Category Archives: Kentucky

Grayson/Sadler

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Hmm.

https://bakerbloch.wordpress.com/?s=sadler

Sadler (Julie) is a collagist, but she’s changed her name since Pietmond days.

The remaining Grayson, (3rd; sans Sadler):

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Ripshin, Grayson County, Virginia.

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Additional note: 2 separate Black Rocks occur in Grayson County, KY.

Additional note: Joe (TX), Cartwright (near TX), Ponderosa (KY).

Additional note: Sadler-Dixie, TX. Sadler-South, KY (obvious!).

Aditional note: *Also*, to reinforce above, Sadler-Southmayd, TX (!).

Additional note: Wax in Grayson County, KY (Bee, Byrd — Poe).

Additional note: Whitetop Mtn. in extreme nw corner of Grayson County, VA, which also contains a Whitetop village. All other Grayson Counties harbor “White” town oddities as well. Whitewright, TX on edge of that Grayson County, and White Mound and White Rock close, as already talked about. Larger Whitesboro, TX near opposite edge of same county. White Run near western line of Grayson County, KY. WHITE reinforced — run of Whites.

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1/21/14 update:

Sadler may instead be referring primarily to William S. Sadler, who helped publish the controversial Urantia book claimed to be channeled from an extraterrestrial source.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_S._Sadler

In 1910, Sadler went to Europe and studied psychiatry for a year under Sigmund Freud. Sometime between 1906 and 1911, Sadler attempted to treat a patient with an unusual sleep condition. While the patient was sleeping he spoke to Sadler and claimed to be an extraterrestrial. Sadler spent years observing the sleeping man in an effort to explain the phenomenon, and eventually decided the man had no mental illness and that his words were genuine. The man’s identity was never publicized, but speculation has focused on Sadler’s brother-in-law, Wilfred Kellogg. Over the course of several years, Sadler and his assistants visited the man while he slept, conversing with him about spirituality, history, and cosmology, and asking him questions. A larger number of interested people met at Sadler’s home to discuss the man’s responses and to suggest additional questions. The man’s words were eventually published in The Urantia Book, and the Urantia Foundation was created to assist Sadler in spreading the book’s message. It is not known who wrote and edited the book, but several commentators have speculated that Sadler played a guiding role in its publication. Although it never became the basis of an organized religion, the book attracted followers who devoted themselves to its study, and the movement continued after Sadler’s death.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Urantia_Book

Or not.

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Filed under Kentucky, MAPS, Texas

3 Whites don’t make a wright.

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitewright,_Texas

Quedlinburg treasures
Main article: Theft of medieval art from Quedlinburg

Whitewright was the home of US Lieutenant Joe Tom Meador, who after World War II looted several major pieces of art from a cave near Quedlinburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.

On April 19, 1945, American troops occupied Quedlinburg. Various treasures of art were secured in a cave near the castle Altenburg. Meador was responsible for the security of the cave.

Meador, a soldier with good knowledge of art, recognized the importance of the treasures (among them being Gospel of Samuel and the Crystals of Constantinople). He sent the treasures to Whitewright via army mail, and the art was placed in a safe at the First National Bank of Whitewright.

Meador died in 1980, and his heirs tried to sell ten pieces of Beutekunst (looted art) on the international art market. After a long search and judicial processes, the art was returned to Germany in 1992 and were investigated because of damages to the pieces. At first those stolen artefacts were exhibited in Munich and Berlin but were finally returned to Quedlinburg in 1993. However, two of the pieces stolen by Meador are still in the United States at an unknown location.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theft_of_medieval_art_from_Quedlinburg

On April 20, 2000, the IRS and the Meador family settled for $135,000.

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Kentucky town.

http://www.texasescapes.com/They-Shoe-Horses-Dont-They/Three-Bean-Salad.htm

Tom Bean
Tom Bean was a mysterious character that showed up in Grayson County one day – having just traded his horse and pistol for a wagon with a yoke of oxen carrying a barrel of whiskey. He had everything needed to open a saloon and so he did – naming it the White Elephant for what he considered his end of the trade. His profession other than saloonkeeper was said to be that of surveyor.

He bought or traded his services for so much land that it was said he could ride to Austin (a three day trip) and camp out every night on property he owned. Reportedly he owned 25,000 acres in Grayson County alone.

When asked where he hailed from – his usual reply was “from a Bean patch.” Bean carried books with him and volumes of Shakespeare and Dickens seemed to be favorites. He was a Mason and a clean-shaven man – rather unusual for that period. According to one source he had one blue and one brown eye. He was not married, although he had a woman with him and quite a few children running around the place. He was described as always carrying an umbrella and wearing a bee-gum hat – whatever that was.

He granted 100 acres of land to the railroad – having the town named in his honor in return. When he died, over 100 people filed claims against the estate, making it one of the most famous of Texas civil law suits. Tom Bean is buried in the Willow Wild cemetery in Bonham, Texas.

The Tom Bean Tom Cats are the local high school football team.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_elephant

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Mr. Bean.

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Lilly 01

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Laurel_&_Hardy

220px-Daylily_'Hush_Little_Baby'

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Lilly, PA on Little Conemaugh River.

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Lilly, PA; Munster, PA

220px-Fred_Gwynne_Yvonne_DeCarlo_The_Munsters_1964

Lily Munster

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Filed under Kentucky, MAPS, Pennsylvania

104 years and counting

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Cubs#1902.E2.80.931920:_A_Cub_dynasty

In 1902, Spalding, who by this time had revamped the roster to boast what would soon be one of the best teams of the early century, sold the club to Jim Hart, and the franchise became known as the Chicago Cubs.[6] During this period, which has become known as baseball’s dead-ball era, Cub infielders Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers, and Frank Chance were made famous as a double-play combination by Franklin P. Adams’ poem Baseball’s Sad Lexicon. The poem first appeared in the July 18, 1910 edition of the New York Evening Mail. Mordecai “Three-Finger” Brown, Jack Taylor, Ed Reulbach, Jack Pfiester, and Orval Overall were several key pitchers for the Cubs during this time period. With Chance acting as player-manager from 1905 to 1912, the Cubs won four pennants and two World Series titles over a five-year span. Although they fell to the “Hitless Wonders” White Sox in the 1906 World Series, the Cubs recorded a record 116 victories and the best winning percentage (.763) in Major League history. With mostly the same roster, Chicago won back-to-back World Series championships in 1907 and 1908, becoming the first Major League club to play three times in the Fall Classic and the first to win it twice. However, the Cubs have not won a World Series since; this remains the longest championship drought in North American professional sports.

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Macon Bacon with the Big Sink

So there’s no doubt that Lisa the Vegetarian can make money off Winesap: she was macon (making) bacon. Cash, Priceville… too many clues here. Cub wins suppressed for psychic energy so the story will go. None of your bee’s wax. Ernie Banks was given compensation as Mr. Cub. Banks is also in UmapS. Banks started as a Kansas City Monarch of the Negro League in 1950 before joining Chicago in 1953, becoming their first black player. This is coded into Oregon, alongside some Dorothy Gale-Kansas material. Kansas City Life probably involved, the first 2 movie synchronicity, technically (Kansas on both sides, City [Centerville] in the middle). Kansas City Life = Second Life, as Kansas City is second city of Missouri (as Chicago is second city of US of A, also known as City of *Big* Shoulders and *Windy* City). Ernie Banks also coded into Mississippi. Popular related quotes: “It’s a beautiful day for a ballgame… Let’s play two!” and, “Without him, the Cubs would finish in Albuquerque!” Also called “Mr. Sunshine,” perhaps relating to “Mr. Bluebird” of ELO.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernie_Banks#Honors

On March 31, 2008, a statue of Banks was unveiled outside Wrigley Field. Upon its unveiling, the base of the statue was revealed to contain a typographical error, reading “Lets play two” rather than the grammatically correct “Let’s play two”. Two days later, sculptor Lou Cella came down to the ballpark early in the morning and carved the apostrophe.

http://www.arf.ru/Notes/Apostro/stfoot.html

“Well I told ’em right then”, Fido said
“It should be easy to see
“The crux of the biscuit
is the apostrophe”

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Filed under Carrcass Artists, Kentucky, MAPS, Mississippi, Oregon, Zapple

Sunfish, KY

All Sunfish, Kentucky is is a crossroads. And this is what I found less than a minute into the “visit” — very easy to spot in Streetview. It only appears in 1 shot, seen in the middle picture below. Otherwise the location is very nondescript.

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I must ask you. Does that look like a flying sunfish?

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Filed under Crop Circles, Kentucky, MAPS