Man Accused of Decapitating Woman

Dec. 18, 1909, Killing 

Dec. 18, 1909: The Times publishes a gruesome story from Chippewa Falls, Wis., about a man called “Crazy Ole” who is accused of shooting Mrs. Peter Shirley in the head and then decapitating her.  The woman’s 3-year-old daughter says: “Bad man come and treat mamma mean. Mamma try to drive away, and bang go gun.” The Times never reported anything further about this incident, nor can I find anything in Google’s news archives. It reminds me of “Wisconsin Death Trip.”

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December 17, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Forgotten Men

Matt WeinstockAs you probably read, film director, Joseph Von Sternberg has sued Fox for $1 million, charging the 1959 version of “The Blue Angel” with May Britt and Curt Jurgens was made without his consent and was inferior to his 1929 version with Marlene Dietrich and Emil Jannings, thereby, he contended, decreasing the original’s value.

That, of course, is a question a court will have to decide.

Meanwhile, Louise Schneider is distressed about something else involving “The Blue Angel.”

In all the hubbub over the original and the remake, no one has given credit to Heinrich Mann, whose novel, “Professor Unrat” (Professor Garbage), published in 1905, made them possible. Continue reading

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December 17, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

December 17, 1959: Mirror cover

We Have Living Dead Living in Red China

Paul Coates, in coat and tieHistorically, war is a cold fact of life.

And one of its most terrifying aspects is that some men conscripted by their nations to fight are swallowed up and lost in its grisly shuffle.

They’re not among the known dead.  They’re not among the known living.

They’re just gone.

After the war in Korea, The U.S. counted its casualties.  Among them were 5,866 missing. Slowly, since then, it has whittled the number down.

There were 715 who were later located in prison camps and returned.  An additional 1,550 bodies, less than half of them identifiable, were sent back to us by the Chinese.  Others, evidence definitely indicated, had died either in action or prison camps.  Still others were eventually written off by the U.S. government as “presumed dead.” Continue reading

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

 
Dec. 17, 1954, Hedda Hopper 
Dec. 17, 1954, Hedda hopper  

Dec. 17, 1954: Otto Preminger would like to team up Harry Belafonte and Dorothy Dandridge after “Carmen Jones,” but “Porgy and Bess” is tied up.

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Gangster Killed in Ambush

Dec. 17, 1959, Cover

  Gov. Brown cites a projected $70-million surplus, says he'll propose no new taxes.

Dec. 17, 1959, Tuohy

Dec. 17, 1959, Whalen

Fred Whalen admits hitting Tony Reno, who was sitting with Mickey Cohen at Rondelli's restaurant when Whalen's son, Jack, was killed.

Dec. 17, 1959, Hedda Hopper

 

Dean “The Love Bug” Jones in “The Magnificent Seven?” Lerner and Loewe are writing a little Broadway show called “Camelot.”

Dec. 17, 1959, Sports

The Baltimore Colts place seven players, including John Unitas, on the Western Conference All-Stars, playing in the Pro Bowl at the Coliseum.


Dec. 17, 1959: Roger Touhy is shot to death in Chicago only 23 days after being paroled in the kidnapping of John “Jake the Barber” Factor. Touhy was promoting his book, written with Ray Brennan, “The Stolen Years.”

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A Renaissance in Filmmaking

 Dec. 17, 1919, Strictly Confidential

An ad for "Strictly Confidential" says, “Renaissance of Motion Pictures: Goldwyn has reclaimed the motion picture from the moneymaking mechanics of industry and restored it to its pedestal as one of the greatest arts. Masterful craftsmanship in direction, absolute fidelity in settings and details and crystalline photography have rejuvenated the 'movies' and restored its popularity among discriminating people.”

Hm. I wonder what this is all about.

Dec. 17, 1919, Fraud

 

Dec. 17, 1919: Simon Frank Graziani has a machine that makes $5 bills. It's yours for $6,000.

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Man Who Was Declared Dead Returns After 10-Year Absence

May 10, 1908, Christian Science Temple, Pasadena

The Christian Scientist Church in Pasadena, designed by Franklin P. Burnham. 

 Dec. 17, 1909, Architect Dies

Franklin P. Burnham also designed the Georgia State Capitol and many civic buildings in Southern California.

Dec. 16, 1909, Returns From the Dead  

 

Dec. 17, 1909: Henry E. Christopher returns to Fresno after a 10-year absence in which he was declared dead and his property was distributed to his heirs. “He is in the best of physical health and is apparently perfectly rational,” The Times says. “According to old acquaintances, except for a few gray hairs, he looks just the same as before he went away.”

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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 16, 1959

 

Dec. 16, 1959, Peanuts
Dec. 16, 1959, Peanuts

Thought-Wave Arrest

Matt Weinstock     While making a routine inspection of a Sunset Blvd. tavern, Jack Zumstein and Adolphus Miles, supervising public health sanitarians (yes, that's the correct title), were heckled by a customer who clearly had overindulged.

    When they went behind the bar to inspect the sanitation he followed.  When they told him to get out he refused.  The owner tried to quiet him but the borracho only became more belligerent.

    The inspectors said  jokingly that if they had a dime they'd call police. The drunk loftily said he'd pay for the call.  By this time they'd finished their inspection and were heading out the door.  The heckler followed, noisily insisting they call police.

    You know that old saying, "There's never a policeman around when you need one"?  At this moment a police car stopped at the curb to check a traffic matter.

    As the officers gathered him in, the awe and bewilderment on the drunk's face was a sight to behold.  Jack and Adolphus can see him now, telling the fellows in the drunk tank how he was captured by the use of thought waves.

::


    AS PEOPLE WHO
still take trains know, the diesels arriving at Union Station sometimes go past the terminal, then back into the platforms for passengers to disembark.  A man named Frank and his daughter Pamela, returning Sunday from visiting San Diego Zoo on the Santa Fe San Diegan , heard a woman remark as the train neared the station, "Look, we're backing into Los Angeles!"  Her companion said, "That's been going on since Los Angeles was founded."

::

    GIFT BUYING
Be it fur coat or book.
One thing makes me weep:
Inexpensive ones look
So awfully cheap.
        –JULIAN BROWN

::


    ATTENTION,
hunch players, [illegible] L.A. girl, received a stuffed army mule a few days ago as a gift from her boyfriend, who attends West Point.  "That doesn't look like a mule," her father jested,  "it looks more like a cranky lion."  "It does not." she retorted, "It looks like a happy tiger!"

    On Monday, the father happened to notice that Happy Tiger was entered in the third race at Pimlico.  On a hunch he bet $2 across the board.  Yes, with a bookie.  Happy Tiger won and paid $152, $37 and $16.40 — total $205.40.

::   


    THIS IS TO
report that Bonnie Black, 6, on being confronted with an eye-winking, arm-waving electrified dummy Santa Claus in a big drugstore, remarked, "Well, that's better than that 'Ho ho,hee hee!' bit."

::


    A MOTORIST
on Beverly Blvd. swerved sharply for no apparent reason in front of car in the next lane and the near-victim sounded his horn in protest.  The guilty motorist yelled, "Aw, take it easy, you'll live longer!"  "You drive better," was the retort, "and I will!" The guilty motorist smiled and said, "You know something — you're right!"

::


    ONLY IN L.A. —
Kay Cataldi saw a woman carrying a live white hen go into a restaurant at 1st and Spring Sts.  What some people won't do to get their food cooked the way they want it. 

::


    AT RANDOM —
A dejected fellow leaving the Rams-Colts game Saturday was overheard by Frank Barron muttering, "My luck's so bad I couldn't pick last week's winners!" . . . Recommended reading for those who have strong views on the death penalty — David Dressler's Coronet article, "Capital Punishment Is Murder" . . . The clientele is at it again.  C.E. Brown of Costa Mesa says he thought the forecast, "Widespread eye irritation is expected tomorrow," meant the smog would be especially irritating to people with widespread eyes.  And when the forecast is "light eye irritation" Rich Fowler is sure glad he doesn't have light eyes. . . Needling taxpayers are referring to their exorbitant taxes as payola to tax collector H.L. Byram, who is really the innocent victim.

 
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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 16, 1959

Mother Wants Probe on Case of Missing GI

The U.S. government says that Donald Sybrant is dead.  It lists him as one of the 142,000 casualties of the Korean war.It first reported him missing in action on Nov. 30, 1950, in the battle of Heartbreak Ridge.

Then, three years later, it notified his mother, Mrs. Leota Shadden, of Ainsworth, Neb., that he was presumed dead.  Where there is no conclusive evidence of death, but where a missing serviceman remains unheard of for 366 days or longer, the government may make this presumption.

This it did a few months after the final prisoner-of-war exchange in the fall of 1953.  Sgt. Sybrant was one of the 4,735 missing and captured GIs whom the United States couldn’t account for and declared “presumed dead” at that time.

Mrs. Shadden doesn’t agree with the U.S. government’s conclusions about her son.

Her reasons are not based solely on faith.  There are facts, both personal and general, she has gathered in the ensuing years which lead her to believe that the government her son fought to preserve is accepting her son’s “death” much too casually.

This week, I discussed some of those facts with her.  Her case, briefly, is this:

Through correspondence with men in his outfit, H&S Co., 2nd Div. Engineers, Mrs. Shadden learned that he fought his way out of a Chinese roadblock and swam safely across the Chongchon River.

This was all she knew about her son until Feb. 14, 1951.  Then, in a picture printed in a Tacoma (Wash.) newspaper of a group of prisoners of war, she thought she recognized one of the men as Donald.

She obtained a glossy print of the picture.  The clearer photograph made her almost positive of the identification, although the Communists did not then, nor have they ever, admitted that Donald was a P.O.W.

Next, in October of 1952, she received by mail a Communist magazine, “China Reconstructs.”

It was postmarked Hong Kong.  Letters from the magazine soliciting  her subscription followed in April, 1953, and July, 1955.

The magazine, to her, was the biggest clue to the mystery of whether her son was or possibly still is prisoner of the Communist Chinese.

“It could be,” she told me, “that my son somehow managed to get the magazine sent to me to let me know that he’s alive.”

Investigators, both private and government, have come up with no information that any other relative of a missing or captured GI received the magazine.

How, Mrs. Shadden would like to know, did the Communists get her name and address if her son hadn’t supplied it?

The magazine was addressed to Mrs. LEO Shadden (Leo being her husband’s name).  All her son’s Army records listed her as Mrs. LEOTA Shadden.

Then, there’s the coincidence that the magazine’s subject matter stressed heavy equipment operation — her son’s Army specialty.

Mrs. Shadden’s case that her son is a captive is purely circumstantial.  It’s by no means conclusive.  There are dozens of cases with equally strong or stronger evidence that the Chinese did hold back, or are still holding back American GIs as hidden hostages.

Mrs. Shadden’s complaint is that the U.S. government is passive in its attempts to get an accounting from the Red Chinese  of the hundreds of American servicemen who “vanished” in the Korea fighting.

The Communists — both in Russia and China — have a history of holding back prisoners of war, denying their existence, and then freeing them five, 10 or 20 years later.

Let’s Look Into It

“I feel that my son is alive,” Mrs. Shadden told me.  “I suppose that it’s only natural for a mother to feel that way.  He could be dead.

“But that’s not the point.  The point is, he was willing to give up his life for his country when he went to Korea.

“So as long as there’s a thread of evidence that the Chinese still have him,” she concluded, “the government shouldn’t turn its back on the possibility just because it’s diplomatically less embarrassing that way.”

Tomorrow, I’ll examine some of the cases of the 450 “missing” GIs whom the government says, in one breath, are dead;  in the next, are possibly alive.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 16, 1953, Hedda Hopper  

Dec. 16, 1953: “Sam Fuller has about finished writing a screen story that begins where "Mogambo" leaves off. Some of the African scenes about which he told me were hair-raising. What a character Sammy is! Dynamic, forceful and fearless. His wife's a doll too.”

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Shooting Victim’s Father Accused of Seeking Revenge

Dec. 16, 1959, Nixon
Dec. 16, 1959, Nixon
Dec. 16, 1959, Nixon

Dec. 16, 1959, Whalen
 

Tony Reno says he was attacked by Fred Whalen, the father of shooting victim Jack “the Enforcer” Whalen.

Dec. 16, 1959: Vice President Richard Nixon holds a wide margin among Republican voters over all other GOP contenders in the 1960 presidential race, the Gallup poll finds.

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Nuestro Pueblo

Sept. 16, 1938, Nuestro Pueblo

2215 Long Beach Ave., via Google maps’ street view.

Sept. 16, 1938: Joe Seewerker and Charles Owens visit 2215 Long Beach Ave.

Note: The original run of Nuestro Pueblo ended in 1939. I’m going back and picking up the ones I missed the first time.

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World’s First Wireless Phone?

image 

Texting is next! 

Dec. 16, 1909, Hopi

Dec. 16, 1909:  The Times reports that disagreement over education and missionaries has been resolved on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona. “The ruling faction at Oraibi is well content to be included in the progress of the white man and the hostile element was compelled to leave the pueblo. Accordingly, the outlawed ones have established a new village, which they call Bakavi, on the same mesa with the village of Hotavela [Hotevilla], a settlement founded three years ago by a similar seceding element cast out because of dissention.”

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The healer

 

1957_0920_roberts

Sept. 20. 1957,

Los Angeles

Tent revivals are nothing new in Los Angeles–they have been going on for a century. But by any standards, Oral Roberts’ crusades were sensational events.

The televangelist staged his first Southern California revival from
Sept. 28 to Oct. 14, 1951, at Atlantic Boulevard and Anaheim-Telegraph
Road in Anaheim, overlapping a crusade by Billy Graham (Sept. 16-Oct.
6) at the Hollywood Bowl. By 1955, Roberts was conducting his "healing
meetings" before thousands of people in a 200-foot by 360-foot tent
erected next to the Santa Ana Freeway at La Palma.

He credited his success to fellow evangelist Billy
Graham–and the increasing power of broadcasting. By 1957, Roberts was
heard over
350 radio stations and seen on 135 TV stations, including Channel 13 in
Los Angeles, which aired his show on Sundays at 9:30 p.m.

Roberts staged his 1957 revival from Sept. 20 to Sept. 29 at Firestone and
Lakewood boulevards in Downey,  culminating in an appearance at the
Hollywood Bowl on Sept. 30.

In an interview with Times religion editor Dan L. Thrapp, Roberts described threats he had received
during a 1954 revival tour of Australia. Saying that he barely escaped
being assassinated, Roberts blamed the Australian press, which he said
dared him to heal someone from a "diagnosed, specific illness."

"I never accept such challenges, " he said.

 

1955_0910_roberts

Roberts’ revivals were emotional and full of fiery rhetoric, always concluding with
sick people forming a "healing line" to receive Roberts’ prayers.

"Los Angeles has rarely seen the like of this newest show of the
sawdust circuit," Thrapp wrote in 1951. "Roberts has been called ‘the
loudest and flashiest revivalist to appear since the advent of Billy
Graham’ and with his emphasis on faith healing, he has an attraction
few of his profession can equal."

"When evangelist Roberts takes over, the show is strictly old-time
religion," Thrapp wrote. "He is a tall man and he paces the platform
relentlessly during his sermon, carrying the microphone with him and
setting it down with a crash to emphasize a point."

Thrapp sketched this portrait of Roberts:

"The angels that help us, they are spiritual beings, guardians of the family of mankind!" he announces.

"Thank the Lord!" the voices well up from the throng.

"You are born with your own personal angel! You have your own angel! I have my angel!" he shouts.

"That’s right," come the voices.

"God is not like a button on your coat which you can have or do without!" the evangelist cries.

"Thank God," say the voices.

"…and the city was filled with chariots of fire and horses of fire
and they drew a circle of steel around Elisha and he was not afraid,"
Roberts relates.

"Amen," moan the voices.

"You either believe the Bible or you don’t–it’s true or it isn’t, and if it isn’t we’re all lost!" he cries.

"Praise God! Hallelujah!" agree the voices.

The sick and infirm file up to the ramp to his platform. Roberts sits
on a chair with the microphone ready, and places his "healing hand,"
the right hand, on the afflicted spot.

"When I feel the power in the hand, I know it can drive the evil out," he says.

They come in a long line–a mother with a Mongoloid child, a
tuberculosis sufferer, a cripple on crutches, an 86-year-old man, a
woman with arthritis, a father with a daughter who was born with no hip
sockets.

It is not for a reporter to say whether Mr. Roberts’ healing is effective.

In some cases, it seemed to do no good.

But the faces of those who believed and who considered themselves cured were beautiful to watch.

From time to time, Mr. Roberts halted the line and bellowed to thousands:

"Who is the healer?"

"God!" they shouted.

And he asked them again and again to pray with him. Everyone prayed. And the line moved slowly past the evangelist.

Email me

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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 15, 1959

Censorship Reverberations

Matt Weinstock     The action of Principal Walter Larsh of Venice High School in banning "The New Pocket Anthology of American Verse" from an 11th grade English classroom is reverberating among teachers.

    The book, available at drugstores and newsstands for 50 cents, was withdrawn on the complaint of Mrs. Theodore Herin, who was backed, she said, by two Venice ministers and the head of a civic organization.  She contended three poems by Walt Whitman and one by Ezra Pound in it were unfit for 11th graders.

    Connoisseurs in the realm of censorship might be interested in the fact that there are more than 500 poems in the collection, arranged in alphabetical order according to author, and unless a person knew what he was looking for he would do considerable reading, very good reading, too, before getting to Ezra and Walt.  Incidentally, the four poems Mrs.Herin considered obscene were not among the 50 assigned by the teacher, Mrs. Florence Russell.

    A UCLA PROF says, "I'm stunned and delighted by the thought that a student could be suspected of reading beyond an assignment.  But now a teacher doing a decent job of teaching American literature is under fire and a first class anthology has lost the approval of a high school principal."

    A group of junior high-school teachers are less tolerant.  They write, "We could have sympathy and perhaps a good laugh over such an anachronism if the principal's action and the people who brought it about had not been successful in achieving their petty, malicious and undemocratic intent.  It becomes more difficult to teach the concept of majority rule when a vocal minority can so easily triumph.  Let them be heard, we say, but why should they be victorious by default."

    Meanwhile, back at my desk, I find a copy of the magazine Adam, subtitled, "The man's home companion."  It strikes a single note — provocatively posed female nudity.  In its way it's on a par with some of the lurid pocketbooks available to 11th graders at any drugstore, along with the condemned anthology of verse.  Let us remind all those concerned that, for better or worse, this is 1959.

::


    TELEPHONE
people are laughing among themselves at a classic case of chaos which occurred in San Diego.  A customer called the company and ordered a telephone jack installed in his patio.  The order was placed in the wrong file or something with the result that on page 422 of the phone book there is a listing, "Patio, Jack."

::

Dec. 15, 1959, Abby
    A LADY NAMED
Kathleen noticed one of her car's tail lights was out and went into a service station for a replacement.  A mechanic found the bulb was all right but the wiring was faulty.  He fixed it and made out a bill for $2.10.  Kathy, embarrassed, discovered she didn't have that much so the bill was reduced to $1.80.  But in counting her change she found she had only $1.35.  The man wouldn't go for that, so Kathy, a little desperately, asked if he would accept one of the credit cards she carried.  Sure.  But the price went back to $2.10.

::

    INCITED BY the grim fact that the gal standing under the mistletoe is seldom the one a man wishes was,  Norte Joven says he's working on an electronics device which will cause a sprig of Phoradendron flavescens to blast off from a tiny launching pad concealed under his lapel and go into orbit above and around the head of the desired target.  Naturally he refers to it as his guided mistletoe.

::


    BIRTHDAY PARTY
The sticky little kiddies,
Are homeward bound
    again:
My darling's one year older,
And I've aged another ten.
        ROBERTA MORGAN

::


    AROUND TOWN —
When students appeared at Audubon Junior High Saturday to rehearse for the upcoming production of "Wizard of Oz" they discovered someone had planted a  nearby real estate man's For Sale sign on the lawn in front of the auditorium . . . Believe it or not it's pure coincidence that the L.A. Press Club is taking over the Theater Mart, 600 N. Vermont Ave., where "The Drunkard" ran for many years, as its quarters . . . A  blond young lady at 3rd and Broadway was carrying a miniature poodle partially dyed pink.

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 15, 1959

 

That Limp-Brain Gang Is on the Loose Again

Paul Coates    Last week, late one afternoon, a ringing phone snapped the quiet of a typical home in this town.

    The man of the house, who had just come in from work, answered it.

    But a voice didn't reply.  Instead, there were the muffled sobs of a girl.

    "Hello.  Who's there?" he repeated.

    The sobs continued for a moment.  He thought he recognized them, and when the girl's voice cried out, "Daddy!" he was sure."

    "Judy," he said evenly.  "What's the matter?"

    Judy was his daughter.  She was a student at SC. 

    "Daddy!"  The voice was hysterical now.

    "Judy," the man repeated.  "What's the matter?"  Judy was always such a levelheaded girl.

    "I'm . . . I'm sick," she blurted.

    "What happened?"

Dec. 15, 1959, Children      She sounded strange, the man thought, like she'd been drugged.  "What happened to you?"

    The girl's reply was an incoherent, frightening blend of words and wails.

    "What is it, Judy?"  The man's voice was intense now.  "Where are you?"

    This time, the girl stammered out the numerals of an address on Sunset Blvd.  The man quickly placed the address as somewhere near Westwood Village — far from SC, where his daughter was supposed to be.

    "What are you doing there?" he asked, shakily.

    A jumble of words followed.  From them, he deciphered, "Some man took me."

    "Come and get me, daddy," she pleaded.  "Help me!"

    "I will," he promised.  He could feel his heart speed up.  "Don't worry," he added, trying to sound calm.

    But his mind was going wild.  The girl had never been in any trouble.  She was a smart girl.  How could anything have happened to her?

    Frantically now, he begged for the answers.  Frantically and fruitlessly.  She'd say nothing for what seemed like minutes.  Then, when she spoke, she was completely incoherent. 

    "I'll call the police," he promised.  "They'll get to you faster.  I'll leave right now, too.  Just stay there."

    The sobbing continued.  "Answer me," he shouted.

    Finally, the answer came.  The hysterical crying melted into an adolescent giggle.

    "What's the matter?" asked a young girl's voice.  "Can't you take a joke?"

    Then, the laughter still ringing, she slammed down the phone.

::

    Yesterday, I talked with the businessman who received the grotesquely unfunny call.

    He told me that he had contacted SC immediately, located his daughter, and, much to his relief, found her perfectly safe.

    "She had no more idea than I did who would have pulled such a vicious prank," he said.  "She was as shocked as I was."

    "My wife has a bad heart," he added.  "I'd hate to think what might have happened if she'd been the one who answered the phone.  What kind of a mind is it that would dream up that kind of torture?"

    I don't know.  But I know that every once in a while these weirdies break loose on an epidemic scale, and apparently that's what's happening now.

    Last week they were on the phone reporting freeway "accidents" to the police.  They had police cars racing red-light-and-siren all over town.

    They also call up private residences and announce that someone in the family's been hurt in a wreck.  Or they'll phone parents to tell them their children are in jail.

Spelled Fancy, It's J-e-r-q-u-e

    Its got to be obvious to them that sooner than later they're going to cause a tragedy — whether it's a high-speed collision involving a police car or a woman with a heart not strong enough to cope with ghoulish humor.

    But they persist.

    Apparently, their grim antics give them some kind of satisfaction.

    But don't ask me what kind.  Stories like this make me realize that the longer I live on this earth, the less I understand some of the people who live on it with me.

   
   

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 15, 1952, Hedda Hopper  
Dec. 15, 1952: A clipping from the Indianapolis Star tells of the dispute over Charlie Chaplin that rocked the Art Institute there. Mrs. C.B. LaDine, chairman of Americanism and Civil Defense Committee, took on John E. Brown, curator of education at the museum, and protested against a festival of Chaplin films arranged for children.

Brown accused the committee of hysterical fear of subversive movements. The ladies, numbering 30,000 with their affiliate groups, replied, "We believe there are plenty of top quality comedians to whom we can turn for entertainment. Let us cease paying homage to a man who, by his words and actions, despises the heritage and freedom of the children who are watching his antics." Gosh! Wish I'd said that.

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Location Sleuth

The High Sign
Buster Keaton in “The High Sign.”

I’ve been going through a Buster Keaton phase on Netflix and in watching “The High Sign,” I noticed this merry-go-round in the opening of the film. I got to wondering where it was – and whether it was the one used in “The Sting.”

The Sting

The short answer is no. The carousel used in “The Sting” was Philadelphia Toboggan Co. No. 62, built in 1922,  The Times says. It was moved from Venice Pier to Santa Monica about 1949.

Then what carousel was used in the Keaton movie? The Times clips say nothing about filming of “The High Sign.” Internet sources – which must always be double-checked – say the scenes were shot in Ocean Park. So I dug into the clips a bit further to see what I could learn.

Google Earth, Ocean Park
A 1940 map from Gillespie’s Guide superimposed on Google Earth. 

The first challenge was to determine the precise location of Ocean Park, and even this is a bit nebulous. As The Times said July 3, 1921: “Although Ocean Park has no independent municipal identity, being partly within the corporate limits of Venice and partly within Santa Monica, it is declared to have a strong individuality as a place of pleasure and happiness.”

According to this 1921 story, Ocean Park extended from south of Marine Street to the municipal auditorium under construction between Raymond and Kinney avenues—streets that have been wiped out by development.

::

The first merry-go-round appeared in Ocean Park in 1902, and immediately caused problems.

July 3, 1902, Merry Go Round

July 3, 1902: A  carousel is set up inside a tent “on the beach near Kinney Street” and, after complaints, moved to Pier Avenue. 

Oct. 8, 1911, Roller Coaster

Oct. 8, 1911:  What was called the largest roller-coaster west of New York is proposed for Ocean Park.
 
Sep. 4, 1912, Fire

Sept. 4, 1912: Everything at Ocean Park was destroyed in a spectacular fire, including a ride called the Dragon’s Gorge and a $45,000 merry-go-round, The Times says.

Sept. 4, 1912, Fire Area 

Notice the trolley tracks at the top of the map of the burned area, which fit with the train in the opening sequence of “The High Sign.”

The High Sign

Buster Keaton jumps off a train at the beginning of “The High Sign,” in  a screen grab that shows the ocean in the background. 

May 25, 1913, Ocean Park

May 25, 1913: The Times published this drawing of Ocean Park when it reopened  after the devastating fire of 1912. If “The High Sign” used the carousel at Ocean Park, it should be the one in this sketch. But is it?

image

And here’s a detail of what appears to be a merry-go-round.  I realize it’s a little difficult to tell from a drawing, but based on the windows in the background of the screen grab, I’m not sure this merry-go-round is the one used in “The High Sign,” even though it was in Ocean Park. 

April 9, 1916, Carousel

April 9, 1916: Wait a minute, what’s this? “The Great American Derby,” planned for Ocean Park, will be the largest “carrousel” ever constructed. But was it ever built? The Times’ clips are inconclusive. Could “The High Sign” have used one of these carousels (assuming they were built)? 

Dec. 22, 1920, Venice Pier Burns

Dec. 22, 1920: Meanwhile, down on Windward Avenue, the Venice Pier burns, including the merry-go-round.
 

Jan. 7, 1924, Pier Fire

Jan. 7, 1924: The Ocean Park “amusement zone,” rebuilt in 1913, is destroyed by another fire. The stories don’t mention the merry-go-round, but presumably the blaze burned whatever carousel was used in “The High Sign.”

Jan. 8, 1924, Ocean Park

Jan. 8, 1924: Rebuilding starts immediately.  But the story continues ….

May 28, 1970, Lawrence Welk 

May 28, 1970: Lawrence Welk visits the charred remains of the Aragon Ballroom after Ocean Park’s Lick Pier burned in 1970. The fire also destroyed an adjoining two-story house of mirrors and an abandoned merry-go-round building, The Times said. It’s unclear whether there was a carousel inside.

High_sign_carousel_02

Which leaves us without a definitive answer. Apparently “The High Sign” used a carousel at Ocean Park that was destroyed in the 1924 fire. Maybe further research will turn up more information.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Parks and Recreation | 7 Comments

Matt Weinstock, Dec. 14, 1959

Dec. 14, 1959, Peanuts

Rubbish Crisis

Matt Weinstock A frantic call came into the county sanitation office recently from Redondo Beach.  A resident there, in placing some discarded clothing in a rubbish disposal bin, had included an old shoe containing $5,000.

    "Don't let them cover it up until I get there!" came the excited message, loud and clear.

    He was referring to the procedure in refuse disposal.  After being dumped and spread, it is compacted, covered with about two feet of earth and watered.

    Sanitation people everywhere, including assistant chief engineer F.R. Bowerman of the Beverly Blvd. office, were alerted to the crisis.  Presumably pins were stuck in maps, as in wartime.

    From the address and time of pick up the truck was identified.  It was determined that it was en route to or had arrived at Landfill No.1, the dump site off Pacific Coast Highway near Crenshaw Blvd.

    But before the desperate search for the shoe and the $5,000 could get under way a second call came through.  The gist of it was "Never mind."

image     The mystery has never been solved.  Best guess is that somewhere in Redondo Beach there is a man even more absent-minded than I am.

::

        A MAN WITH a wonderful sense of humor died recently and his family's grief was overwhelming.  But little by little his greatest legacy, a puckish attitude toward life, was restored to them.

    His son, going over his affairs, discovered he'd arranged an eye examination and phoned the doctor to cancel it.  He identified himself and said, "My father had an appointment for tomorrow and I wanted to tell you that he has passed away."  There was an uneasy silence on the other end and the son plunged irresistibly on, "I guess, uh, he won't be able to make it."  He thinks his father would have enjoyed it.
   

::

    FENDER POLISHER
As a rule, this family bus
Is fondly claimed by
    five of us,
But now it needs a wash
    and shine
And it is mine, mine , mine
    –all mine.
        GUY MULLEN

::


    WHEN YOU STOP
to think of it, there's something elusively enchanting about the name, House Subcommittee on Legislative Oversight, which has been turning up the quiz show and payola scandals.
   
It is not only a lively departure from the usual committee names — Ways and Means, Rivers and Harbors, Foreign Affairs — but it carries the sly implication that members are digging into matters that occurred while their colleagues' backs were turned or while they had misplaced their glasses.

    Some coffee break philosophers I know think such lively nomenclature should be encouraged and have suggested names for similar committees.  To name a few: Committee on Missile Muscle, Committee to Separate the Demigods From the Demagogues, Committee on Blame-Placing, Committee to Discourage Platitudes and Irrelevance in Political Speeches.  The possibilities are endless.

::

    AN L.A. businessman is baffled by a recent nightmare experience in Las Vegas.  He and several friends attending a convention were having a drink in a leading spa when the floorman came over and said to him, "You've got no right coming in here, Tom, you'll have to leave." 
   
The businessman thought it was a joke perpetrated by his pals and he sat back and smiled.  The floorman summoned two large henchmen and the businessman, realizing it was not a joke, reached for his wallet to identify himself.  He never got the chance.  The two burly fellows grabbed him and propelled him into the street.

    It was the most authentic bum's rush he ever saw or felt.  But he keeps wondering who Tom is.  His name is Clarence.

::


    MISCELLANY —
Odd thing about newscaster fluffing a line is that they sometimes feel the fluff coming but are powerless.  Frank Goss of CBS was describing Ike's "globe-girdling tour" the other day and he couldn't help it, he said "gurgling" . . . North Young doesn't think our rocket failures belong on the front page but back in the vital statistics — in the obituary column.
 
   

  

 

   
   

 

Posted in art and artists, Columnists, Comics, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, Dec. 14, 1959

Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 14, 1959

 
Dec. 14, 1959, Mirror Cover

Hey, it's Christian Brando!

Raul Bernal: 'He's a Miracle'

Paul Coates    Over a taco, I sat down with Java Joe the other day. 
 
   "It used to be," he was saying, "problems like I got now would throw me.  But that was before I really got to know Raul Bernal."

    Java Joe, whose last name is Castillo, has a little cafe in South L.A.

    Fingering his napkin, he continued, "You never heard of Raul Bernal, have you?"

    "No," I told him, "I haven't."

    "Let me tell you," he said.  "Raul Bernal is 50, maybe 55.  He usually needs a haircut.  He's got this old blue suit.  It's worn pretty good now.  It's the same one he's had for eight, 10 years.

    "He drives a truck.  You look at him and you'd think he's nobody.  Raul Bernal — he's a miracle."

    Java Joe smiled broadly.  "Now I'll tell you what he does.

    "Raul — we call him Conejo, Rabbit, because he used to play professional baseball and he was the fastest man around — does things for kids.  His girl's grown up now, but every extra penny he gets, he uses on kids.

Dec. 14, 1959, Abby
    "Like this Christmas party he's throwing at Belvedere playground.  This is the 14th year he's done it.  Six hundred, 800 kids there every year.  This year there'll be 850.

    "Twenty-five turkeys, mashed potatoes, green beans, apple sauce, milk, ice cream, Seven-Up, and two toys — good toys — for every kid.  Raul has a way for getting people to help out.

    "For example," Joe continued, "he's got toys from the Marines and Sears and Newberrys.  When Raul asks, they give because they know that they'll go to the right kids.
   
Dec. 14, 1959, Know Your Town "He doesn't just put an ad in the paper saying, 'Come and get it.'  He finds out what kids need it, from the schools and the county.

    "He gets 16 or 18 of us and makes us help.  He gives each one of us a job and we got to do it.

    "Take me," Joe continued.  "My job is the turkeys.  That's what's got me worried.  I've got 25 of them, but I've just got a little oven in my restaurant.  It only holds two at a time.

    "Last year it took me 73 hours to cook them all.  I didn't get any sleep — just kept cooking turkeys.

    "So the night before the party, when I went out of the restaurant to pick up some more things, somebody broke in the back door and took four of the turkeys.  People like the Lions Clubs had paid for them, so I had to replace them naturally."

    Joe shook his head.  "They caught the boys who took the turkeys three weeks later.  They were just a couple of kids about 18, and I went over to their trial and told them whose turkeys they took.

    "They said they were sorry and if they'd known, they wouldn't have done it. They said they took the turkeys home and had a big Christmas dinner themselves.  They had so much turkey, in fact, that they invited the neighbors.

    "But they were poor people themselves," he added, shrugging.  "I didn't feel too bad.  What made me sorry was that at the party a few of the turkeys weren't cooked all the way through.

Just Needs Big Oven

    "I'd hate for any little kid to get sick," he said. "That's why I wish I could find somebody with a big oven.  The party's Sunday, the 20th.  I could stuff them, stitch them up, deliver them and pick them up again if there was a big bakery or some outfit that could cook them on Saturday. 

    "Understand me," Java Joe explained.  "I don't mind cooking them myself, but after last year, I'm a little worried.  You see my point?"

    "I see it," I said.

    "But not really worried," Joe came back.  "With Raul Bernal running things, they always work out.  He makes everything seem so easy, and then he goes and hides when they're passing out credit.

    "I guess," he concluded, "that's why you never heard of him."
 
   

   
   

Posted in Caryl Chessman, Columnists, Parks and Recreation, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 14, 1959