
A moment in history from the Los Angeles Examiner.

A moment in history from the Los Angeles Examiner.

This week’s “unsuitable” mystery movie was the 1931 First National Pictures film The Ruling Voice, with Walter Huston, Loretta Young, Dudley Digges, David Manners, Doris Kenyon, John Halliday, Willard Robertson, Gilbert Emery and Douglas Scott. Continue reading

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
October 20, 1907
Los Angeles
Winsor McCay and his cartoons never completely go out of fashion and are periodically rediscovered—as in the current Taschen anthology. He was a fabulous artist and his Sunday panels remain a marvel of fantasy and rebellion against the tyranny of pigeonhole boxes. Living as we do in the era of legacy comics (Charles Schulz has been dead since 2000); bland, humorless writing; weak drawing; and panels shrunk to the size of postage stamps, it’s easy to think that comics aficionados 100 years ago were fortunate to get strips that ran a full page.
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Correction: This post (and the original version from 2006) misspelled the artist’s first name, Winsor, as Windsor. We were so worried about spelling his last name, McCay, properly that we overlooked his first name.
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October 19, 1957
Edwin Anthony Browne, playboy newspaperman of another day, is revisiting L.A. after 20 years and he is aghast.
Perhaps aghast is too strong a word. Let’s say amused or mildly interested.
Brownie, an innocent-looking cherub but a deadly man in his day in running down a story or a bottle, is not given to emotional expression. In fact, his indifference to what most people consider important is colossal. Continue reading
October 19, 1957
Most good writers are also good listeners.
And Hollywood scenarist Jack Wagner isn’t an exception to the rule.
In fact, Jack often goes it one better by listening in the right places at the right times.
Forty-seven years ago, Jack sat in the plaza of the north Mexico town of Gomez Palacio and listened.
He heard storekeepers grumble softly about the soldiers of Presidente Porfirio Diaz. The soldiers, they complained, had an ugly habit of
grabbing merchandise off the shelves and laughing:
“Charge it to Porfirio.” Continue reading

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.
RIVERSIDE, Oct. 18.—Gov. Earl Warren was formally and officially called on here today by the executive committee of the California Republican State Central Committee to become a candidate for president of the United States.
Resolutions urging Warren to consent to the selection of the delegates pledged to place him in nomination at the GOP convention in Philadelphia June 20, 1948, were adopted without a dissenting vote.
Earlier in the day the candidates and fact-finding committee of the California Republican Assembly, meeting in Riverside’s Mission Inn coincidentally with the executive committee session, adopted a similar resolution…..
This appears to be just another photo of water spouting from a fire hydrant that was hit by a car. And indeed it is.
But wait! What’s that weird building in the background? Continue reading
Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
October 19, 1907
Los Angeles
On a visit to Japan, K. Tsuneda of California met an attractive young woman named Toku. Telling her family that he was a wealthy Stanford student, Tsuneda married Toku and they embarked for the United States so his new wife could get an American education.
Her education began the moment they arrived in San Francisco: Tsuneda revealed that he was neither wealthy, nor a Stanford student. In fact, they both had to go to work. They moved from Berkeley to Redlands, where they separated. After reuniting briefly in Los Angeles, Tsuneda vanished, Toku said in seeking a divorce.
October 18, 1957
If pressed, most persons who preside at information and complaint desks will admit there are times when they don’t think the human race is going to make it. Sanity and/or serenity, they mean.
Not long ago, a woman phoned the complaint desk at the City Health Department and said, “I want to report a health menace–my doorbell is out of order.”
Another non sequitur came from a lady who said she lived next door to a pet shop which sold horse meat. This she considered very unsanitary. “I’m expecting a baby,” she added, “and I think something should be done about it.” Continue reading

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.
NEURNBERG, Oct. 17 (A.P.)—S.S. Gen. Erich Naumann, whose commandos killed thousands of Jewish men, women and children on the eastern front, told a war crimes court today he saw nothing wrong with that.
He was one of the leading defendants in the case against the Einsatz command groups which Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himmler formed to eradicate whole races.

October 18, 1943: Los Angeles is in the middle of a paternity suit brought by Shirley Evans Hassau, 21, against Errol Flynn. Hassau charged that Flynn was the father of her daughter Marilyn, who was 3. Hassau was seeking $1,750 a month child support, $10,000 in attorneys fees, $5,000 for hospital expenses and $2,000 in court costs.
An aunt, Florence Muller of San Francisco, had raised Marilyn since she was 5 weeks old and refused to let Hassau see her, The Times said.
Hassau’s suits against Flynn were dismissed in 1951. In 1940, two weeks after Marilyn was born, Flynn agreed to pay Hassau $2,000 although he denied being the father. The actor said he wanted to avoid a long court trial and adverse publicity.

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
October 18, 1907
Los Angeles
For the last month, the pages of The Times have been peppered with pen-and-ink cartoons signed Gale—in fact some of them have already appeared in the blog, with Nathan’s post on Japanese hobos and mine on Marco Vessella. But that was only the beginning. By the end of the month, Gale’s cartoons have become a regular feature of The Times, usually paired with text by Harry Carr. Gale specializes in ethnic caricatures: Chinamen with long queues, bucktoothed Japanese, Mexicans with sombreros—and don’t even ask how he draws African Americans.
His name was Edmund Waller Gale, but he was known as Ted or “Cartoonist Gale” and he was an institution at The Times, drawing editorial cartoons for decades, on an irregular basis before they became a daily feature in 1922.
Oct. 17, 1957
It was recently stated here that the origin of Murphy’s Law, a derisive bit of whimsy among airplane people, was unknown. The “law” states, “If an aircraft part can be installed incorrectly, someone will figure out how to do it.”
Now the man who formulated this precept of human fallibility, George B. Murphy of Venice, an aircraft factory inspector, has come forward to acknowledge responsibility. He has also recounted a recent experience bearing on the same subject.
A young machinist brought him a part to inspect and he found it was out of tolerance by .001 of an inch and rejected it.
The youth insisted it was in tolerance because he handled .005. Continue reading
Oct. 17, 1957
He sat nervously in the chair opposite me. The staccato beat in his speech reflected his anxiety.
“Nothing would ever have happened to me,” he said, “except that on her dead body was found my name.
“I had a job and everything was nice. I was living in Jersey, in Newark.
“It was headline in all the papers–that she was murdered.
“She lived in Phoenixville, in Pennsylvania, but it wasn’t far from Newark. Sixty, 70 miles.”
“When?” I interrupted. “When was all this?”
The young man paused. “That was…let’s see–March of ’54.” Continue reading

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
October 17, 1907
Los Angeles
Mr. Woolin, left tackle of the USC team, took great exception to be tackled by one of the black players on the Whittier State team (one of Whittier’s five black players) and voiced his displeasure, emphasizing his point with his fist.
Whittier’s coach, Mr. McLouth, rushed to intervene, whereupon Mr. Woolin further expressed his disdain by striking him in the face. Coach McLouth responded in kind. Peace was eventually restored until Whittier’s water boy came onto the field and retaliated against Mr. Woolin, and had the Whittier team not retreated from the field, the unpleasantness might have continued.
Continue reading
October 16, 1957
On a recent clear evening about an hour after sunset, Chet Kennedy of Sun Valley looked up and apparently saw not only Saturn but some of its rings.
The planet was a bead “blazing with bright glory in the southwest sky,” he said. Nearby was a smaller bead, possibly one of Saturn’s 11 moons. The rings on the left side, he said, seemed to be in shadow. There also was a dark streak across the center of the planet.
Unwilling to accept the verdict of his own eyes, he pointed out the unusual sight to neighbors and they said they saw the same thing.
“Here’s this wonderful object spinning away at its business,” said Chet, “and here we are worrying ourselves sick about Sputnik.” Continue reading
October 16, 1957
At 3:24 a.m., the ambulance arrived.
The victim was rushed to Hollywood Receiving Hospital for emergency treatment. His condition was critical. He was then taken to General Hospital.
Nine hours later, he was pronounced dead.
That was still quite a few hours before his letter reached me. When it came, I read it a couple of times.
Then I called his wife.
“I’ve been expecting your call,” she told me. “He mentioned it–that you’d contact me–in the note he left me.” Continue reading

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.
Sixteen policewomen who will be graduated at 3 p.m. tomorrow from the Police Academy after their training course visited the City Attorney’s office yesterday to receive instructions in legal procedure.
The class is the first to wear the new uniform recently adopted by the Police Commission and the first group of women to receive pistol training at the academy.
This is a puzzlement. Does this mean policewomen didn’t carry weapons before 1947? Stay tuned.
Answer: Yes! In 1947, the LAPD changed the uniform for policewomen and gave them a shoulder-slung black purse with a .38 revolver and handcuffs.
Quote of the day: “I Like Ike”
New slogan of the Draft Eisenhower for President League.
Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
October 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.