
Note: This is a post I wrote in 2007.
Feb. 1, 1907
Los Angeles
I was all set to write about Leroyxez, “The Human Pincushion,” being nailed to a cross promptly at 4 p.m. at Chutes Park, and then a story about lynching in the U.S. caught my eye.

Note: This is a post I wrote in 2007.
Feb. 1, 1907
Los Angeles
I was all set to write about Leroyxez, “The Human Pincushion,” being nailed to a cross promptly at 4 p.m. at Chutes Park, and then a story about lynching in the U.S. caught my eye.

Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.
It is difficult to believe that there was a time when newspapers published rape victims’ names and addresses, but the Herald-Express had no misgivings about it. Aggie Underwood, Herald reporter and eventually the city editor of the Herald Examiner, said she once had to go out eight weeks in a row and interview rape victims. Since this woman may still be alive, I’ve deleted her name and address.
Attacker
Masked Man Assaults
Girl at Gun Point
A young masked gunman early today attacked an attractive 18-year-old girl in the Hawthorne district after forcing her to enter his automobile on 161st Street near Hawthorne Boulevard.
Note: This is a post I wrote in 2007.
Jan. 31, 1907
Los Angeles
Showing once again that Los Angeles is out of touch with Sacramento, local health officials are fighting an education bill that would lift mandatory smallpox vaccinations for schoolchildren.
Vaccinations were opposed for several reasons in the Legislature. Assemblyman Sackett objected to placing the burden of enforcement on schools. Assemblyman Percival, a Christian Scientist, apparently objected to the measure on religious grounds. Other opponents said the only reason health officials supported the shots is to protect their jobs.
Continue reading

Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.
The rewrite desk in action:
The Examiner:
Free Cash, Nylons and Gum—
Then They Took Him Away!
Dollar bills, nylons and bubble gum pelted persons at 6th and Main Streets yesterday.
It started a near-riot and brought police on the double. One woman was injured slightly.
The pelter was Benny Stone, diminutive candy salesman, of 5754 West Fourth Street.

Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Jan. 30, 1907
Los Angeles
Recent rains have left the city’s streets in terrible shape, as The Times shows in a photo taken at 1st Street and Spring.
This wagon, pulled by a strong team, plunged up to its hubs in one of the potholes and the horses were unable to free it. “Under the whip and vociferous admonitions of their driver, they were helpless to pull it out from the stinking muck in which, hub deep, it stood,” The Times says.

Jan. 30, 1947: An ad in the Sentinel announces a preview of a model home in Carver Manor, a housing development designed by Paul R. Williams at 135th Street and Avalon Boulevard.

Stanford Avenue in Carver Manor, via Google Street View.

The Rev. J.L. Caston, a Baptist minister; attorney Lucius Lomax, publisher of the Los Angeles Tribune and the father of civil rights attorney Melanie Lomax; dental technician Albert Patrick; and attorney Vince M. Townsend Jr. announce that they are running in the City Council 7th District race against the incumbent, Rev. Carl C. Rasmussen, a Lutheran minister. Rasmussen, who was white and endorsed by the Los Angeles Times, was reelected.
Caston was endorsed by the Sentinel, which noted that he was an official of the NAACP, was active in the YMCA and was an honorary member of the Dining Car Workers Union. He placed third in the election after Rasmussen and Don A. Allen.
Note: We’re rebooting the concept of the 1947project (founded by Kim Cooper and Nathan Marsak) by going day by day through 1947 – but using the Los Angeles Sentinel, an African American weekly, rather than the very white and very conservative Los Angeles Times. We promise you an extremely different view of Los Angeles.

(The historic Los Angeles Sentinel is available online from the Los Angeles Public Library. We encourage anyone with a library card to delve into the back issues and explore the history of black L.A.

This week’s mystery movie has been the 1956 Allied Artists film “Crime in the Streets,” a Lindbrook production. With James Whitmore, Sal Mineo, Mark Rydell, Virginia Gregg, Peter Votrian, Will Kuluva, Malcolm Atterbury, Denise Alexander, Dan Terranova, Peter Miller, Steve Rowland and introducing John Cassavetes. Story and screenplay by Reginald Rose, photography by Sam Leavitt. Art direction by Serge Krizman, set decoration by Victor Gangelin, dialogue coaching by David S. Peckinpah and music by Franz Waxman. The producer was Vincent M. Fennelly and the director was Donald Siegel.
The film was adapted from a 1955 episode of “The Elgin Hour,” directed by Sidney Lumet, with Cassavetes, Kuluva and Rydell, with Robert Preston in the role played by Whitmore and Glenda Farrell in the role played by Gregg.
The DVD of the film is available in a boxed set Film Noir Classic Collection, Volume 5 from Warner Archive.

Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.
Wanted: Thief Who
Took 3 Snakes
SAN GABRIEL, Jan. 28—Chief Frank L. Carpenter sent out a police broadcast tonight for capture of the boldest and most daring thief in San Gabriel’s history.
The suspect is wanted for stealing three rattlesnakes.
The reptiles were taken from the automobile of Joseph Gerle, snake authority of North Hollywood. Gerle was lecturing at the Town House, 900 W. Santa Anita Ave. Continue reading

Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.
Yet another of the kind of story that would never see Page 1 of The Times, but was featured on the front of the Examiner, with a picture inside of a detective crouching over Gordon’s mangled remains.
However, The Times did run one interesting story in 1954 about Mirror reporter Cliff Dektar persuading a man not to jump off a building. As Dektar told a recent meeting of the OFTS (a group of retired Times employees), he and photographer Delmar Watson went up to the roof of the building 802 N. Vermont Ave. and Watson got pictures of him persuading the man not to kill himself.
On their way down in the elevator, Dektar said, he met a Herald reporter and photographer on their way up to the roof. It was a great day, Dektar said, “I saved a life and beat the competition.”
Man Plunges
86 Stories
Empire Building Leaper
Falls on Woman
NEW YORK, Jan. 28—(AP) A man identified as David H. Gordon Jr. leaped 1,000 feet to his death today from the 86th floor observation tower of the Empire State Building.
He evaded efforts of guards and another spectator to prevent him from jumping.

Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Jan. 28, 1907
Los Angeles
William Jennings Bryan stepped from the Owl train to be greeted by a long-waiting crowd.
“In appearance, Mr. Bryan has changed but little since he was last in Los Angeles,” The Times says. “In his manner, also, there has been little, if any, change, and he greeted his friends with the same fervor and showed the same remarkable talent for remembering names.”

Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Jan 28, 1907
Los Angeles
“If my career seems strange to you, it seems stranger and more incredible to me,” Gen. Homer Lea once said. And indeed it was, for Lea’s life was the tale of a poor and badly handicapped boy’s adventures as a leader in an exotic foreign land.
His 1912 obituary in The Times begins: “His great work finished, the pitiful, wasted little body of the American boy who overthrew the tattered old Chinese empire lies silent in his home in Ocean Park. Gen. Homer Lea died yesterday.

Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Jan. 27, 1907
Los Angeles
One thing you can say about Angelenos: We love to talk about traffic. The only thing we love more is to commission studies and draft plans to deal with the problem, and then ignore them.
“With the wonderful growth of Los Angeles as a great city has come to it many problems to be solved. The Owens River and the system of storm drains underway are the solutions of two important ones,” The Times says.
Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.
L.A. Crime
Total 1,229
During Week
In the last week 1,229 crimes were committed in Los Angeles. They were:
553 thefts
337 burglaries
83 robberies
83 assaults with deadly weapons
15 morals offenses
132 automobiles stolen
4 attacks on women
1 attempted attack on a woman
2 murders
1 attempted robbery
3 attempted burglaries
7 thefts from persons
8 assaults and batteries
Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Jan. 26, 1907
Los Angeles
Chin Man Can (or Kan) is in jail on charges of being an illegal immigrant. The young man says he is nothing of the sort, but unable to prove that he was born in San Francisco because all of his belongings were destroyed in the 1906 earthquake.
Can says that when he was 13, the rest of his family left San Francisco to return to China, but that he stayed behind, attending Chinese school and learning English. After the earthquake, he came to Los Angeles, where he was arrested while working at an Ocean Park restaurant.
Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.
He said he didn’t do it. He said he didn’t lure the little girl into his garage on her way home from school. But he was convicted of molesting her.
He kept insisting he was innocent, saying that except for a few minutes when he left to get a haircut, he was at the doctor’s office with his wife, Marie, as their 8-month-old son got a checkup. The doctor’s nurse signed an affidavit supporting his story.

Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.
Savant seeks key to
mental telepathy in
radar, light waves
PORTLAND, Ore, Jan. 24—(U.P.) An electrical engineer said today he thought the answer to mental telepathy might be found in the unexplored frequency band between ultra-short radar waves and the longest waves of light.
Dr. Phillips Thomas, for 35 years a research engineer with the Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co., said he was so thoroughly convinced that the answers would be found that he plans to devote his own time to the research.

Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Jan. 24, 1907
Los Angeles
Meet a tough little lady who gave her life to helping the poor, needy children of Los Angeles. She built a church and school starting with a nickel donated by a newsboy, left it all and began again in a tent when the presiding minister turned out to be a crook, and then regained it all. She spent most of her later years fighting with state authorities to stay in operation. Her name is Belle L. White.
White was preaching as early as 1897 at the Pacific Gospel Union, working with needy children in the neighborhood east of Alameda Street. But in a few years, when the Gospel Union decided to give up working with youngsters, White split off and formed her own school at 6th Street and Mateo.
Note: This is a post I wrote in 2006 for the 1947project.
Murder
Four held for Trial in
‘Hibiscus’ Slaying
After a weeklong preliminary hearing, four of five youths arrested in the Lincoln Park “hibiscus” murder case were today held to answer to Superior Court by Municipal Judge Arthur Guerin.
Freed after the hearing was Ephrem “Baby Face” Olivas, 18, who was named by the four others as the slayer of Naomi Tullis Cook, 52, whose beaten body was found under a clump of hibiscus bushes in the park near the men’s restroom.
Note: This is an encore post from 2007.
Jan. 23, 1907
Los Angeles
Pity, for a moment, Felix Chavarino, caught in the grips, not of opium, morphine or heroin, but of citrus, for he is a “lemon fiend.”
He was arrested after begging for food in a small restaurant. Chavarino didn’t want anything else on the menu, pleading for a “le-mon,” a “le-mon.”
“Gaunt, unkempt and weird looking, he crouched there, disdaining all offers,” The Times says.