1963-Voice Of The Tennessee Walking Horse 1963 February Voice | Page 3

Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse 1 Ia of the Tennessee Walking Horse B en A. G reen .................................................................................... Publisher-Editor M rs . B en A. G reen .......................................................................................... Secretary OFFICE—SHELBYVILLE, TENN. (This monthly magazine is dedicated to the welfare of the Tennessee Walking Horse breed for show and pleasure.) OUR AIM—To maintain a permanent publication that will merit the full support of all who love the Tennessee Walking Horse. Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse is owned by Ben A. Green and Mrs. Ben A. Green, Shelbyville, Tcnn., and its editorial contents can be used for re-publication by any person or firm provided proper credit is given and the magazine is correctly quoted. Voice of the Tennessee Walking Horse is published monthly at 1110 South Brittain St., Shelbyville, Tenn. Send all subscription payments and advertising payments to Ben A. Green, Shelbyville, Tenn. Subscription price: §4 per year; Single copy 50 cents A Personal Letter To You Dear Friend: Four and one-half moiuhs ago I entered a severe mental depression- one in which you wish you were dead and had never lived. (It must be experienced to be understood.) I emerged from that depression like a chick breaking out of its shell at 8 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 8. During my illness the life of this magazine was maintained by others to whom I am inexpressively grate­ ful—especially to: My wife, Mary Frances, who carried on like the Joan of Arc she is; My sons, the Rev. Duff Green and the Rev. Bruce Green, who wrote special messages for our Christmas issue; and Dr. Ben A. Green, Jr. of Western Reserve University who has been a special inspiration to me since he was born; My daughters-in-law and my six grandchildren (the sixth is Katherine Elaine Green born Feb. 10, 1963 at Memphis, Tenn., to Duff and Alice Sawyer Green) ; John B. Curley and his folks at the Curley Printing Co., including Fore­ man Ed. T. Sparks of the composing room and Miss Betty Elliott—who did much thinking and working for me to carry on; Charles R. Goldswig of Dayton, O. and St. Petersburg, Fla., and to Virginia Lamb of Sacramento, Calif., who write our regular columns and inspire in many ways. And to you—Dear Subscriber. Dur­ ing my sickness—when we published one 20-page magazine and two 24- page magazines—we received ONLY ONE complaint or criticism. We have received hundreds of additional sub­ scribers. At this moment our mailing list numbers more than 3,700. And we are reaching the interested people. Some weeks ago Virginia Lamb wrote Mary Frances that "I would hate to see the finest horse magazine ever published go down the drain.” 'Dear Virginia—here’s a promise. The Voice will not go down the drain. This morning I drove to the Notices To All Voice Subscribers Dear Friends:—With this issue the Voice completes one year of publica­ tion. A large number of subscribers will have received their full year of issues with the February issue—and subscriptions are due for renewal. Ad­ dresses marked with 2-63 WH show that the subscription has expired. We urge all subscribers due for renewal to send their checks (§4) as promptly as possible to The Editor at Shelby­ ville, Tenn. If the subscription was originally sent to some other indi­ vidual or agency, the renewal should be sent to the same person or place. Thank you—Ben A. Green, Shelby­ ville, Tenn. Please do not send unsolicited pic­ tures of horses to the Editor unless you want the Editor to keep them. Naturally, this does not apply to pic­ tures to be used in advertising. print shop in a snowstorm before 7 a.m. But it looked like the sun was shining to me. Gratefully, BEN A. GREEN. Midnight Mack K, Sun Dust Reach New Home At Vic Thompson Stables; Go Boy's Shadow Not In Syndicates Midnight Mack K and Sun Dust, two stallions in the program an­ nounced recently for breeding opera­ tions through syndicates, have arrived at the Vic Thompson Stables near Shelbyville, Tenn. where they will be in service. Merry Go Boy, a third stallion in the syndicate arrangement, is at the S. W. Beech, Jr. Farm at Belfast (Rt. 5, Lewisburg, Tenn. He has been standing there for several years under previous ownership. It was learned on Feb. 8 that Go Boy's Shadow—previously announced to be in the syndicate operation—will not be a part of it—but will remain at the FI. C. Bailey Stables, Jackson, Miss., under his present ownership. Earlier announcements had indicated the purchase of Shadow by syndicate sponsors would be consummated on Feb. 15. Midnight Mack K arrived at the Thompson Stables on Feb. 4—being brought by Joe Urquhart from his stables near Columbia, Tenn. Sun Dust reached his new home at Thompson's several days later, being bought from Pat Kimbro of Atlanta, Ga. Originators of the Midnight Mack K Syndicate and the Sun Dust Syn­ dicate are Don Decker of Omaha, Neb., Jack Corn of Brentwood, Tenn., near Nashville, and Vic Thompson of Shelbyville. Shares are being offered to the in­ terested public and details can be secured from the originators named. The plan is to sell approximately 100 shares in each syndicate with share­ holders receiving one service per share during a season. Shareholders also agree to pay their pro rata cost of the syndicate’s operation—not to exceed $60 per year a share, the sponsors said.