Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

Coffin Snuff Box on EBay

Photo: A coffin snuff box listed on EBay at $2,200.


Queen of the Dead – dateline February 13, 2012

•  It is dangerous to call someone “the last living” whatever, as you will invariably be proved wrong. So I will only say that Florence Green, who died on February 4, aged 110, is reported to have been the last living World War I veteran. Green joined the Women’s Royal Air Force in September 1918, at the age of 17, and, according to her local Norfolk paper, she had as good a time as my own mother did in Miami during the Second World War: “I met dozens of pilots and would go on dates,” said Green. “I had the opportunity to go up in one of the planes but I was scared of flying. It was a lovely experience and I’m very proud.” When asked how it felt being 110, she deadpanned, “Not much different to being 109.”

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Movieland Mystery Photo – Newsboy Cap Edition II [Updated]

Movieland Mystery Photo

Here’s two young mystery lads in newsboy caps. And the movie would be?

How to Wear a Hat – Newsboy Cap Edition
How to Wear a Hat –  ‘Grapes of Wrath’ Edition
Movieland Mystery Photo – Newsboy Cap Edition
How to Wear a Newsboy Cap – Marc Chevalier Edition

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‘Hellzapoppin’ " Opens in Los Angeles

"Hellzapoppin"

Feb. 10, 1942:  The Hawaii Theater at Hollywood and Gower becomes a first-run theater (adios, Charles Foster Kane) with “Hellzapoppin.’ ” The “Congaroos” are “colored performers” who do “snappy dances.” “Stand-ins of the Hollywood stars” sounds like a gag, but it could be real for all I know. And the entertainment is suitable for The Times’ carriers.

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Movieland Mystery Photo – Help the Los Angeles Public Library!

L.A. Public Library Mystery Photo

Dear Brain Trust: Our friends at the Los Angeles Public Library photo collection are trying to identify this photo. I know you can do it!

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Over Protests of Racism, ‘The Clansman’ Opens in Los Angeles

Feb. 6, 1915, The Clansman,

Feb. 9, 1915: The Los Angeles premiere of D.W. Griffith’s “The Clansman” (later retitled “The Birth of a Nation”) provokes protests and an attempt to prevent Clune’s Auditorium from showing the film, which was based on Thomas Dixon’s “The Clansman.”

Opposition to “The Clansman” was led by the Rev. Charles Edward Locke, who said:

“While the mechanical construction of the picture is remarkable yet the theme is to be unequivocally denounced as serving no educational or patriotic or entertainment purpose. It opens afresh wounds that have taken more than a generation to heal. It cannot help but arouse sectional antipathy and revive much of the animosity which prevailed between the North and South 50 years ago… It is a libel against the white people of the South and it is a positive blackmail against the Negro.”

The Los Angeles Board of Censors (yes, there was such a thing) saw a rough cut of the film and approved it, with a few deletions.  W.H. Clune, the owner of Clune’s Auditorium at Olive and 5th, announced that he would show the picture regardless of attempts to halt the film.

“The unexpected opposition to the exhibition of this film has been due to a misunderstanding of the great historical purpose of the picture, which is not an attack on any race or section of the country. It is a most powerful sermon against war and in favor of brotherly love of all sections and nations,” The Times said.

Grace Kingsley follows with a feature on making “The Clansman” and ends by saying: “And now, as one last great difficulty, comes the protest of the darkies and the interference of the police against the exhibition of the picture next week at Clune’s Auditorium.”

Henry Christeen Warnack,who covered the opening for The Times, said that the movie was delayed by the LAPD on orders of the City Council. D.W. Griffith, meanwhile, obtained a court injunction barring interference with the film.

At the intermission, A.P. Tugwell, head of the Board of Censors, addressed the audience, explaining what the censors had done and the dispute over showing the picture. Usherettes in period costumes circulated among the audience, asking people to sign petitions that urged the City Council to let the film be shown.

Columnist Harry Carr followed up with the results of a hearing over the injunction Griffith obtained to bar the City Council from banning the picture.

“In deciding the injunction case yesterday, Judge Jackson addressed a few words to the colored people who half-filled the courtroom.

He told them that, while he did not approve of the play himself, he advised them to stop talking about it and to calm their stormy agitation. ‘There is a certain feeling between the races and there always will be as long as both live in this country,’ said the court. ‘But the production of this play will neither make the position of the colored people better nor worse and it will have no effect whatever upon the standing of the colored citizens of this community.”

As Carr pointed out, the dispute over the film was a bonanza of free publicity.

Thanks to Mary Mallory for pointing out the anniversary!

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U.S. Moves to ‘War Time’

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Feb. 9, 1942: It’s a sad day at the Daily Mirror HQ. No more Jimmie Fidler.

The U.S. moves to Daylight Saving Time “for the duration,” which will last until six months “after the day America wins the war,” The Times says.

You’ll find lots of African Americans in The Times – if you look at the “Situations Wanted” listings in the classified ads. Hm. One job seeker specifies “Gentiles.”

G.K. has a feature on Victor Mature: “Victor doesn’t like being likened to Valentino and isn’t in fact like him…. Is buying Valentino’s house for the view.”

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Mystery Photo

And this movie would be?  I know, too easy, right?

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FBI Continues Raids on Japanese Homes

Feb. 8, 1942, FBI Raids Homes
Feb. 8, 1942, Comics

Feb. 8, 1942: FBI agents lead local law enforcement in the continuing raids on Japanese communities.  “Trunks and storerooms were ransacked, suspicious areas of newly turned earth were dug into and all buildings were carefully investigated,” The Times said. After a night’s work the raiders had seized 18 people, 17 of whom were turned over to immigration. Oh yes, they found a .38 revolver and what they called “war propaganda.”

Kyle Palmer, Richard Nixon’s future cheerleader in chief, looks at reluctance in Washington to calls for removing all Japanese.

“Reasons for the failure of the federal government to make prompt provision for the removal from Pacific Coast defense areas of American-born as well as alien Japanese are based on a feeling here that the citizenship rights of the native-born outweigh the menace to national security which their presence presents.”

I didn’t think it was possible for me to lose any more respect for Kyle Palmer — I figured I didn’t have any left. Whatever vaguely positive feeling  I had was gone.

John Gunther’s “Inside Latin American (nonfiction) and Mary Ellen Chase’s “Windswept” (fiction) lead the bestseller list.

Dwight Franklin, character designer for the studios, is featured in Philip K. Scheuer’s “Town Called Hollywood.” (Jimmie Fidler apparently has the day off).

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Me vs. Wikipedia


no_wikipedia

I drew a range of reactions with my recent post “A World Without Wikipedia: Not Such a Bad Idea,”  in which I said “I don’t know a single serious researcher who considers it anything other than a joke.”

That isn’t precisely true. Most of the scholars, historians and academics I have met do think Wikipedia is a joke — except for the ones who find it an incredibly frustrating cesspool of misinformation. And I don’t know of any college professors who allow students to use it in term papers. That should tell you something about the caliber of its information. In fact, I recently had a conversation with Suzanne Stone, senior researcher for “Jeopardy,” and she, too, said Wikipedia is literally not ready for prime time.  (And for the record, the L.A. Daily Mirror is designated a Wikipedia-free zone).

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Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

Lincoln's Funeral

Image: President Lincoln’s Funeral at the White House, listed on EBay at $375.


Queen of the Dead – dateline February 6, 2012

•  The Prettiest Girl in All of Turkey has died: 98-year-old Keriman Halis Ece, on January 28. She won the Miss Turkey pageant in 1932, and Google-imaging her reveals a pleasant young Barbara Stanwyck-looking type. She then went on to win (are you sitting down, and not drinking anything?) the International Pageant of Pulchritude held in Belgium that same year. (I go all Jayne Mansfield even typing that.) Ece came from an impressive family: her uncle and aunt were composers and musicians, her brother a well-known sportsman, but I can’t find much about what she did later in life. I guess once you have been crowned Princess of Pulchritude, everything else is pretty much downhill.

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Movieland Mystery Photo

I was watching this movie the other day and thought:  that’s….

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Body of Kidnapped Girl Found in Riverbed

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Feb. 4, 1942, Missing Girl Found

Feb. 4, 1942: “As Coroner R.E. Williams and his aides bore the pitiful little body, still clad in her gay blue and white striped red school dress, toward town for an autopsy to determine the cause of death, the hundreds of law enforcement officers and volunteers turned in cold fury to the grim job of tracking down her murderer.”

Shirley Marie Bell, 6, was found in Cajon Wash, strangled with her jump rope. She was apparently abducted on her way to school. Several people reported seeing her on the handlebars of a bicycle ridden by a man headed for the desert. She was crying, one rancher said.

Searchers found the tracks of a man and a child leading into the desert. Then signs of a scuffle and Shirley’s lunchbox.

As news of the tragedy spread among the searchers and onlookers, angry mutterings that the murderer should pay with his life on the end of a rope swelled through the crowd. Sheriff [Emmet L. ] Shay said nothing at this but directed his deputies to be on the alert to guard the life of the suspect, if and when found.

Several men were questioned in the case, and in 1946 suspect John William Carlson showed a surprising amount of knowledge about the incident, although he eventually recanted his story. The killing was never solved.

“It Started With Eve” is opening at the Pantages Hollywood and RKO Hill Street, with “Confessions of Boston Blackie.”

Jimmie Fidler says: Nelson Eddy, who stands so erect, sprawls on chairs and divans.

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Posted in 1942, A Kinder, Simpler Time, Art & Artists, Cold Cases, Columnists, Comics, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Homicide, Jimmie Fidler, World War II | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Feb. 3, 2012, Mystery Photo
[Update: This is Glen Boles. Please congratulate Mike Hawks and Mary Mallory for identifying him!]

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 10 Comments

L.A. County Board Recommends Roundup of All Japanese

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Feb. 3, 1942, Comics

Feb. 3, 1942: The FBI, police and sheriff’s deputies round up 336 “alien Japanese fishermen” on Terminal Island.

“Operating with machine-like efficiency, the FBI agents, headed by J.W. Vincent, in charge of operations, had prepared lists of the names and addresses of all those for whom warrants had been issued,” The Times says.

But that’s not good enough. The Los Angeles County Defense Council  wants to round up “all enemy aliens INCLUDING AMERICAN-BORN JAPANESE UNABLE TO PROVE THEY DO NOT HOLD DUAL CITIZENSHIP.”

After chiding the government for taking so long to round up the Japanese, The Times editorial page says:

“This is a necessary measure, as much for the protection of enemy aliens as for the protection of the United States, and well-disposed aliens will comply with the regulations to the letter. Others will feel the weight of the law. This is war.”

An unidentified California congressman said: “There is no hatred for the Japanese on the Pacific Coast and the demands for ordinary precautions in this situation represent neither hysteria nor any attempts at reprisal for what happened at Pearl Harbor.”

Jimmie Fidler says: Dorothy Lamour has inaugurated the idea of giving Defense Stamps as tips.

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Angry Butcher Cuts Wife’s Throat

Feb. 2, 1942, Marshall Islands

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Betty Rowland at the Follies!


6152 Agra St., Bell Gardens
Photo: 6152 Agra St. Credit: Google Street View.


Feb. 2, 1942: Lewis Buell Chase dialed the sheriff’s substation in Firestone Park and told a deputy: “I have just murdered a woman.”

He had gone to the home of his estranged wife, Susie, at 6152 Agra St., Bell Gardens, to see if she would sign some papers. They argued, and as their 11-year-old son, Robert, played outside, he slashed her jugular vein with a boning knife.

He was convicted of first-degree murder with a recommendation of life in prison. Robert Chase was left in the custody of his grandmother, Mrs. Roxie Shipp, also of Bell Gardens.

Police are also investigating the shooting of palm reader Madame Lorraine, allegedly by her protege, Charlotte Jean Le Nord.

The women, described as “motion picture fans,” had recently seen a film involving Russian roulette and police speculate that they were imitating the movie when the shooting occurred. I guess she didn’t see that one coming.

In cage ball, referees at a game between Southern Oregon College and Monmouth were kept off the floor. Instead, the officials were placed in two “crow’s nests” behind the baskets.

Coaches, players and fans say the system is an improvement, allowing a faster game.

Referee Frank O’Neil said: “It virtually eliminated petty pushing, hacking and the like. Players found they couldn’t get away with it and didn’t try.”

Jimmie Fidler says: The fact that  eight out of 1941’s top 10 box office stars were men (Bette Davis and Judy Garland were the exceptions) points directly to my oft-repeated statement that there is too much sameness among actresses.

(The eight men are: Mickey Rooney, Clark Gable, Bob Hope, Gene Autry, Jimmy Cagney, Gary Cooper, Spencer Tracy and Abbott and Costello.)

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William Desmond Taylor Shot!

Feb. 3, 1922, William Desmond Taylor

Mary Mallory points out that this is the 90th anniversary of William Desmond Taylor’s death. I did several posts when the Daily Mirror was at The Times:

William Desmond Taylor, Mystery Guest | Crime scene photos

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Posted in 1922, Cold Cases, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Homicide | Tagged | 7 Comments

Stravinsky Premieres ‘Danses Concertantes’ in Los Angeles

Feb. 1, 1942, Japan Unmasked

Feb. 1, 1942, Igor Stravinsky
Feb. 1, 1942: The Times serializes Hallett Abend’s “Japan Unmasked.” Abend (d. 1955) was The Times city editor from 1920 to 1924 and was later a Far East correspondent for the New York Times.  (Note: An interesting line from his obituary: “He had been living in recent weeks with a longtime friend, Morgan Craig.”  A little digging reveals that Craig was not a longtime friend. He was Abend’s son. Oops. )

When I waxed hot and angry because of my own certainties, and offered bets at odds that we would be at war with Japan by Christmas of 1941, I was looked at pityingly for a fool.

The Werner Janssen Orchestra premieres Igor Stravinsky’s “Danses Concertantes,” his first work composed in the United States.   As is often the case, The Times clips are a mixed blessing. The concert was covered, which is good, but it was reviewed by longtime critic Isabel Morse Jones, whose mangled review of a “Don Giovanni” performance is one of the most unintentionally humorous critiques I have ever read.

The woman who thought the Don got his way with women all through Mozart’s opera (sorry, no, that’s part of the joke) does not disappoint with lines like:

Stravinsky’s conducting is an aid to the audience as well as the orchestra. It, too, is streamlined and watching him, one is reminded that it is the merest chance that he wasn’t a dancer instead of the most important modern composer to write music for the ballet.

Jimmie Fidler says: After seven years as a 20th Century-Fox star, Jane Withers is leaving that studio to freelance. I doff my bonnet to Jane (and her manager-mamma) for pluck shown in making this move. I know she was offered a huge salary to stay on and in current times it takes nerve to turn down a sure thing.

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Movieland Mystery Photo – Newsboy Cap Edition [Updated +]

Movieland Mystery Photo

Almost everybody wears a newsboy cap in this film. What could it be?
[Please congratulate Dewey Webb, Mike Hawks, Don Danard, Mary Mallory and Rotter for identifying the movie — or our mystery fellow in the incredible sweater. ]

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U.S. Urged to Evacuate Japanese Immediately

Jan. 31, 1942, Japanese Evacuation

Jan. 31, 1942, Comics

Jan. 31, 1942: Members of Congress from the West Coast call on the U.S. to expedite the evacuation of “enemy aliens,” a term that includes native-born people of Japanese ancestry. Officials concede that some of them may be loyal – but in wartime, why take a chance?

Note the byline: Kyle Palmer, who would forge a dubious legacy as one of Richard Nixon’s most ardent and unquestioning cheerleaders. (Nixon was, in fact, a pallbearer at Palmer’s funeral.).

Palmer’s inverted sentence structure is particularly remarkable:

Taking sharp issue with the leisurely program of the Department of Justice for evacuating enemy aliens and possible sympathizers from Pacific Coast defense areas, members of Congress from California, Oregon and Washington today approved recommendations calling for immediate action.

And:

Speedy exercise of authority by President Roosevelt and Army and Navy authorities to clear the vital defense areas of enemy aliens at once was advocated.

And:

Expressions of dissatisfaction with the government’s procedure to date with indicated plans for carrying out the evacuation program were voiced by those attending the conference of Western States representatives.

And so on.

It reminds me of Wolcott Gibbs’ satire on the language once used in Time magazine:  “Backward ran sentences until reeled the mind. Where it will all end, knows God.” This odd, stiff language also appears in the opening newsreel portion of “Citizen Kane” and I’m sure it was intentional.

Dateline Ennis, Texas. “Seven Negroes were killed and a white woman was injured when a tornado leveled two houses” in Bristol.  No names are provided on the seven dead blacks, but the injured white woman is Mrs. Walter Sparkman.

Ouch. The old newspapers are full of this kind of thing.

A few days ago,I posted that Traffic Engineer R.T. Dorsey was advocating a program of staggered work shifts to reduce downtown traffic. I wondered at the time whether rationing of gas and tires — and the halt in passenger car production — would increase the use of mass transit.

The answer is: yes.

Los Angeles Railway officials announce that use of streetcars and buses increased 7.3% since April. Pacific Electric passenger revenue is up 20% for the first three weeks of January, compared to a year ago.

“The Man Who Came to Dinner” opens at Warners Hollywood and Downtown.

Jimmie Fidler says: CONFIDENTIAL COMMUNIQUE to Dorothy Lamour — I commend your fine attitude when, after working hard for Defense Bond sales and then being denied the privilege of visiting an airplane factory because “your presence would delay production,” you were American enough to refuse a higher-up’s offer to intervene for you.
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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Jan. 30, 2012, Mystery Photo

Here’s another photo from the collection of Steven Bibb!

[Update: This is Emlyn Williams. Please congratulate former Mystery Photo star B.J. Merholz, Mike Hawks and Mary Mallory for identifying him! ]

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