THANKS again Buckles for a Good Spread! I do notice the NEW Size of THIS BOX. I have Learned, if you keep your comments, to the left Side, all can be read.
This is the little African Basenji barkless dog that simply vanished off the lot one day. Mr Beatty told me the dog's name but I forgot it. This pic must have been very early 1960.
The entire movie, GOOD-BYE, MY LADY, focused on Brandon De Wilde's young boy discovering a lost Basenji in the swamplands. He adopts her with the approval of his grandpa, 3-time Oscar-winner Walter Brennan. But no one can figure out why she doesn't bark. Store-owner Phil Harris sees an ad seeking the dog and realizes it's the boy's new pet. In the coming-of-age element, the boy agrees to surrender Lady to the true owner, William Hopper (Heda's son, and Paul Drake on PERRY MASON). It would have been a better picture if Clyde Beatty had shown up. He'd have let little Brandon keep the dog.
3 comments:
THANKS again Buckles for a Good Spread!
I do notice the NEW Size of THIS BOX. I have
Learned, if you keep your comments, to the left
Side, all can be read.
This is the little African Basenji barkless dog that simply vanished off the lot one day. Mr Beatty told me the dog's name but I forgot it. This pic must have been very early 1960.
The entire movie, GOOD-BYE, MY LADY, focused on Brandon De Wilde's young boy discovering a lost Basenji in the swamplands. He adopts her with the approval of his grandpa, 3-time Oscar-winner Walter Brennan. But no one can figure out why she doesn't bark. Store-owner Phil Harris sees an ad seeking the dog and realizes it's the boy's new pet. In the coming-of-age element, the boy agrees to surrender Lady to the true owner, William Hopper (Heda's son, and Paul Drake on PERRY MASON). It would have been a better picture if Clyde Beatty had shown up. He'd have let little Brandon keep the dog.
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