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

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 4, 1941, Hedda Hopper  

Dec. 4, 1941: Is Warners casting Errol Flynn in John Huston’s “Moby Dick?” Perhaps not. You may have to wait for a while on this one.

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Movie Star Mystery Photo

Nov. 30, 2009, Mystery Photo
  Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Marion Burns in “Man Eater,” May 14, 1933. Evidently the film was released as “The Devil Tiger.”

April 27, 1932, Marion Burns

Marion Burns. the daughter of the former head of Western Costume Co.,  gets a contract with Fox, April 27, 1932. She died in 1993.

2009_1204_mystery_photo_02
Los Angeles Times file photo

Marion Burns in an undated photo from Fox. 

Just a reminder on how this works: I post the mystery photo on Monday and reveal the answer on Friday … or on Saturday if I have a hard time picking only five pictures; sometimes it's difficult to choose. To keep the mystery photo from getting lost in the other entries, I move it from Monday to Tuesday to Wednesday, etc., adding a photo every day.

I have to approve all comments, so if your guess is posted immediately, that means you're wrong. (And if a wrong guess has already been submitted by someone else, there's no point in submitting it again).

If you're right, you will have to wait until Friday. There's no need to submit your guess five times. Once is enough. The only reward is bragging rights. 

The answer to last week's mystery star: Creighton Hale!

Dec. 1, 2009, Mystery Photo Los Angeles Times file photo

Here’s another photograph of our mystery woman!

2009_1202_mystery_photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Marion Burns in a July 29, 1934, photo.

Here's another photo of our mystery woman.

Dec. 3, 2009 Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Marion Burns, Jan. 26, 1936, in “Leaning on Letty” at the El Capitan. 

Here’s another picture of our mystery guest. Please congratulate Mike Hawks for identifying her!

Dec. 4, 2009, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Marion Burns in a photo from “The Show Off” with Joe E. Brown, dated Jan. 1, 1941. Evidently this was a play produced at the El Capitan … with Jason Robards.  
Posted in Hollywood, Mystery Photo | 19 Comments

Mickey Cohen Arrested

Mickey Cohen is booked on suspicion of murder in the shooting of Jack “the Enforcer” Whalen, along with George Piscitelle and Sandy Hashagen, 18, who was found by The Times at 2284 1/2 Holly Drive.




Above, Holly Drive as shown by Google maps’ street view.


Times reporter Jerry Hulse interviews Sandy Hashagen: “I was eating my dinner and drinking my orange juice when this man [Whalen] walked over to a nearby table and hit the man seated there. Then I heard the shots. It ruined my dinner…”


Chief William H. Parker takes over the Whalen investigation.


“Last night Parker challenged rumors that there had been a lack of diligence in police handling of Whalen in the past. ” ‘Some time ago it was brought to my attention that Whalen was operating outside the law,’ Parker said. ‘I called in the captain of the administrative vice squad and told him to go to work on the case.’ “

Dec. 4, 1959: Mickey Cohen is “a perfect gentleman,” Sandy Hashagen says. “He never drinks. He never swears. He never smokes.”
Posted in Front Pages, Mickey Cohen | 1 Comment

Hole in Brain Doesn’t Kill

 
image
“That Guiltiest Feeling” by Clare Briggs

Dec.4, 1919, Free Love

A man of mystery tries to kill himself … and a husband tries to divorce a wife who believes in free love. 

 

Dec. 4, 1919: Movie star William Stowell and Dr. Joseph R. Armstrong are killed in a train accident in the Belgian Congo while on an expedition by the Smithsonian Institution and Universal Film Manufacturing Co. Stowell appeared in “Hearts of Humanity.”

Posted in #courts, art and artists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Suicide | Comments Off on Hole in Brain Doesn’t Kill

Man Seeks Former Comrade in Arms

 Dec. 4, 1909, Republican Dinner 

The Republicans hold a dinner  in support of George A. Smith for mayor. Despite strong backing from The Times, Smith was defeated Dec. 8, 1909, by George Alexander. Alexander, in turn lost the mayor’s race to H.H. Rose in 1913. 

Dec. 4, 1909, Veteran
 

Dec. 3, 1909, Samuel Sheppard Dec. 4, 1909: William Davis is looking for an old friend from the Confederate Army’s 10th West Virginia Infantry after seeing his name in a story about divorce proceedings.  “I have not seen him since the surrender of Lee at Appomattox Courthouse in April 1865,” Davis says.

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Found on EBay – Duesenberg

Duesenberg manual What is described as an original manual for a Duesenberg Model J has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $1,200. A little pricier than the set of eight pistons, with bidding that started at $100. Then again, a lot of assorted parts plus an engine was listed at $99,999.
Posted in books, Transportation | Comments Off on Found on EBay – Duesenberg

Matt Weinstock, Dec. 3, 1959

 

   

Book Banning

Matt Weinstock     In 1946 two Los Angeles booksellers were arrested for selling copies of Edmund Wilson's "Memoirs of Hecate County," which had been banned.  The book was ruled obscene and they were convicted.
   
Now, 13 years later, a new edition of "Hecate" has been published and an interesting experiment in book-selling is taking place.

    Several dealers are selling it.  They feel that people have come to age since 1946.  Even westerns are "adult."  Besides, they feel fortified by the U.S. Supreme Court decision which ruled long-banned "Lady Chatterley's Lover" permissible, over the objections of Postmaster General Summerfield and other self-appointed censors.

Dec. 3, 1959, Mickey Rooney    Other book dealers are refusing to handle "Hecate."  They choose to wait and see if anything happens.

     The irony of all this is that anyone who keeps up with his reading can quickly name 10 books that are bolder than either.

::


    ON ARISING THE OTHER DAY
a chemist whose wife is out of town decided he'd like two soft-boiled eggs for breakfast, the way he'd seen her prepare them.  He let them boil about 15 minutes and when he tried to eat them they were of course, quite hard.  At this point the scientist in him took over and he was overheard musing, "Of course! An egg is a protein and a protein is irreversibly coagulated at 40 degrees Centigrade!  I should have known that!"

::

    LIKE NORMAL
Since the quiz show
    collapse
(I hope it won't start
    again)
I've had a relapse-
I'm incurably smart again.
        -CLIFF MACKAY

::


    SPEAKING
before a PTA group, a Beverly Hills fireman cautioned about the danger of fire, particularly from faulty wiring in old homes, and announced the department stood ready to inspect them to ensure safety.

    Failing to arouse any response, he remarked whimsically, "You know, I've been making this announcement for years but I'm beginning to think Beverly Hills is a strange town –nobody's ever home!"

::

Dec. 3, 1959, Strangler
    HOT STUFF —
Karen Danehe, 5 1/2, was drinking some lemonade her mother made from a can of frozen lemon juice when she pointed to several lemons in a basket and remarked, "Did you know you could make it from those, too?  Grandma does" . . . What should  a person do on finding a new form in the office supply room, especially if it won't fit a typewriter?  That's what Kay Cataldi, City Hall employee, would like to know.  Yep, a girdle, apparently discarded by some gal because of the heat.

::


     SOMEHOW,
these last few clear mornings, it has seemed to John W. Mann, as he drove into town on Harbor Freeway, that the cars were just loafing along.  Yesterday he figured it out.  The mountains look so close that motorists are afraid they'll run into them . . . A man named Alex has just installed a radio with short wave in his car and daily around 6 p.m. he gets Radio Brazzaville, in French Equatorial Africa.  Not only that, the announcer, speaking in English, plays currently popular native tunes.  So there's Alex, listening to the top 40 from the African veldt, on Hollywood Freeway.  Better than the local yappers, he says.

::


    WORD PLAY —
Dave Orr has an alternate choice for people who misuse "patients" and "patience."  His firm received a check on an overdue account with a note stating, "Sorry I was so slow in paying and thanks for your patechentz" . . . Meanwhile, back at the dictionary, Dave Soibelman has reactivated his campaign against the female suffix as in poetess and millionairess.  Contends it defiles the language, also is redundant.

::


    MISCELLANY —
Lady named Vivian, reading about the $15 million film "Ben-Hur,"  commented, "I'll bet it'll be a long time before that's on television!" . . . Pat Buttram on CBS Radio: "There are two kinds of highways in America today — overcrowded and under construction" . . . A player in a Gardena poker club keeled over from a heart attack the other day and you guessed it, everybody kept playing.  In fact, one lady was annoyed at the interruption. 

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 3, 1959

 
Dec. 3, 1959, Jack the Enforcer Whalen
The Mirror brings out an extra on killing of Jack “the Enforcer” Whalen.

 

Google maps’ street view of 13359 Ventura Blvd., site of Rondelli's restaurant.

On the Togetherness of Police, Pawnshops

Paul Coates    Today's lesson is how to have your home burglarized, and — after the police have caught the culprit and recovered the loot — how to buy it back.

    I know it sounds simple, but it isn't.  Really, it isn't.  It's very confusing.

    Take, if you will, the Comiskey caper.

    On Dec. 23, 1958, burglars broke into the L.A. home of James and Helen Comiskey.  It was a daylight job.  It happened while the couple was at work. 

    The crooks were methodical pros.  They took their time, ransacked every room, opened every package under the Christmas tree, and walked out with $1,000 worth of loot.

    The Comiskeys immediately filed a report with police, listing all the items they missed.  And that, until last month, was the end of it.

    Then, to their happy surprise, they were notified that the LAPD had located part of their property — a $140 camera and a $190 projector- in a downtown pawnshop.
   
Taking along the necessary proof of ownership, the elated couple hurried down to the police station to claim their possessions. 

Dec. 3, 1959, Whalen

     And here is where matters started to complicate themselves.  Right away, an officer explained to the Comiskeys that the pawnbroker had put out $50 for the stolen goods.

    "Customary procedure," he told them, "is for you to pay the pawnshop man $50, and he'll give you your camera and projector back."

    This startled Mrs. Comiskey, as it would anyone who is a novice at being burglarized.  "Why should I have to pay for my own property?" she demanded.  "If a pawnbroker takes in stolen property, that's his responsibility, not mine."

    "All I said," the officer repeated, "is that it's customary procedure.  You have alternatives."

    He handed her a written form which said she could:

    1- Demand the pawnbroker give the goods back to her. ("Of course, he won't do it," the officer assured her.)

    2- File a claim for the property with the Board of Police commissioners.

    Or 3- File a civil action.

    "The easiest thing to do is to just pay the man," the officer explained.

    And Mrs. Comiskey, although not very happy over the prospect, was inclined to go along with the officer.  She'd probably lose money in the long run — she reasoned — if she took the matter to court, what with attorney's fees and time off from work.  And even then, how could she be sure that court actions or any hearings would actually get her property back for her.

    So she took the officer's advice and followed "customary procedure."  She drove to the pawnstore, went through the formality of demanding her camera equipment back and letting the broker laugh at her, and then paid him the $50.

Dec. 3, 1959, Abby
   
All of which, I think, is too bad.  Because if the officer had explained to her that it's a very simple matter to file  a request before the police commission, if he'd said that this frequently scares the pawnbrokers into giving up the property immediately, if he'd mentioned that, with rare exception, the commission awards the property to its rightful owner, she could have saved herself 50 bucks.

    But policemen seldom point this out to the bewildered citizen.  They just say "customary procedure" is to pay the pawnbroker.

He Who Gets Bitten

    After all, policemen work closely with pawnbrokers.  Pawnbrokers happen to be very good informants.  They've helped break some pretty big burglary cases.  It doesn't hurt to do them a good turn now and then.

    If citizens are only half-informed of their chances of getting back stolen property which is rightfully theirs- without having to "buy" it back- it's not exactly a lie.

    In fact, if you rationalize long enough, you might even come up with the conclusion that the officers — who are paid to protect the people and their property — aren't really misleading the citizenry.

    You might, I say.  But, somehow, I can't. 
   

Posted in Comics, Food and Drink, Front Pages, Homicide, Mickey Cohen, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 3, 1959

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movie Columnist

 
Dec. 3, 1940, Hedda Hopper 

Dec. 3, 1940: Mark Hellinger fills in as columnist.

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Jack ‘the Enforcer’ Whalen Killed


Dec. 3, 1959, Times Cover  

The Times brings out an extra on Whalen’s death.

Jack Whalen
Photograph by the Los Angeles Times

The body of Jack “the Enforcer” Whalen lies on the floor on Rondelli’s restaurant.

 

TALES FROM THE GANGSTER SQUAD

Death of 'the Enforcer'

* Jack Whalen follows the advice of his friend on the police force and calls on Mickey Cohen and his associates at a Ventura Boulevard restaurant . . . unarmed.

October 31, 2008

By Paul Lieberman

The dispute had its roots in Nov. 21, 1959, vice raids on the homes of five phone clerks who took bets for Al Levitt, a Woodland Hills bookie. With Levitt's records gone — the cops had them — a pair of bettors began clamoring for $390 they said they were due.

One of them was Sam Lo Cigno, who described himself as an unemployed bartender and asphalt salesman but managed to drive a new Cadillac. "I don't believe anyone can win on horses," Lo Cigno said, "but I was lucky."

He had grown up in Cleveland while Mickey was there, and after Mickey moved west to serve as muscle for Bugsy Siegel, Lo Cigno came too. But with only one jail term on his sheet, five days for speeding, he seemed little more than "a flunky and errand boy for Mickey," as a probation officer put it.

Now, the errand boy and his friend George Piscitelle were fixing to heist $390 from the just-raided Levitt until the bookie realized, no — they'd lost their bets. On Dec. 2, he told them, "I am through with this. I am having J.O. call you," and they understood exactly: J.O. meant Jack O'Hara, a.k.a. Jack "the Enforcer" Whalen.

In minutes, Piscitelle said, the phone rang in his apartment and it was the "head-buster," declaring, "You Dago bastards" had better come up with what was owed.

Lo Cigno and his pals were getting ready for a night out, starting with supper at Rondelli's on Ventura Boulevard. The pint-sized lounge singer Tony Reno was coming, and so was talent manager Joe DeCarlo, who handled Mickey's two favorite strippers, Candy Barr and Beverly Hills.

Lo Cigno liked Rondelli's because they served him pasta without the spicy sauce that inflamed his nervous stomach.

He wore one of his perfectly tailored suits, with a side pocket just the right size for his .38. "It hung in there real nice," he said.

Tough as he was, Whalen wasn't about to confront them alone. He'd called his pal on the Gangster Squad, but Sgt. Jerry Wooters had been busted to night duty at the police jail.

So Whalen had his frequent helpmate Rocky Lombardi meet him at a seafood joint on the Strip. "He wanted me to watch his back," Lombardi said. Then they met a second backup, "Big Joe" Herrera, and headed to Sherman Oaks, those two in one car, the Enforcer in his own.

The backups got to Rondelli's shortly before 11:30 p.m. and took positions at opposite ends of its dimly lighted bar. Customers filled all the stools and a row of cocktail tables.

Rocky barely had time to order a drink before Whalen burst through the swinging doors of the kitchen. He'd come in the back from an alley. Now he strode toward the phone booth. "I knew that he wasn't there for pleasure," said a woman at the bar.

You couldn't see the dining area from the bar. They were separated by a planter filled with fake greenery rising nearly to the ceiling — the sort of stuff that had been a staple of the nursery Mickey Cohen opened when he got out of prison.

Mickey had arrived between 8:30 and 9 p.m. in his new, black Caddy, accompanied by his bulldog, Mickey Jr. The dog had his own checkered bib so he could eat in style off a plate at his master's feet.

At a hearing a month before on Rondelli's application for a license to offer live entertainment, Mickey had taken the 5th when asked if he was a hidden owner. This night, he came early to meet with a black singing group seeking his help and with Roger Leonard, who fancied himself a writer-producer. Leonard was at Mickey's table to talk about making "The Mickey Cohen Story."

Sam Lo Cigno took the seat on Mickey's left and Piscitelle took a seat on the other side, where he could see anyone entering the dining room. Last to arrive was Mickey's date, Sandy Hagen, a model, full name Claretta Hashagen. She ordered the veal scallopini.

Mickey was constantly getting up, going to the office to make calls or the men's room to wash his hands. Lo Cigno flitted about too, schmoozing with two women at the bar. He wanted Jo Wyatt and Ona Rae Rogers to join them later at the Cloisters, on the Strip, where Mickey had reserved a table to see comedian Joey Bishop.

The tiny crooner, Tony Reno, kept getting up also, to go to the pay phone, to find his manager, he said. That's who he was trying to reach, he insisted, when an enormous hand lifted him out of the phone booth. He said Jack Whalen told him, "Show me where those bastards are.' "

Whalen prodded Reno into the dining area, but let him go when he saw who was there. Reno hurried back to the bar, where he couldn't see what happened. He only heard the shots. After that, he looked across at Rocky Lombardi, the big man's backup, and gave a hands-up gesture, like "What can you do?"

Mickey's first story was that the shots came from a nearby booth and he "didn't see nuthin'." Then he changed that to, OK, they came from his table. But he still didn't see much.

He said Whalen walked up and said, "Good evening, Mr. Cohen," but he didn't have time to respond because the Enforcer put his left hand on Piscitelle's shoulder and said, " 'Have you got something for me?' . . . and Bingo! . . . he hit George a shot" — a powerful right — "and George went to the floor."

Whalen turned to Lo Cigno, Mickey said, and "he said, 'You Dago bastard, you're next' or something of that sort. . . . The next thing, I heard the shooting, and that was it."

"I never seen any gun," Mickey said, describing how he ducked "from force of habit," and stayed under the table, down there with the dog, Mickey Jr., and when he finally looked up, the restaurant was empty.

That became Mickey Cohen's story.

Only the women from the bar had not left. Jo Wyatt and Ona Rae Rogers sometimes waitressed on the Strip and knew who Whalen was.

Wyatt hurried to the dining area and found him lying on his right side, next to the pastry table. Whalen was still breathing, but bleeding from his head, so she got napkins and towels and asked her friend to get ice. To one fleeing diner, it looked like she was kneeling in prayer over the body.

Wyatt said she pleaded, "Please call a doctor,&q
uot; and Mickey did — he phoned his own physician. "Next thing," Mickey said, "I went and washed my hands."

Whalen was dead when police arrived at 12:10 a.m. The first bullet had missed. The second got him almost between the eyes.

Chief William H. Parker and Capt. James Hamilton, head of the Gangster Squad, were there within an hour. But the honor of questioning Mickey fell to Thad Brown, the cigar-chomping deputy chief who was familiar with the victim. "He'd been flirting with the undertaker for a long time," Brown said of Whalen.

"So help me God, chief, I didn't shoot him," Mickey said.

"Who did?"

"I don't know."

When the press arrived, Parker revealed that Hamilton's squad had been tipped earlier that Whalen might be going to Rondelli's "to settle a beef." Parker did not say where the tip came from.

Jerry Wooters was awakened by the phone at 2 a.m. It was Hamilton, and it was not a friendly call.

"He says, 'Where can we pick up' — see, now suddenly he knows I'm close to Whalen. He says, 'Where can I pick up Mrs. — Whalen's wife?' I said, 'Captain, you're talking to a uniformed sergeant. . . . You got all those high-powered detectives down there. Let them find out.' So he says, 'Listen . . . you think you're so smart. And Jesus, he went on with stuff I never heard about. And I said, 'Listen, I assume you're recording this. And I have no desire to talk any further. I'm on overtime if you pull me down.'

" 'God damn it, blah, blah, blah.'

"So I didn't tell him anything."

Only later did Wooters learn that an unmarked Intelligence car had gone to Rondelli's as a result of his tip the night before. But the two squad members simply parked on Ventura Boulevard. They never went in. They hadn't realized anything was amiss until the other police cars pulled up.

So that's what his years as the secret buddy of Jack Whalen had come to — him stuck in the jail, Whalen dead on the floor and two cops "sitting outside that goddamned place when the shots were fired."

When the sun came up in the morning, one of the swarm of officers still at the scene searched through a trash can next door and discovered a plastic bag with three .38s in it.

That was the moment another member of the Gangster Squad had been anticipating for a decade.

Jack O'Mara got to Rondelli's while the body still lay there. When he heard what was in the trash, he told Hamilton, "Cap', they could be the guns I took."

Hamilton remembered well how O'Mara had sneaked seven guns out of Mickey's house ages ago and etched initials under their butt plates in hopes of one day proving the man was a killer. The Gangster Squad had been trying to make that case, but failing, since 1946.

On Dec. 8, 1959, six days after the shooting, Lo Cigno came out of hiding to surrender at LAPD headquarters, saying he was turning himself in at Mickey's urging.

LoCigno announced: "Well, I'm the man that shot Jack O'Hara in self-defense."

 

 

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Man Kidnaps Daughter’s Playmate

 Dec. 3, 1919, Briggs “The Days of Real Sport” by Clare Briggs

Dec. 3, 1919, Kidnapping

 Dec. 3, 1919, Kidnapping

Dec. 3, 1919: J.C. [or J.T.] Christian is accused of running off to Calexico with a 13-year-old girl who was his daughter's playmate. The Times not only names a minor child who was the victim of a kidnapping and sexual assault, but publishes her picture as well. Christian was sentenced to one to 50 years in prison, The Times said. 

Posted in #courts, art and artists, Comics | 1 Comment

Life’s Seamy Side

 
Dec. 3, 1909, Found Unconscious 

 

Dec. 3, 1909: Authorities are trying to establish what happened to Hazel Robertson Dillon between the time she escaped from St. Mary's Convent by stealing a dress and slipping it over her gym clothes and when she was found unconscious in Chicago's Lincoln Park. She was evidently befriended by men she met on streetcars … oh life’s seamy side indeed!

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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 2, 1959

 Dec. 2, 1959, Peanuts
Dec. 2, 1959, Peanuts

Oath Era

Matt Weinstock

    Harvard and Yale, you may have read, withdrew recently from the federal student loan program in protest over the required loyalty oath.  Their action meant a substantial sacrifice, involving more than $500,000.  It also brought into focus again what has become an anachronistic nuisance.
   
Most people accept the loyalty oath as one of the curious appendages of our fearful era.  Others go down fighting.  A writer, in great demand as a speaker, expresses himself thusly:

    "Why is it my driver's license is good for four years but I have to take a loyalty oath  every time I get near certain people?  Why can't my loyalty be checked once and for all and then perhaps I could be given a card showing that I do not plan to overthrow the government.  Every time the matter comes up it could be punched, like  a meal ticket."
   
Dec. 2, 1959, Nixon It isn't likely the flag wavers would approve.  With them the ghost of Joe McCarthy still hovers.

::

    A TRUE dog story.

    In the town of Walker, north of Bridgeport, Cal., there is a general store and gas station run by George Johnson.  A fixture around the place is a dog, part black cocker, named Canyon.  He is named Canyon because he was found, as a pup, about three years ago, in a nearby canyon.  Now everyone knows and feeds him.

    John Prince of Hollywood has a cabin in Walker and while there last weekend noticed a curious thing about Canyon.  As a community dog, he doesn't respond particularly as people drive up to the store.  But if they're in a blue car he becomes keenly interested.  The speculation is that he was let out of a blue car as a pup and is still looking for his master.

::

NOAH, PLEASE NOTE
There's a change in the
    word for a hassle,
The name for a wrangle,
    a row.
That used to be known as
    a rhubarb
Is known as a cranberry
    now.
    –RICHARD ARMOUR

::


    EVERY MONDAY
night station KPFK-FM presents a 15-minute program titled "Soviet Press and Periodicals."  Interested listeners are urged to phone and ask questions.
   
But not all listeners realize that the program is conducted live in San Francisco by William Mandel and repeated on tape the following Monday here. So since July they've been dialing the THornwall number intended for S.F. listeners and getting a lady in San Fernando Valley.  She was mystified but recognized their sincerity and from her meager knowledge of Russia tried to answer them.

Dec. 2, 1959, Abby
    Lately she has been swamped with 20 to 30 calls each Monday and has given up.  She'd leave the phone off the hook but when she'd put it back there they were, demanding information.  When she said she didn't know they'd become angry and ask why the station put out her number if she didn't know the answers.  The station has finally come to her rescue, but not entirely.  Until further notice, it's the wrong number tale of the year.

::


    DURING A
coffee break a couple of working girls, Jeanne and Barbara, were analyzing their personalities, and Jeanne thoughtfully remarked, "No, I don't think I could ever be a nonconformist — even if everybody else was!"

::


    AROUND TOWN —
You know the line in "The Star Spangled Banner" that goes, "that our flag was still there"?  Oldtimers say Sunday was the most reassuring day in months because it was so clear they could see landmarks usually invisible.  Even trees and houses on Catalina Island were visible from the mainland.  Keith Homeier saw the City Hall from Whittier — a rare sight . . . Yesterday was another shocking day — if you were susceptible to static electricity . . . Lalo Guerrero, noted Belvedere troubadour, has recorded a parody of "Mack the Knife" titled "Macario el Carnicero" . . . Harry Cimring refers to platter spinners involved with payola as slipped disc jockeys. 

 
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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 2, 1959

 Dec. 2, 1959, Mirror Cover

Mickey Rooney shows up drunk on “The Tonight Show” and demands an apology the next day from host Jack Paar for saying: "It's a shame, he was a great talent."

A Columnist Broods Anent Brodies of Idols

 Paul Coates   This is the new Dark Age. 

    Idols are being shattered all around us. 

    The plaster figure of Charles Van Doren was the first to crumble, quickly followed by a horde of lesser geniuses which quiz shows had illegitimately spawned.

    And then there was the after-shock.

    The rumble of disc jockeys declining to state whether or not they had declined to take.  The brutal revelation that Ed Murrow's “Person to Person” cameras and crews didn't knock on just any door.  They came invited and announced.

    The begrudging admission from Madison Ave. that some commercials might have a slight, barely perceptible tendency to over-evaluate the product.  That the rich, tempting foam on a glass of beer might really be soap.  And, I suppose, that the luxurious lather from a bar of soap might really be beer foam.

Dec. 2, 1959, Mickey Rooney     The depressing truth that those gales of appreciative laughter on comedy shows didn't come from people, but from a spool of tape.  That even the cheers on newsreels  for Ike were canned, not fresh.

    The findings so far in this grim inquisition make you wonder what else in life is not all that it seems to be.

    For example, Desi Arnaz.  That accent.  Isn't it just an affectation?  After all, he got out of Cuba a week after they sank the Maine.  And Alfred Hitchcock.  Does he really look like that?  Or do they just make him up that way?
   
And Sheriff John.  Everybody knows he's not actually a sheriff, but what I mean is, how does he REALLY feel about kids?

    And, when you came right down to it, Bing Crosby.  Is that really his hair?

    I don't know the answers.  But I can assure you, if there's a tattle-tale gray involved, it'll come out in Rep. Oren Harris' automatic washer.

    Because this, my friends, is the time of the great soul cleansing.

    And into this steamy atmosphere, I'd like to throw my own soiled linen.   

    I, too, have been tampered with.  There are special interest groups who have sought to buy my favor by playing me with an assortment of temptations.

    I've been lured by Liberace, who, even when it isn't Christmas or my birthday, sends me ash trays in the form of grand pianos with his name splashed across the keyboard.

    An independent lady vegetarian named Hasmick Goodell sends me floating candles for my bathtub, hoping it will sway me to print a good word in behalf of organic squash and cockaleekle soup.

    The Cossman Toy Co. sent me a genuine ant farm.  I got a highly polished apple from an Oregon agricultural association, a piece of pickled corned beef from a man who pickles corned beeves, a long baton-pencil from Lawrence Welk and a dues-free membership in the Smiling Jack fan club.
   

My Payola Does Flopola

    Now that I see the handwriting on the wall, I'd gladly return these spoils just to ease my conscience, and to take the heat off.  But I can't.

    Mrs. Goodell's candles have melted into a mere blob which clings stubbornly to the porcelain of my bath.  Liberace's ash trays have been sent to my mother, who doesn't smoke but is a music lover. Welk's pencil is just a nub of its former self.

    And finally, I bit into the apple, which was forbidden even before the Harris subcommittee started looking into that sort of thing.

    

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Dec. 2, 1959

A Kinder Simpler Time Dept.’: Your Movie Columnist

Dec. 2, 1939, Hedda Hopper 

The Ritz Bros. in person!

Dec. 2, 1939: "At preview [of 'Destry Rides Again'] Marlene [Dietrich] and Jimmy [Stewart] sat beside me and held hands. I wonder if Mae West and Bill Fields will do that when they preview 'My Little Chickadee?' Mae's got to go some to out-yip Marlene."

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

Singer Pleads Not Guilty to Soliciting


Dec. 2, 1959, Akron

Akron has remote-control dachshunds — “a zany plaything.”

Dec. 2, 1959, Johnnie Ray

Johnnie Ray says he just invited a friendly undercover officer up to his room for a nightcap. Nothing indecent about that.

Dec. 2, 1959, Flynn Statue

Mr. Flynn, would you like gold plating on that nude statue of your “protege?”

Dec. 2, 1959, Smut

Three of bookstores accused of selling obscene materials are in the 500 block of South Main.

Dec. 2, 1959, Fiat

The Fiat Bianchina ($9747.94 USD 2008) gets 40 mpg  and has a heater!

Dec. 2, 1959

“I could have a baby now, but I prefer to wait until I’m 100,” says Dr. Barbara Moore.

Dec. 2, 1959, Bardot

Brigitte Bardot in “A Woman Like Satan.” Free Bardot hairstyles and makeup to the first 25 women who attend the showing at the Iris Theatre matinee!!

Dec. 2, 1959, Nancy

Ernie Bushmiller — An early influence on Bill Watterson

Dec. 2, 1959, Sports
Is Sid Gillman leaving the Rams? And who might take his place?

Posted in #courts, #gays and lesbians, books, Film, Hollywood, LAPD, Music, Rock 'n' Roll, Sports, Transportation | 1 Comment

Nuestro Pueblo

 Aug. 31, 1938, Nuestro Pueblo  

 

Aug. 31, 1938: Joe Seewerker and Charles Owens visit the Southwest Museum. Although I’ve been to the museum many times, I always drive to the top, so I’ve never noticed this tunnel. Next time I’m there, I’ll look at it.

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

Posted in art and artists, books, Nuestro Pueblo | Comments Off on Nuestro Pueblo

Three Pros Hold Up Bank

Dec. 2, 1919, Holdup 

The Times illustrates the  holdup with a cutaway drawing of the bank.

Dec. 2, 1919, Holdup

Dec. 2, 1919, Holdup

One of the bank robbers looked like a “hop head” or drug fiend, The Times says. 

Dec. 2, 1919, Holdup

Dec. 2, 1919: “The robbery, according to veteran detectives, was planned without a single flaw and executed without a hitch.

“The three bandits suddenly called to the five employees to hold up their hands, herded them into a little office next to the vault and then proceeded to clean out the place. While one of the trio held the four men and one woman in the office, the other two swept all the paper money into waste paper baskets, walked into the vault and cleaned out all the compartments that were found unlocked, including the circular safe in which the Liberty Bonds were kept, and then carried their loot to the front part of the bank.

“Returning to the door of the little office, the bandits transferred their prisoners into the vault and closed the heavy steel door after them. Then they walked out and disappeared from the vicinity. No one could be found by the police up to last night who actually saw the trio get into an automobile or walk into the bank.”

Posted in LAPD, Robberies | Comments Off on Three Pros Hold Up Bank

Homeowner Captures Burglar After Struggle

Dec. 2, 1909, Aqueduct  

Dec. 2, 1909: William Mulholland says the aqueduct from Owens Valley will be done a year ahead of schedule.

Dec. 2, 1909, Burglar 

The East Adams Boulevard neighborhood via Google maps street view.

Dec. 2, 1909, Burglar

Dec. 2, 1909: Romeo E. Ellithorp [or Ellithorpe]  and his wife come home about 7 p.m. and discover Fred Murray burglarizing the house.

Ellithorp says he tumbled down the stairs while fighting with the burglar over a pistol. Because he was unarmed, Ellithorp went into a closet under the stairs. The burglar followed him and the struggle continued while Ellithorp’s wife called police. A neighbor rushed in to help but because he wasn’t sure which man was the burglar, he struck both of them.

Posted in #courts, LAPD | Comments Off on Homeowner Captures Burglar After Struggle