Drunk Man Kills Food Wagon Vendor


Dec. 8, 1909, Christmas

What women want for Christmas: a desk.

Dec. 8, 1909, Killing

Dec. 8, 1909: The operator of a food wagon at 9th and Main streets is shot to death after refusing to give some food to a drunk man. The killer escapes through a “marble yard” and either went to Broadway or 8th Street. A police officer tried to take the victim to the hospital via streetcar, but the man died en route.

Posted in #courts, Downtown, Food and Drink, LAPD | Comments Off on Drunk Man Kills Food Wagon Vendor

Found on EBay: Silverwood’s

Stetson Ebay  
This Royal Stetson DeLuxe from Silverwood’s has been listed on EBay – with what the vendor says is the original box. Bidding starts at $49.
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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 7, 1959

 
Dec. 7, 1959, Murder-Suicide

The Rainbow's End

Matt Weinstock     One by one the old landmarks are disappearing.  Last week the Rainbow, with its old-fashioned mahogany bar, folded.

    The shabby Rainbow was known in bat cave circles as the saloon that cared.  Great men drank there, or at least they thought they were great while drinking there.

    Now the plaintive cry is heard around 2nd and Hill Sts., "Where will we cash our checks?  Where else can we run up a tab?  Where can we find bartenders who will find a clean shirt for a patron so he may go to work looking presentable, or raise the bail money when a customer makes the jailhouse?"

    Of course, there's another side to the passing of the Rainbow.  Dapper Abe Stein, the owner, puts it simply, "Too many headaches."

::

Dec. 7, 1959, Murder-Suicide     "ONE PICTURE is worth 10,000 words," some obscure Chinese philosopher is supposed to have once stated.  Ever since there has been sharp disagreement as to the relative impact of the written word, the spoken word and the picture.

    I happen to be partial to the written word although the emphasis these days seems to be on the spoken word and the picture.  The written word requires thought, as does reading.  This is not always true of the other two. 

    Anyway, it's always nice to hear one's feelings echoed.  In the quarterly journal, Arizona and the West, editor John Alexander Carroll offers this perhaps prophetic "dash of candor":

    "First and last, it is a journal for readers; the mere lookers will do better to look elsewhere.  We realize that mere looking has been in vogue in the United States for  a generation and more, that the Pulitzer Prize for the best photograph of the year is twice as much in cash as the award for the winning book in history.  Nonetheless we are convinced that ultimately the law of supply and demand will right the scales.  A good paragraph today is worth a hundred ordinary pictures.  Ten years from now, if American cameras are still clicking so much faster than the typewriters of talented authors, a good sentence may be worth a thousand of them."

::

    SHORTLY AFTER noon the other day newsman Joe Laitin, in pursuit of a story, phoned Mt. Wilson observatory.  The man who answered said he was sorry but he'd have to call back after 1 p.m.  "Nobody's ever here during the lunar hour," he explained.   Twitching slightly from the "lunar hour" bit, Joe asked, "Who's this?"

    "The janitor," was the reply.

::

Dec. 7, 1959, Murder-Suicide     BRACE yourselves, we seem to have another plateau.  The woman next door came to the home of a Beverly Hills matron and said, "My husband just called and said he'd invited a Russian engineer for dinner and I wondered if you had any caviar I could borrow."

::

    IT'S ONLY natural that the crew at Lou MacKenzie's electronics firm in Inglewood should be closely following television's agonizing self-scrutiny, particularly of synthetic and rehearsed phases of its output.  Their work is creating automatic audio systems.  For one thing, they create applause and laugh tracks for TV programs.  They also did the jungle and cave noises for some of the Disneyland rides.
   
Out of curiosity, Phil Worth, shop foreman, looked up the word "quiz" in the dictionary.  You, too, may be surprised to learn that in addition to the definition, "to examine or instruct by close questioning," it can mean "hoax."

::


    ONLY IN PASADENA —
The topic for debate in a Muir High School speech class was whether this country should provide birth control information to foreign nations — until a mother objected.  The new topic:  The Mike McKeever incident.

::


    AROUND TOWN —
On the main floor of the County Museum there is a marble statue of Hercules resting his arm on a club.  A small boy studied it a moment as Russell J. Smith, chief of the education division, happened by, then asked his dad, "Is he the father of baseball?"  At that, old Herc looks as if he had the "take" sign . . . A lady named Mary Louise heard a newscaster say, "Widespread to moderate eye irritation is expected tomorrow" and asks, "What's that?"  It means you cry bitter tears.

   

 

   
   

 

Posted in Columnists, Homicide, LAPD, Matt Weinstock, Suicide | 2 Comments

Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 7, 1959

 
Dec. 7, 1959, Mirror Cover

Is This Really Tokyo Rose?

 Paul Coates  
    Her name is Iva Toguri d'Aquino, but you know her as Tokyo Rose.
    And that's why she hides.
    She's 43 now.  She has a small business and a smaller circle of acquaintances.
    This is deliberate.  This is her shield against the humiliation which results when somebody finds out and whispers, "That's Tokyo Rose."
    Strangers frighten her.  So do crowds.
    "They shouldn't," she says, "but they do.  I still live in terror of being recognized by someone."
 
Reluctant to Talk
    It was just a few days before today's anniversary of Pearl Harbor that I talked with Mrs. D'Aquino.  It wasn't easy to find her, and when I did, she was reticent at first.
   
"What's the use? she said.  "What good is it to talk to the press?  Everybody's mind is made up about me."
    The woman known to the world as Tokyo Rose continued:  "Nobody will believe me, but I'm not Tokyo Rose.
    "Maybe," she added, "before I leave this earth, I'll find out if such a person really existed."

Dec. 7, 1959, Jack the Enforcer Whalen
 

    There are people in the United States today who do believe her.  In February, 1957, the St. Louis Post Dispatch carried a story by one of them, Maj. William A. Reuben, a former U.S. Army combat officer.  After investigating her case, Reuben indicated that there was more than reasonable doubt of her guilt.

 
Evidence for Her
    There has been a lot of evidence to give some credence to the theory.  Among the facts brought out, and not disputed, at her 1949 trial for treason were the following:
Dec. 7, 1959, Vietnam     -No Radio Tokyo announcer ever identified herself as Tokyo Rose. There were 18 English-speaking women announcers employed by Radio Tokyo during the war.
    -Mrs. D'Aquino, born in Los Angeles and educated at UCLA, was stranded in Japan at the outbreak of World War II, and made repeated efforts to get back to the United States.
    -Her becoming a Radio Tokyo announcer was the result of a request by Allied officers, who — as Japanese prisoners of war — were writing the programs.  (One of the officers, an Australian major, testified at her trial that he and an American captain wrote all of her 12-minute, five-times-a-week segments, and that it was a straight disc jockey tape entertainment program.)
    -None of the officers were punished for their participation.  One, in fact, was promoted to major immediately after the war.
    -In both 1945 and 1946, Mrs. D'Aquino's activities were investigated by the Army, and then the FBI.  Each time, she was cleared.
 
Refused at First
    "The first time I was asked to do the programs, I refused," Mrs. D'Aquino told me.  "Then I was told it was orders of the Army and I learned that the prisoners of war wanted me to do it.
    "I was told that we would send messages to the families of prisoners of war.  We did this, and we played music.  On my segment, there was no propaganda."
    Mrs. D'Aquino added that she could have avoided the eventual treason trial if she had been willing to give up her U.S. citizenship.
    "Between those investigations after the war and 1948, when I was brought back to the United States for the trial, I had opportunities to become either a Japanese or a Portuguese citizen," she said.  "I was offered transportation to any Portuguese possession because my husband was Portuguese."
    (By Japanese law, she –as a descendant of a Japanese national — could have become a citizen of Japan in a procedure which requires about 20 minutes.)

 
Convicted on One Count
    "But I didn't give up my U.S. citizenship," she told me, almost casually.  "The jury was out four days before they came back with a 'guilty' verdict."
    The jury — which twice reported that it couldn't reach a decision- finally acquitted her on seven counts and convicted her on one, which charged specifically that she had broadcast the following words in 1944 after the Battle of Leyte Gulf:
   
"Now you fellows have lost all your ships.  You really are orphans of the Pacific.  Now, how do you think you will ever get home?"
    After serving 6 1/2 years of a 10-year sentence in the federal women's reformatory in West Virginia, Mrs. D'Aquino walked back into the world again in January of 1956. 
    "I'm lucky to have  a family like I've got," she continued.  "They have stood by me all the way."
    It was at her parents' request that Mrs. D'Aquino made her first and only trip to Japan in the summer of 1941 — to visit her mother's only sister, who was near death. 
   
Dec. 7, 1959, Abby

"Before that," I asked her, "did you ever belong to any Japanese organizations here in the States?"

    "The only organization I ever belonged to, in my whole life, was the Girl Scouts," she said.
 
'They Had to Find Somebody'
 
    "If you feel you're innocent, why do you think you were convicted?"
    Mrs. D'Aquino shrugged.  "I guess they had to find somebody who was Tokyo Rose, and I was as close as they could get."
    After a moment, she went on: "I'm not bitter about what's happened.  I'm not cynical.  What good would it do?"
    "Then," I said, "you have no intention of leaving the United States — giving up your citizenship?"

    The smile disappeared.  "No," Iva Toguri d'Aquino said.  "Everybody thinks I'm a traitor.  But I fought too long to keep my citizenship.  I'll never give it up."

   
   

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John Birch Society Official to Speak in L.A.

Dec. 7, 1959, Robert Welch 

535 S. Hoover via Google maps’ street view.

Dec. 9, 1959, Robert Welch

Dec. 7, 1959: Robert Welch is speaking in Los Angeles on the first anniversary of the John Birch Society. The Freedom Club was founded in 1952 by Dr. James W. Fifield Jr., pastor of First Congregational Church, 535 S. Hoover St. 

Posted in Politics | 1 Comment

Christmas Snapshots


Dec. 7, 1919, Electric Car

Dec. 7, 1919: Continuing our exploration of Christmas ads in The Times,
we find an electric car “for her” …

Dec. 7, 1919, Beer 
… home-brewed beer …

Dec. 7, 1919, Tetrazzini
… Tetrazzini records …

Dec. 7, 1919, Piano Rolls
QRS piano rolls

[I think "All the Quakers are Shoulder Shakers" has dropped out of the repertoire.]

Dec. 7, 1919, False Teeth

… maybe some new false teeth …

Dec. 7, 1919, Toys   … toys …   Dec. 7, 1919, Clothes
… clothes for women …   Dec. 7, 1919, Clothes

… and men …

Dec. 7, 1919, Furniture

… or bedroom furniture … (“it’s one of the first rules of femininity to thrill at the sight of a beautiful bedroom or boudoir – no matter whose it is.”) …

Dec. 7, 1919, Record Player 

… the happiest times of your life …

Dec. 7, 1919, Washing Machine

… or mother’s first washing machine.

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Predictions for Aviation Week

Dec. 7, 1909, Aviation Meet 

Dec. 7, 1909: How would you describe flying in an airplane to someone who’s never done it in a time when all but a few people are earthbound? 

"By climbing to the top of a tall tree in a heavy wind," said Mr. Willard in the interesting description of the sensations experienced in an aeroplane flight with which he began his talk, "you can get very much the same feeling that you have during the flight of an aeroplane. I know of no way of describing the sensation more closely."

Posted in Science, Transportation | Comments Off on Predictions for Aviation Week

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 6, 1943, Hedda Hopper  

Dec. 6, 1943: “Even though Martha Raye has the biggest mouth in these parts, she didn't make enough noise to stop a runaway camel that she was riding in 'Four Jills and a Jeep!' Gosh! Imagine getting out of control with a camel.”

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Christmas Snapshots


Dec. 6, 1959, Christmas 

Dec. 6, 1959: Let’s look through The Times’ Christmas ads and see what we can find … 

Dec. 6, 1959, Schwinn

… This Schwinn Speedster costs $386.92, USD 2008 …

Dec. 6, 1959, Science Toys
 

http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docid=2170759913343757068&hl=en&fs=true How many girls do you think got Erector Sets for Christmas in 1959? But look closely at this article. There’s a mention of the “Annie Oakley” TV show, starring Gail Davis, one of the few adventure/Western programs of that era with a woman lead character.

Dec. 6, 1959, Doll

… In 1959, girls get dolls!

Dec. 6, 1959, Dishwasher

… For busy housewives, a dishwasher!

Dec. 6, 1959, Lighter

… Hey it’s those cigarette lighters with little things floating in the lighter fluid. I never knew anyone who had one of these. I never saw anything but Zippos … 

image 
… Like these …

Dec. 6, 1959, For Men Only

… And men use Christmas shopping as an excuse for a night out with the boys…

Dec. 6, 1959, Shaver

“Well, hon, if you’re tired of cutting yourself shaving, why don’t you try an electric?”

”Because they’re lousy, that’s why.”

Dec. 6, 1959, Hifi Equipment

… Notice there’s no price on the Sherwood S5000. I guess people were supposed to worry about that later. Hint: Do NOT, under any circumstances, buy the Wollensaks. Leave them for the school A/V departments.

 

Dec. 6, 1959, Fragrances   Fragrances for the ladies, like White Shoulders …

Dec. 6, 1959, Fragrances

Rallet No. 1, Intimate, White Magnolia. I don’t recognize any of these fragrances.

Dec. 6, 1959, Film 

How to shoot home movies for the holidays: Put the camera on the floor for that arty effect.

Posted in Fashion, Film, Hollywood | 7 Comments

Bank Robbers Captured

Dec. 6, 1919, Bank Robbers

The Times publishes a map by Charles Owens, who later contributed to “Nuestro Pueblo.” This is about the earliest work of his I’ve seen in the paper. 

Dec. 6, 1919, Bank Robbers

The bank robbery story carries the byline of Otis M. Wiles, which is a new name to me. Judging by the clips, he worked for The Times from the late teens to about 1925. Evidently he went to the Examiner at some point.

May 24, 1948, Otis Wiles

May 24, 1948: Otis M. Wiles dies in a head-on crash in a crash that injured Examiner photographer Felix Paegel and six other people.

Dec. 6, 1919, Bank Robbers

Dec. 6, 1919: "Outwitted by the wrath of the elements and the cunning of four Indian woodsmen in their desperate attempt to escape the clutches of the law, Arthur and Herbert Brown, brothers and professional bank bandits, smiled upon their fate last night in the County Jail as they voluntarily confessed to their part in the looting of the Union Square Branch of the Hellman Commercial and Savings Bank last Monday afternoon."
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A Deadly Encounter With John Barleycorn

Dec. 6, 1909, Aviation Week

Los Angeles is getting ready for Aviation Week, Jan. 10-20, 1910.

 
1910 Aviation Meet
Photograph by Larry Harnisch / Los Angeles Times

I found a copy of the Aviation Week poster on the L.A. Conservancy’s “The Sixties Turn 50” tour.

Dec. 6, 1909, Aviation Week 

Reprints of the Aviation Week poster are available on EBay, along with other items from the event.  

Dec. 6, 1909, Booze Orgy 
“Death Stops Booze Orgie”

Dec. 6, 1909
“Train Wheels Crush Face”

Dec. 6, 1909: The copy desk outdid itself with these headlines. I thought “Death Stops Booze Orgie” was the headline of the day until I found “Train Wheels Crush Face.”

Posted in art and artists, Food and Drink, Transportation | 1 Comment

Artist’s Notebook: Echo Park

 Echo Park
“Echo Park,” Marion Eisenmann, Nov. 22, 2009
Marion Eisenmann says of this week’s sketch:

“I love the lake of Echo Park. I don't know why, but there's something about the muddy water and the diagonals of the birds' flight, which cuts the composition into triangles. (Well, not on this version of my illustration). I wanted to reflect the solitude of the lake and its peaceful settledness in a busy part of Los Angeles. The scenery also reminds me of the film ‘Chinatown.’ ”

Note: In case you just tuned in, Marion and I are visiting local landmarks in a project inspired by what Charles Owens and Joe Seewerker did in Nuestro Pueblo. Check back next week for another page from Marion's notebook.

By the way, Daily Mirror readers have asked about buying copies of Marion's artwork. Naturally, this is gratifying because I think Marion's work is terrific, and one of my great pleasures is sharing it with readers every week. We have decided that the project is a journey about discovering Los Angeles rather than creating things to sell. Marion is busy with other projects and says she isn't set up to mass-produce prints but would entertain inquiries about specific pieces. For further information, contact Marion directly.

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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 5, 1959

 

    Dec. 5, 1959, Sis

Television Judge

Matt Weinstock     Three days a week Edgar Allen Jones Jr. rushes from UCLA, where he is a law prof, to ABC-TV studio, where he puts on a robe and becomes Judge Edgar Allen Jr. of the program "Day in Court."

    He has presided over the camera courtroom for more than a year, during which he has heard approximately 600 cases, ranging from adoption to murder.  The program, incidentally, is an outgrowth of "Traffic Court," over which he also presides.
    The actors, who sometimes reach such realistic emotional pitches that watchers think it's for real, are rehearsed in their parts but Jones isn't.  He ad-libs his decisions, based on the testimony.  Sometimes he reverses the anticipated verdict on some quirk of the law, giving the show unexpected spontaneity.  His decisions are the high point of the show and are usually accompanied by a "lecture" to the defendant or plaintiff, known as "the hearts and flowers."  By the way, Jones in real life isn't as grim as her appears.
    Through it all Jones must be on solid legal grounds.  His law students keep trying to trip him up, arguing he made a wrong decision.  They haven't won one yet.
 
::
 
    FOOTBALL NOTES — Herb Eder, former UCLA student taking graduate work at LSU, writes that Coach Paul Dietzel asked students at an assembly to pray for the Bruins to defeat Syracuse today so maybe the Grangemen would be dethroned from the No. 1 spot and LSU move up . . . As Bob Bowden passed, a road crew on Malibu Canyon Rd. had "Caution.  Men at Work" signs posted and two flagmen 50 feet apart were warding off motorists as one workman shoveled gravel on the shoulder.  That's really protecting the passer.
 
::
 
 
    MARKET SADIST
I'm hypnotized by pack-
    aged bacon,
Lift each flap 'til my back's
    achin'.
Line behind thinks I'm the
    meanest,
But I don't care, I'll get
    the leanest.
            GINNY LENZ
 
::
 
    SCARLETT O'HARA, who takes them off provocatively at the Follies, is piqued about a singer here who is using the same name, also her picture in ads.  Of course, it isn't, her real name either.  But stripper Scarlett claims priority.  She has been using the name for seven years and she says, actually read "Gone With the Wind."
 
::
 
    THE UPROAR has already started over Stanley Kramer's film, "On the Beach," and doubtless it will get louder when it is premiered simultaneously all over the world Dec. 17.  I saw it at a press preview and it's easy to understand why.

Dec. 5, 1959, Abby

    It's the chilling story, based on Nevil Shute's novel, of atomic doom.  Someone probably thought he saw something on a radar screen, scientist Fred Astaire muses, and pressed a button.  And so the innocent survivors, wait in Melbourne, Australia, for the radioactive cloud to smother them.  You leave the theater comforted vaguely by the double-entendre Salvation Army banner, "There Is Still Hope, Brother."
 
::
 
    ONLY IN L.A. — A young woman seeking a divorce, which she said would be routine and uncontested, asked lawyer Isadore Moidel how much it would cost.  When he told her, she said, "I can give you $10 now and I'll be in with the rest on Dec. 19, 1960."  Why then, he wondered.  "Well, I'm going to the bank now to start a Christmas savings account," she said.  "I'm giving myself this divorce for Christmas."
 
::
 
    FOOTNOTES — Yes, that is the Grant Fought service station on Wilshire Blvd. in West L.A.  Understand, however, he's a very peaceful fellow . . . Ed Brasloff, magazine photographer who recently returned from a trip east, reports there's a Garbage Can Cafe on Highway 66 in Missouri and a dress shop on W 57th St. in New York that has a sign, "Se habla espanol.  We also carry half sizes."
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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 5, 1959

Dec. 5, 1959, Mirror Cover

Mash Notes and Comment

 
Paul Coates    "Mr. Coates:
    "In your column of last Wednesday, you delved into the timely issue of 'Is TV on the Up-and-Up?'
    "You suggested, rather broadly, that maybe it isn't.
    "You cited Desi Arnaz' accent and hinted it was just an affectation.
    "Then you said, and I quote:
    " 'And Sheriff John.  Everybody knows he's not actually a sheriff, but what I mean is, how does he REALLY feel about kids?'
    "It just so happens, Mr. Coates, that I have an authentic badge given me by E.W. Biscailuz and an ID card which states that I am a duly authorized deputy sheriff of L.A. County.
    "If you don't retract your false statement, I'm going to come over to your office one of these days and, if necessary, use a little persuasion on you."  (signed)  Sheriff John,KTTV, Hollywood.
   -Lay a hand on me, officer, and I'll have you pounding a beat after the late, late movie.
 
::
 
    "To Paul Coats,
Dec. 5, 1959, Sidewalk     "Paul I sent a note to Hedda Hopper, she made a mistake in her column a couple of months ago.  She said Tennesee Ernie Ford was going to settle in Palo Alto.
   
"Well he changed his mind and moved to Portola Valley in the mountains 15 miles away from Palo Alto.
    "How do I know this, well the guy who does the plumbing in Portola Valley took me to the Village Pub in Portola and Tennesee Ernie Ford was there and he introduced me to him.
    "All the society people go to this bar, but we got in ok because we knew the bartender.  Paul I just paid Maria Ellena of Stanford 15 bucks to retype my book.  I paid her $7.50 but she will hold my book until I pay her the rest.
    "I can get my book printed for two hundred dollars for the 1st thousand copies.  You are always broke, I know you won't lend me $200 even if I pay you back.
Dec. 5, 1959, Cohen     "I wish I could get Greer Garsons address.  She sent me a Christmas card five years ago, maybe she would lend me $200.
 
 A Couple of Graves to Dig
 
    "Money is hard to come by up here.  Today this guy came in and said Parkey will you drive me to the graveyard, I got a couple of graves to dig.
    "He takes care of the cemetery Paul.
    "I said I would take him after another beer.  By the time I got him to the graveyard he was too loaded to dig a grave, so we turned around and went back and got a bottle.
    "I ask him how much he paid his helpers digging graves.  He said two seventy five an hr.  I said how about a job for me helping you.  He said swell.
    "You watch, Paul, with my luck nobody up here will die for months."  (signed) Parkey Sharkey, 2077 Bay Road, Palo Alto.

    -That's just negative thinking, Parkey.
 
::
 
    "Coates, your comment last week that you didn't ever heed any of Parkey Sharkey's pleas for the loan of some money because you didn't want to commercialize your friendship with him failed to strike me as being a humorous one, if you intended it that way.

    "Any of the letters of Parkey Sharkey which you have printed should have been paid for by you.  His letters do untold good for you by adding the human touch to your column — something which you rarely attain by yourself.

    "Do you refuse to pay him the few dollars he asks because of poverty by your part.  Penury?
    "Wake up, man!  You're profiting by Sharkey's frustrations.  The man needs help!"  (signed) Memphis Harry Lee Ward, P.O. Box 1963, Hollywood.
    -Nothing wrong with Parkey that one good epidemic wouldn't cure.
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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 5, 1942, Hedda Hopper 

Dec. 5, 1942: "Aldous Huxley didn't rush in from his desert home to confer with David Selznick on a new story but for a quick polishing job on 'Jane Eyre' so it can roll immediately."

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Cohen Freed in Slaying

Dec. 4, 1959, Terri Lee

Akron has Terri Lee dolls! 

Dec. 4, 1959, Cohen

Dec. 5, 1959: And on the third day, The Times puts the Jack Whalen killing inside.

Dec. 4, 1959, Oviatt's

Those $15 ties from Oviatt's would cost $109.61 in 2008 dollars.

Dec. 4, 1959, Petticoat

There really was a pink submarine like the one seen in "Operation Petticoat."

Dec. 4, 1959, Sports

Is Chick Meehan full of Flit when he says Syracuse is the best collegiate team he's ever seen?

Posted in Film, Homicide, Mickey Cohen, Sports | 1 Comment

Couple Held in Bank Robbery

Dec. 5, 1919, Bank Robbers

Police arrest Edward Hudson and “Jane Smith” in the Hellman bank holdup.

Dec. 5, 1919, Car

Police also find the blue getaway car…

Dec. 5, 1919, Bank Robbers
… and a second vehicle.

Dec. 5, 1919, Bank Robbers

Authorities are pursuing Arthur Brown in the Hellman robbery. 

Dec. 5, 1919, Bank Robbers

Hudson and “Smith” are arrested in a Main Street tattoo parlor!

Dec. 5, 1919, Bank Robbers

”Smith” describes her relationship with the bank robbers.

Dec. 5, 1919, Bank Robbers

"Yesterday, Ed wanted to have a tattoo mark on his chest covered over. It was a design of two flags and a spread eagle. It is true I have a butterfly tattooed on my arm but I had not gone to that place on Main Street to be tattooed," “Smith” says. 

Dec. 5, 1919, Bank Robbers

Dec. 5, 1919: Will Arthur and Herbert Brown evade police? And who is the mysterious “Jane Smith?” Check tomorrow!

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Dime Novels Blamed in Death of Teenager

Dec. 5, 1909, Dime Novels 

Dec. 5, 1909: Claude Williams, 16, of Cannelton, Ind., kills 13-year-old James Hall and escapes to Kentucky. Williams is a reader of dime novels.

Posted in books, Homicide | 1 Comment

December 4, 1959: Matt Weinstock

December 4, 1959: Christmas needyHalf a century hasn’t dulled the tragedy of these Christmas stories.


Start With People and Where Are You?

Matt Weinstock Top public relations executives took a long, searching look at themselves and what they referred to as “continuing attacks” on their work at their recent Miami Beach convention and their conclusions are succinctly reported in the four-page PRSA (Public Relations Society of America) Convention News.

In his keynote speech, the new president, Kenneth Youel, said the society’s job primarily was to raise the stature of public relations as a profession.

“The greatest area for accomplishment,” he said, “the great challenge to public relations leadership is this:  How can we attract more of the right kind of young men and women into public relations?  How can they themselves be prepared for leadership?  I have thought about this many times and inevitably I return to the same starting point — people.” Continue reading

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December 4, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

December 4, 1959: Mirror Cover

Touhy, Jake Factor, J. Edgar Hoover. Et Al.

Paul Coates, in coat and tieRoger (The Terrible) Touhy, prohibition era gangland boss who was released from Illinois State Penitentiary last week, is remembered most for his kidnapping of John (Jake the Barber) Factor.  That crime earned him a 99-year sentence back in ’34.

But the Touhy story which melted that one into insignificance happened in 1942.
That’s when he and six fellow Statesville inmates practically drove World War II out of the Chicago newspapers by pulling off one of the most implausible prison escapes in penal history.

After smuggling a small arsenal into the pen, Touhy commandeered a prison garbage truck, which he couldn’t get started until some by-standing inmates rocked it back and forth for him. Continue reading

Posted in 1959, Columnists, Countdown to Watts, Mickey Cohen, Paul Coates | Comments Off on December 4, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File