You want to have some of these antiseptic type items on hand.
Like I say, it helps fight the spread of germs.
It helps you clean the wound initially, whatever it might be.
Bites, cuts, scrapes, stab wounds, whatever.
Okay.
The next thing I think everybody's familiar with in those little, what's really handy and easy to use is these little swabs.
They're like a little napkin, like a towelette.
This is Sam with the Kentucky Fried Chicken and what not.
They're alcohol essentially on a pad.
Those are really handy.
You can get them.
What do they call them?
They call them an alcohol prep pad.
I think that's the industry term.
If you buy an alcohol prep pad you're going to pay a lot more than if you just go buy an alcohol wipe somewhere else.
Okay?
Now keep this in mind because some of the big stores you can buy this stuff like in the form of a
baby wipe looking container and these are alcohol laden, sterile when sealed and when
manufactured, towelettes and these are great for cleaning up small stuff and cleaning
areas of the body in a bad time or wounds or whatever especially insect bites you got to
really clean them good because they can get infected quite quickly and we've seen that
right here because of the environment, the Arizona environment that we live in.
One of the next things I would suggest you have is some of your, well just your basic
stuff that you've seen for years and don't think about having, a thermometer, an oral
thermometer, there's many variations out nowadays.
You have the glass ones that you have to shake the mercury down to the bottom.
There's nothing wrong with them.
You just got to be a little more careful because it is glass.
You have the one that's called, I think it's a proprietary name, temp dots.
They are essentially a heat reactive strip that changes color and gives you a rough idea of body temperature when you apply them to like the forehead.
It's like a band-aid sized thing or a small circle.
You can apply them to arterial points.
Like the two main points below your jaw bone or your forehead and get the temperature.
And there's also the electronic ones now that work orally or aurally.
The other aural sounding one.
A-U-R.
Stick them in the air, hit a button, and like in ten seconds you got the temperature.
Those are quite popular in the line of work I used to do with the hazard response and what not from my old company.
Because if If for some reason you broke a precaution in the rush of things and whatnot, you're not sticking something in someone's mouth that they're going to ingest.
Okay?
The little thing, boom, goes right on the outside of your ear, tells you the temperature.
They're electronic.
These range in prices.
TempDot, whole boxes of them for a few dollars, and each one is good for a reading, or a thermometer, that glass one that you use until you break it, but you have to be careful, it should last quite a while, to the electronic ones that Last as long as you keep putting batteries in it and don't break it.
Or wear it out.
I don't see how you would ever do.
Some of the other things.
Tweezers.
Getting out splinters.
You can use them for all sorts of things.
Besides splinters, small objects in the corner.
I stress the corner, like the tear duct area of the eye.
Don't go probing around my eyeball with some metal object, please.
It's a thermometer.
Tweezers.
EMT shears.
They're very handy.
They can cut clothing.
Real easy to get to a suspect area.
You can use them to cut bandages.
The adhesive tape.
The adhesive tape is pretty tough if you're not tearing it in length.
Like I described earlier to narrow it down.
Pretty tough stuff.
That's good.
That's what it's supposed to be.
It's supposed to stay on there.
Instant ice packs.
Two versions of these.
A couple different chemical compositions essentially have this plastic bag, like a, uh, I don't know what it looks like, but it's a plastic bag, roughly the size of an open hand.
You just smash it in the middle, you feel a pop, and that is the separating barrier between two chemicals inside.
They mix, and because of the chemical reaction, they drop in temperature incredibly very quick.
They generally last 20 minutes or so to 30 minutes.
The heat pads last a lot longer than the instant hot packs.
Compared to the instant cold packs.
Hey Allie.
The dolphin came to say hi.
Allie, are you going to say hi to everybody?
Yes.
Hi, hi.
Oh, she's got a flashlight.
Alright.
Come on, you want to say hi?
Okay, come on up here.
Jump up here.
Here you go.
Allie's going to say hi.
Hi!
Oh, that was loud.
Alright.
Yeah?
Alright.
We'll see you later, Ollie.
Bye.
Let's see, I talked about the essential things like the tools now, hardware we're talking about, tweezers, thermometer, EMT shears.
One other thing, a couple other things that are really handy to have around, your everyday antibacterial soap.
Two reasons, okay?
Number one, the person caring for someone should clean their hands thoroughly before they start touching and grabbing stuff and trying to pull dust out of someone's eye or whatever.
You don't want to introduce more germs and make the problem worse.
An industry documented fact that I used to have to deal with back in my old line of work was eye injuries.
Eighty percent of all permanent eye damage was not a result of the injury.
It was a result of the cleaning.
Afterwards, a poke in the eye, a metal particle, a piece of dust, a rock, whatever, a shrapnel type deal, like off a grinding wheel in an industrial environment or home workshop.
It wasn't the particle that caused the blindness.
It was grabbing the closest jug of water on hand and dumping it in your eye or whatever, or grabbing at it with dirty hands.
The infection afterwards in the living tissue is what caused the eye damage.
It wasn't the actual injury.
Okay, so you want to have some good antibiotic soap on hand.
Just some of the liquid stuff.
Generic brand, it doesn't matter.
You can look at the contents, the composition of it.
They're almost all the same.
They'll tell you .05% alcohol and .05 this color and whatnot.
Just the price range depends on where you buy it.
Okay?
Couple other things that you'll use over and over again.
Your elastic type stretch bandages.
Like a 3 inch wide one.
It's an Ace bandage.
More popularly known as an Ace bandage.
I refer to it as an elastic bandage because Ace is a proprietary brand name.
Much more expensive than buying an off market one.
And they're both essentially identical.
The off-brand ones that I've seen that we even used to use in the cutback costs and the kits back at my old line of work, they didn't wear out any faster, stretch out any faster, or not hold as tight.
There was no difference.
They just cost less because they didn't have that expensive name attached to them.
Safety pins.
Keep a stock of basically one and a half inch, two inch size safety pins that can be used to secure clothing, bandages, all sorts of stuff especially if you get into some heavy
duty stuff like where you're putting on pressure pads and all that stuff and hopefully you won't
get to the 26 days where they can be used to hold all that on.
And if you can get some of the burn type relieving gel like the big one burn free this is called
excellent stuff it really takes the pain away and speeds up the healing process of a burn
from first to third degree from minor sunburns to major burns that you may incur from a gas
or burn or an explosion and what not or charred clothing stuck to the wound that you peel
off which hopefully you never do you're not supposed to do that but people do.
Okay the other things too you can buy these really cheap surgical gloves and I say cheap
I should say inexpensive.
The quality, there is no difference.
They're just not in a big bulk box like you'd see in a medical office.
They come in like 5 pairs, 10 pairs, 2 pairs.
I've seen these at Target.
I've seen these at Walmart.
Thrifty's, a lot of the big stores, inexpensive.
Right around a dollar.
Very nice to have on hand.
Keeps from introducing more germs to someone.
And to keep stuff that you don't want, on you.
And it can be stuff that may not have direct harm or effects like just some blood from your child.
You're not worried about catching anything per se, but you've still got to clean up.
So these are nice, just get them on, boom, you do your work, get rid of them.
Okay?
I think that'll cover most of the inquiries I've had in the last week.
Those are some of the essentials.
You can put together a nice basic medical kit for very Very little expenditure and it's essentially good for most of this stuff has a lifespan of four to five years in actuality like bandages and whatnot as far as sterility guaranteed on the package.
Okay.
Let me see.
Okay.
Like I said, you want to store this stuff just like your prescription medications.
If you have to have these, these are very important things to keep around.
Okay.
I've had family members who found this stuff out the hard way.
Once you get cut off from stuff, if you can't drive to the pharmacy or go get your refill, that's all there is to it.
Okay?
Store all your medical supplies, not just the prescription medications, I should have been more elaborate earlier, in a cool, not a moist place, but a cool, dry, dark area.
A medicine chest.
A medicine chest, a good nice cabin, the pantry type deal.
Don't throw these things underneath your sink.
I don't know how many I have seen in my life, especially in the industrial environment, um, medical kits that get put in the worst places, like right next to a sink.
Okay.
Or underneath a cleaning area.
The bad thing about this is that you always have leaks, splashes, everything.
And I have literally seen a metal professional $300 First aid kit lifted up and the whole back of it fell off because it was rusted through.
It does no good if you have everything coated in rust and it seeps into all your bandages and packages and you drop all of the contents when you pick it up anyway.
So store this stuff properly, it's going to save you a lot of headaches.
Because if you do run into some kind of medical type emergency, like a cut, a very bad one, a natural disaster, tornadoes and whatnot, you don't want to have to worry about where you're going to find this stuff.
The idea is to get rid of these headaches, these problems.
You don't want to go adding to the situation.
So don't wait until the time that the hurricane is six hours away, according to the National Weather Service.
To worry about refilling your prescription.
If those of you who inquired with me, if this does not satisfactorily answer your questions, you can write and I will answer them in the quickest time frame that I can, and the best that I can, but please be specific.
You can write to hour of the time.
Care of 101.1 FM P.O.
of 101.1 FM PO Box 940 Eager EAG AR Arizona 85925 or you can call between 1 and 5 Mountain
Time Monday through Friday 520-333-4578 and we'll try to attend your questions about topics
that we've covered or other subject products, what not.
The best that we can.
And it's time for this.
Hello Randy.
This is WBCQ.
Monticello, Maine, USA.
The planet.
The planet.
Alright.
Okay.
I think we need some music here.
That'd be really cool.
By the way, we uh...
We're going to open the phone lines later.
Okay?
We don't want to, uh, cut up the show right now.
No matter how unorganized it sounds.
We don't want to cut it up at this moment for phone calls.
Uh, it's not to be rude.
It's just to be practical, okay?
So we can keep this in some kind of flowing, organized manner.
What song do you want to hear, Sue?
I don't know.
I know what we're gonna hear.
Okay.
But I know it's going to be good.
Uh huh.
Word.
Oh.
It's our song clue.
Okay everybody, we're going to take a quick break here.
Play a little piece of music for you.
It's a good song.
I think everybody will enjoy it.
A long time ago, I can still remember how that music used to make me smile.
And I knew if I had my chance, that I could make those people dance, and maybe they'd be happy for a while.
But February made me shiver with every paper I'd deliver.
Bad news on the doorstep.
I couldn't take one more step.
I can't remember if I cried when I read about his widowed bride.
Something touched me deep inside.
The day the music died.
So bye-bye, Miss American Pie.
Drove my Chevy to the levee, but the levee was dry.
Them good old boys were drinking whiskey and rye.
Singing, this'll be the day that I die.
This'll be the day that I die.
Do you write the book of love?
Do you have faith in God's love?
Have you survived the devil's tongue?
And how do you believe in rock and roll?
Can music save your mortal soul?
And can you teach me how to dance real slow?
Well I know that you're in love with him Cause I saw you dancing in the gym
You both kicked off your shoes And I kicked those rhythmic moves
I was a lonely teenage rockin' punk With a pink carnation and a pickup truck
But I knew I would rattle off the day To music's side
I started singing, I'm this American pie. I broke my shaggy to the levee, but the levee was dry.
Them good old boys were drinking whiskey and rye and singing, this will be the day that I die.
This will be the day that I die.
Now for ten years we've been on our own, and lost roads and fell out of rolling stone.
But that's not how it used to be.
When the jester sang for the king and queen in a coat, he borrowed some chains,
he and a boy, said it came from you and me.
Oh, and while the king was looking down, the jester stole his party crown.
The courtroom was adjourned, no verdict was returned.
And while Lindy read a book on Marx, the quartet practiced in the park.
And we sang the churches in the dark The day the music died
And we sang churches in the dark today, the music didn't die.
We were singing bye bye Miss American Pie Goin' to the city to the lady from the lady with strife
We were singing bye, bye, this American pie. I broke my shaggy to the levee, but the levee was dry.
Them good old boys were drinking whiskey and rye and singing, this will be the day that I die.
And you know the boy was a big whiskey and pride Singin' this will be the day that I die
This will be the day that I die.
This will be the day that I die Held to a shelter in the summer swell
Heard a bird flew off with a fallout spell Eight miles high and falling fast
Landed proud on the grass The players cried for a forward pass
The projection on the prize earned in the past Now the halftime air was sweet perfume
While we marched and played a marking tune We all got up to dance, well, I think you never got the
chance But the players cried, the pay, the deal, the marching band,
the youth feels Do you recall what would reveal the day?
To me, it's a meaningful moment to live and die We started singing, bye, bye, Mr. Merrick
I don't miss getting to live every second, every time And then all the boys were singing, we'd see the light
Singing, this'll be the day that I die This'll be the day that I die
Oh, and there we were all in one place A generation locked in space
And no time left to start again The time of Jack the Nimble to Jack the Great
Jack's flash and I were a can of cigs, us Fire is the devil's only friend
Oh, and as I watched him on the stage My hands were clenched and fingers were braced
The wings of Ornette could bring that thing to fell And the flames would climb high into the night
And light the day, you're right I saw a big laughing witch this way today
She was cute and beautiful, and we'd die We started singing, bye, bye, Mr. Merrick
I don't miss getting to live every second, every time And then all the boys were singing, we'd see the light
Singing, this'll be the day that I die This'll be the day that I die
I met a girl who sang the blues And I asked her for some happy news
He just smiled and turned away.
I went down to the sacred store, Where I'd heard the music here before, But the man there said the music wouldn't play.
In the streets the children sing, The lovers cried and the boys dreamed, But not a word was spoken, The church bells all were broken, And the three men I admired most, The father, son, and the host, They caught the last train for the coast, The day the music died.
And they were singing, Five mile amidst American fire Drove my Chevy to the levee But the levee was dry Them good old boys were drinking whiskey and wine Singing, this'll be the day that I die This'll be the day that I die They were singing
Yes, that's a great song, don't you?
I'll share this with the laddies, until the laddies will die
And good old boys are drinking whiskey and rye Singing this will be the day that I die
Yes, that's a great song, don't you?
Yep.
And what do we do when we hear that song?
Sing.
Sing.
That's right, that's our song.
We were singing while it was playing.
That's right.
And it's fun too.
Alright, I hope you all enjoyed that song as much as we did.
Gave us a quick break to do the necessities.
Okay, I think what we'll do now.
Pooh just can't wait to get to the open calling lines.
So I think what we'll do is I want to cover a couple more things real quick.
Then, we're going to take 101.1 FM off the air, so we can do our commercials, because 101.1 is a community service station, so we will not do commercials on there.
Once we're done with that, we'll bring them back on the air, and open the phone lines for call-in, and you can call and talk about whatever.
Alright, Pooh?
Yep.
You're going to have a workman talk.
Yeah.
Alright, cool.
Alright.
Alright, to cover one more time in case you didn't get it earlier, the address to write to is hour of the time, Kara 101.1 FM, P.O.
Box 940, Eager, E-A-G-A-R, Arizona 85925.
And we've got, we've been getting more inquiries lately.
We appreciate your support.
Let's keep it up so we can keep the show on the air and keep the good stuff going.
Okay.
I've got to do it.
Okay, I'm going to have to go away from the microphone for a second so I can turn off 101.1 FM.
The Round Valley audience will be back on in about, how long?
20 minutes?
I don't know.
About 20 minutes.
So just tune back in then and check us.
We are coming back on.
We're not having problems.
We're going to turn off the FM station because we want to and we have to and it's because it's a community service station.
Okay, give me just a second, I gotta walk away.
Well, I don't know what to talk about.
Okay.
101.1 Okay 101.1 FM is off the air.
Okay I think what I'd like to cover tonight I like to give a real quick overview of the products that we have here that we're offering you.
Some of these we've done a great deal of work to try and find to offer a good price, a good shipping price, everything, and to make the arrangements as easy as possible.
I think I'll start off with the literature type items first.
First I'd like to cover is the book, Behold the Pell Horse.
This book is written by William Cooper.
It's 500 pages of the most well-documented, most suppressed information ever published.
Excellent book.
It's a really good book.
It's one of those that you sit down, you get engrossed in, you start reading, and before you know it, time has flown by.
It's a really good book.
It really is.
I read this, well, Much prior to me ever having talked to, met, spoke of, looked at, or anything, William Cooper, and it was a good book then, and knowing him has not changed my view at all, and has not slanted it in favor of it.
It was a good book before, and I suggested it to people that were asking about this type of information.
Behold the Pale Horse, 500 pages, excellent book, $30, postage paid in the U.S.
And remember, we accept blank.
Money orders, no checks whatsoever.
Blank money orders, cash, gold or silver coin.
If you wanted barter in gold and silver, call.
We'll work out a good price that works out and is quite reasonable and convenient to both parties.
Okay.
The next thing I'd like to cover is the alternative audio book of Behold the Pell Horse.
It's a two tape audio book.
These are very popular with those who have a lot of commuting or traveling.
Make a great gift for someone who has one of those long drives.
Particularly, I know just from my background, there's a lot of satellite cities where people live in to save money and then drive a long way to Frisco or L.A.
to work.
And they'll have hour, hour and a half commutes daily.
These make great gifts for anybody in that situation or just in general.
It's a really neat set.
Two tapes.
Three hours of information.
Ten minutes of brand new stuff.
Information stuff is really crude.
I shouldn't use that word.
Really good set.
Nice box.
Two separate tapes.
Ten minutes of new information read by the author, William Cooper himself.
Professionally produced.
It's 1995 postage paid.
This is the alternative audio version of Behold!
Appellate Force.
Okay, it's 1995 postage paid.
And next thing I'd like to cover, Veritas.
Veritas is an international newspaper published by everybody here and all the people who help.
It addresses issues that affect your individuality and freedom.
Fully documents sources for readers to confirm.
It's a big stickler of ours.
Don't just believe it because you've read it in one place or just because so and so said it.
Check it out.
Back it up, okay?
This is the paper that fully documents the sources for readers to confirm.
It's hand-delivered to key representatives and media bureaus in Washington, D.C.
And, uh, it's a really good newspaper.
It's a full-size, not a newsletter, don't say that.
It's a full-size newspaper.
Okay, the price, 12-issue subscription, is $55.
It's an excellent paper.
Fifty-five dollars for twelve issues.
Okay.
There again, you can pay in the blank money order.
Cash.
What not.
And you can send to the address which I gave earlier.
I'll give it one more time at the end of this.
Okay, fifty-five dollars for a twelve issue subscription of Veripop.
Really good newspaper.
Very popular.
Nice.
Really good reading.
Okay.
Backed up with stuff.
Next item is Oklahoma City Day One.
This is a massive book.
It's a very large book.
It's a good book.
It's a detailed account of the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on April 19, 1995.
It was written by Michelle Marie Moore.
It's forwarded by William Cooper.
It's a really good book.
It's very large.
It gives you every piece of evidence in this book.
It's fully documented.
Complete references are provided.
This book is, and there's nothing that can compete with this as far as I'm concerned with this subject.
I have read it.
I got it probably a couple years ago, my first one.
And it details everything that surrounded the Oklahoma City bombing and you get a lot more evidence than you ever... What's that from?
I'll just go on.
You get a lot more stuff than you... and we heard something really strange in our headphones.
I don't know what it was from.
Anyway, you get a lot more of the background information and the evidence and circumstances surrounding the Oklahoma City bombings than you did from the cut up, hashed up, regurgitated major media.
It's a good book.
$16 postage paid.
This is a really good book.
There again, you can order it from the address I mentioned earlier.
It's $16 post-paid for Oklahoma City Day 1.
Just refer to it as that title and we'll know exactly what you need.
I could get into a couple videos here.
The Branch Davidians Last Will and Testament.
This videotape was made by the Branch Davidians.
For the BATF and the FBI to prove, once and for all, despite all the allegations and lies and everything else that was spreading at the time, and it still is spreading, unfortunately, that no one was being held against their will in that home and their church.
Okay?
This tape was made by them.
Unfortunately, very unfortunately, the church members were not aware that this tape would turn out to be their only chance to tell their story to the rest of the world.
All the people in this videotape are now dead.
This is their own stories.
You see them there.
You know, live.
Or I guess profound.
What better word to use?
But them with their families, telling their side of the story.
They weren't being held there.
They weren't lunatics.
They weren't nuts.
They weren't in a compound.
They weren't in a fortress.
They were in their home.
Their church.
No one was being forced to stay there.
And they made this tape to tell their side of the story.
Unfortunately, it was not spread.
But now you can own a copy of this.
This is their own tape that they made for the ATS and FBI.
It's $3 postage paid.
This tape is a... It's a heart-wrenching tape to see these people right there, their families, their children, their, you know, wives and husbands and everything else, and relatives talking in their own words, seeing them right there on the camera.
And some of them, you can see the, uh, injuries that were incurred during the raid.
on their home right there on video it's uh the branch divinian's last full in testament
30 postage paid that's one that uh once you see it if you uh hadn't already rethought what you
may have heard via the major media about the whole deal down there at waco texas this one will make
you rethink almost everything you ever thought before okay the last one i could cover is the
zap ruder film on november 22nd six 1963 abraham zap ruder stood on a concrete abutment near the
famous grassy knoll this is called in dallas texas intending only to film the president's motorcade
Instead, he filmed the assassination of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy.
Abraham Zapruder rushed his film to a lab where it was developed.
An ex-local TV station aired what became known as the Zapruder film the very same night.
Shortly after the film was confiscated and transported to the National Photographic Laboratory in Washington, D.C., the film was eventually returned to Abraham Zapruder, but he promptly auctioned it off to Highest Bidder Time-Life Incorporated.
It wasn't made available in its entirety to public scrutiny.
I believe if you purchase this video and watch it, you'll see why it was not made available to public scrutiny.
In 1992, Wayne Cooper acquired a first generation copy on 35mm color positive film.
It was immediately made on 1-inch videotape.
Transferred.
We are offering a brilliant color copy of the famous Zapruder film on 1-inch VHS videotape.
And what's really nice about this tape is you see it in its entirety.
Frames aren't zoomed in on.
The top, bottom, and left and right side of a frame is cropped off.
Which is quite popular.
With some of the clips you see, which normally all you see is a clip.
Here you see it in its entirety.
And it's played at normal speed, quarter speed, one-tenth speed, and frame by frame, frame, freeze, frame, freeze, like that.
All on the same video.
If you have an interest in the Kenyan assassination, This is a videotape to have.
The public's never been allowed to purchase the complete film in a frame-by-frame type format until now.
It's a very rare part of our history.
It's something to make you rethink the circumstances and what you may have been taught or saw during the time or heard.
And I say taught based on your possible age.
That's a good tape.
$40 postage paid.
It's a Zap Bruder film.
Simply indicates that you would like to purchase a copy of the Zap Bruder film.
$40 postage paid.
It's a really good tape.
Okay.
Uh, if you would like to place an order for any of these items that I just covered above, you can call 1 to 5 Mountain 5, 2, 0, 3, 3, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8.
Or you may write hour of the time, care of 101 Point Morn FM, PO Box, 310-333-4578.
Box 940, Eager, E.A.G.
A.R.
Arizona 85925.
And a couple more things I'd like to cover real quick.
The knives, the Columbia River Knives we advertise, we are down to one unit.
Uh huh.
Yeah.
It's alright, we're doing some logistics here.
We are down to one unit.
We have the 15-in-1 tool.
Those are already being ordered.
We have 20 of those coming.
We have the enameled signs, which I think Pooh already snagged up a couple.
And the character knives, we have two... What's his name?
Snuffy?
Yes, Snuffy Smith.
Snuffy Smith.
How do you like your knife, Pooh?
Oh, it's great.
I carved out a pumpkin for Doyle today.
Yeah.
He helped me a little bit.
A little bit?
What'd I help you with?
Well, he helped me make the face.
And... I think that's all we did.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, we've had a bad... We've had the freezing, as we talked about, the last couple nights.
And unfortunately, it's a thirsty pumpkin plant.
So there's some immature, small pumpkins that... So...
Instead of just letting them rot, we decided to carve them up.
It was a nice little jack-o-lantern Pooh and I made together.
What else have you done?
You made me a duck.
Yeah.
And a fish.
It's like a flying duck.
Yeah, a flying duck.
Now what's the fish you made me?
Yeah, it's pretty neat.
Pooh's been having a blast with it.
We have two of those collector character knives.
USA.
steel blades. Snuffy Smith. Two more left that's it. And uh those are $8.95 a piece.
There's two left. Poo's has had a blast with hers. And uh just gotta uh I don't teach her
anything. She's been carving up the storm. I didn't even cut myself yet. That's good.
That's the idea. You don't want to cut yourself.
Let's turn on the radio station again, 101.1.
And why don't we open the phone lines, okay?
Talk to him, I'm going to walk away.
Okay.
Well, anyway, Doyle's kind of like my big brother.
He helps me with some stuff.
Stuff like that.
Anyway... What else do I do?
Well, he helps my dad.
And...
And he helps my mom.
Alrighty, 101.1 FM is back on the air.
Took about 20 minutes, like we said.
We didn't have any problems, we just stumped our head a cake.
101.1 FM off the air at the community service station, why we aired some products, because we will not do commercial broadcasting on our community service station.
It's not right and we won't do it.
Okay, go ahead, Poo.
Go ahead, what?
What were you talking about?
I ain't arresting you.
Uh, yeah.
He helps my mom.
And he helps Allie sometimes.
Mm-hmm.
She gets in trouble a lot.
Yeah, that's okay though.
But she's still my sister.
That's right.
She doesn't do it on purpose, huh?
Uh-uh.
Okay, we're gonna open the phone lines up now.
The number is 520-333-4578 if you'd like to call in and talk about whatever.
I'll try to converse with you.
And Pooh's going to help me out tonight, so if anybody would like to talk to Pooh, there's more people that would probably like to talk to her than myself, then feel free to.
And don't forget about Sarah the Cat!
That's right, Sarah the Cat is here, so I'm going to talk to Sarah.
Anyway, the phone lines are open, it's 520-333-4578.
In a couple minutes we're going to have to change the tape, flip it over, change it, do everything.
So hopefully I won't mess it up as I did last week.
I think we got a call.
Do we?
Let me see.
Oh, we do.
Hello, you're on the air.
Hello, is this Daryl?
Yeah, this is Daryl.
Hi, you know who this is?
No.
This is Turtle.
I saw Gary, you know, just down below there where you used to live out in Kern County.
Yeah?
Oh, hey, what's going on?
Ah, yeah.
Just found you on the shortwave.
Did you?
You know, what in the world is the world doing back there?
I know.
Well, you know me, Gary.
Yeah?
So what's helped you?
Ah, I thought I'd call you.
I pulled up on the computer and I find the state of California where these commies are
these people and our congressmen and senators well our senators they voted it's ok now to
be a state employee but that also includes a senator a state senator or a state congressman
and it's ok to be a member of the communist party they passed that about 3 months ago
yeah it was a libertarian his name was crops he was on his third term he vowed anyhow so
he introduced it so more proof of what's going on in this thing
Unfortunately I know about California a lot.
So how are things going out there Gary?
It's ok for me.
A lot of people it's not going that good.
I spent about an hour talking to Bernardine Smith yesterday afternoon.
It's too bad there isn't a lot of people that have the knowledge that woman has.
Yeah, yeah.
You're right.
You're exactly right.
Uh, now you say you just, uh, Gary, you just found us tonight on the shortwave?
Yeah, I found you guys tonight.
Yeah, uh, how's it coming in out there?
It comes in pretty clear, if not, uh, it comes in okay.
Okay, good, good.
It's been okay.
Yeah, do you, uh, what kind of, if you don't mind me asking, uh, you don't have to answer, what kind of, uh, equipment are you using?
I'm using a chenille.
Uh-huh.
And, uh, I have a long line, uh, Uh, 90 feet.
Okay, yeah.
90 feet.
It's 45 feet each way.
Each way, yeah.
And then a coax comes right in the center of it.
Okay, yeah.
And it comes right to my radio.
Good.
I was just thinking about you today, and the reason I say that is because I was digging through my briefcase, and I got to contact a few people, and you were one of them.
Are you still with the same number?
Yeah.
Okay, good.
What do you have?
Oh, I got to call a few of you to ask some stuff.
Come back anytime you feel like it.
Yeah, I will, Gary.
I appreciate you calling in, too.
That's cool.
You want to say hi to Pooh?
I sure do.
Hi, Gary.
Hello, Pooh.
How's your little sister doing?
Oh, she's doing just fine.
You probably don't remember me, but when your mother and father gave a seminar at the Paul Bunyan Club in Porterville, that's where I saw you at.
Oh.
Do you remember Porterville, too?
Yeah.
Yeah, my old stomping ground.
Born and raised in Porterville.
Yeah.
Adore, I'm going to let some other people call you.
Alrighty.
Thanks for calling, Gary.
And keep in touch with me.
I will.
And I'll listen to you just about every night.
Yeah, Monday through Thursday, 6 to 9 Pacific.
You're not on Friday?
No, no.
Okay, I got you.
And the radio station I'm picking you on, here, my numbers, I got punched in.
There's 7.415.
That's it!
WBCQ, the planet!
Monticello, Maine!
Now, where's this coming from?
Maine, Monticello, Maine, yeah.
Well, that Cheney's working pretty good, then.
Yeah, it's an excellent station.
Everybody's there, very professional.
These are really good people.
It's a good station, good antenna.
Everything, it's been a delight.
Well, Doyle, I found out on shortwave radios in the wintertime, even if it doesn't matter, if it's cloudy and raining, Seems like the short wave works better in the winter time.
Uh huh.
Oh yeah, yeah.
I don't know what it is.
I think they're half a radio.
It's the sunspots.
Yeah, half a radio is black magic to me.
The sun messes with the waves I believe.
Yeah, exactly.
It heats up the atmosphere where it bounces off of.
Yeah, so it keeps more of the waves on the correct path for us to receive so it comes in better.
Alright, I'll let you go and give her a room for some other garbage.
Alrighty, thank you Gary for calling.
Bye bye.
Alright, let's get talking.
I haven't heard from him in a while.
I haven't called him either, that's just so much my fault.