From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9408 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Wednesday, July 27 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9408 Today's Subjects: ----------------- 30 Second Trick to GREASE Your Stiff Joints and Protect Your Heart & Lungs ["Inflammation Gone" ] How To Relief Neck Soreness In Minutes ["The NeckRelax Team" Subject: 30 Second Trick to GREASE Your Stiff Joints and Protect Your Heart & Lungs 30 Second Trick to GREASE Your Stiff Joints and Protect Your Heart & Lungs http://goldenrevivie.sa.com/JY8lNTM5wdImBigN0605yT0XCSksQ01xV8sQ2vbkyD5BtJRBkw http://goldenrevivie.sa.com/s6Ht6zjOYbZA1N1zDPdLpYxnY-DDE45twLTrnYq6tG6mThDg econd devastating fire in four years destroyed much of downtown Chincoteague on February 25, 1924, and caused the town's leaders to conclude that a better-organized volunteer fire department was needed to replace Chincoteague's fire brigade. The Chincoteague Volunteer Fire Company was founded in June 1925, though it needed much equipment, including a fire truck. To raise funds the fire company took over the 1925 Chincoteague pony penning, which had been declining, and sold some horses at fixed prices (auctioning began not later than 1932). Fifteen thousand people attended the penning and other festivities. The proceeds from the event were over $6,000, enabling the department to buy a pump truck. Public fascination with the pony swim, inaugurated that year at the narrowest point of the channel between the two islands, led to increased attendance in the following years. Except during the war years of 1943 and 1944, and the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021, the carnival, pony swim and auction have occurred every year since. Chincoteague Naval Air Station (c.?1948) By 1930, the year the causeway was purchased by the state and the toll removed, the Town of Chincoteague had a population of 2,130. In the 1930s poultry farming became popular on the island, and by the 1950s was producing more than a million birds per year. Although oystering was still a common occupation, the trade was increasingly regulated, causing much of the production and canning to be done by large companies, and many watermen turned to fishing, clamming, and crabbing. Others shot ducks and other waterfowl indigenous to the island. Locals carved duck decoys to aid in the hunt; these remain a popular collectible and souvenir of the island. In 1941 the United States entered World War II; early the following year, the Germans torpedoed two merchant ships off the Assateague coast. To guard the coast, the United States Army established two smal ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2022 11:10:28 -0400 From: "Butter" Subject: BUTTER: The new superfood? BUTTER: The new superfood? http://epishieldplus.za.com/Hw_Mx7r0p7A4pyFdSCnASCtxiXvTdFvZG_QM_fm_szKAyRI2sw http://epishieldplus.za.com/XM-LeOuanIYTz1maUEebkNTri2f5-dyciQVITtCOab16Xq8KGg wrote a series of sequels, and hoped to interest the movies, but Hollywood was slow to reach out to the Eastern Shore. It was not until 1960 that filming of Misty began. Almost all of it was shot locallybthough the Beebe Ranch was not used, with a property on the mainland substituted. The film premiered at a Hollywood cinema and at the Roxy Theatre in Chincoteague, with the first showings simultaneous. In a nod to Hollywood, the real-life horse Misty placed her hoof in wet cement outside the Roxy just before the movie ran. The Chincoteague Causeway connects downtown Chincoteague with the mainland. Shown here in 2009, with the swing bridge open, before the causeway terminus was relocated. Despite the new source of island fame, many young people left Chincoteague in the years after World War II. There was no beach on Chincoteague; in an effort to provide one for visitors and townsfolk, local promoters sought the construction of a bridge to Assateague Island, where there is a beach along the Atlantic shoreline. They were led by Wyle Maddox, a wealthy chicken farmer who had significant business interests on Chincoteague Island. First proposed around 1950, the bridge and roadway across Assateague, by then uninhabited and under federal jurisdiction, took over a decade to approve, and finally opened in September 1962. The bridge to Assateague is at the east end of Maddox Boulevard, which crosses Chincoteague Island north of downtown, and was developed by Wyle Maddox. The town remained busy and prosperous in the postwar years, especially by the standards of the rural Eastern Shore, and the locals took pride in thisbin the early 1950s, the town twice finished second in a competition for the cleanest community in America, and then won the award for its size classification in 1954 and 1955. Main Street was so crowded with cars that parking meters were installed. When oyster parasites and overfishing combined to devastate the oyster industry in the 1950s, clams became the island's major industry. The Burton Clamming Company promoted itself as the largest in the world, sending 1.3 million clams to market on a typical day in 1957. The final delay in the completion of the Assateague bridge was caused by the Ash Wednesday Storm of March 1962, which devastated both islands as well as other points along the Atlantic Seaboard. Although no one died on Chincoteague, the storm flooded virtually all buildings on Chincoteague Island and wiped out the poultry industrybnot only were an estimated quarter million birds killed, the buildings used in chicken farming were destroyed. An estimated one hundred ponies were killed by the storm, both on Assateague Island and at the Beebe Ranch. Misty was pregnant with her third foal; the Beebes placed her in their kitchen before they were evacuated. Once the ranch could ag ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2022 06:27:26 -0400 From: "The NeckRelax Team" Subject: How To Relief Neck Soreness In Minutes How To Relief Neck Soreness In Minutes http://neckrelax.sa.com/7B_z62SdwUmsKEnUPBcyES0_9CPZ7BuJ44vMhV6ZNjii99wJjQ http://neckrelax.sa.com/QEVH8iDrvw0eJy8JTglwiyb8Q0a94LwoDJN-1Yrv5DFkbUqDLA y 1800, the original large parcels of land on Chincoteague Island were being broken into plots of thirty acres (twelve ha) or larger. There were some two hundred people living on Chincoteague or Assateague, but there were no stores or other retail enterprises. A school, unusual for Virginia's Eastern Shore at the time, was erected sometime before 1804. Three island families were free African-Americans; two other households had black servants or slaves. One of the free African-Americans, Ocraw Brinney, became a major island landowner. Born in Africa and transported by slave ship, he was freed in 1787 and was supposedly 130 years old when he died around 1840, but was more likely aged about 100. His holdings included what today are the Carnival Grounds, south of downtown Chincoteague. In the first half of the 19th century, Chincoteague became a source of seafood. As the cities along the eastern seaboard, such as New York and Philadelphia, continued to expand, their local areas could not supply them with enough shellfish. Islanders saw the opportunity, and many abandoned agriculture, instead harvesting the sea. The villagers of Chincoteague petitioned the Virginia General Assembly three times between 1833 and 1851 seeking the repeal of various fishing laws. The first post office was established in 1854, and the first doctor arrived four years later. By 1860 there were 150 families resident on Chincoteague, 126 oystermen on the island, and others belonging to allied trades. That year a hotel was operating on the island, located in what today is the downtown areabin the mid-19th century that part of the island developed as Chincoteague's commercial core. The first accounts of pony penning are from an 1835 letter to the editor published in the Farmer's Register by Thompson Holmes of "Chincoteague"bthat is, the mainland opposite the island, then also called by that name. According to his letter, few horses remained wild on Chincoteague Island, and residents would go over to Assateague to build temporary corrals to place the local herds in. Selected horses were branded, gelded, and sold. Holmes told about an earlier practice, to drive the horses directly into the water, which had been abandoned because too many had drowned. Holmes mourned that the pony pennings of his day were only "a shadow of their former glory". The pennings, the letter related, nevertheless attracted crowds from far an ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2022 08:31:40 -0400 From: "Professional Recognition" Subject: Congratulations! You have been selected Congratulations! You have been selected http://whosplatinum.sa.com/Yql2bJDi0aCS0-TpnV6eGA-zrs3RuEHDX0F8MOxNNokeNEkYTg http://whosplatinum.sa.com/IhB2u1i7CB7tBVhadz2aCC_j9I4KBkpE80lAaxlJ1cUk9tJojw the early 20th century, according to Mariner, Chincoteague "was a curious mixture of the progressive and the primitive, of worldly-wise townsfolk and isolated country people". Beginning in about 1900, the residents sought to be incorporated as a town. Gaining a municipal charter from the General Assembly would allow ordinances to be passed to keep livestock off the streets without seeking redress from the state government in Richmond or the county government in Accomac. In 1908 the legislature incorporated part of the island as the Town of Chincoteague, and on July 4, A. Frank Matthews became the first mayor. The 1910 United States Census showed a population of 3,295 for the island, of whom 1,419 lived in the town. Few resided in the interior of the island; most lived in single-family houses, facing the water across roads that ran just above the high tide line. The population of the island had increased to about 3,600 as of 1916; there were about a hundred African-Americans, all of whom lived on the same part of the island. Most islanders of working age were part of or supported the seafood trade. At that time, most houses got their water from shallow-dug wells, located in many cases close by primitive privies. Water from such wells was also used to wash the oysters and to make ice to preserve them. Almost all Chincoteague oysters were sent out of state, and the federal Public Health Service intervened in 1916 to get the mayor and town council to order improved sanitation, with islanders living outside the town line agreeing to abide by the ordinances. A display of Chincoteague oyster cans Although dwarfed in population by the neighboring island, Assateague was still populated by a few families. A penning was still held on Assateague along with one on Chincoteague, but the Assateague event was suspended after 1920 as the largest landowner refused to allow access. Beginning in 1923, the Assateague herd was transported to Chincoteague for a joint penning, most likely by boat, as the idea of swimming the ponies had not yet been adopted. The refusal of the Assateague landowner to allow islanders to cross his land made it difficult for them to get to work, and As ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2022 07:17:53 -0400 From: "Extraordinary results" Subject: A quick way to REGROW GUMS OVERNIGHT A quick way to REGROW GUMS OVERNIGHT http://steelbitepro.sa.com/cAOB_1yweM1MMPLznVVsCBZs9S70PJEjCmIesvc8nR1l_l-mnA http://steelbitepro.sa.com/lC1xnhgfAJj3FQO9hfuMDr4Xb-1EdLr5kY28KDG8Crvj9a7SaQ 2022 Tour de France was the 109th edition of the Tour de France. It started in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 1 July and ended with the final stage at the Champs-C lysC)es, Paris, on 24 July. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard (Team JumbobVisma) won the general classification for the first time. Two-time defending champion Tadej Poga?ar (UAE Team Emirates) finished in second place, and Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers) finished third. This was the first Tour since 1989 where each of the three podium finishers had all made the podium on a previous occasion. The race began in Copenhagen before returning to France. Wout van Aert of Team JumbobVisma controlled the lead for much of the first week until Poga?ar seized control of the race and won two consecutive stages. In the Alps, Team JumbobVisma attacked Poga?ar, and Vingegaard became the first rider to take serious time out of the Slovenian. Vingegaard defended his lead successfully through the Pyrenees and the final individual time trial to secure the victory. Vingegaard is the first Dane to win the Tour since Bjarne Riis in 1996. The race was affected by climate change protests, as well as a 40 B0C (104 B0F) heat wave. The race had the fewest number of finishers since 2000, with several riders forced to leave the race due to COVID-19, including stage winners Magnus Cort and Simon Clarke, as well as former Tour winner Chris Froome of IsraelbPremier Tech ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 26 Jul 2022 08:11:01 -0400 From: "Your Side" Subject: Sleeping in THIS position linked to Alzheimerâs Sleeping in THIS position linked to Alzheimerbs http://neurodrine.ru.com/7OZ3wHximL_-DboMIEllEYa5gGizHQY1BUg513NDTzVeEpdIEw http://neurodrine.ru.com/NF8GxVklp02Q7TFooeIbZRLPUwvhFyy4-UCZvaOMHctsDq6l dence implies that the enclosures were visited occasionally by Neolithic groups rather than being permanently occupied. The presence of human remains in the banks and ditches of the enclosures has been seen as an attempt by the builders to connect their ancestors with the land and thus begin to anchor themselves to specific areas. Longitudinal sections excavated along the ditches by archaeologists suggest that the builders repeatedly redug the ditches and each time deliberately deposited pottery and human and animal bones, apparently as a regular ritual. Environmental archaeology suggests that the European landscape was in general heavily forested when the enclosures were built and that they were rare clearings in the woodland that were used for various social and economic activities. In the 1970s the archaeologist Peter Drewett suggested seven possible functions for the sites: Settlement Defence Cattle compounds or kraals Trade centres Communal meeting places for feasting and other social activities Cult/ritual centres Burial sites Other interpretations have seen the causeways as symbolic of multi-directional access to the site by scattered communities, the enclosures as funerary centres for excarnation or the construction of the site being a communal act of creation by a fragmented society. Animal remains (especially cattle bone), domestic waste and pottery have been found at the sites. But there has been limited evidence of any structures. In some locations, such as Windmill Hill, Avebury, evidence of human occupation predates the enclosure. Generally, it appears that the ditches were permitted to silt up, even while the camps were in use, and then re-excavated episodically. It is unlikely that they had a strong defensive purpose. The earthworks may have been designed to keep out wild animals rather than people. The sequential addition of second, third and fourth circuits of banks and ditches may have come about through growing populations adding to the significance of their peoples' monument over time. In some cases, they appear to have evolved into more permanent settlements. Most causewayed enclosures have been ploughed away in the intervening millennia and are recognized through aerial archaeology. The first were constructed in the fifth millennium BC and by the early third millennium BC; nota ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9408 **********************************************