September has always been the time, that's all...I don't know what it is. It always seems to be the best time. September... it's always September.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Target Practice
Those frequent gun shots on The Adventures of the Thin Man have finally had their effect on actress Elspeth Eric--she's acquired a 22-calibre rifle and is shooting it out on her own. Another radio refugee from the whodunits, Stacy Harris, gifted the rifle to Miss Eric, and the two can be seen out on the countryside these fall mornings, taking pot shots at tin cans, rocks, and assorted vegetable and mineral targets. "No birds or animals," says Miss Eric. "Too gruesome!"
-Harrisburg (PA) Telegraph Nov. 9, 1946
Born in 1907, Elspeth Eric was a successful radio actress and writer. She died in 1993.
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Cheers Grow Dim and Colors Fade for Artist-Athlete, Critically Ill
Artist-Athlete Is Losing Hope |
Artist and athlete, Harris is a curious combination of robust directness and quiet subtlety. In high school, he alternated between playing football and lying on Seattle docks, sketching ships in quiet moods. On other occasions he spent hilarious, voluble moments as Roosevelt's cheer leader.
He didn't like leading leather-lunged students in wild cries. He felt it was "sissy." But he found nothing "sissy" in several outlets of his artistic nature, carving figures in soap, and during the winter, in snow; making sketches and paintings.
Physicians at Swedish Hospital planned today to give the youth a little milk. Recently he had been fed through the veins. The youth's mother, Mrs. David Harris, 7803 W. Green Lake Way, took heart at that news, she said.
Only last Monday her son said to her: "Mother, I don't think I want to live. I want to kiss you good-bye."
The hopeless tone in his voice, the tired look in his eyes, discouraged Mrs. Harris. It sounded so unlike the virile son who used to stride about the house in his corduroys, eager for whatever he planned to do next.
Parents do Leading
If Stanley Harris isn't interested in life anymore--if the zest has been taken away from him by the long, dreary twenty days since his operation after he suffered a burst appendix--Stanley Harris' parents are doing the cheer-leading and cheering for their sick son. They've taken a houseboat along Westlake Avenue, where bright sunlight streams across the decks of dozens of ships that would make fine subjects for the youth who likes to sketch and paint them.
Young Harris learned to draw and paint without instruction. He engaged in art work, swimming and amateur acting with equal enthusiasm. He graduated from Roosevelt last year, and since then has been doing whatever he could find in the way of work. Stanley Harris may face another operation in a few days, but he doesn't know it yet. That is best. He is already too indifferent to his future for his physical good.
-Seattle Daily Times Apr. 16, 1936
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Dragnet, April 26, 1954
Stacy Harris pops up as a used car dealer in the Dragnet comic strip dated April 26, 1954.
This time the artist is Mel Keefer.
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