
Sept. 14, 1947: Let’s see. White couples or single women wanted. Age limit 55 years.
No, we don’t do this anymore.


Sept. 14, 1947: Let’s see. White couples or single women wanted. Age limit 55 years.
No, we don’t do this anymore.



Note: This is an encore post from 2013.
Joseph and Anna Lewis, 2630 Johnston St., Highland Park, had been married for 42 when she disappeared.
Not that Joseph, 72, a carpenter, was particularly concerned about her absence. Police were not informed of the disappearance until her daughter Shirley returned from a vacation in Montana and learned that her mother was missing.
According to Anna’s brother Charles Biba, she had visited in Chicago and boarded a direct flight to Los Angeles on Aug. 13.
Joseph told police “she has probably run off with some man,” but allowed investigators to search the home and agreed to a polygraph test — which he “passed with flying colors,” The Times said. Further investigation revealed that he had filed for divorce while his wife was gone.
Note: This is an encore post from 2008.
By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer
The Dodgers’ first season in Los Angeles was tough on Duke Snider.
The veteran outfielder’s power numbers were way down in 1958, thanks to knee trouble and the huge dimensions of the Coliseum that were impossible for a left-handed hitter. He would hit only 15 home runs in 1958, after hitting at least 40 home runs each season from 1953-57.
Snider received a little unwelcome publicity when The Times headlined the news that he and pitcher Clem Labine “faced the prospect” of fines or other discipline for violating a team rule on a game day in Pittsburgh.
Their offense–they played golf.
The story had a small presence on the sports cover, but it was on the cover! It wasn’t packaged with the Dodgers’ game story that night, which makes me wonder if something dropped out or came up short late. Continue reading

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.
Someday an inquisitive person studying the history of transportation and urban planning will tell the world exactly what became of Los Angeles’ 1947 blueprint for dealing with transit problems. In the meantime, we’ll have to settle for the knowledge that at least they made a valiant effort. They certainly knew what was coming—without much argument, you could call them futurists.
A committee sponsored by the California Chamber of Commerce spent 19 months studying transportation issues and warned that someday Los Angeles would have a population of 5 million (the 2000 population of Los Angeles County was 9,519,338, with 3,694,820 for the city of L.A.).
“High-speed rail transit arteries plus a system of downtown subways alone can save Los Angeles from disintegration into a hodge-podge of unconnected municipalities,” The Times said in quoting the project’s advocates.


September 13, 1942: Retired Lt. George H. Williams,who held LAPD retirement Badge 1, dies at the age of 84. He retired in 1912 after serving with the department for 23 years and was in charge of the detail that brought bodies out of the Times Building after the 1910 bombing.
Washington is testing “standsit” seats for its streetcars and buses to accommodate more passengers and use less steel, which is needed for the war.
Homicide Detectives Ray Varela and R.J. Hollis kill murder suspect Richard Emilio Diaz after tracking him to a downtown garage.
Bert Grossman dies at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital after telling police that two men “accosted him and forced him to drink from a bottle of ‘some bitter liquid.’ ”
“Panama Hattie” starring Ann Sothern is opening at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre and Loew’s State.

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
Sept. 13, 1907
Los Angeles
The family was too poor to take a streetcar, so Concepcion Parra, 60, and her sister Mrs. J.L. Ghiotto began walking the 12 miles to El Monte with Parra’s 5-year-old granddaughter, Delphina Verde, to see the girl’s mother. To save time, they took a shortcut along the streetcar tracks.
Around State Street, they jumped back to avoid a southbound car from Pasadena and were hit by a northbound car. Parra (or Parras) and Ghiotto were thrown clear by the collision, but Delphina was crushed under the wheels.

September 12, 1944
Danton Walker says: Huge orders for railroad cars, motors, trucks, etc., have already arrived here from France, first indication of U.S. industry’s bite of postwar business.
Louella Parsons says: Hunt Stromberg’s plan to make “Blood and Guts” is a natural. Of course, it’s the life story of Lt. Gen. George S. Patton Jr., and the way he took the American Army right through the German lines. Hunt has contacted Mrs. Patton and he hopes to be able to get some data from the general, if the war is over as soon as we all hope. Bob Considine has been contacted to write the script. Charles Bickford, rough and ready, will have the role of the great soldier. Gen. Patton, to whom war comes first, won the respect of his men, and their unanimous support, even after the much publicized “slap” episode.
Through the grapevine, ’tis whispered Capt. Ronald Reagan, who has been in the service since the beginning of the war, may be out the first of the year. He has a wife and child. If this is true, Ronnie will probably resume his movie career in “The Voice of the Turtle,” which is a natural for him.
VIRGO: No vestpocket effort or half-hearted try will accomplish a thing. Big business needs big action, anticipation and above average comprehension. All these and more you can deliver.
From the Philadelphia Inquirer via Fultonhistory.com.


September 12, 1944
Charles Holdren, 45, lived at 1515 Trolleyway, Venice, with his wife, Ellen, and daughters from a previous marriage: Virginia, 20, Peggy, 18, and Lois, 13. He worked as a fish cutter and after Charles and Ellen had spent Sunday drinking heavily, he decided to go to bed.
Where he found his wife, Ellen, 44.
The Times said he “objected to her presence in bed when he started to retire.”
At the Wilshire-Ebell Theatre: Rainbow Rhapsody with ‘Spectratone.’
“Boogie-Woogie Blue Plate” is No. 2on this week’s juke box hits.

Sept. 11, 1947: KLAC disc jockey Al Jarvis replies to Earl Griffin’s criticisms in last week’s Sentinel. “To knowingly plug a sponsor who discriminates against the Negro race is contrary to every belief I have ever had or ever will have.”

Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.
“Big Bill,” driver for Maier & Zobelein, blockaded a procession of cars on Spring Street yesterday afternoon because he was insulted and angry. He had driven his big brewery wagon too close to the tracks and a passing car rolled one of the kegs of beer into the gutter and spilled the contents. For revenge, “Bill” drove his wagon into such a position that not a car could pass north on Spring Street and the trolley coaches began to pile up behind the foam cart.
The team was allowed to stand and “Bill” went into the saloon to refresh himself and cool off as much as possible.

September 11, 1944
You needn’t be surprised if you find Mervyn LeRoy producing pictures in Bulgaria, setting up shop in Italy or moving into France. Mervyn has formed an independent producing company to be known as the Arrowhead Productions.
When Fred Allen faces the cameras come Monday, he’ll have Binnie Barnes, gifted actress, as his screen vis a vis.
VIRGO: The more you extend yourself and the less worry and doubt you engage, the fuller the response you receive. Industry, professions favored.
From the Philadelphia Inquirer via Fultonhistory.com

September 11, 1943: The Times features the Los Angeles Times-Army Ordnance in Action Show being held at Exposition Park.
The Times promised that
“visitors will see the massive 32-ton Gen. Sherman tanks whose tough armor and deadly firepower blasted the vaunted divisions of Marshal Rommel from the sands of Africa.
They will see tanks in action, their cannon and machine guns firing, in a grimly realistic simulation of an actual battle.They will see the dreaded Long Tom, 155-millimeter mobile rifle, whose long, probing muzzles sought out enemy targets with devastating accuracy.”
What visitors will not do is take pictures — cameras will be will be confiscated, The Times warns.
Expatriate novelist Lion Feuchtwanger is fighting eviction by his landlords from a home at 13827 Sunset Blvd.

Photo: City Hall, Sunday, Sept. 11, 2011. Credit: Larry Harnisch/LADailyMirror.com
Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
Sept. 11, 1907
Direct Wire From New York
Wow! Now this is the kind of quote one simply doesn’t see every day, at least in the 21st century. The Victorians certainly had a different attitude toward women’s physiques:
“The woman who gets the proper sort of corset will have the fashionable figure, even if she weighs a ton.”



Note: This is an encore post from 2005 and originally appeared on the 1947project.
There are some obstacles that even love cannot overcome, or so David Everett has discovered. The 30-year-old mechanic is in critical condition at Torrance General Hospital after shooting himself in the head and neck in despondency over his frustrated love for his 17-year-old first cousin Janet. And yes, she lives in a trailer park.
Everett is the man who was handing out $100 tips the other day after withdrawing all his money from the bank. Not just to Flora Killingsworth for bringing him ham and eggs, but to 15-year-old newsboy Edward Grant for a nickel paper, and to a cabdriver who took him to Glendale. To top it off, Everett ripped up some $100 bills and threw them in the street.

Sept. 10, 1944
The influence of Andre de Toth, the director, has been very important in the life of Veronica Lake. She is no longer the girl who doesn’t care. She cares very much now what people think of her, and she is eager to win the respect of fellow workers and to explain why she has done some of the things in the past that have brought criticism on her — not really serious things, but impulsive, foolish little exhibitions of her temperament.
From the Philadelphia Inquirer via Fultonhistory.com.

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.
September 10, 1907
Los Angeles
A very uncertain day. No evil omens glare anywhere but in all aspects there lies a heavy veil, defying those who would peer into this day. Beware, therefore, of all and any unconsidered act. Promise nothing unless you comprehend clearly the full scope and limit of the pledge. Sign neither note nor contract this day without full security in your hand. Avoid speculative enterprises like the plague.
“A red flag flows wildly” this day. Take heed that neither spark nor flame be left carelessly in dangerous places. Do not retire tonight without guarding against fire with much more care than usual. A great fire is threatened for a large city on the Atlantic Coast this night.
Reminder: Boxie and I will be doing a live “Ask Me Anything” on George Hodel and Steve Hodel on Tuesday, September 16, 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!