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Today's Topics:
1. early gilley ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
2. Front Porch scenes ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
3. mixed up Gilleys (laverne defazio)
4. matching pennies (Paul Mulik)
5. bad-luck Henry (T Schott)
6. RE: Matching Pennies ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
7. Pigeon Ford ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
8. Barking Dogs on the front porch (Paul Jennings SLES)
9. Why would Warren ask? (Dawn Biegelsen)
10. Squad car... ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
11. Biblical Gomer ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
12. Phil Fox...Where are you? (Mike Zimmerman)
13. Not so famous, but just as beloved quotes (DEBORAH DUBOSE)
14. Songs from the Office ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
15. drawings ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
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Message: 1
Subject: early gilley
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 08:05:26 -0500
"Early Gilley" was too blame cheep and tried to save money on the caulking
- "The Jinx" Episode
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Message: 2
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 09:24:13 -0400
Subject: Front Porch scenes
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
How about that time when Ange barks like a dog to start a ruckus? That
was mischievous but comical, the big rascal!
Aunt Bee of Orlando
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Message: 3
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 14:21:24 +0000
From: "laverne defazio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: "laverne defazio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: mixed up Gilleys
Horrors !! I think I have my Gilleys mixed up. I do think it was
Gilley Walker that had his car outside the Taylors house for Gomer
to check. Guess the trained watchers will have to straighten this
out.
Oh I was thinking about the front porch . I liked the one where
Andy starts barking like a dog, too. Also the one where they were
all sitting on the porch after they attempting to build a
bandstand....
You know that in certain upscale neighbourhoods that it is against the
rules (not rule#2) to sit on your front porch!!!! Can you believe
it.!!! Course I do not have to worry as I do not live in
such a place but I saw an article on this in paper. Hard to imagine.
Have a good day Laverne
--
laverne defazio
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
http://fastmail.fm - the way email *should* be
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Message: 4
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 09:17:08 -0500
From: Paul Mulik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: matching pennies
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> Just watched the episode when Warren arrested the ladies for gambling.
Early in the episode it talks about Floyd and Goober matching pennies. Andy
says on a good week that 7 cents may change hands. I was just wondering
what matching pennies was.
Not that I've ever DONE it, mind you, but it's a game of chance. It
probably has lots of variations, but in it's simplest form, two people each
flip a cent. If the two coins match (both heads or both tails), then player
one gets to keep the coins. If they don't match, player two keeps them.
A more complicated variation is seen in an episode of "Gomer Pyle - USMC."
It's the episode in which Gomer has saved up to buy his "dress blues"
(uniform) but Duke cons him into giving the money to him because he wants to
gamble. Duke and a buddy each take a handful of pennies and shake them up
(like dice) and them form them into a stack. Then they go down through the
stacks, comparing the coins. Duke is convinced that Gomer is a "good luck
charm," because he seems to win every time, as long as Gomer is standing
next to him.
--Paul
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Message: 5
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 07:56:51 -0700 (PDT)
From: T Schott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: bad-luck Henry
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In the episode about 'Bad luck Henry', Barn rubs the
head of a red-headed stranger, at the end of the
episode.
Would that be Clint Howard?
TED
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--__--__--
Message: 6
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 11:39:44 -0400
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Matching Pennies
>Susan asked, "What is matching pennies?"
We used to match pennies (and other coins, too) when we were kids. It was a
form of gambling, of course, and therefore illegal, but since it was small
stakes and we were merely kids, no one paid any attention to it (except my mom,
who told me to quit it). It was done by two people at a time, and we did it as
follows (I am not encouraging or endorsing this, just explaining):
The way it worked was for each person to flip their coin into the air, then
catch it with one hand as it came down, and put it on the back of the other
hand (while keeping it covered with the catching hand). Then, one of the people
would call out "match" or "nope" (those are the words we used, others would
probably work, too), and then both would uncover their coins. If the person
called out "match", and the coins were laying the same way (both heads or both
tails), that person got the other person's coin. If they were different, the
other person won and got the coins. Similarly, if the person called out "nope",
they would win if the coins were not the same and lose if the coins were the
same.
We would proceed, alternating who got to call "match" or "nope", until we ran
out of coins of equal value. Once in a while, someone would put up a coin of
larger value against a smaller coin (giving "odds", but we didn't know it back
then) just for the sake of continuing to play, but not often. We did this more
as a way to fight boredom than as a way to get money, and we would usually only
do it with a few pennies, and then quit.
That's how we did it. Anyone else do it differently?
Have a great day!
Will - She called me a creachter! - DuBois
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Message: 7
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 12:06:47 EDT
Subject: Pigeon Ford
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Teresa Welch and other WBMUTBB members who are going to Pigeon Ford next
week, we are looking forward to being there and seeing old Mayberry friends
and meeting new ones. We are also staying at the Baymont. Maybe plans can
be made to get together. I've tried to locate some places and see that the
Cracker Barrel is close to the Crountry Tonite, but of course there are lots
of other places. Any body have any ideas? Contact us or write the Digest if
you do.
We are really looking forward to the event and, as always, can't wait to see
David and Alan and the others. Also, hope every one enjoys the Squad Cars
this week end and we are sorry to miss that event. Have fun!
As always, Alan, thanks for the great job with the digest. Hope every body
has a Mayberry day and travels safely to these events. Look out for Deputies
giving away jars of pickles!
David Cantrell
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Message: 8
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 11:12:05 -0500
Subject: Barking Dogs on the front porch
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: "Paul Jennings SLES" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Now...there may be nothin' to this....but I've heard tell that those very
dogs that bark in Mt. Airey....are direct decendents of the original dogs
that barked when Andy started barking.......I think they once belonged to
a Nathan Tibbs..........or perhaps Clint Biggers (he once had a whole pack
of dogs!)
"Dumb" Paul
(note the Beamon overbite)
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Message: 9
From: Dawn Biegelsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Why would Warren ask?
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 12:00:34 -0500
In Digest #252, someone asked: "...This was the episode where Warren
arrests the entire ladies auxiliary for gambling.... When they were applying
for the permit to hold the bazaar, Warren asks if any alcoholic beverages
will be sold on the premises...Why would he ask that in a dry town?"
I wondered that very same thing! I asked it aloud to my husband, who is not
a regular TAGS watcher, so he didn't really offer an opinion. Any ideas?
Just a slip-up by the writers? Or, if the ladies auxiliary event were
considered a "private" event, could they have [potentially] served alcohol?
Gosh, the Golden Door to Good Fellowship lodge didn't even serve alcohol
(right?). Just root bear, I think.
Dawn in Kansas City
--__--__--
Message: 10
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 16:03:07 EDT
Subject: Squad car...
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In a message dated 6/20/02 7:05:28 AM Central Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> I was headed out to lunch yesterday when I passed this truck carrying a car.
> Would you believe it was a squad car replica? I don't know what it was
> doing around here or where it was going, but it sure made my day.
I'll bet it was headed for Alabama to the Mayberry Squad Car Nationals in
Brent,AL.
I'll be there with my beloved....Floyd.
Can you believe Allan's gonna let me drag race HIS squad car? What he
doesn't know is that I really use to race my best friend's brother back in
high school. Oops, the secret's out now. Maybe he won't see this message
until we get back home. :-)
Jan "Checkpoint Chickee" Newsome
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Message: 11
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 16:45:16 EDT
Subject: Biblical Gomer
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Here's is a little lesson plan that Sunday school teachers can incorporate
into the TAGS Bible study.
We all know who Gomer is in our Mayberry frame of minds. In the Bible,
though:
* Gomer was the grandson of Noah and son of Japheth.
* Gomer, although a female one, was the wife of the prophet Hosea.
* Gomer was a region in the Assyrian empire circa 700 B.C. It is now modern
day
Turkey.
Killing the Sgt. Carter within-
Brian Rodahaver
Stevensville, MD
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Message: 12
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 14:15:05 -0700 (PDT)
From: Mike Zimmerman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Phil Fox...Where are you?
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hey All,
Sorry to use the board for this but I am looking for a Mr. Phil Fox who said
he had some JL-327 plates I can't seem to be able to reach him any other way
..so Phil if your out there PLEASE e-mail me [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thanks and
thanks to all the other Mayberry folks who had to read this and have a mayberry
day!
Mike Z.
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--__--__--
Message: 13
From: "DEBORAH DUBOSE" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Not so famous, but just as beloved quotes
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 16:45:25 -0500
First of all, Hey to Kendra! You have the same beautiful name as our
youngest, and, if you are anything like our Kendra, you are not only very
pretty, but quite a handful! And a delight. Very happy to meet
another "woman of intelligence" which is what your name really means
(not water baby).
Also, Aunt Bee, I agree with you about the beautiful hymns of the legendary
Dr. Graham's crusades. I was never lucky enough to attend one
of his services, but the world will surely miss him when his time comes.
Now, we all have our favorite quotes, you know the famous ones. But what
about
the lesser known quotes that--for whatever reason--just sets us off?
Here's a few samples of mine: Andy waving off to released prisoners, "By and
Write if you get work." I don't know why, but that one slays me.
Long before it became a catch phrase for the gossip magazine, Barney telling
Andy, after their discussion in his interest in the occult, "I just have an
inquiring mind." Oh, Barney's mind is inquiring all right.
And then there's Floyd. My Floyd. Banana waving Floyd. There he and
inquiring minded Barney are mixed up with those women convicts (don't forget
Big Maude aka Ralph Henderson) and always on the ball Floyd telling our
Barney, "Barney, you are a good dancer; you're very light on your feet."
I'll give more later. That's just a start. As Goober would say at a
four-star restaurant, "That's the best salt I've ever tasted." And those
are some of the best lines that were ever written that didn't win
a prize, but should have.
Laura Lee Hobbs, watching for gold trucks down the dusty road of life
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--__--__--
Message: 14
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 21:05:14 EDT
Subject: Songs from the Office
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Who can remember all the songs that Andy and Barney would sing in harmony in
the office? I can get it started...."No more guilty stains...." and in the
Ben Weaver episode they started singing " Spread a little sunshine..." Also
- when Otis thinks he drowned - " We shall (something), but we shall miss
him..."
" Got yourself a little innarculated."
Aunt Bee1
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Message: 15
Subject: drawings
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 21:30:50 -0500
The drawings I'm asking about are at the end of the episodes.
During the B&W shows the drawings were of trees, lakes and stuff
like that.
During the color shows the drawings were of scenes from town.
Paul Mulik (the ultimate trained noticer) said these drawings were put
in after the original run of the shows. I just wish I knew who drew them.
The drawings remind me of Bob Ross' paintings. Mr. Ross had his
on painting show on PBS for years and since he passed away the
PBS channel in Nashville still show his reruns. I always like how he
ended every show with 'God Bless'.
Also didn't someone who worked on the production crew of TAGS have the
name 'Bob Ross' ?
Margaret
I hope I didn't confuse anybody.
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