Matt Weinstock, Aug. 3, 1960

 
Aug. 3, 1960, Comics Look! It’s a 1959 Pontiac! With whitewalls!

Aug. 3, 1960: Jeri Miyazaki, who plays the title role so appealingly in "The World of Suzie Wong" at the Biltmore Theater, was born in a California wartime internment camp for citizens of Japanese ancestry. It is nice to see someone emerge successfully from what was one of the black pages in California history — the cruel and unnecessary detention of 100,000 persons during WWII, Matt Weinstock says.

DEAR NO THANKS: The next time you see the boys starting a fire, call the fire department and let it "handle the matter." Don't worry about getting involved, Abby says. 

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Paul Coates Is on Vacation

 
Aug. 3, 1960, Mirror

Aug. 3, 1960: Paul Coates will return Aug. 8. On the jump, more about missing NSA analysts Bernon F. Mitchell and William H. Martin, who fled to the Soviet Union.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Aug. 3, 1940

 
Aug. 3, 1940, British Bombs

Aug. 3, 1940, Paris
Aug. 3, 1940, Occupied Paris

Aug. 3, 1940: Jimmie Fidler’s staff says: Have you seen Jeanette MacDonald's new custom-built jalopy, upholstered in the MacDonald plaid and rigged with a horn that tootles "The Campbells Are Coming?"

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L.A. Makes Theater Censor Billboards for Play

 
Aug. 3, 1910, Budweiser

Aug. 3, 1910: Remember that beer is a health drink – like “liquid bread.” On the jump, the manager of the Grand Operahouse is arrested for violating the city’s billboard laws over posters for “Queen of the Highway.” Accompanied by a police officer, a worker went around Los Angeles and covered up the offending portions of the posters, “showing pictures of holdups, fights and other scenes in which weapons were freely exhibited.”

Unfortunately, I’m unable to locate any copies of these posters. It would be interesting to know what they looked like.

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Matt Weinstock, Aug. 2, 1960

 
Aug. 2, 1960, Comics A  cargo of stolen Caltechium?

Aug. 2, 1960: What do you suppose is in Caltechium?

Matt Weinstock looks at one family’s problems in having a swimming pool.

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NSA Analysts Defect to Soviet Union

Aug. 2, 1960, Mirror Cover

Aug. 2, 1960: William H. Martin and Bernon F. Mitchell of the National Security Agency defect to the Soviet Union. See David Kahn's classic work "The Codebreakers" and James Bamford's 1982 "The Puzzle Palace" for more details.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Aug. 2, 1940

 Aug. 2, 1940, Nazi Planes  

Aug. 2, 1940, Tom Treanor

Tom Treanor, who was killed covering World War II for The Times, gets a “silent interview” with the Duchess of Windsor. 

Aug. 2, 1940: Ha! Gladys Swarthout, arriving in slacks, quickly rolled them to her knees under her mink coat and made an elegant entrance into swank Ciro's, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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De Palma’s ‘Home Movies’

 

Aug. 2, 1980, Dressed to Kill

Aug. 2, 1980, Brian De Palma

Aug. 2, 1980: Brian De Palma’s “Dressed to Kill” is a runaway hit. His film “Home Movies,” which is also in release, not so much.  “Home Movies” is not on Netflix, but you can find the VHS version on EBay. Predictably, it gets the minimum five stars given to all films on imdb.

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From the Vaults: ‘The Watcher in the Woods’ (1980)

Watcherposter Well, "Watcher in the Woods"  is certainly an odd film. Starring Bette Davis and the radiant, fresh-off-of-"Ice Castles" Lynn-Holly Johnson, it hails from an era of vaguely dark and weird Disney films: "The Black Hole" had come out the previous year, and a couple years later they'd release a little something called "Tron." There's also "Something Wicked This Way Comes" (1983) and "Escape to Witch Mountain" (1975) — it's probably too much to call these movies edgy, exactly, but they're a far cry from "The Santa Clause" and "Beverly Hills Chihuahua."

I guess the idea was to appeal to adolescents; the tone of these older movies tends to veer toward the dark and creepy without having there really be a lot of actual nastiness. "Watcher" certainly sets up with the evil fairy-tale tropes, but Bette Davis turns out to be a nice old mom instead of a witch, and the monster in the woods (spoiler) is just a benign force that's lost its way. Whew! We will sleep well tonight.

Lynn-Holly (I do love a girl with two first names) arrives with her parents and little sister at the big country house they're renting in Britain. Creepy old Mrs. Aylworth (Davis), the landlady, rents them the place because Lynn-Holly's Jan reminds her of her own daughter, who disappeared 30 years ago. "Are you kind?" Mrs. A. demands of Jan. "Are you sensitive? Do you… sense things?"

Jan does, in fact. As soon as she walks in the house, she's seeing things and moaning, "Something awful happened here. I can feel it. Something awful." She has visions of a blindfolded girl, and of triangles and circles and flashes of unexplained light in the woods. This movie gets tons of mileage out of Jan sensing things. Meanwhile, little sister Ellie is hearing things: whispers, disembodied voices singing songs. What's going on?

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Brave Officer Halts Runaway Horse

 Aug. 2, 1910, Runaway Horse

Aug. 2, 1910, Officer Green

Aug. 2, 1910: Patrolman R.M. Green was directing traffic at 3rd and Main streets when a runaway horse pulling a light wagon plunged toward the intersection. Green jumped into the back of the wagon and made his way to the driver’s seat and then onto the horse’s back, halting the animal.

"A dozen collisions were narrowly averted and people fled in terror from the path of the runaway, only to turn on the sidewalk and stare in amazement at the strange spectacle of this man in blue hanging over the neck of the horse, much as a mountain lion would have done," The Times said.

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Matt Weinstock, Aug. 1, 1960

 
image
Aug. 1, 1960, Comics

Aug. 1, 1960: Matt Weinstock observes the newsroom travels of a popular coffee cup.

CONFIDENTIAL TO H.H.: There is an old Chinese proverb you should paste in your hat. "The mouth is wind but the pen leaves tracks." Be careful of what you say — but be doubly careful of what you put in writing, Abby says.

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Paul Coates Is on Vacation

Aug. 1, 1960, Mirror
 
Aug. 1, 1960, Mirror  

Aug. 1, 1960: The Mirror gets a new nameplate! Paul Coates is on vacation until Aug. 8.

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Movieland Mystery Photo

 
July 31, 2010, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Aug. 1, 2010, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

March 18, 1929, Robert Ober
March 18, 1929: Robert Ober to direct at MGM.

Update: Our weekend mystery guest is Robert Ober (d. 1950). Saturday’s picture shows him in “A Reno Divorce” with May McAvoy in a photo marked Jan. 5, 1928. Sunday’s picture shows him in an undated photo.

Here’s our weekend mystery fellow, with a mystery companion. To keep the weekend posts more informal, I post answers as they come in rather than waiting until the end.

This week’s mystery guest was Marjorie Bennett. Thanks to Carmen for being the Daily Mirror’s guest host!

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Workers Save Children From Fire at Jewish Orphans Home

 
Aug. 1, 1910, Orphan Home Burns

535 Mission Mission Road via Google maps’ street view.

Aug. 1, 1910: A short circuit in the attic starts a fire that destroys the Jewish Orphans Home at 535 Mission Road. Disregarding their own safety, Rabbi Sigmund Frey and Emma  Rives got the youngsters out of the burning building and went back to search for any that might have been left behind. The fire claimed Frey’s large library of books, including the first Greek Bible published in the U.S., The Times said.

Frey died in 1930 at the age of 77.

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Found on EBay – Mason Opera House

mason_opera_house_ebay A nice postcard of the Mason Opera House (now the site of a huge, vacant pit on Broadway between 1st and 2nd streets) has been listed on EBay. The Mason Opera House/Operahouse was one of the leading theaters in Los Angeles and featured many top performers of the early 20th century,  including Ruth St. Denis, Julian Eltinge and Geraldine Farrar

The Mason was demolished in the 1950s to make way for a Cold War Moderne state building and Concrete Nouveau parking structure that were finally torn down after being damaged in the Northridge quake. 

Bidding starts at $6.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, July 31, 1940

 
July 31, 1940, Italian Army Joins Blitzkrieg

July 31, 1940

Tom Treanor, who was killed covering World War II for The Times,  interviews Salvador Dali in Lisbon.

July 31, 1940: Gilbert Roland and Peter Lorre are off on a hunting trip, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Dr. Crippen

 
July 15, 1910, Belle Elmore

July 15, 1910: Belle Elmore, buried in the cellar.

July 15, 1910, Dr. Crippen

July 15, 1910: Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen.

July 15, 1910, Crippen

July 15- 30, 1910: Murder-suspense stories don’t get much better than that of Dr. Hawley H. Crippen, an American  living in London who ran off with his secretary after killing his wife and burying her body in the cellar in a particularly gruesome fashion – original newspaper accounts said that most of her bones were missing. 

Here’s a thumbnail of the sensational case: Crippen, who lived with his family in California as a young man, led a fairly nomadic life in the medical profession, spending time in Los Angeles, San Diego, Salt Lake City, Brooklyn, N.Y., Philadelphia and Toronto.

Somewhere in his wanderings, he  met vaudeville actress Belle Elmore, known “for her good looks and laughing disposition,” who was born Kunigunde Makomarkski and used the names Cora and Corrine Turner, according to Elmore’s sister.

The Crippens went to England and since 1908 had lived at 39 Hilldrop Crescent, North London.  Dr. Crippen was involved in  a rather mysterious business that kept him away from home and he became involved with his secretary, Ethel Clara Le Neve, whose name was spelled many ways in the old newspapers. 

In April 1910, Dr. Crippen wrote to a letter to his in-laws, saying that his wife had died in California during a sudden, unexpected trip to arrange an inheritance of some property. Another of Dr. Crippen’s letters, advising a theatrical guild of his wife’s death, aroused suspicions because he misspelled her last name as Ellmore instead of Elmore and guild officials contacted investigators. 

Dr. Crippen disappeared after an initial police interview and investigators thoroughly searched the house, discovering a mutilated body covered with quicklime in the cellar. Police began hunting Dr. Crippen and Le Neve, receiving many clues before determining that they were on a ship headed for America.

Newspaper readers were tantalized by a race across the Atlantic between the ship carrying the fugitive couple and Inspector Walter Dew of Scotland Yard. On July 29, 1910, Dew arrived in Father Point, Quebec, to intercept the ship carrying the fugitives.

The Times published an interview with Crippen’s father, M.A. Crippen, who was living at  the Veranda Apartments, 3rd and Flower streets in Los Angeles. The Times also tried to interview Crippen’s son Hawley, who was staying with in-laws at  1612 Holmby Ave.

Sitting in front of the home and armed with a Winchester rifle, Hawley Crippen’s father-in-law, J.C. Herwick, said: "No, sir, my son hain't heerd a word about his pa, ner he ain't goin' to be pestered by no reporters. I don't read the dirty sheets, ner he ain't goin' to talk with any of ther dirty newsgetters, so you kin just dust yourself right along or you'll get into trouble," according to The Times. 

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Found on EBay – Happy Hooligan!

Examiner Comics

It’s Happy Hooligan, master of subtlety!

An undated album for stamps featuring the Los Angeles Examiner’s comics has been listed on EBay. This was evidently a promotional item for stamps showing characters from “The Katzenjammer Kids,” “Krazy Kat” and “Bringing Up Father,” etc. Note to collectors: There are relatively  few stamps in the album. Bidding starts at $19, but there is a reserve.
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Matt Weinstock, July 30, 1960

 
July 30, 1960, Comics

July 30, 1960: Matt Weinstock has a curious tale about the influence of the horsefly on American history.

DEAR ABBY: I have a message for "The Other Woman" — I have offered my husband his freedom so that he could marry you, but he refused. Another thing, we haven't been married 30 years. It was 39. He lied about his age, too.

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Eric Malnic and ‘Con Air’

 
Con Air Poster
 

One of the late Eric Malnic’s more remarkable experiences was his involvement in “Con Air.” Here’s his original story, which inspired the film.


When Jailbirds Fly, They Always Use

'Con Air'


Travel: The amenities are few and the passengers are manacled. But the Marshals Service provides necessary jet transport to prisons and trials for inmates.


August 9, 1993

By ERIC MALNIC, TIMES STAFF WRITER

The airline uses conventional passenger jets and makes scheduled stops at more than three dozen cities across the United States.

Aside from that, "Con Air" is a little different.

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