Oct. 16, 1907: Man With Three Wives Believes in Marriage but Not Divorce

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

Oct. 16, 1907
Santa Ana

George S. Best is a great believer in marriage and strongly opposes divorce, which is why he has three of one and none of the other.

His most recent troubles began when his wife Anita discovered that he had married young Cecile Fleming, the daughter of a prominent local businessman. Upon investigation, Anita Best of Los Angeles and Charles Fleming of Santa Ana discovered that Best had married Cecile in back of the county clerk’s office. After returning to Los Angeles long enough to get his belongings, avoiding his mother and his wife Anita, Best and Cecile left for San Francisco, where he was arrested for bigamy.

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights — A. L. “Whitey” Schafer Simplifies Portraits

Whitey Schafer "Thou Shalt Not"
“Thou Shalt Not,” “Whitey” Schafer’s most famous image.


Note: This is an encore post from 2013.

In the very early days of the motion picture industry, stills photographers meant nothing to the moving picture companies. They asked their feature cameramen to work double duty, shooting scene stills after completing filming that very same scene. These companies also hired local photographic studios to shoot portraits of their stars, or allowed the stars themselves to hire photographers to shoot images that could be employed in advertising.

When stars’ names and faces became important tools to sell product, stillsmen became integral in shaping a motion picture company’s or star’s brand that could be sold to consumers. Studios hired their own photographers to shoot scene, production, off-camera and reference stills that could be employed in advertising, while major stars Mary Pickford and William S. Hart signed their own personal cameramen like K. O. Rahmn and Junius Estep to capture their on- and off-camera pursuits. By the middle of the 1920s, each studio established stills departments to shoot, process and manufacture the thousands of stills required for product-hungry newspapers, magazines and consumer tie-ins.

Mary Mallory’s latest book, Living With Grace: Life Lessons from America’s Princess,”  is now on sale.

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Posted in Books and Authors, Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory, Photography | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Oct. 20, 2018, Mystery Photo
This week’s mystery movie has been the 1955 Columbia Pictures film “Creature With the Atom Brain,” with Richard Denning, Angela Stevens, Michael Granger, Linda Bennett, Harry Lauter, Charles Evans, S. John Launer, Gregory Gay, Tristram Coffin, Larry Blake and Pierre Watkin. Story and screenplay by Curt Siodmak,  photography by Fred Jackman, art direction by Paul Palmentola, set decoration by Sidney Clifford, special effects by Jack Erickson and music conducted by Mischa Bakaleinikoff. Directed by Edward L. Cahn.

“Creature With the Atom Brain” is available on DVD from Amazon.

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October 15, 1907: Fire Threatens Orpheum




Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

October 15, 1907
Los Angeles

On a rainy night in Los Angeles, a fire broke out in the four-story brick office building at 235 S. Spring St. housing the Orpheum Theater and the Elks Hall, which was engulfed in panic as visitors at a Japanese festival rushed for the exits. The second-floor hallways were so jammed that members of the Elks Club rushed to the rear of the building to use the fire escapes.

At Orpheum, on the floor above the Elks Club, veteran actress Minnie Seligman calmly made the smoke and the sound of fire engines part of her skit. Rushing offstage for a moment, she returned covered with soot and announced: “Oh the gasoline stove exploded. It will break up housekeeping for good!”

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Oct. 14, 1907: ‘In 9 cases out of 10, Where There Is a Shooting, There Is Also a Woman’


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

Oct. 14, 1907
Los Angeles

“In nine cases out of ten, where there is a shooting, there is also a woman,” said The Times.

In this case, there was Oscar E. Otto, a young chauffeur with a hot temper and a gun. There was his 19-year-old wife, the former Irene E. Jester, “a silly little creature with futile tears and French heels.” And there was J.C. Henderson, another chauffeur with a gun and better aim or more luck.

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May 23, 1945: Woman Killed Outside Sanitarium; Ex-GI Arrested

image Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.

Echoes of Georgette Bauerdorf….

Paging through the Oct. 15, 1947, edition of The Times offers so many choices: meatless Tuesdays to send food to the starving people of Europe, thereby stemming the march of Communism; the new Buick’s Accurite Cylinder Boring, Fliteweight Pistons and Deepflex Seat Cushions; or Pasadenan Adolf Schleicher, who wants to the city to buy him a new canary after a city trash truck knocked down a birdcage hanging on his porch..

How about two “adults only” features at the Mission theater, 4238 S. Broadway, “Nude Ranch” and “Sins of Passion,” two movies so obscure that they’re not even in imdb.com? As a family paper, The Times refused to run the racy movie ads found in the Examiner.

A Proquest search for “Mission” and “Nude” turns up the gruesome May 23, 1945, killing of Vivian Simon, whose nude body was found under a palm tree at Mission Sanitarium, 4525 San Fernando Road, stabbed and beaten, with her underwear jammed down her throat.

Although the sanitarium was surrounded by a 12-foot-high barbed wire fence, Simon, 31, the wife of Syrian grocer James S. Simon of 1262 W. 25th St., and another patient escaped for drinks at a nearby bar with the help of one of the dishwashers, Candelaria Cabrillo.

Cabrillo and the other patient left, while Simon remained to have several more drinks with James O. Bullack, a 29-year-old ex-GI. Arrested wearing blood-spotted clothes outside his rooming house at 2062 Wollam St. with his suitcase packed, Bullack told police of taking Simon back to the sanitarium and “socking her in the jaw” when she “resisted his advances.”

Bullack, described as a tall, shy blond, was questioned in the 1944 murder of Bauerdorf, who was found in a bathtub with a rolled-up bandage jammed down her throat, but nothing apparently came of it. He was convicted in the Simon killing and sentenced to five years to life in prison. No James Bullack is listed in the
California Death Index or the Social Security Death Index. His whereabouts remains unknown.

 

Quote of the day: “Reckless attacks on liberals permitted by the House Committee on Un-American Activities in the past repeatedly have strengthened the hand of Communist agents. They have used such attacks to prove that our democracy is a frail and frightened thing and to proclaim that legitimate exposure of their activities must inevitably degenerate into a ruthless heresy hunt.”

Leon Henderson and Melvyn Douglas of Americans for Democratic Action, on the need to protect the civil rights of Hollywood actors and writers called to testify on Communist influences in the film industry.

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Oct. 13, 1907: 2 Die in Tong War


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

Oct. 13, 1907
Los Angeles

Gunmen imported from out of town by the Hop Sing Tong entered the tailor shop of Lem Sing at 806 Juan St. in Chinatown and under the pretense of having some clothing made, wounded him when he turned to reach for some material. The men also killed Wong Goon Kor, who was, according to The Times, “lying in a bunk under the influence of opium.”

The three fleeing men threw away their revolvers as they ran down Marchesault Street, through Stab in the Back Alley to Apablasa Street, where they got into a vegetable wagon that took them away.

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L.A. Noir: Will Someone Please Get the New York Times a Map of Los Angeles?

Oct. 12, 2018, Noir Map of L.A.

The New York Times has published a “guide” to “Where Noir Lives in the City of Angels.” With text by Gal Beckerman.

And take a good look at the graphic by Ross MacDonald (no, not that Ross MacDonald; he’s dead). This Ross MacDonald is the illustrator and movie prop designer, and yes, his artwork captures the literary noir ambience, but there is this little inaccuracy problem going on.

Here’s the key:

1. Pacific Palisades (“In a Lonely Place”)

2. Laurel Canyon (“The Long Goodbye”)

3. Leimert Park (“The Black Dahlia”)

4. South-Central L.A. (“Devil in a Blue Dress”)

5. Hollywood Hills (“The Black Echo”)

6. MacArthur Park (“North of Montana”)

7. Pasadena (“Die a Little”)

8. Watts (“Southland”)

9. Hollywood Hills (“Woman No. 17”)

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Posted in 1947, Another Good Story Ruined, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, LAPD, New York | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

October 1947: Spike Jones at Philharmonic Auditorium

Oct. 9, 1947, L.A. Times

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.

BY EDWIN SCHALLERT

Hitting the bull’s-eye squarely in the center with the title of his show, which he calls “Musical Depreciation Revue,” Spike Jones last night provided two and a half hours of undoubtedly the most nosily numbing entertainment that has ever been heard in the precincts of Philharmonic or almost any other auditorium.

I would like also to add that he made it a violently enjoyable event, which he did for the most part. Sometimes I wanted to borrow the ear-muffs with which his star, Doodles Weaver, disported, in order to quiet the sound emanating from the stage. But I must say that the potency of the comedy offered by Jones, the City Slickers and also, in quite a degree, Weaver, is more or less irresistible.

 

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Oct. 12, 1947: Father Charged With Beating Son, 2, for Talking During Movie

L.A. Times, 1947

Oct. 13, 1947, L.A. Gimes

 

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project in response to a post by Kim Cooper.

Judge Arthur Guerin told Sheppard W. King III that the beating he gave to his son was “the most aggravated case I have heard in my 11 years on the bench. It is beyond human understanding how you could beat a little child like that.”

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Oct. 12, 1907: Contractor Leaves Dead Dogs in Street to Break Contract; A Foul Wind From Fertilizer Plant Blows Over Boyle Heights

Oct. 12, 1907, Dead Dogs

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

Oct. 12, 1907
Los Angeles

After repeated complaints to police because half a dozen dead dogs had laid in the streets for two weeks, the health department tried to charge C.T. Hanson, who held the contract for removing carcasses. But according to the city attorney, Hanson was only guilty of not abiding by his contract and nothing more.

In fact, Hanson had tried to get out his contract, claiming that he was losing money, but the city refused. “The opinion expressed at the City Hall is that Hanson has grown lax in the collection of carcasses, thinking that he may be able to force the city to more favorable terms,” The Times said.

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Coming Attractions: Celebrating the Reopening of the Central Library

central_library
The Los Angeles Central Library, courtesy of the library.


Los Angeles is celebrating one of its great treasures – the Central Library – this weekend on the 25th anniversary of its reopening in October 1993, seven years after a devastating fire. Among the events is an appearance by author Susan Orlean, whose “The Library Book” treats the fire as another of the city’s irresistible unsolved mysteries. (Note: A man identified as a “prime suspect” was never charged). In another author appearance, Stephen Gee will sign his book “Los Angeles City Hall: An American Icon.”

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Oct. 11, 1947: Jury Overturns Dog Lover’s Will Leaving Fortune to 2 Irish Setters

L.A. Times, 1947

L.A. Times, 1947

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.

Pat and Gunner, 6-year-old Irish setters who were left a $30,000 estate by their late master, Carleton R. Bainbridge, retired attorney, yesterday were disinherited by a jury of eight men and four women.

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Posted in 1947, Animals, Comics, Crime and Courts | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Col. John Bryson, 1819 – 1907 | Ex-Mayor Was Millionaire L.A. Developer

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

Oct. 11,1907
Los Angeles

Perhaps John Bryson’s early life was something out of Horatio Alger, but the death of the Los Angeles developer and self-made millionaire could have easily been taken from the pages of Charles Dickens.

 

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October 1947: Lebanese, Syrian, Egyptian Armies Gather at Palestine Border for Possible Invasion

Oct. 10, 1947, Comics

L.A. Times, 1947

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.

BEIRUT, Oct. 9 (U.P.)—The Lebanese and Syrian governments have ordered various units of their armies to mass along the Palestine borders for a possible invasion of the Holy Land, and the first units already have started marching, it was announced tonight.

Abdul Rahman Azzam Pasha, secretary general of the Arab League Council now meeting in nearby Alieh, announced the massing of troops along Palestine’s northern borders, and said the Egyptian government also is ordering strong contingents of its army to move to Palestine’s southern frontier.

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Oct. 10, 1907: The Want Ads

This is an encore post from 2006.

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Black L.A., 1947: Sentinel Reports on City’s Segregated Fire Department

L.A. Sentinel, 1947, Engine Co. 30.
Oct. 9, 1947, L.A. Sentinel
Google Street View

Engine Co. 30 in 1947, top, and via Google Street View.


Oct. 9, 1947: The Sentinel reports on segregation in the Los Angeles Fire Department. Sentinel Publisher Leon H. Washington Jr. said that because of segregation, “there are a number of qualified Negro firemen on the list who must wait until one of the present firemen dies or retires before they will be appointed to jobs.”

Washington said the black community was mainly served by two “colored companies” at 14th and Central — now the African American Firefighter Museum — and at 34th and Central.

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Oct. 9. 1907: Trellis, The Confidence Woman

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

Oct. 9, 1907
Los Angeles

She was known as Trellis C. Harris or Trellis Blessing—or Edna Hall. But her method was always the same. She would commit some theft, then fake an epileptic fit, spitting up blood from a capsule hidden in her mouth.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Zenobia
This week’s mystery movie was the 1939 Hal Roach production “Zenobia,” with Oliver Hardy, Harry Langdon, Billie Burke, Alice Brady, James Ellison, Jean Parker, June Lang, Step’n Fetchit, Hattie McDaniels, Phillip Hurlic, the Hall Johnson Choir and “Miss Zenobia.” Directed by Gordon Douglas, screenplay by Corey Ford from an original story by Walter De Leon and Arnold Belgard. Photography by Karl Struss, photographic effects by Roy Seawright, art direction by Charles D. Hall, set decoration by W.L. Stevens, musical score by Marvin Hatley, gowns by Omar Kiam, wardrobe supervision by Harry Black, produced by A. Edward Sutherland.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , | 45 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Colleen Moore’s Dollhouse Supports Children’s Charities

image
Colleen Moore’s doll house in a frame grab from CBS “Sunday Morning.”


Note: This is an encore post from 2015.

From the beginning of time, people have been collectors. Objects as diverse as paintings, stamps, shells, rocks, postcards, photographs, baseballs, or even furniture have been compiled for the joy they brought to those acquiring them. Individuals such as J. P. Morgan, Henri Francis du Pont, Henry Huntington, and William Randolph Hearst created large assemblages of objects, which are now open for research and visits by the general public. Hearst’s “Enchanted Hill” on the Central Coast of California is now known as the stupendous Hearst Castle, filled with gorgeous and exquisite works of art from around the world, including whole magnificent rooms saved from mansions and castles in the process of being demolished.

Silent film actress Colleen Moore, the effervescent embodiment of the jazz-mad 1920s flapper, collected doll houses and small miniatures from the time she was a child. In the late 1920s, she began assembling what became her masterpiece, a luxurious doll’s house that reflected every young girl’s romantic dreams of what it meant to be a princess. Moore’s “Enchanted Castle,” a Lilliputian relative of Hearst’s “Enchanted Hill,” rivaled the newspaper magnate’s Hearst Castle for its unique works of art and outstanding craftsmanship.

Mary Mallory’s latest book, Living With Grace: Life Lessons from America’s Princess,”  is now on sale.

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