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The ‘Onion Field’ Remembered [Update]
Posted in #courts, 1963, books, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD, Photography
7 Comments
Horses vs. Streetcar
| “Imagination Is the Only Real Thing in the World.”
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| A wagon drawn by runaway horses crashes into a streetcar, sending the wagon tongue through the side of the trolley and injuring passenger Howard Siebold. The horses, which were pulling an L.J. Christopher Co. wagon, were frightened by a piece of paper that blew in front of them.
It’s interesting to note that horse-drawn vehicles didn’t disappear from the streets of Los Angeles simply because the automobile became more sophisticated. The old issues of The Times are full of stories about terrible accidents involving horses. Curiously enough, The Times doesn’t say whether these horses were injured. |
Posted in Animals, Transportation
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Through the Lens – Aviation Meet
| Here is another original photo of the 1910 Aviation Meet that I found in The Times’ archives. The contrast of horses and airplanes at the meet always amazes me. It’s hard to read the writing on the back of this photo. From left, J.H. Klusser or Klussen, V.C. Worden, machinist, and G. Bentley, none of whom are mentioned in any stories. I wonder if those little torpedo-shaped objects are gas tanks.
This is Edgar S. Smith, who was hit by the propeller of his plane. As you can see, his landing gear consists of the front forks of two bicycles.
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| I’ve never seen a print quite like this one. Apparently it’s how photographers got more usage out of their plates. |
Posted in Photography, Transportation
1 Comment
A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist
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| Jan. 24, 1962: Hedda Hopper says Buster Keaton's going to tour Germany, Austria and Switzerland with some of his films and gives another slam to Charlie Chaplin … and Marilyn Monroe is getting ready to do “Something’s Got to Give.” |
Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood
1 Comment
Nixon Leads Kennedy in Poll
There’s no credit on this photo, but it wouldn’t surprise me if it were a Delmar Watson shot.
The Alexandria Hotel’s Palm Room has been converted to a gym as boxers Jose Becerra and Battling Torres train for bouts at the Coliseum.
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| Jan. 24, 1960: Republican Vice President Richard Nixon is slightly ahead of Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.) in a Gallup poll. Before his trip to the Soviet Union, Nixon was trailing Kennedy in the polls. In an accompanying story that was the first in a five-part series on pollsters, The Times noted that public opinion polls were expected to be particularly influential in the 1960 election and had already played a role in persuading New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller to drop out of the race. |
Posted in Downtown, JFK, Politics, Richard Nixon, Sports
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The Naughty Borax King
| “The Days of Real Sport,” by Clare Briggs.
Mr. Thorkildsen submits a photograph of his wife in a “scanty” bathing suit.
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| Jan. 24, 1920: A deposition read in the divorce trial of borax king Thomas Thorkildsen catalogues the liquor consumed at one party: “37 bottles of Champagne, numerous cocktails and glasses of Burgundy, and innumerable Scotch highballs.” Mr. Thorkildsen and Mrs. Agnes Smith, a woman other than his wife, were “picturesque but terribly naughty,” the maid says. |
Posted in #courts, Food and Drink
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Women and Cars
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| Jan. 24, 1910: Sydney Ford writes about women, cars and the annual Los Angeles auto show. She touches on America's only auto club for women and talks about fashions, including the latest outfits for chauffeurs. Ford took a trip around the world in 1910 and her account was serialized in The Times. It might be interesting to tag along with her later this year. For people who are in a hurry, her stories were collected in a book, “Journeying Around the World,” published in 1912. |
Posted in Transportation, travel
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Matt Weinstock, Jan. 23, 1960
Posted in Columnists, Comics, Matt Weinstock, Religion
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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Jan. 23, 1960
Posted in broadcasting, Columnists, Film, Hollywood, Paul Coates, Television
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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist
Dolores del Rio is at the Million Dollar Theater! |
| Jan. 23, 1961 – Hedda Hopper says: “She's 19, beautiful, a student at Northwestern University in Chicago, and made her debut singing with George Burns in Las Vegas. Her name is Ann Margaret.” |
Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood
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Finch Stole Two Cadillacs, Went to Las Vegas
| Betty Jean Behr shows a photo of victim Barbara Jean Finch. What to do with the radioactive waste piling up in Long Beach? Dump it in the ocean!
March 22, 1960: A judge rules that Long Beach has no right to oppose an atomic waste facility, saying that it is "an indispensable part of both the peacetime and defense uses of atomic energy. Without a continuous and speedy waste disposal program all atomic research and production would stop."
March 27, 1960: Even an explosion wasn’t enough to deter operations.
Dec. 12, 1960: The Atomic Energy Commission recommends closing Robert Boswell’s Coastwise Marine Disposal Co. Unfortunately, I can’t find any further coverage in The Times to learn whether the business was shut down.
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| Jan. 23, 1960: Testimony in the Finch murder case focuses on two Cadillacs that were stolen shortly after Barbara Jean Finch was shot.
One Cadillac was taken from a home at 1847 Citrus St., in West Covina near Finch’s home and abandoned three miles away. |
Posted in #courts, Environment, Homicide, Long Beach
1 Comment
Through the Lens – the Finch Case
| Photograph by Edward Gamer / Los Angeles Times |
| May 21, 1960: Regular correspondent Howard Decker asked if the Daily Mirror could publish some photos from the Finch case. This is defendant Carole Tregoff, who went through many outfits and changes in appearance during the trial. |
Posted in #courts, Homicide, Photography
1 Comment
Are You Blue? Go to ‘Pollyanna’
| “That Guiltiest Feeling,” by Clare Briggs.
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| Jan. 23, 1920: Hey, it’s Hobart Bosworth! |
Posted in Uncategorized
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Matt Weinstock, Jan. 22, 1960
Inspired Night Crews
An office spy managed to grab these ideas while the gentlemen of the copy desk were still in a benumbed state and brought them to me. They are sharply divided into two categories — those which can be printed and those which cannot. Let us try the first, most of which are contained in signs and are self-explanatory: Methusitol. For That Tired Feeling. Eat Elijah’s Hot Dogs. Flown in Fresh Daily by Contended Ravens. Bible Storyland Hotel. Rates by the Day, Week or Eternity. Still Waters in Every Room. Tower of Babel. Se Habla Espanol. Wrestling: Jacob vs. The Angel. Thou Shalt Not Walk on the Green Pastures. This Means Thee! Don’t Miss Our Two-Headed Golden Calf! For Thy Stomach Take a Little Wine. Free Manna. Leah. Coats of Many Colors. Best, I thought, was a drawing of a barber pole labeled “Delilah.” ::
To Gloria it was like a coup de grace. Her husband and their three children were down with the flu with her and the house had taken on the aspect of a hospital ward. “I’ll take five!” she screamed, and slammed the door. ::
The youth was put away for 60 days to meditate upon his sins but this does not entirely explain the case. But I think I get it. One police car was actually chasing him, the other eight were tabulating his offenses. ::
THERE’S NO accounting for the whims of the kiddies. Two small boys went into a San Gabriel bank, presented four tarnished pennies and asked that they be exchanged for shiny new ones. The teller had to go to another window to get them. Then the boys dashed to a nearby gum machine and got what they really wanted . . . and guard Weldon Lunsford reports a boy of about 6, apparently hotel and restaurant-reared, rushed up to the live trout in the California Museum of Science and Industry and shouted, “Mother, look! Fillet of sole!” ::
AT RANDOM – An announcement for a PTA meeting at a Lawndale school stated, “Hear guest speaker Mr. Tyler, eat refreshments served by the second grade mothers.” |
Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock
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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Jan. 22, 1960
'Dead' Bill Howard Now Living New Life
The reason was William K. Howard, a man whose obituary three months before included the vital statistics that he had been a buddy of Mickey Cohen and had drowned rather mysteriously at Newport Beach the day before he was to appear in San Bernardino Superior Court to face charges of bilking a widow of $11,000. About 10 o'clock that night, I received a long distance call from San Francisco. The caller identified himself as the "late" Bill Howard. "I'm at the airport," he told me. "In a few minutes I'll be taking off for Los Angeles. You'll do me a big favor if you're there to meet me. "I've got some matters I'd like to talk over with you," he added, "and I'd like you to drive me to San Bernardino and surrender me to the sheriffs." I drove to International Airport. And I met the "late" Mr. Howard who was very much alive. He was 40 pounds lighter than when he jumped $2,500 bail three months before, and he was disguised with a red beard and dark glasses. On our trip to San Bernardino he told me the grim story of his life. He was a two-time loser who had spent a lifetime working his way up the ranks of the underworld. The rungs included orphanages, industrial schools, reformatories and penitentiaries. "My 'drowning' at Newport Beach," he explained, "wasn't completely phony. What happened, the surf was rough and I was having trouble in the water. I was being swept under the pilings. "I fought my way to the other side of the pier and when I walked back up the beach there was a crowd of women around my wife. On of them turned to me and said, 'That woman's husband just drowned.'
He made it to Canada, he said, where he took a job in a sawmill until the futility of his existence began to weigh heavy on him. "I went to San Francisco, talked to Billy Graham, and then I called you. If they give me 30 years, I'll take it. I'm through running. I'm through with men like Cohen." "I found God," he added, almost too dramatically. I'd been a newspaperman long enough to know that, while confession is good for the soul, public confession is also a good way to try to impress the court which passes sentence on you. My belief on Howard's sincerity when I left him at San Bernardino Sheriff's station wasn't without at least a few reservations. But an article which ran in San Bernardino paper last week began chiseling away at my cynicism. It started:
Yesterday I called Howard. He told me that the court had been very kind to him, that he'd done a year, and had been out on parole for a couple of months. "I've been talking to lots of groups here," he said. "Churches, businessmen, fellowship organizations. I'm working with the local Christian Businessmen's Committee and one of our pet projects is with the Verdemont Boys Ranch. "I can talk to them on their level," he said. All This Takes Time
I asked him how the community had accepted him. "The business world hasn't quite accepted me yet," he answered. "But it takes time. I take part-time jobs as I can get them — house painting, manual labor,whatever's available. My wife — she waited for me — is carrying the load, selling cosmetics." "And your plans for the future?" "I'm going to study for the ministry. That's the goal," answered the man whose obituary a year and a half ago wasn't the final chapter in his life, after all.
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Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates
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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist
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| Jan. 22, 1960 – Hedda Hopper says: “Jerry Wald's finally got his "Return to Peyton Place" players all set: Joan Crawford plays the mother-in-law who plans the murder of her daughter-in-law, Carol Lynley, who gets wind of the scheme and turns the tables.” Gosh, why does this plot from Grace Metalious’ book sound like the Elizabeth Ann Duncan case? |
‘Onion Field’ Killing Revisited
| March 13, 1963, Jimmy Lee Smith reenacts the killing of Officer Ian Campbell. March 12, 1963: "Ex-convict Jimmy Lee Smith stood in a Kern County onion field Monday and acted out his version of how an unarmed policeman was slain and a fellow officer narrowly missed the same fate in a cold-blooded shooting."
March 24, 1963: Gene Sherman takes a look at the lives of Jimmy Lee Smith and Gregory Powell.
March 25, 1963: Why were Smith and Powell paroled?
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| Convicted killer Gregory Powell’s Jan. 27, parole hearing has refocused attention on the “Onion Field” killing of Officer Ian Campbell. |
Posted in #courts, books, Homicide, LAPD
2 Comments
Movie Star Mystery Photo
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Los Angeles Times file photo Update: This week’s mystery star is Sally Eilers, shown in a photo dated Dec. 14, 1929. Jan. 7, 1978: Sally Eilers dies at the age of 69. In case you’re wondering, I don’t intentionally have a Hoot Gibson theme going—It just worked out that way.
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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo
25 Comments
Forgery Charged in Finch Trial
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| Jan. 22, 1960: The prosecution alleges that Dr. R. Bernard Finch forged his wife’s signature to a check for $3,000 [$21,576.68 USD 2008] three days after Finch allegedly beat and threatened to kill his wife and two days before she filed for divorce and obtained a restraining order. |
A couple named Janet and George, who moved recently from the lowlands to a home in the Hollywood Hills reached by a short private road, invited some friends to dinner the other night.
(Press Release) "As far as space travel is concerned, a big bosom is a bust — according to an article in the new issue of Look magazine.