Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Sunday, April 26, 2026

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, CASEY KASEM!

 "Casey" Kasem (1932-2014) was an American disc jockey who created America's top 40 in 1970, the popular radio count-down show that still survives, having had many hosts and formats over the years.

I thought it would be fun to recapture those days from the beginning of the show.  I couldn't find the playlist for the first show from July 4, 1970 (radio station KDEO -- now KECR -- of El Capo, California jumped the gun by airing it first on the evening of July3rd), but truth to tell, I did not look very hard.  instead, here's the playlist from the August 1, 1970 outing,  but instead of the Top 40, I have limited myself to the Top 15.

How many do you recognioze?


#15 - "Lay Down (Candles in  the Rain)" -- Melanie.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EiEtAQ8Es4


#14 - "Are You Ready?" -- Pacific Gas & Electric

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


#13 - "Hitchin' a Ride" - Vanity Fare

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88EykxITki8


#12 - "War" -- Edwin Starr

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01-2pNCZiNk


#11 - "Ride Captain Ride" -- Blues Image

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


#10 - "O-o-o Child" -- The Five Stairsteps

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dguz0IsCuKU


#9 - "Tighter and Tighter" --Alive 'n Kickin'

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mjG9wK-Cn-o


#8 - "Ball of Confusion" -- The Temptations

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-9poCAuYT-s


#7 - "Spill the Wine" -- Eric Burdon and War

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-Xs7NK-7B8


#6 - "The Love You Save" The Jackson Five

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkuULWqF3AY


#5 - "Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I'm Yours" -- Stevie Wonder

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6To0fvX_wFA


#4 - "Band of Gold" Freda Payne

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=daxiMb0rITA


#3 - "Mama Told Me (Not To Come)" -- Three Dog Night

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZ1KBCSkH_Q


...we're getting closer to NUMBER ONE!...


#2 - "Make It with You" -- Bread

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0KXV0gB0dw


...and here it is!...the one you've been waiting for!...the NUMBER ONE Song of the Week!"...

[drum roll, please]


#1 - "Close to You" - The Carpenters

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NpQRsXrduc8


Any other fond memories of hits from 1970?



Saturday, April 25, 2026

HYMN TIME

 A bit of western swing gospel from Shiloh Worship Music.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDXeKmsuV2o

Friday, April 24, 2026

JACKPOT COMICS #9 (APRIL 1943)

This was the final issue of Jackpot Comics, a mixed-bag anthology title from MLJ Comics shortly before they became Archie Comics.  A number of the characters featured also appeared in other MLJ titles an=d many of them shifted to titles from the newly-formed Archie Comics, such as Zip Comics, Pep Comics, Archie Comics, Top Notch Laugh Comics, and Mighty Comics.
  • "The Last Treason of George Carter"  A Steel Sterling Adventure.  Sterling was a superhero who had developed a formula that gave his body the strength and resistance of steel; he was also able to magnetize himself so he could fly (don't ask).  Nazis have held up a munitions truck and stolen its cargo of depth charges.  Working with Hitler's number one agent in America is the co-own=er of the Atlas Munitions Company, George Carter.  Steel has to stop the Nazis, expose Carter, and save a river tunnel from being blown up.  Sterling was the second superhero to be called "The Man of Steel"  -- wonder who was the first?
  • "Archie's Super X-Press Service"  Bob Montana shows up with his popular red-headed teen.  Archie is hired by Tony the fishmonger to deliver a barrel of fish.  Because it is late in the day, he decides it would not matter if he delivered the fish in the morning.  The next day he has to drive his father to work...a flat tire, a loose cover on the barrel, and the heat of the day are working against him.  The fish begin to smell and get away from him, causing problem=s throughout Riverdale.  This early version of Archie (and his father) is drawn differently from what I was used to when I was reading Archie in the Fifties.
  • "Map of Skin"  A Black Hood story.  The original Black Hood was Matthew "Kip" Burland, an ex-cop who had been framed by the Skull; after clearing his name, Burland still wore the Black Hood costume.  He may or may not have had superpowers (the original stories were vague on that account),  but he had unusual strength, agility, and healing powers.  The character had his own radio show in 1943-4.  At an antique store, girlfriend Barbara Sutton has fond two pieces of parchment with portions of a map drawn on them.  An amnesia patient wakes from a two-month coma and tries to get the maps from Barbara.  Meanwhile, lab tests have shown that the "parchment" was actually tanned human skin...Curiouser and curiouser...
  • "It Shouldn't Happen to a Dog"  A "funny animal" story.  A puppy who does not like rain keeps getting wet through three pages of misadventures.
  • "What Do Porkchops and Gooch See?"  Another "funny animal" story, this time with a pih (Porkchops) and a cat (Gooch).  This was evidently Porkchops' only appearance in Comicbookland.
  • "The Radium Corpse"  A Mr. Justice adventure.  Mr. Justice was Prince James of England, who was murdered in Scotland in 1740.  His spirit was freed during World War II when a German submarine sank the boat carrying the ruins of his castle to America.  He is a supernatural presence who can communicate with other spirits, project himself astrally, and has super strength and can fly.  At the same time O'Hara, the mad killer, was electrocuted, Professor Stimes, in an experiment to make people immune to death, tried to project an radium ray at him, because this what respected scientists do in the 1940s.  It didn't work.  Or did it?  The corpse rises as a monster and begins wreaking havoc.  Mr. Justice descends to Hell to confront the Keeper of Lost Souls to claim the soul of O'Hara.  He fights off various demons, gains the Keeper's Scepter, and flies back to Earth with the magic incarnation needed to end the terror of the Radium Corpse.  Will he make it in time?
  • "Murder Trap"  A two-age text story by Alf Corsican featuring the Black Hood.
  • "Clancy and Looney"  Humor.  Sgt. Clancy of the Metropolitan Police meets up with Sgt. Looney Lunar of the U.S. Army.  Military police mistake Clancy for an AWOL  soldier and try to arrest him.  Hijinx (or perhaps low jinx) occur.  This was the final appearance of Clancy and Looney.
Like I said, a mixed bag.  Two things should be noted.  First, the cover proclaims a Sergeant Boyle story that does not appear in the issue.  Second, a number of these public domain characters were rebooted, reimagined, and revised over the years by other companies, so things can get confusing. 

Yet, over the years, Archie Andrews endures.

Enjoy this final bow of Jackpot Comics.

https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=98070&comicpage=&b=i

Thursday, April 23, 2026

NO FORGOTTEN BOOK TODAY

 Sometimes life just happens and plans go awry.  Or, sometimes, backs just go awry.  My on-again, off-again back problems have flared up over the past few days and I have just not been able to concentrate on reading.  I have four very good, very enjoyable books that I am currently reading and have had to put on hold.  For a bibliophile such as myself, that may be the ultimate tragedy.

But all is not lost.  I have discovered a new rabbit hole, thanks to a recent post by Mike Toomey on Steve Lewis's Mystery*File website.  Mike brings attention to two lesser-known websites offering out-of-copyright reading:  Roy Glashan's Library and Standard Ebooks, both offering high quality reproductions of mystery, science fiction, and other genres. I was familiar with Roy Glashan's Library and have been using it for years, it being a standard stop for me to check out its near daily updates.  But for some reason, I had never stumbled upon Standard Ebooks and thought I should check it out -- and you should too.  Their books appeared to be carefully curated and exquisitely packaged.

Categories include Adventure, Autobiography, Biography, Children's, Comedy, Drama, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Memoir, Mystery, Nonfiction, Philosophy, Poetry, Satire, Science Fiction, Shorts, Spirituality, and Travel.  Their Short Story collections are carefully chosen public domain works from specific authors, many of them from the science fiction field, such as Frederik, Pohl, H. Beam Piper, Cordwainer Smith, Frank Belknap Long, Andre Norton, and others -- some of which may not be available in other single-author collections from these writers.

Their catalog shows over 1400 books thus far, some from the usual suspects, some not, but almost all look gorgeous.  To give a taste, here are the first fourteen books that they offered:

  • A Princess of Mars, Edgar Rice Burroughs, the first adventure of John Carter on Barsoom.  It knocked my socks off when I was much younger, and the fond memories still remain.
  • The Narrative of A. Gordon Pym of Nantucket, Edgar Allan Poe,  The weird classic that has inspired writers from Jules Verne to H. P. Lovecraft and beyond.
  • The Turn of the Screw, Henry James, A classic ghost story that continues to haunt.
  • Walden, Henry David Thoreau, a personal declaration of independence and a reflection on simple living in natural surroundings -- still meaningful.
  • The Lady of the Barge, W. W. Jacobs, a collection of twelve short stories, ranging from the humorous and the nautical to the macabre, including the classic "The Monkey's Paw."
  • Candide, Voltaire, the satirical French novel from 1759 which many consider to be the author's magnum opus, originally denounced by  both secular and religious authorities; Ellery Queen and others have pointed out the basic framework of a mystery novel in the  book.
  • Meditations, Marcus Aurelius, a classic work of philosophy.
  • The Time Machine, H. G. Wells, eloi and morlocks, oh my!
  • The Jungle, Upton Sinclair, the sensational, muckraking novel of the Chicago meat yards that led to the implementation of food safety laws in 1906.
  • The Book of Wonder, Lord Dunsany, a collection of fourteen fantasy stories by the Anglo-Irish writer, which greatly influenced future writers such as Lovecraft and Tolkien.
  • Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll, in my opinion, in a dead heat with The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn as the greatest novel of all time.
  • Confessions of an English Opium Eater, Thomas de Quincey, an autobiographical account of the author's addiction and its effect on his life, now considered a classic; the book has influenced both psychology and abnormal psychology; Poe praised its "glorious imagination -- deep philosophy -- acute speculation."
  • Tao Te Ching, Laozi, a fundamental Chinese philosophical text from 400 B.C, a spiritual and philosophic classic that still resonates today.
  • Dracula,  Bram Stoker, the classic vampire novel.
I have read ten of these first fourteen books and have made dents into a couple more.  It is good to see these titles available with great art design, consistent layout, easily readable typography, and best e-book and programming practices; the books are curated with care and the professionalism shows.

Later books issued expand the range of the catalog and include both familiar and less familiar works by authors such as Jules Verne, Anthony Trollope, P. G. Wodehouse (including his nearly schoolboy novels), Maurice LeBlanc, Sigrid Undset, George MacDonald, Emile Gaboriau, William Morris, Freeman Wills Crofts, Andre Norton, Ellis Parker Butler, Ford Madox Ford, Margaret Oliphant, Edith Nesbit, G. A. Henty, S. Fowler Wright, and many others, including early adventures of Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys.  There is something for everyone.

Do yourself a favor and check it out.  I can almost guarantee that there will be something you will want to click on immediately.

https://standardebooks.org/

THE LUCKY STRIKE PROGRAM STARRING JACK BENNY (JANUARY 12, 1947)

 If you have a refined and sophisticated sense of humor (like me), you cannot get enough of Jack Benny.

Here, the laughs are doubled because Jack's guests are George Burns and Gracie Allen.   Also featured are the usual gang  -- Mary Livingston, Phil Harris, Eddie Anderson, Dennis Day, and Don Wilson.

Enjoy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNVK6QCI8dI

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: THE LOST LIMERICK

 "The Lost Limerick" by Guy Gilpatric (first published in Britannia and Eve, January 1930; then published in America in The Saturday Evening Post, January 4, 1930; reprinted in Argosy  [UK], September 1940; reprinted in Glencannon:  Great Stories from The Saturday Evening Post, 1953)

This was the fourth recorded adventure of Mr. Colin Glencannon, ship's engineer of the S.S. Inchcliffe Castle, and the first to appear in The Saturday Evening Post.  A further sixty-six stories and one novel (in collaboration with Norman Reilly Raine, in which Glencannon met Raine's character Tugboat Annie) followed through 1950-- all but three appearing in SEP.  Glencannon, along with Tugboat Annie and William Hazlett Upton's Alexander Botts, was one of the most popular characters to appear in SEP.

So, who is Glencannon?

"Mr. Colin Glencannon, shjp's engineer of the S.S. Inchcliffe Castle, is blessedly, completely, blissfully, belligerently without redeeming social value.  If, by some horrible mishap, Guy Gilpatric had been a writer of pornography instead of humor, no judge in any court in any hall of justice anywhere between Alcatraz and Zanzibar would have permitted Glencannon to wind up in print.  For he appeals to that strange section of our phrenological chart, the prurient.  We lust after the pure, bellyaching, guffawing laughs Glencannon provides us.  He is a lewd, low, lascivious fellow who cares no more for his reader than he cares for a dry whistle.  Liquor is the guiding principle of his life."

As the Inchcliffe Castle makes her way from Melilla in Spanish Morocco to Algiers, Mr. Glencannon appears bereft, if not desperate.  He had foolishly sent his money back home while in Melilla and is facing three days in Algiers without funds.  Worse, he had even more foolishly not stocked enough liquor to keep him occupied over theose three days.

What to do?  What to do?

A breakfast (his time-honored repast of a heaping quart of porridge, lubricated with a lump of oleomargarine the size of a cricket ball), Glencannon was visibly troubled.  When Captain Ball asked what the problem was, Glencannon offered this story:

"My nairves.  They've been all a-joomp and a-jangle since we cleared Melilla for Algiers.  Yes, captain, since we cleared Melilla.  I just fear that Malilla will envetually be the death o' me.

"Weel, [he continued] it's a seetuation so strange as to be no less than eunuch.  As some of you know, Captain Ball and gentlemen, I've always been a great one for lummericks -- silly vurse of poesy, like, foe instance, the one about a suirtain young man from Bombay who went out a-riding one day, and the coolie who lived in Hong Kong whose job was to hammer a dong.  You know that sort o' thing?...O' course:  Weel, there are liteerally hundreds o' them, a' more or less immoral, but a' o' them verra comiuc -- yes, verra, verra comic indeed!  It's  been a hobby o' mine to collect and meemorize a lummerick for every port in the world; in fact, it's been a matter o' pride that no liviong man, aship or ashore, could stumnop me when it comes to lummericks.  Weel, when I heard about our next port o' call being Melilla, I o' course thought o' the famous lummerick which goes -- weel, the first line goes something about Melilla.  Ye know it?"

And here, Glencannon said that he could not remember the limerick.  Try as hard as he could the rhyme avoided him, although it always seemed on the tip of his tongue.  the captain and others at the table all agreed they were familiar with the famous limerick, but not one of them could recall exactly how it went -- not the officers, not the mess boy, nor the cook.  This bothered the captain, because, as captain, he had the best brain on the ship.  The other officers were also proud of their brains, and were equally frustrated.  Each swore that, with a little bit of thought they would remember the verse.  The captain was willing to bet that he  would remember it soon.  Others were willing take the bet, and soon it escalted to a shipwide poo, with everyone putting in ten percent of their wages, and the one who first remembered the rhyme before they reach Algiers would take the whole pot, which had swollen to sixty-four pounds, nineteen shillings, sixpence.

While everyone was racking their brains to remember a limerick that had never existed, Glencannon went to his room and scoured over his book of collected limericks, eventually finding one that could be adapted to fit Melilla.  Then he took his bagpipes and what little was left of his bottle of Duggen's Dew of Kirkintilloch and went on deck to play four hours of "Cock o' the North" -- which "as all good Caledonians know, is the greatest and grandest music ever composed by mortal man, but, unfortunately, none but the Caledonians are capable of appreciating it"  The  blaring music served to distract all the crew members who were trying to come up with the limerick.

Alas, for Glencannon., he did not count on the ship's radio operator, a young man as larcenous as himself.  The operator had been radioing all ships in the area for the words to a limerick about Melilla and had learned form dozens of sources that of such limerick existed.  He threatened to expose Glencannon's scam to the captain unless he receive a fifty percent share, and Glencannon had  no choice but the accede.

And so Glencannon and the radio operator won the  money.  While ashore in Algiers, the captain happened to meet the world's greatest expert on limericks and learned that he had been gulled:  the winning limerick was actually one about Manilla and had been written by the limerick expert himself many years before.  But it was too late, the money had been spent on liquor and, through a  window, the captain could hear a snake charmer's pipes change its tune to "Cock o' the North."  Looking out, he could see Glencannon, drunk as a lord, with a pile of wounded Arabs heaped all around him, while the wireless operator was selling a tom-tom to American tourists.


John Guy Gilpatric (1896-1950) was an American pilot, flight instructor, journalist, and writer.  He received his pilot's license when he was sixteen; that same year he set the United Stats altitude record.  As a teenager, he became a stunt pilot and a flight instructor.  He was stationed overseas as an engineering officer during World War I.  following the was he worked as a journalist in Paris, returning to America in 1940.  He is credited with popularizing spear-fishing in the 1930s and influenced diving pioneer Jean-Jacques Costeau.  An editor at The Saturday Evening Post, in response to a question, stated that the reason the magazine did not print more stories by Gilpatric was because he just didn't writing them fast enough.  In addition to his Glencannon stories, Gilpatric wrote a  number of aviation stories and tales about Francis X. Olvaney, a crooked Tammany Hall politician.  One of his novels, Action in the North Atlantic, was made into a film starring Humphrey Bogart and was nominated for an academy award.  A television series about Glencannon was produced in 1959, starring Thomas Mitchell.

Gilpatric's life ended in a tragic turn.  His wife Maude was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1950 and the couple made a suicide pact.  Gilpatric shot Maude in the back of the head, then turned the gun on himself.  Although it was never proven, it is now believed that Maude had never had breast cancet, and that the doctor had read the wrong medical chart.

Monday, April 20, 2026

OVERLOOKED OATER: CHEYENNE RIDES AGAIN (1937)

 Tom Tyler (1903-1954) was a popular star of low-budget westerns, appearing in at least fifty films as the star and dozens more as a supporting player.  At one time, the Poverty Row film company Victory Pictures tried to pitch him as a singing cowboy, a la Gene Autry or Tex Ritter, by having him lip-synch several songs -- it did not work.  Tyler was also noted for supporting roles in major pictures,, such as Stagecoach, Drums Along the Mohawk, Gone with the Wind, The Westerner, and The Grapes of Wrath.  He also played the mummy Kharis in The Mummy's Hand, and starred in several serials based on comic book characters in The Adventures of Captain Marvel and The Phantom.  After 1943 leading roles for Tyler dried up, although he he still continued working as a supporting players, eventually transitioning to television, mainly in westerns, until shortly before his death from heart failure.  One of his last roles was as the co-star on an unsold television pilot written and directed by Ed Wood, Jr.

In Cheyenne Rides Again, Tyler plays Tom "Cheyenne Tommy" Wade, a lawman posing as a gang member to expose cattle Thief Girard (Lon Chaney, Jr.).  Wade uses leverage to blackmail Girard into letting undercover lawmen join the gang.  Eventually, the lawmen out number the crooks, and arrest the entire gang -- a plan that could only work in a B western.

Directed by Robert F. Hill (Blake of Scotland Yard, Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars, Tarzan the Fearless).  Hill took a page from Alfred Hitchcock, appearing in cameos in many of his films; in Cheyenne Rides Again he appear as "Bartender Ed."  The script was written by Basil Dickey (The Masked Marvel, Captain America, Son of Zorro).  Also featuring Lucile Brown (The Moonshiner's Daughter, Secrets of Chinatown, The Story of Elias Howe) and Carmen Laroux (Two-Gun Caballero, Starlight Over Texas, Saved by the Belle).

A true Poverty Row oater.

Enjoy,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BM8qbip16hc