
March 19, 1944
— CBS’ “World News Today” reports on Allied bombing of Germany and the battle for Cassino. “This is still a battle of yard by yard annihilation.” Courtesy of Archive.org.

March 19, 1944
— CBS’ “World News Today” reports on Allied bombing of Germany and the battle for Cassino. “This is still a battle of yard by yard annihilation.” Courtesy of Archive.org.


March 19, 1944
It was old home week when I visited the first lady of the theater, Ethel Barrymore, on the “None but the Lonely Heart” set.


I recently visited the city archives and thanks to archivist Michael Holland, I learned that the LAPD kept scrapbooks in the 1940s. Not all years are represented, unfortunately, but the department apparently subscribed to a clipping service at one point.
This front page is from the June 16, 1949, Los Angeles Examiner with a headline about the Brenda Allen scandal. Notice that this is the 9 a.m. final. Like all newspapers of that era, the Examiner had multiple editions through the day. I mention this because newspapers today have one edition, so the idea of tearing up a page several times over the course of a day is unfamiliar. My impression is that this edition wasn’t delivered to homes (that would be an earlier edition) but was sold on newsstands.
And to save you the trouble of looking, there’s nothing about the Black Dahlia case in the scrapbook for 1947. Not a single clipping was saved. The most you may find is a few stories about the Leslie Dillon fiasco in the 1949 scrapbook.

March 18, 1944
It’s Saturday in 1944 and today we have:
— Jungle Jim and the crew evade Japanese soldiers. “The Adventures of Jungle Jim.” Courtesy of Otrrlibrary.org via Archive.org.


March 18, 1944
HOLLYWOOD, March 17 — Warners are going all out for American movies, and if you want to call that “flag waving” it’s all right with them. As Jack Warner says: “You can’t wave a better flag!” One of the first of the specials will be “San Antonio,” a saga of Texas and the Alamo which should be a minor sized riot where the Texas are concerned….
IT’S GOSSIPED IN MOVIE CIRCLES that Columbia has bought “Burlesque” for Rita Hayworth.

March 18, 1944
Novelette: Irving Berlin arrived the other day from England with messages for kin and loved ones of members of “This Is the Army.” Berlin phoned parents, wives, sweethearts and pals, and took down messages to relay to the boys in his show now abroad. He made several hundred calls.
The most touching: Two soldiers gave him the same name of “the only girl in the world.”

This is “Sister Kenny,” which I thought would be fun to post since Louella Parsons had recently written about it. You may recall that Parsons said Kenny was Rosalind Russell’s house guest while visiting Los Angeles.

Morgan Lithograph’s poster for “The Sheik.”
Fast-cutting, hyper-kinetic trailers and TV spots today sell upcoming films to the general public. In the 1910s-1920s, however, eye-catching visual illustrations like posters and theater displays lured paying customers into movie palaces. Film studios provided lithography companies with photographs or suggested designs around which talented artists produced striking key art promoting the films. Exhibitors rented or purchased the never-ending supply of publicity materials from the studios, manufacturers and exchanges to display throughout their theater or around the town in sizes ranging from half-sheets and one-sheets, to wall-size three- and six-sheets, all the way to gigantic billboard-sized 24-sheets. The Morgan Lithograph Co. reigned as one of the top poster lithographers of this period, creating stunning images branding a company’s product and selling them on a grand scale to consumers.
According to the book, “Cleveland: the Making of a City,” Captain William J. Morgan and his younger brother, George, established the W. J. Morgan & Co. on Superior Street in 1864 to produce broadsheets and various forms of business ephemera (trade cards, pamphlets, blotters, postcards, posters) to advertise local businesses. Increasing orders from surrounding states soon forced the company to abandon using a hand press and employ a punched stamp press to churn out product. They also moved to larger headquarters.
Mary Mallory’s “Hollywoodland: Tales Lost and Found” is available for the Kindle.

March 17, 1944
It’s Friday in 1944 and today we have:
— Andy finally located Madam Queen in “The Amos ‘N’ Andy Show.” Courtesy of Archive.org.
— Constance Bennett is the guest on “Bill Stern’s Sports Newsreel.” Courtesy of Otrrlibrary.org via Archive.org.
— Donald Dame of the Metropolitan Opera is the guest on “To Your Good Health,” a musical program from the House of Squibb. Courtesy of Otrrlibary.org via Archive.org.
— “Vic and Sade.” Courtesy of Archive.org.

March 17, 1944
SNAPSHOTS OF HOLLYWOOD COLLECTED AT RANDOM: The Jack Bennys and Danny Kayes were Joe E. Lewis’ best audience at Slapsy Maxie’s. These two top comedians roared at Joe. Gracie Allen and George Burns were equally appreciative. Gail Patrick and Norman Taurog were also at the opening. They are getting to be a steady duet. Humphrey Bogart’s Dane, Jackson, has been honorably discharged from the canine corps. (On the Q.T. — Jackson was taking nips at friends as well as foes!)

March 5, 1914: Spring training!
I jumped back to 1914 to see if I could find out anything about the Police Commissions order against non-Asian women in Oriental cafes. No luck, alas, but I did find a couple of goodies.
In the first, a crowd of witnesses hisses mounted LAPD Officer M.E. Wise, whom they accused of beating former firefighter Jack Ramsey, who was thrown in the alley behind the Phoenix bar, 121 S. Main, after getting into a fight. Members of the crowd said Wise handcuffed Ramsey and put him in the back of a patrol wagon, then hit him in the face. A police official said that Ramsey attacked other prisoners after being put in the patrol wagon and had to be subdued.
Meanwhile, Police Chief Charlie Sebastian says there are usually complains whenever anyone is arrested in that area (and yes, even 100 years ago Main Street was a tough neighborhood).
In Stockton, the mystery of Ester Crotzer’s disappearance comes to a grisly conclusion with the discovery of a body cut into 11 pieces and stuffed into four sacks.

March 17, 1944:
Faces About Town: Capt. Clark Gable and pretty Virginia Grey. Their chums say, “This is it!” … Lovely Ann Mace, Billy Rose’s tallest showgirl. Her groom, Lt. Al Downs of Westchester, has the miseries since she returned to the Horseshoe line … The Three Stooges going through their mainiactivities in Lindy’s… Raymond Massey putting a sassy stew in his place at El Morocco… Joe E. Brown ankling along Park Avenue — wearing the stares with dignity … George Raft, the cinemenace, ringsiding at the Ubangi … Kath Cornell, the star, wearing galoshes when it’s slushy — her shoes in her hands … At the Hurricane: Gertrude Niesen featuring red, white and blue fingernails …

Diana van Dyne is at Milwaukee’s Empress Burlesk!

March 16, 1944
HOLLYWOOD, March 15 — Charles Boyer was on the 20th Century-Fox lot today, so I knew something was cooking, if you’ll pardon my slang. He was there to talk with Ernst Lubitsch about “The Typhoon,” and because he knows the play he said if he could arrange his commitments at Universal he would do it. All actors like to work with Lubitsch because they can be sure of a good picture. Charles would play a Jap as he did in “Hari-Kiri.”
Ernst is very busy these days, with three pictures in the offing. The first of these, “Czarina,” will get going the last of July with the inimitable Tallulah Bankhead as the star. Yep, Tallulah’s coming back. That means good copy for all the newspaper people and a lot of fun for her friends.

March 16, 1944
It’s Thursday in 1944, and today we have:
— Alan Hale is the guest on “The Abbott and Costello Show.” Courtesy of Otrrlibrary via Archive.org.
— Laird Cregar is the guest with Hans Conried in “Narrative about Clarence” on “Suspense.” Courtesy of Archive.org.

March 16, 1944: “It is impossible to see how there could be a living thing left there.”

March 16, 1944
A newspaperman and radio reporter is as much a part of our political scheme as the statesman, politician and the dime-a-dozen misfits who make the news … As such the reporter should be subjected to just as many brickbats, slanders and innuendos… It is all part of the game, and anybody who can’t take it should not have entered into it in the first place. But by that same American code by which you are obliged to take it, you are also entitled to dish it out … Currently I am being vilified by being called a vilifier … I welcome the attack because it comes from the people I regard as the most contemptible that ever disgraced American citizenship. They believe that their own miserable self-interest is the destiny of this Republic. They think that freedom of speech is the right to lie about the president, that free enterprise means pre-war profits from government money and that the only thing the matter with Hitler is that he doesn’t pay cash … I repeat, I welcome their attacks. They cannot be expected to stick to the rules because they can never afford to stick to the facts.

March 15, 1944
It’s Wednesday in 1944, and today we have:
— Charles Laughton is the guest on “Orson Welles’ Radio Almanac.” More jokes about the income tax. Courtesy of Archive.org.
— “The Lone Ranger.” Courtesy of Archive.org.
— Baritone William Hargrave is the guest on “To Your Good Health,” a musical program from the House of Squibb. Hargrave died at the VA hospital in Los Angeles in 1986. Courtesy of Otrrlibrary via Archive.org.

March 15, 1944
HOLLYWOOD, March 14 — “The Green Years,” the new Dr. A.J. Cronin novel, has been purchased by M-G-M from the galleys. While George Landy of the Frank Vincent office, who handled the deal, is unwilling to mention price I am told it is an all time record for a novel and that was $200,000 paid. The closest to this was $170,000 paid for “Saratoga Trunk.” The story is not Cronin’s autobiography, as many thought. It is about an Irish boy who goes to live with penurious relatives in Scotland and is in a way another “How Green Was My Valley.”
CHATTER IN HOLLYWOOD: Kay Hurrell, who in the opinion of many people in Hollywood behaved like the gallant lady she is at the time of her divorce proceedings is being forced to return to Hollywood by George Hurrell, local photographer. He has filed bankruptcy proceedings involving her source and so she must return for a session which … breaking for her, since … to put the whole thing … her mind.

March 15, 1944
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt (newspaper row hears) is fed up with the way some syndicate clients chop her column to appease local subscribers … Drew Pearson made the identical squawk. Pearson’s beef was that some editors delete the punchiest stuff … A model who won a film contract lost it because (while woofled) she talked too much at the Mocambo in Hollywood…. Ethel Barrymore and her director, Clifford Odets, have eased the tension and dropped the boxing gloves.

March 14, 1944
It’s Tuesday night in 1944, which means we have “Duffy’s Tavern” and “Fibber McGee and Molly.”
— Gertrude Lawrence is this week’s guest on “Duffy’s Tavern.” Courtesy of Archive.org.
— Fibber McGee and Molly hire Beulah. Courtesy of Otrrlibrary.org.