
This is one of my favorite discoveries from the city archives, a description of tattoo shops in Los Angeles by an anonymous citizen.
September 2, 1943
Dear Sir,
I recently made an investigation of the tattoo shops here and the persons who operate them, for a friend of mine, whose young son, age 13, had been marked up like a circus freak by a so called (professor) Freaser.
Of course I knew nothing and cared less about this business until I saw the filthy conditions under which they operate, which are just about as filthy and unsanitary as the restaurants in which I am compelled to eat. Of course I know that no one in the city or state govt. is interested in their sanitation or the filth of the foods they serve. As long as they pay their license they can poison any one they want to and get away with it.
Sept. 3, 1943: Councilman Ira McDonald’s attempt to regulate tattoo shops brought this anonymous response, which I unearthed in the city archives.
Photo: Undated postcard showing Artoria, tattooed by C.W. Gibbons, Los Angeles
The daily NewsWatch of the
I’m moving to 

Here’s the mystery of the see-through car. Hemmings Motor News has a feature on
My hair (or what’s left of it) stood on end when I read this portion of 



I guess you could yodel like 


Michele is wondering about a fellow named Wolfgang Krause-Brandstetter, a German writer who was in the U.S. as a representative of Tauchnitz, which was affiliated with Albatross Press “a British-owned firm that printed and sold Anglo-American paperbacks in English from German in the 1930s.”

This unusual combination of Batchelder tiles has been listed on EBay. I have seen individual tiles from this series, like the one at right, in previous listings, but this is the first time I’ve seen a combination of them.
Photograph by Larry Harnisch /ladailymirror.com