstorms and snow showers. Jacob Spender, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Sacramento, said a storm system was moving on shore in California throughout Sunday and through the week.
Heavy snow was forecast for elevated areas, Spender said.
“As we get up into the mountains and the foothills, we’re going to be looking at some snowfall,” Spender said. “So there will be snowfall all the way down into the foothills as well.”
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Spender said people should heed travel advisories in the coming days.
“So if they are traveling, packing winter safety kits. Anything to be prepared. This is a bigger system, and a major system,” Spender said.
Call the Midwife viewers were left devastated during the latest episode of the BBC show.
Tianna Corbin TV Reporter
21:38, 15 Feb 2026Updated 21:42, 15 Feb 2026
On Sunday night, emotions ran high among BBC viewers as they discovered the fate of Sister Monica Joan, portrayed by Judy Parfitt.
In recent episodes of Call the Midwife, fans learnt that the much-loved character was suffering from kidney failure, with Dr. Patrick Turner, played by Stephen McGann, indicating that further tests would shed more light on her condition.
As Dr Turner, Sister Julienne (Jenny Agutter), and Nurse Phyllis Crane (Linda Bassett) sat down to discuss the findings, Dr Turner began: “I was hoping it was something that could be treated, but chronic kidney disease is just-“.
Interrupting him, Sister Julienne added: “Something that takes old people gently, but kindly.”
Dr Turner stressed that despite its ‘gentle’ nature, the disease still claims lives, leading Nurse Phyllis to ask how long Sister Monica Joan had been living with the illness, reports the Mirror.
He responded: “I suspect not long.”
When questioned about her life expectancy, he admitted: “The same, unless we can persuade her to accept what treatment there is, she’ll progress to end-stage renal failure fairly quickly.”
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Despite the devastating news, Nurse Crane responded: “Till that day comes, we’ll just have to love her as we always have, but a bit more carefully.”
It wasn’t long before viewers flocked to X to express their reactions to the looming death of Sister Monica Joan, with one person writing: “Are they actually going to kill of sister Monica Joan? Just end Call The Midwife there!”.
Another commented: “No, Sister Monica Joan is immortal…she can’t die.”
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Whilst a third added: “SISTER MONICA JOAN. Sobbing.”
A further viewer wrote: “Absolutely devastated hearing the news that Sister Monica Joan has kidney failure and may not have long left, if we lose her, it will be like losing a much-loved family member. I’d be completely heartbroken.”
For the latest showbiz, TV, movie and streaming news, go to the new Everything Gossip website‘.
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One person posted: “Don’t you dare let anything happen to Sister Monica Joan.”
Meanwhile another said: “#callthemidwife Oh no, surely it can’t be the demise,of Sister Monica Joan? On the other hand could it be the end on Nonnatus? What a fantastic drama this is @CallTheMidwife1 #SundayMood.”
Sister Monica Joan has featured in the cherished period drama since its debut back in 2012. However, as the programme enters its 15th series, it’s been reported that the finale will feature a birth, a wedding and a funeral.
Call the Midwife continues Sundays on BBC One from 8pm
A glove containing DNA found about two miles from the house of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie’s mother appears to match those worn by a masked person outside her front door in Tucson the night she vanished, the FBI said Sunday.
The glove, discovered in a field beside a road, was sent for DNA testing. The FBI said in a statement that it received preliminary results Saturday and was awaiting official confirmation. The development comes as law enforcement gathers more potential evidence as the search for Guthrie’s mother heads into its third week. Authorities had previously said they had not identified a suspect.
Nancy Guthrie, 84, was last seen at her Arizona home on Jan. 31 and was reported missing the following day. Authorities say her blood was found on the front porch. Purported ransom notes were sent to news outlets, but two deadlines for paying have passed.
The discovery was revealed days after investigators had released surveillance videos of the masked person outside Guthrie’s front door. A porch camera recorded video of a person with a backpack who was wearing a ski mask, long pants, jacket and gloves.
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AP AUDIO:FBI: DNA recovered from glove found near Guthrie home that appears to match glove worn by suspect
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AP correspondent Julie Walker reports on a break in the Nancy Guthrie disappearance case.
On Thursday, the FBI called the person a suspect. It described him as a man about 5 feet, 9 inches tall with a medium build. The agency said he was carrying a 25-liter “Ozark Trail Hiker Pack” backpack.
Late Friday night, law enforcement agents sealed off a road about two miles (3.2 kilometers) from Guthrie’s home as part of their investigation. A series of sheriff’s and FBI vehicles, including forensics vehicles, passed through the roadblock.
The investigators also tagged and towed a Range Rover SUV from a nearby restaurant parking lot late Friday. The sheriff’s department later said the activity was part of the Guthrie investigation but no arrests were made.
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On Tuesday, sheriff deputies detained a person for questioning during a traffic stop south of Tucson. Authorities didn’t say what led them to stop the man but confirmed he was released. The same day, deputies and FBI agents conducted a court-authorized search in Rio Rico, about an hour’s drive south of the city.
Authorities have expressed concern about Nancy Guthrie’s health because she needs vital daily medicine. She is said to have a pacemaker and have dealt with high blood pressure and heart issues, according to sheriff’s dispatcher audio on broadcastify.com.
Earlier in the investigation, authorities had said they had collected DNA from Nancy Guthrie’s property which doesn’t belong to Guthrie or those in close contact with her. Investigators were working to identify who it belongs to.
The FBI also has said approximately 16 gloves were found in various spots near the house, most of which were searchers’ gloves that had been discarded.