Indeed, back when AM was king. Traditional WADC became WSLR in 1965 after being bought by the folks at American Greetings in Cleveland and was the first full-time country music station north of the Mason-Dixon line.
"Whistler" 1350, with staffers like Ken Spec and morning legend "Jaybird" Drennan, had a traditional southern country format, with a hymn of the hour and brokered religious shows in the evenings.
WSLR was successful in Akron and a factor up in Cleveland where there was no real competition. Even into the 1970s, WSLR dusted off Cleveland FM stations who tried country, WCJW 104.1, WELW 107.9 and the first incarnation at WNCR 99.5.
But when Malrite made the surprising switch of flagship WHK to country in 1974, sans hymns and preachers, they knocked WSLR back to Akron.
At home, WSLR continued to do OK up until Jaybird's retirement. In 1993, WQMX-FM went country, sealing their fate, and WSLR dropped the format and the cool call sign in 1994.