October 29, 1907: ‘Oh, God, The Bassoon!’ Musicians Union Dispute Becomes Operatic

October 29, 1907: Rampant Laborites Ruin Opera Music

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

October 29, 1907
Los Angeles

Given The Times’ view of unions, it’s a little difficult to determine precisely what went wrong with a production of Ambroise Thomas’ “Mignon” at the Auditorium, but it went very wrong indeed because of a labor dispute.

The traveling company included orchestral players from Italy who had, according to The Times, joined the musicians union. However local union officials, citing labor leaders in St. Louis, appeared shortly before the evening’s performance and insisted that the musicians be thrown out of the union and therefore unable to perform.

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Matt Weinstock, Oct. 28, 1959

October 28, 1959: Peanuts

Misplaced Patch

Matt WeinstockThis one requires the utmost delicacy.

A lady named Irene got an infection on her chin.  Her doctor prescribed a series of shots, not on her chin.  She has been going to his office regularly and the nurse has been administrating them.

The other day when she appeared for her shot she said to the nurse, “I’ve got a business appointment after I leave here, would you put a Band-Aid on it?”

She was thinking, of course, of her chin.  The nurse, administering the shot, was not.  And amid wild laughter from Irene, she slapped the Band-Aid in the wrong place. Continue reading

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October 28, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

Nippon Women Split on Retaining Geisha

Paul Coates, in coat and tie LADIES DAY IN TOKYO:  The flowery era of Madame Butterfly is dying, but not quite dead in the postwar life of Japan.

Under the democracy dictated to them by Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Japanese women got the vote in 1946.

Since that time, 11 of them have become prominent members of parliament.  There is a very active, very huge, very persuasive League of Women Voters.  Women are beginning to outnumber men at political rallies.

And women are responsible for pushing through a law that banned prostitution for the first time in Japanese history.  It took them five tries in parliament to get the bill through, but they finally did it.

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October 28, 1956: Charlton Heston on the ‘Ten Commandments’

October 28, 1956: Ten Commandments

We had our religion writer Dan Thrapp interview Charlton Heston about his role as Moses in “The Ten Commandments.” Fortunately, Thrapp was not from the “over a salad and mineral water at the Polo Lounge” or “speaking by phone from Paris, where he is at work on his next picture” schools of celebrity interviewers, but he got something of substance.

Quote of the Day: It is interesting to note that once Moses climbs Mt. Sinai and talks to God there is never contentment for him again. That is the way it is with us. Once we talk to God, once we get his commission to us for our lives we cannot be again content. We are happier. We are busier. But we are not content because then we have a mission — a commission, rather.”

— Charlton Heston

This is adapted from an earlier post on Heston’s death >>>

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George Hodel: Ask Me Anything, October 2025

Here’s Boxetta (Boxie is on vacation) and I with this month’s “Ask Me Anything” on George Hodel.

In this session, I discussed:

Don’t dress up like the Black Dahlia for Halloween! 

Also: Continue reading

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October 28, 1938: Mayor investigates honorary LAPD badges

Old style LAPD badgeAbove, Police Chief James Davis turns over a list of more than 7,800 people who have received honorary badges from the Los Angeles Police Department. Recipients include Shirley Temple, Clark Gable, Louis B. Mayer, Joe E. Brown, King Vidor, Bela Lugosi and Leo Carrillo.

So many old-style badges like one the at left and the one in the Daily Mirror sidebar were handed out that the department replaced them with the current design and these are tightly restricted.

The old badges (usually with the rank of captain or chief) can sell for a fair amount of money, even though thousands of them were given away.

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October 28, 1907: Former LAPD Chief Calls It ‘Most Detestable Job Ever Created’

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
October 28, 1907
Los Angeles

You know the song even if you’ve never seen “Pirates of Penzance”: A policeman’s lot is not a happy one” and that is doubly true for one anonymous former LAPD chief.

The ex-chief has nothing but complaints: “It is the most detestable job ever created.” He can’t get enough men and when he does, many of them are political appointees who have friends in high places but nothing upstairs.

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October 27, 1968: Wilt Chamberlain and Richard Nixon

By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

Wilt Chamberlain tried to explain his political leanings during a turbulent year in American history, particularly his support of Richard Nixon for president. Continue reading

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October 27, 1959: Matt Weinstock

October 27, 1959: Peanuts

Street Shrinkers

Matt WeinstockStudies are constantly being made to determine the effects of alcohol, smoking, overeating and noise on people but another perhaps more deadly trauma-producing experience is relatively neglected.      Driving in traffic, I mean. It does things to people.  At least it has to a man named Hank.

“I finally got it figured out,” he said the other day.  “You know these outfits that are always digging up streets and funneling three lanes of traffic into one?  They’ve got extrasensory perception!”

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October 27, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

Coates Is Reluctant Stripper of Airways

Paul Coates, in coat and tieYou want my opinion, I say there’s something almost indecent about Japan Air Lines’ luxury flight to Tokyo.

We left Los Angeles after midnight — an hour when self-respecting Occidentals give some thought to retiring.  And that was the kind of idea I had in the back of my mind.

But immediately after the no-smoking lights were off, an adorable hostess sidled up to me and, without so much as a by-your-leave, began unbuttoning my jacket.

Well, I knew right then and there what kind of a ride this was going to be.

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October 27, 1957: The rules of the game

October 27, 1957

Here I am, giving away the punchline of a “Nancy” comic. My bad. Which reminds me of a game called “Five Card Nancy” that I learned about from Kim Cooper of 47p.

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October 27, 1927: Follies Theater’s ‘Hot Mamma’ Show Led Court to Overturn Law on ‘Indecent Shows’

follies_burlesque_ebay
A EBay vendor posted this photo of a woman named Aline or Alene Carberry, and I could not resist unleashing the hounds of research.

Bidding on the “Hot Mamma” photo is currently at $34.50.

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October 27, 1907: On the Comics Page


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

October 27, 1907
Los Angeles

Along with “Little Nemo,” “Buster Brown” was a popular feature of the Sunday comics. Like other cartoons of the era, such as “The Katzenjammer Kids” and “Foxy Grandpa,” that were full of naughty children, Buster Brown was fond of pulling pranks on adults.

Unlike Hans and Fritz, who usually ended up getting a good paddling and threats of being sent to reform school, Buster Brown usually learned his lesson the hard way and in the final panel always promised to mend his ways in a long block of text titled “RESOLVED.”


One bit of Buster Brown’s wisdom has stayed with me since I read it as a kid in an anthology on the history of comics: “If the carpet were as worn in front of the bookcase as it is in front of the mirror it would be a better world.”

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Movieland ‘Unsuitable’ Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main Title in lettering evoking carved stone
This week’s mystery movie was the 1940 Warner Bros. film Castle on the Hudson, with John Garfield, Ann Sheridan, Pat O’Brien, Burgess Meredith, Henry O’Neill, Jerome Cowan, Guinn “Big Boy” Williams and John Litel. Continue reading

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October 26, 1959: Matt Weinstock

October 26, 1959: Peanuts

L.A. Justice

Matt WeinstockAll Steve Medved wants is to be left alone by the LAPD.  He hopes that now, after a third trial, he has it made.

Medved, 38, is a big (6’2, 230), easy going fellow of Yugoslav descent.  But he can be tough and stubborn when aroused.  He was in the Marine Corps during the Second World War.

His trouble began last Feb. 5 when two officers stopped him at 6th and Bixel and accused him of being drunk.  He said he wasn’t but admitted he’d had several beers.  The words became hotter and the nightmare began. Continue reading

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October 26, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

Columnist’s Wife Influences Column

Paul Coates, in coat and tieTOKYO — There’s an ancient and revered Oriental proverb which, roughly translated, goes: “Man who take wife to Japan is man who bring coal to Newcastle.”

But to my way of thinking, this is an archaic, reprehensible attitude.  It has no place in today’s western world of togetherness.  In our way of life, marriage is a partnership.  Fifty-fifty.  When we do things we do them as a team.  That, friends, is red-blooded, true-blue American sportsmanship.  Am I right?

Take my own case, for example.  Where I go, my wife goes.

She insists on it.

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‘Ask Me Anything’ on George Hodel – October 28

Reminder: Boxie and I will be doing a live “Ask Me Anything” on George Hodel and Steve Hodel on Tuesday, October 28, at 10 a.m. Pacific time on YouTube.

Can’t make the live session? Email me your questions and I’ll answer them! The video will be posted once the session ends so you can watch it later. Remember, this is ask me anything, so please remember to ask questions rather than make comments. Thanks!

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October 26, 1942: Lon Chaney’s Ghost Haunts Hollywood and Vine!

Oct. 26, 1942, Duncan Sisters

October 26, 1942: Rosetta (D. 1958) and Vivian (D. 1986) Duncan appear in “Topsy and Eva,” a musical version of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” a musical comedy in which they first appeared in San Francisco in the 1920s. The Duncan sisters wrote the music and lyrics for the show, adapted by Catherine Chisholm Cushing.

Councilman Norris Nelson tells a story about the ghost of Lon Chaney sitting on a bench at Hollywood and Vine.

In discussing a proposed ordinance to ease restrictions on placement of benches, Nelson said that about 15 years earlier, he had placed an ornamental iron bench at the famous intersection.
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October 26, 1907: Women Clean Clothes With Gasoline, Die After Explosion and Fire


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

October 26, 1907
Los Angeles

Two women in the West Adams District were badly burned and expected to die after a bowl of gasoline they were using to clean a soiled dress exploded, engulfing their apartment at 42 St. James Park in flames.

Mrs. James P. Burns (identified helpfully by The Times as the wife of James P. Burns) and maid Catherine Blake had spread a dress across a table and wrapped their hands with rags soaked in gasoline to clean it. Because the electric lights weren’t bright enough, Burns told Blake to light several candles. The candles ignited the bowl of gas, which in turn set off a nearby tank of gasoline.

With her clothes on fire, Blake ran to the rear porch of the second-story apartment and jumped to the ground while Burns fled to a hallway. The building manager ran to the second floor upon hearing the explosion and wrapped Burns in a rug to extinguish the flames.

“Nearly all of her hair had been burned off and only a few charred garments remained about her badly burned body,” The Times said of Burns. “Examination by surgeons disclosed a pitiable condition. They expressed little hope of her recovery.”

In the meantime, neighbors got a blanket and rolled Blake on the grass to put out the fire. “Miss Blake was burned about the face, breast, arms and legs,” The Times said. “In some places the flesh fell away. She fainted several times before reaching the hospital.”

Bad streets hampered the Fire Department’s response to the blaze. The Lawrence Apartments, where the blaze occurred, suffered $10,000 ($205,235.70 USD 2005) in damage while the adjoining Mayfair Apartments suffered $3,000 damage, mostly from water.

Burns died the next day, having been put under anesthetic to allay her pain. There was no further word on Blake.

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October 25, 1982: Millennial Moment: Iranian Exiles Find a Bit of Home in Santa Monica Park

Oct. 25, 1982, Iranian Exiles

October 25, 1982: Times staff writer Bill Overend profiles Iranian exiles who gather in Santa Monica’s Palisades Park on Sunday afternoons, hundreds of people — mostly Jews and some Muslims — who came to the U.S. because of the Iranian revolution.

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