Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: GHOST IN C-MINOR

"Ghost in C-Minor" by Richard Sale  (first published in Detective Fiction Weekly, June 12, 1937: reprinted in The Saint Detective Magazine, January 1956 as "The Ghost of a Dog")


The detective pulps (and their readers) loved series characters and one of the types of series characters they loved was the wise-cracking report, and few were more popular than Richard Sale's Joe "Daffy" Dill of the New York Chronicle, the hero of sixty stories in Detective Fiction Weekly (later Flynn's Detective Fiction) from 1934 to 1943.

It's just after quitting time and Daffy is about to take his lady love, Dinah Mason, out to dinner when the Old Man stops him and places a "speed Voltex with an expensive synchronizer, lens Tessar, also expensive, and a focal shutter with speeds from one-tenth to one-thousands of a second" in Daffy's hands, and instructs him to take a picture of a ghost.

It seems that eight years before, noted actress Gloria Canova, wife of big game hunter Walt Nurbeck, vanished without a trace, along with her devoted cocker spaniel, neither Gloria nor the dog were ever seen again.  At the time Nurbeck was on an African safari.  It was an impossible disappearance -- she entered a room with witnesses at both entrances and just vanished.  The following day, the m6aid reported seeing the ghost off the dog while a "Satanic" organ was heard playing a ghastly tune.

Reports of Gloria's ghost walking the halls and of music coming from a nonexistent organ led the "Old Dark House" gaining a reputation as one of the area's most haunted homes.  For eight years, the house has been empty.  Then, the night before, Walt Nurbeck decided to put the rumors to rest and spent the night in the house.  He claimed to have seen the ghost of the cocker spaniel and that he could see right through the beast...and that there was spectral organ music coming from somewhere.  Nurbeck, a good friend of the Old Man, asked him to sent his best reporter out to try to get a photograph of the spectral dog.

Daffy does not believe in ghosts.  Neither does Gloria.  Nor does Captain Bill "Poppa" Hanley of the New York Homicide Bureau.  All three decide to check it out.  It may have been a coincidence, but the date was Friday the thirteenth...

I hope I am not spoiling your pleasure by telling you that there was a logical explanation for all this, but getting to that point is half the fun.


Richard Sale (1911-1983) was a prolific short story writer (over 400 short stories), novelist (including Not Too Narrow, Not Too Deep, filmed as Strang Cargo, with Joan Crawford and Clark Gable) , screenwriter, and director.  During the 1930s he was one of the highest ;paid of the pulp writers.  In the 1940s, he moved into screenwriting -- among his screenplays were Suddenly, Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (which he also directed; it was co-written with his wife, Mary Loos), The Oscar, and White Buffalo.  


The June 12, 1937 issue of Detective Fiction Weekly can be found here:                                 https://s3.us-west-1.wasabisys.com/luminist/PU/DFW_1937_06_12.pdf

The January 1956 issue of The Saint Detective Magazine can be read here:    https://archive.org/details/the-saint-detective-magazine-v-05-n-01-1956-01 

Monday, January 5, 2026

OVERLOOKED FILM: RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE (1925)

Today is Epiphany, the twelfth day of Christmas, a sacred time for many in the world.

Today sadly, is also the anniversary of the 2021 Capitol insurrection, a sacred time for a few demented yahoos living under those rotten logs kin the swamp, and which our president denies he had a  hand in -- denying it so much he pardoned all the "patriots" who had been convicted.

Today is also the birthday of Tom Mix (born Thomas Hezikiah Mix, 1880-1940), the first major western movie star, with 291 films to his credit, the vast majority of them silents.

Guess which will be the focus of this Overlooked Film post?


Mix was the second actor to play Jim Lassiter, the hero of Zane Grey's 1912 novel Riders of the Purple Sage; William Farnham played the role in 1918..

Texas Ranger Jim Carson's sister, Millie Erne (Beatrice Burnham), and her daughter, Bess (Seessel Anne Johnson as Bess as a child; Marian Nixon as the older Bess), have been kidnaped by dastardly Lew Walters (Warner Oland).  Walters also killed Millie's husband.  Carson quits the Rangers, adopts the name Jim Lassiter, and vows to find his siter and niece.  

Lassiter spends years in his quest, finally ending up in  Cottonwood, Arizona, at the ranch of Jane Withersteen (Mabel Ballin).  There, he rescues Jane's rider, Bern Venders (Harold Goodwin) from being flogged for a crime he didn't commit.  There's a band of rustlers who have been raiding Jane's ranch and Lassiter and Bern go after them, wounding and capturing the gang's female leader, and ...son a gun! it's young Bess, all growed up!  Bess and Bern fall in love and leave the valley to get married.  (Justice can be strange in Old Arizona.)  Jane then tells Lassiter that his sister had died after searching for her child, who had (once again) been kidnapped.  Lassiter also learns that Walters is now a local judge and is calling himself  Dyer.  Lassiter goes to town, plugs the Judge/Walters, and goes on the run with Jane and her adopted ward, Fay (Dawn O'Day).  They end up inside Sunrise Valley, where they have blocked off the only entrance so the posse cannot touch them.  The end. 

Look closely and you might see a young Gary Cooper in an uncredited role.

You don't have to look that closely to see Tony the Wonder Horse as Lassiter's horse.


Enjoy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aogO0I8zvvU&t=3s

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, SAM PHILLIPS

 Sam Phillips (1923-2005) was a disk jockey, radio station owner, and the man who forever changed American popular music through his founding of Memphis-based Sun Records and Sun recording studio, which brought to the forefront such artists as Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison, Johnny Cash and Howlin' Wolf.

Here's just sone of the great music Sun gave us:


"Rocket 88" - Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats (considered the first rock and roll record; written and featuring a 19-year-old Ike Turner; and is the Bette Page in the clip?)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gbfnh1oVTk0


"Call Me Anything, But Call Me" - Big Memphis Ma Rainey

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGPbSXPTMqE&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=17


"Straighten Up Baby" - James Cotton

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vnoOv_EeUs&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=45


"Beggin' My Baby" - Little Milton

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wX12aT0Cr8&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=35


"That's All Right" - Elvis Presley

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zejweh3Wjrk&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=65


"Drinkin' Wine Spodee-O-Dee" - Malcolm Yelverton

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzmC9f2CwYs&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=66


"Let That Juke Box Keep on Playing" - Carl Perkins

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SfQniRGGRBU&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=85


"So Doggone Lonesome" - Johnny Cash

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVnBB_Utkek&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=101


"Blue Suede Shoes" - Carl Perkins

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2o2pVYkNnBo&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=104


"Ooby Dooby" - Roy Orbinson

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a45z_DLE5YE&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=118


"Crazy Arms" - Jerry Lee Lewis

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ricp8I7nquE&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=151


Flyin' Saucers Rock & Roll" - Billy Lee Riley

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIe1lW5MwXI&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=153


"My Bucket's Got a Hole in It" - Sunny Burgess

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7XGrPx8etQ&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=202


"Fool, Fool, Fool" - Dickie Lee

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MivA_C2to2o&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWReizP5t33K4lUdBOPOTDG&index=225


"I've Got a Woman" - Howlin' Wolf

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z9n5X1FxwJo&list=PLr6GeNhq5MoInxg3l2S2p3_2ZSNCy8sm4&index=16


"School Days" - Charlie Rich

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dB-54tWBNRI&list=PLaWrmLFwYEFWWYca7A21znhYPuBil_Sga&index=10


The Million Dollar Quarter - an impromptu jam session with Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis Presley, and Johnny Cash -- Wow!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAbbQl2pr5s

Sunday, January 4, 2026

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KEN HOUSE!

 My younger brother turned mumblely-mumble years old today.  A whip-smart MIY-trained computer engineer, Ken is the type of brother many of wish we had -- kind, compassionate, funny, talented, athletic, almost as good-looking as I am, and second only to me in being an international sex symbol.  And the sumbitch can sing and play instruments, unlike someone we know who has a totally no musical talent other than turning on a radio, and that with great difficulty.  Nos, sadly, very sadly,* he's fighting the biggest challenge of his life as he fights Alzheimer's.  When he was first diagnosed, his first reaction was sadness, followed by acceptance.  Que sera, sera.  This, because he is Ken, was followed by a fierce determination to live his best life as long as he could.  In this he is supported long-distance from Arizona by hos eldest daughter Lizzie, and back home, by his beloved wife Carmen and his youngest daughter Julie, and Tom, her husband; added to the mix are his two granddaughters, Lily Maria and Emma, both of whom are capable of bringing so such joy to him.  I'm  not sure how much they will remember as they get older, but I hope the memory of "Bumpa" playing with them, singing to them, and reading to them will remain with them.  The future does not bode well for Ken, who% is also getting frailer, but as long as there is a spark of Ken within him, and beyond, we will stand by him, love him, and cherish all that he has given us.

It seems like every day I read about some possible advance in the detection of Alzheimer's, in determining the cause of this terrible disease, and in promising experiments and treatments in delaying or, possibly, stopping this  miserable scourge.  Whatever is happening today is happening too late for Ken, but hopeful steps are being made and I sincerely hope -- and I know that Ken also hopes -- that people in the not too distant future will never have to suffer as he has.  But we are also at a time where self-serving, low information, anti-science, and callous people are influencing our government, our health cafe system, and our very lives.  Because of this we are inches away from losing our herd immunity to infectious diseases and very close to taking major steps backward in vital research.  I weep.  but I also hope that we, as a people, will soon wake up.

HYMN TIME

Ricky Skaggs & Patti Loveless.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98jNS8MmEqw

Saturday, January 3, 2026

MICKEY FINN #7 (OCTOBER 1945)

Mickey Finn, created by Lank Leonard, was a newspaper comic strip that ran for over four decades, from April 6, 1936 to September 10, 1977.  The title character is Michael "Mickey" Aloysius Finn, an Irish-American police officer in Port Chester, New York.  Leonard based the character on real-life Port Chester policeman Mickey Brennan after he watched Brennan help some children cross a street.  Mickey is a big, kind lunk of a guy, also willing to help out.  He was later promoted to detective, although crime in Port Chester might involve a penny-ante burglar, usually.  (Exception:  as this issue opens, Mickey and his partner Tom have captured a kidnapper.)

Mickey has a girlfriend, Kitty Kelley, and lives with his widowed mother and her "cigar smoking, derby-wearing, blarney-sprouting brother," Uncle Phil Finn.  (Why Mickey's maternal uncle has the same last name as him is beyond my pay grade.)  Uncle Phil, a proud member of the Goat Hill Lodge of the Ancient Order of American Grenadiers, was the strip's break-out character, especially in the Sunday strips; when I was reading the strip in the Fifties I often wondered why it wasn't titled Uncle Phil.  Phil eventually became a local alderman and sheriff.  The strip often focused on humor, with occasional drama.

Mickey Finn was popular from the get-go, eventually appearing in over 300 newspapers.  The comic books contained reprints of the newspaper strip with all dates, signatures, and copyright information removed.  The issue before us reprints strips from October-November 1938 and January-February 1939.After capturing Dixie Dixon, the kidnapper of "Sunny" Bright, Mickey takes the boy home with him, hoping to adopt the young boy.  But it turns out that millionaire Mortimer Mintmore is a relative and is claiming Sunny, much to the dismay of the Finn household.  Will Mickey be forced to give up Sunny?  SPOILER:  Of course not.

Flossie, the girlfriend of Mickey's partner, Tom, loses her job and decided to apply to be a policewoman.  Flossie can pass the physical part of the test, but can she pass the mental?  uncle Phil decides to try to help her.

Uncle Phil decides to enroll Sunny in fancy private school,  Sunny's teacher is the pretty Miss3 Forward (apt name!); she decided to set her sights on Mickey despite Mickey being in love with Kitty.  Mickey si too naive to see what is going on, so it's up to Flossie to set things straight:  "Lissen Goldilocks!  you can't kid me!!  -- just remember that he's engaged and lay off him!  Or I'll pit a dent in your pan that only a plumber could fix!"  Flossie is very diplomatic.  In the meantime Flossie is concerned that she and Tom will not be able to afford a house after they get married, so Uncle Phil cons her into one of his get-rich-quick schemes... Then, a department store offers to foot the bill for a wedding for Tom and Flossie, as well as new furniture for their home if thy agree to get married at the store as a publicity stunt.  tom is reluctant but Flossie is a force of nature, and the issue closes out with their wedding...and with Uncle Phil being clocked on the head with a shoe.

Enjoy.

https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=85287