Monthly Archives: September 2025

September 26, 1947: Remingtons, Winchesters, Colts and Smith & Wessons

September 26, 1947: You can buy a new Colt semiauto for $65 ($712.59 USD 2018) in .38 Super or .45, or a Smith and Wesson (presumably a Model 10) in .38 Special for $56.50 ($619.40) USD 2018. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 26, 1944

September 26, 1944: Hollywood’s fear of emphasizing the war angle of war pictures that not a single shot is fired in “Abroad With Two Yanks,” Danton Walker says. Continue reading

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September 26, 1907: Disharmony for Conductor of Long Beach Band

September 26, 1907: Marco Vessella, conductor of Long Beach’s Royal Italian Band, has had nothing but trouble with Special Officer W.D. Cason after firing him from his job as ticket taker. On one September evening, Vessella and a young lady were waiting for a streetcar when Cason taunted him, calling him “spaghetti face” and “a longhaired dago.” Continue reading

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September 25, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 25, 1959: Matt Weinstock on the success of pianist Van Cliburn. Continue reading

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September 25, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 25, 1959: Paul Coates on the tragic story of Barbara Burns, the daughter of entertainer Bob “Bazooka” Burns. Continue reading

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Texas teenager arrested in death plot, September 25, 1958

September 25, 1958: Diana was a brilliant teenager … until that day she decided to kill her family. Continue reading

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September 25, 1947: It Was a Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.

September 25, 1947: Five Japanese war criminals are hanged in Guam for practicing cannibalism on American POWs. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 25, 1944

September 25, 1944: All the battles Sam Goldwyn had with Warner Bros. over rights to “Those Endearing Charms” will come to naught. When he purchased the play it was taken to the Dramatists Guild for a settlement on the claim Sam had bought it before Warners. Now he’s sold it through his agent to RKO, Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Life Magazine, September 25, 1944

September 25, 1944: Claire Poe of Miami Beach, Fla., appears on the cover of Life’s special issue “A Letter to GIs,” because she is the kind of good-looking American girl that a lot of GIs know and would like to hear from. Continue reading

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September 25, 1907: The Melancholy Prizefighter

September 25, 1907: Meet Joe Gans, a boxer whose name once echoed among fans of the ring now buried in the dusts of sporting history. Gans may well have been one of the finest fighters whoever lived. Continue reading

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September 24, 1957: Matt Weinstock

September 24, 1957: Matt Weinstock profiles Red Rowe, host of Panoramic Pacific on KNXT, Channel 2 Continue reading

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September 24, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 24, 1959: The old door-to-door salesman peddling magazine subscriptions scam is making the rounds again, Paul Coates says. Continue reading

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September 24, 1947: Young Men Say ‘I Love You’ With a Buick Hood Ornament

September 24, 1947: There’s no better way to a woman’s heart than with the hood ornament from a 1946 or 1947 Buick. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 24, 1944

September 24, 1944: Why is young Van Johnson the idol of the bobby sox brigade and at this moment crowding Frank Sinatra and Alan Ladd for top honors? Van isn’t handsome, he hasn’t a striking physique and he hasn’t Frankie’s ability to sing, Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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September 24, 1907: A Poem on the First Day in L.A.

September 24, 1907: Walter Adolf Roberts writes a poem about his first day in Los Angeles. Continue reading

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September 23, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 23, 1959: To folks who think traffic in Los Angeles is a new problem, please read the stories on 1) freeways 2) new buses 3) moving sidewalks. Bonus story 4) drunk drivers. Matt Weinstock on the complaint that teachers spend too much time maintaining order in the classroom and too little time teaching. Continue reading

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September 23, 1959: Paul V. Coates — Confidential File

September 23, 1959: Paul Coates on how not to start a conversation … and Abby’s advice to a widow who wants to meet a good man and get married. Continue reading

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September 23, 1947: Janet Flanner, The New Yorker’s ‘Genet,’ Visits L.A .

September 23, 1947: Janet Flanner, European correspondent for the New Yorker, says: “The carpetbagging of our American soldiers went on for two years until the Army stopped it. It made cigarettes legal tender. American money still rates high, but our morality rates low….Just now we Americans are trying to run a checkbook empire. It can’t be done.” Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 23, 1944

September 23, 1944: I don’t wonder William Goetz is eager to get Loretta Young started before the cameras. She looks so wonderful since the birth of her baby, and so radiant. He has decided to co-star her with Gary Cooper in Gary’s first independent production, a western, tentatively titled “The American Cowboy,” Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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September 23, 1907: Rev. J.L. Griffin Baptizes 5 in Echo Park Lake

September 23, 1907: The Rev. J.L. Griffin baptizes five believers in Echo Park Lake as 2,000 watch. Continue reading

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