Mystery Photo

 

May 18, 2009, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Our mystery person this week is Trixie Friganza, who died in 1955. Above, Friganza in "Canary Cottage, May 21, 1916.

March 3, 1955, Trixie Friganza

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 prize is bragging rights. 

The answer to last week's mystery star: Marjorie Rambeau.

May 19, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Friganza as the "Flapper Grandma" in "The Clinging Vine," Nov. 2, 1924.

Here's our mystery gal with her fancy radio. Check out the horn on the speaker.
Please congratulate Eve Golden and Mary Mallory for correctly identifying her!

May 20, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Friganza in "The Charmer," April 5, 1925.

Here's another photo of our mystery gal. Please congratulate Bob Birchard and Nick Santa Maria for correctly identifying her.

May 21, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Sophie Tucker visits Friganza, who is bedridden with arthritis, Dec. 15, 1952.

Our mystery woman is ill and receives a visit from an old friend. Please congratulate Mike Hawks for correctly identifying our mystery gal.

May 22, 1959, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Friganza celebrates her 82nd birthday, Nov. 30, 1953.

var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www.");
document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));

try {
var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("UA-8640152-1");
pageTracker._trackPageview();
} catch(err) {}

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Stage | 24 Comments

Father Turns in Son in Fatal Stabbing, May 22, 1959

May 22, 1959, Wait Right There

"Just Wait There!  — I'll Come Right Down."

may 22, 1959, Insane

Kenneth A. Merriam is accused of helping to kill the two children of his girlfriend, Wanda Brogdon. Evidently, both of them were mentally disabled.

At right, Ernie Kovacs needs a 100-foot piano for his TV show.

May 22, 1959, Cover
A father turns in his son and a friend after they killed a man. View this page

May 22, 1959, Embezzler
Underworld figures rounded up after 1957 mob summit. View this page

May 22, 1959, Ernie Kovacs

May 22, 1959, House

Catherine Webber of 1368 Yosemite Drive says house movers are trespassing when the jack up a house 20 feet in the air to clear her garage.

May 22, 1959, Comics
Who wins Day 2 of the "Nancy" vs. "Ferd'nand" comic death match? View this page

May 22, 1959, Sports
Boxing is even more crooked than anyone realized, Paul Zimmerman says. View this page
Posted in #courts, art and artists, broadcasting, Comics, Dodgers, Film, Hollywood, Homicide, Sports, Television | Comments Off on Father Turns in Son in Fatal Stabbing, May 22, 1959

Man Admits Sack Murder, May 28, 1934

May 28, 1934, Sack Murder

Tulley/Tully McQuate was hanged May 24, 1935.

May 28, 1934, Sack Murder

Harry Carr visits Beale Street.

May 28, 1934, Sack Murder

Posted in #courts, Homicide | Comments Off on Man Admits Sack Murder, May 28, 1934

Found on EBay — Chinatown, 1908

Chinese Family, EBay This postcard of a Chinese family, postmarked Los Angeles 1908, has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $4.99.
Posted in Downtown | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Chinatown, 1908

Matt Weinstock, May 21, 1959

Election Gripe

Matt_weinstockdTed Austin is unhappy about next Tuesday's municipal election.

He
doesn't think truth and justice will be served by closing the bars that
day, thereby depriving thousands of deserving bartenders of a day's pay
merely to provide an opportunity for people to vote on a handful of
candidates and issues in which they don't seem particularly interested.

It
is a rather silly, anachronistic ordinance, but in the interest of
truth and justice, which prevail mightily here, it should be observed
that Ted Austin is a bartender.

::

IT HAS BEEN a fatal fortnight for well-known old-time L.A. detectives — Eddie Romero, Dwight Longuevan,
Bert Wallis and Frank L. (Lefty) James. Lefty was born Jan. 4, 1890, on
Yale St. about a mile from the Civic Center, where he carved out a
memorable career as a tough but human cop.

May 21, 1959, Delinquency By arrangement, Lefty
phoned his wife, Bobbie, every day at 9 a.m. They lived apart but were
friendly. When he didn't call Tuesday she tried to reach him. She
couldn't and notified the manager of the apartment. Lefty was found
dead of a heart attack which apparently struck while he was preparing
coffee.

Only a few weeks ago Lefty turned over to agent Lou Irwin his completed autobiography, "Crime Shouldn't Pay," now his obituary.

 ::

WHEN DON Demeter came to bat last Sunday a Dodger fan shouted, "OK, Don, let's play screeno!"
A few seconds later Don blasted a homer over the left-field screen. The
fan stood up and, Malvin Wald reports, announced ecstatically, "He got
the message! He got the message!"

::

WE'VE HAD IT
The time has come to lower the gavel
And silence the phrase
"Have Something,
Will Travel,"
–HELEN MITCHELL

::

IN THE RATHER macabre filling station version, the way Maurice Ogden tells it, an attendant was probing for the oil stick of a Belchfire Eight when the raised hood suddenly dropped, decapitating him.

"Ah," sagely commented a passing philosopher, observing the head, "a filling man's thinker!"*

::

IT APPEARS that
John Grover turned over a hornet's nest about conflicting views on
education titled "Notes on Parental Functions." Most of the hornets
were friendly but the dilemma remains.

One mother writes:

"I
would like to ask these 'objecting' educators what is a parent to do
when a child asks, 'How do you spell book?' Should I say, 'I won't tell
you, you should not ask questions like that, it isn't normal, just go
out and play'? So she asks her father and he says the same thing. So
she goes underground and asks a neighbor and learns it in spite of me.
Is that better? Because it's for sure that when she wants to know
something she's going to find out one way or another."

::


May 21, 1959, Abby BY COINCIDENCE
the preceding is a prelude to notes that two sixth-graders named Cindy and Lea wrote each other and the red-faced mother of one of them happened to see.

First note: "I have know book."

Second note: "What do you wanted to no how to spell?"

::


AT RANDOM —
There's a big squawk emanating from the area around Van Nuys
Airport. Residents say the north-south streets are such a maze of
excavations and detours that they can hardly find their way home …
LedLiringis heard it on KMPC : "About twice a year we hold our annual
spring clearance sale" … Pete the Waiter, the language purist, scoffs
at collectors of such cliches as "do hereby" and "shark-infested
waters." Much more offensive, he contends, is "gives lip service" …
Man on the telephone says he heard a record titled "Chavez Ravine" on XERB, Rosarito Beach, all about the recent episode here … Walt Hackett's solution: The Dodgers need a smaller park. These huge crowds scare 'em after dark.

* This is a play on the ad slogan: "A thinking man's filter."

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, May 21, 1959

Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, May 21, 1959

Confidential File

Moms-to-Moscow Movement Churning

Paul_coatesWASHINGTON,
May 14 — EXCHANGING MOMS WITH RUSS URGED. Congress was asked today to
authorize a cultural exchange of mothers between the United States and
the Soviet Union as an approach to peace.

Rep. Kind (D-Utah) proposed a resolution to authorize the visits for promotion of understanding between the two countries.

Two hundred mothers — 100 from each county — would participate in the program.

Nominees from every state would participate in the program.

::

You ask me, I say Rep. King should be commended for his unique plan to create an international mother exchange.

May 21, 1959, Thumb He
should be commended, that is, providing he isn't entertaining any
bizarre ulterior motives. Like, trying to palm off his wife's mother on
the Russians.

Of course, if that's in back of his mind, there's
always the risk that he'll wind up getting some Russian's wife's mother
in return.

And, as far as I'm concerned, it would serve him right.

If
there's one thing I cannot stand it's a duly elected representative of
the people who takes up the valuable time of the United States Congress
just to solve a gnawing personal problem.

You know what I mean?

However,
for the sake of this discussion, let's assume that Rep. King really
loves his mother-in-law and that his motives are sincere.

In that case, his proposal raises a few questions.

He
suggests a nationwide competition to select the mothers who would be
turned in for exchange. I'd like to know what form this competition
would take.

For example, would there be an apple baking contest?
That's essential. And would the typical American mother have to hold
her own in a sock-darning and collar-turning exam?

Would she be expected to have home remedies for (1) croup, (2) earache, (3) la grippe, (4) runny nose?

To
fit the traditional picture, wouldn't her personality tests have to
reveal an intense feeling that all her children made bad marriages,
that her oldest son's wife is systematically starving him, and that
nobody knows how to raise kids these days — all that hogwash about
child psychology.

I ask these questions because I think I've got
a candidate. I would like to volunteer the services of my own mother.
Or, as I call her, Mom.

May 21, 1959, Thumb What I'm doing is a sacrifice, I know.
But, really, no sacrifice is too great in the cause of international
friendship. Besides, the trip would do her good. She's never gone
anywhere except FarRockaway.

My mother could go to Russia
without too many preconceived notions about Marxism. Back in 1924
somebody told her that Communists practiced free love and she has
primly closed her mind to the entire subject ever since.

My mother is dedicated only to the pressing proposition that everybody she meets is on the verge of a physical breakdown.

Ma Would Serve Nikita Right

Given the opportunity to meet Khrushchev, I'm sure she would look him over carefully, shake her head and tell him:

"You should be ashamed. A man you age letting himself go like that. I've seen overweights
like you drop like flies with heart attacks. And you drink too much.
Your liver must be some sight. I cant tell by your color. Pasty."

This
may not do a helluva lot for world understanding. But, at least, it
would serve the alternate purpose of reducing Nikita to a gibbering,
whining hypochondriac in a matter of minutes.

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, May 21, 1959

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Computer Dating

May 21, 1967, Dating

May 21, 1967
Posted in Science | 1 Comment

Cooking With the Junior League: Land of Lincoln

Lincoln's Kitchen

The Lincolns' kitchen in Springfield.
In this week's post on Cooking With the Junior League, Mary McCoy tries dishes from the Springfield, Ill., league's cookbook, "Honest to Goodness."

Mary writes: "The Junior League of Springfield’s thoughtful dedication to local history is matched only by their thoughtful dedication to local food.  Food styling and photographs aside, this is simply one of the best Junior League cookbooks I’ve encountered when it comes to great recipes."

Read more >>>

Posted in Food and Drink, Politics | Comments Off on Cooking With the Junior League: Land of Lincoln

Highway Patrol Rounds Up Missing Legislators, May 21, 1939

May 21, 1939

"Teach me to dance, Dragon Lady."

May 21, 1939, Cover

View this page

At left, my kind of story. The Assembly sends the Highway Patrol to track down legislators who skipped their session on the last day they got paid. Among the missing is Assemblyman Sam Yorty, who reported later in the day.

There's a follow-up on anti-Semitic groups in the U.S. and purported plots to take over the government.

In Italy, mobs shout "On to Paris!" and crowds at the Tall Corn Exposition in Marshalltown, Iowa, are terrified when an ape escapes from a carnival and runs through the streets before being captured in a hardware store.

May 21, 1939, Yankee Clipper

The Yankee Clipper, which can carry 35 passengers, begins service to Europe.


May 21, 1939, Along El Camino Real

Ed Ainsworth takes a look at back at six years of columns.

At right, Los Angeles is reading "The Grapes of Wrath," "All This, and Heaven, Too" and "Reaching for the Stars."  

May 21, 1939, Jews
Jews and Arabs fight with the British in the Holy Land. View this page

May 21, 1939, Wild Daughter

May 21, 1939, Table
There's a mile-long table for Ontario's All States Picnic. View this page

May 21, 1939, Only Angels Have Wings

"Only Angels Have Wings" is opening.

May 21, 1939, Theater
Hollywood is ruled by fear of criticism, failure, public opinion and whispering campaigns, Hedda Hopper says. View this page

May 21, 1939, Bestsellers

May 21, 1939, Bride

May 21, 1939, Overpass

Here's some interesting background on the interchange where Glendale Boulevard turns into 2nd Street west of downtown. Evidently much of the bridge was buried but the caption is a bit unclear as to the reasons. Note that the artist is Charles Owens of Nuestro Pueblo.

May 21, 1939, Underpass

Still another attempt to ease traffic in Los Angeles: A bridge is built to help turn Olympic Boulevard into a thoroughfare across the city.
Posted in Architecture, art and artists, books, Columnists, Comics, Downtown, Fashion, Film, Freeways, Front Pages, Hollywood, Nuestro Pueblo, Transportation | 1 Comment

Woman Tries Suicide at Church, Feb. 20, 1928

Feb. 20, 1928, Suicide
Posted in Religion, Suicide | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — Downtown L.A., 1908



 
Broadway Postcard EBay 1908 This postcard showing
Broadway as seen from around 4th Street has been listed on EBay. The
building in the distance with the pointed roof is the old City Hall,
now a vacant lot next to the Hosfield/Victor Clothing Building. Also
notice the billboard shaped like an old-fashioned shoe on top of the
building on the west side of Broadway.

Bidding starts at $5.

Posted in Architecture, Downtown | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Downtown L.A., 1908

Matt Weinstock, May 20, 1959

May 20, 1959, Don't Shoot, Margo!

"Don't shoot, Margo, I'm coming in!"

Just a Mistake

Matt_weinstockdSeveral months
ago the after-midnight serenity of the 100 block on South Commonwealth
Avenue was disturbed by a sustained crashing noise which turned out to
be a drunk driver banging into four parked cars.

Several nights ago, there is was again — the same sound.

Residents
rushed out to find a large, befuddled gentleman in his damaged car,
which had badly bruised four parked cars, trying to start it so he
could back away from the one in which it was embedded. He finally got
it going, backed up, almost knocking down a woman, and took off
erratically, damaging five more cars before stopping. Total, nine cars.

But
what fascinated J. Jackson, an onlooker, was his remark as police took
him away. "Everyone," he said plaintively in a thick German accent,
"makes mistakes."

::

May 20, 1959, Ax ALONG WITH several million other persons, TV director Rick Oxford last week watched Desilu
Playhouse's "Man in Orbit," the exciting tale of a man (Lee Marvin) who
was launched into space and became trapped there when something went
wrong with the machinery. There he was, talking desperately into his
radio as he orbited the earth every few minutes.

To let him know
he was being heard it was arranged that when he passed over Kansas City
at midnight the people there would turn out their lights a few moments
before and turn them on again simultaneously at 12 sharp.

At the
exact moment the folks in K.C. flipped their switches Rick's TV picture
blacked out although the sound continued. Next day he called a
repairman but he found nothing wrong and the set has worked perfectly
since.

And what have you heard from outer space recently?

::

PLAY BAWL

How many hits and runs they'll score remains to be seen.
But they're already making putouts in Chavez Ravine.

-JACK PRICE

::

IT'S LITTLE old lady time again. A tiny, wizened, decrepit-looking one on the early morning Brentwood
bus, known as the Housemaids' Special, attracted the attention of the
regulars and one asked if she were going to work. No, she replied, she
was going out to take care of her daughter's children while her
daughter went to school. She added, "I don't mind going out there but,
I hate to leave my mother at home." How old was her mother?
Ninety-seven.

::

May 20, 1959, Women 1959_0520_women AFTER a half-hour wait in a busy airline ticket office on 6th Street, a man said despairingly, "How come if there's so much unemployment so many people are traveling?"

A lady who had been waiting 45 minutes responded. "Maybe they're going out looking for jobs."

::

A LADY NAMED
Doris decided to have an FM unit installed in her 10-year-old
radio-phonograph or possibly turn it in on a new model. When she got to
the store she became bewildered by the hi-fi and stereo talk. She
didn't know exactly how to describe her machine to the salesman so she
said, "I guess you'd call it an old low-fi."

::

May 20, 1959, Abby ROBERT A. Futterman,
31, who has made a lucrative career of appraising American cities in
terms of future real estate values, states of our burg in the June
Esquire: "Despite what some people think, you don't have to be afraid
of Los Angeles." Who's afraid?

::

AT RANDOM — It
will come as no surprise to those who drive home around 5 p.m. to learn
that, according to Gov. Brown's traffic safety committee, there are
more autos in L.A. County than in any of 44 states … On SidKuller's
return home from an extended trip his son Kenny, 4, said, "Daddy, you
were gone so long I almost didn't miss you anymore" … This word
reversal business could be contagious. A press release quotes Jack
Carson saying he saw a TV show that underwhelmed him … Every time he
passes it Roy Walters cringes at the sign on a chicken pie place onVerdugo Road, near Colorado Blvd: "Individuals to take out."

Posted in broadcasting, Columnists, Matt Weinstock, Television | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, May 20, 1959

Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, May 20, 1959

Confidential File

More Letters From a Badly Warped Mind

Paul_coatesThe hard way, Jet Simrell got what he wanted this week:

Headlines.

By
threatening to kill six superior judges and three other court
officials, he got his name and picture plastered on the front page of
every paper in town.

But the stories weren't written the way Jet Simrell wanted them to be.

I know, they weren't, because I know Jet Simrell.

Fifteen months ago, he came to my office and told me his "plan."

He was going to dedicate the rest of his life, he said, to curing what he considered the biggest ill of our nation.

He
was going to put us — the men — back in the driver's seat. And he was
going to depose the "un-female" American woman from what he considered
her position of power and authority in American society.

May 20, 1959, Cover  Exactly how he'd conduct his one-man crusade he wasn't too sure, then. But publicity definitely would play a key part in it.

It
never occurred to me at the time to classify Simrell as a dangerous
fanatic. Much of his criticism, many of his arguments made a lot of
sense.

He was a man who obviously was deeply hurt when his wife
divorced him. He couldn't comprehend that the fault for failure of his
marriage had to be in some part his own.

"The more freedoms and privileges I gave my wife," he said, "the more she took."

Simrell
blamed his personal troubles on his wife, existing social conditions,
neighbors — but most of all the divorce courts of our state.

Only
a few weeks after I'd met him, Simrell pulled off his infamous "I
killed three kids and their mother" stunt, which sent police racing to
his home to find three kid goats and their nanny spread across a bed,
their throats slit.

May 20, 1959, Simrell He was picked up and put in the psychiatric ward at General Hospital for observation.

While there, he wrote me an apologetic letter about his "unusual caper," as he described it.

"I
need to attract public attention," he wrote. "I wanted to shock the
public into thinking strongly about the seriousness of our national
problem of divorce and its tremendously numerous devastating effects.

"The scheme backfired partly when the police confiscated the papers on the table that explained my reason for doing what I did.

"I must also make it clear that I expected only the more intelligent people to fully understand my bizarre action.

"I
did expect the press to headline the fact that a man, known to be
unorthodox but intelligent, had the guts to pull such a stunt for the
sake of a cause in which he sincerely believed…"

'I Must Injure No One'

The
10-page letter went on: "One paper called me a woman-hater. This, of
course, isn't true. I love woman, as nature intended her to be, with
all my heart."

Simrell said that his greatest concern was the
embarrassment which his actions caused his three daughters. "But I
know," he wrote, "that during their lifetime they will come to know
that I was in the right."

But most prophetic, I hope, are the words he used in describing his plan to "shock" the public into listening to him:

"I must injure no one, physically, and must stay within the law, or reasonably so."

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, May 20, 1959

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: The Office of Tomorrow

May 20, 1964, Adding Machine

May 20, 1964. It's portable! It does multiplication! And it's only $443.09 USD 2008.
Posted in Science | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: The Office of Tomorrow

U.S. Calls for Release of POWs; Lakers’ Coach Quits, May 20, 1969

1969_0520_cover_thumb

Richard Nixon and South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu agree to meet. View this page

May 20, 1969, Sports The soap opera that was the 1968-69 Lakers had at least one more teary chapter.

Butch Van Breda Kolff resigned, headed to Detroit after two seasons as coach of the Lakers. His decision "for the best interest of all concerned" came after the Lakers blew a 2-0 lead in the finals to the Boston Celtics, losing in seven games.

The Times' Dan Hafner left no doubt why the coach was leaving: "Apparently Van Breda Kolff's days were numbered from the day the club acquired [Wilt] Chamberlain from Philadelphia." Player and coach didn't get along, and when that happens the coach almost always loses.

Speaking of  Wilt, he was called out by the Celtics' player-coach, Bill Russell, for leaving Game 7 with an injured knee. Van Breda Kolff wouldn't put him back in, saying later that the Lakers were "doing well without him."

Russell said in a May 22 story, "Any injury short of a broken leg or back isn't good enough."

Wilt's response, a day later: "He is a man and I suppose subject therefore to his own opinion. Why he has chosen to enlighten the world with it, only he knows."

::

Tony Conigliaro was getting letters, not about baseball, but about his love life.

"Here's one from a 75-year-old woman," he said to The Times' Ross Newhan. "She writes: 'How an innocent boy like you can get mixed up with somebody like her I don't know. I don't like the idea of you marrying her.' "

Conigliaro, the dashing young right fielder of the Boston Red Sox, had fallen victim to a familiar Southern California curse. He was dating an actress.

Mamie Van Doren's name and photo had been in sports stories before, as the girlfriend of boxer Art Aragon and pitcher Bo Belinsky. She had married and divorced a minor league pitcher, Lee Meyers.  

Newhan wrote: "Conigliaro shook his head and said, "Most of the letters are sad … you know, from 16-year-old girls who just don't want me to get married."

Conigliaro's life had enough subplots for a movie. He was one of baseball's brightest young stars when he was beaned by the Angels' Jack Hamilton in 1967. His injuries included a fractured cheekbone. He missed all of 1968 but fought his way back into Boston's lineup. He hit  20 home runs in 1969, then 36 in 1970. His reward was a trade to the Angels, of all teams.

It was a disaster. He played only 74 games and hit only four home runs, retiring in a bizarre early-morning news conference in Oakland after a 20-inning, 1-0 loss. Newhan's story in 1969 included assurances from Conigliaro that his vision was OK, but he described things very differently in 1971.

"When the pitcher holds the ball, I can't see his hand or the ball. I pick up the spin on the ball late by looking away, to the side, I don't know how I do it. I kept it away from the Red Sox," he said.

There was one more comeback in 1975. But he hit only .123 in 21 games. Conigliaro suffered a massive heart attack in 1982 and died in 1990.

Newhan's story ended with a discussion of romance and dating amid a batting slump.

"I'm tired," said Conigliaro. "I'm under a strain. I'm not going to have another date for a long time." He was asked to define a long time. He smiled and said: "About a day."

— Keith Thursby

Posted in #courts, Lakers, Politics, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on U.S. Calls for Release of POWs; Lakers’ Coach Quits, May 20, 1969

State Athletic Commission Investigates Boxing, Cartoon Death Match, May 20, 1959

May 20, 1959, Kingston Trio

Isn't the Ambassador Hotel great? Oh wait, we let L.A. Unified tear it down.

May 20, 1959, Cover

View this page

Gangster Squad Officer J.J. "Jack" O'Mara calls on Joe Sica with a subpoena. Unfortunately, the runover of the story didn't get microfilmed. But the sidebar ran in sports.

California leads the nation in car registration — 7 million in 1958. Teamsters chief Jimmy Hoffa threatens a nationwide shutdown if Congress approves anti-trust laws for unions.

And a Senate panel narrowly approves President Eisenhower's nominee for secretary of Commerce. Sen. Clair Engle (D-Calif.) urges the president to withdraw the name of Lewis L. Strauss to avoid repeating the sort of bitter dispute that was fought over Clare Boothe Luce.

May 20, 1959, Nixon

Herb Klein joins Richard Nixon's staff.  

May 20, 1959, Sports

The LAPD charges that there is "outside influence" in boxing. Subpoenas are issued to Louis Dragna …
View this page

My 20, 1959, Boxing

 … boxing manager Don Nesseth and Jack Leonard, boxing promoter at Hollywood Legion Stadium.
View this page

May 20, 1959, Gangbuster

Back in the day when police officers had nicknames like "Lefty" and "Roughhouse."

May 20, 1959, Buses

Streetcars, you are doomed.

May 20, 1959, Oviatt's

Which cartoon strip is more bizarre, "Nancy" or "Ferd'nand?"

May 20, 1959, Nancy

The alternative universe occupied by "Nancy" is well-known and the spartan esthetics of artist Ernie Bushmiller are widely appreciated …

May 20, 1959, Ferd'nand

..but I think "Ferd'nand" lives in its own parallel world that's just as odd. For example, there's something seriously wrong with this car's windshield.

Posted in Architecture, Comics, Education, Fashion, LAPD, Music, Nightclubs, Politics, Richard Nixon, Transportation | Comments Off on State Athletic Commission Investigates Boxing, Cartoon Death Match, May 20, 1959

May 20, 1939: Midnite Show at the Follies

May 20, 1939: Marion Morgan at the Follies, showing a woman in a dress and a cowboy hat“Political crises, European crises or stock market troubles mean nothing to our busy businessmen. They still heed the call of relaxation….”

 

 

Posted in 1939, Stage | Comments Off on May 20, 1939: Midnite Show at the Follies

May 20, 1939: Flocks of Sheep Near City Hall

Hillsides covered with sheep as a shepherd and dogs watch.

Continue reading

Posted in 1939, Downtown | Comments Off on May 20, 1939: Flocks of Sheep Near City Hall

Found on EBay — J.W. Robinson’s

Robinsons Purse EBay This purse from J.W. Robinson's has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $5.
Posted in Fashion | Comments Off on Found on EBay — J.W. Robinson’s

Matt Weinstock — May 19, 1959

 

Guardian of the Law

Matt_weinstockdOn a
recent Saturday about 2 p.m. Mrs. Joan Wheeler, 21, six months
pregnant, began having pains. Her husband Ernest, 27, phoned the
doctor, who said to take her to the hospital immediately and he would
meet them there.

The husband put a robe around his wife, carried
her to the car and headed for the West Valley Community Hospital, about
three miles from their home in VanNuys.

He drove fast, he
admits, but stopped for all the signals against him. Incidentally, he
drives between 35,000 and 40,000 miles a year on his job.

About
halfway there a motorcycle officer pulled him over. Wheeler said it was
an emergency. He indicated his wife, lying on the front, seat, bleeding
badly.

mqy 19, 1959, Women THE OFFICER said profanely that it was no excuse
for speeding. Wheeler asked him to escort them to the hospital and he
could write them up there.

When they reached the hospital the
officer wanted to write the citation before Mrs. Wheeler was admitted.
Then, Wheeler says, the officer followed him inside and prevented him
briefly from seeing his wife. Finally a hospital attache made him wait
outside.

Perhaps the officer was not to blame. It seems to be
rigid LAPD procedure that writing a traffic ticket must come ahead of
everything.

Wheeler, outraged, pleaded not guilty and asked for a jury trial.

When the case came up in Van Nuys court last Thursday the officer said Wheeler had been traveling 65 m.p.h on Balboa Blvd. between Victory and Burbank Blvds. He admitted traffic normally went 45 although it was posted 35.

Wheeler,
armed with the hospital records, backed by his employer, had no
opportunity to tell his side of the story to the jury, which included
eight women. After the officer's testimony the prosecutor chatted
briefly with the judge, who dismissed the case.

The outcome was irrelevant anyway. Mrs. Wheeler lost her baby and is still recovering from the ordeal.

::

ONLY IN L.A. — Everyone who caters to the whims of blue jays
thinks he has the craziest one in town. Comes now a lady named Hilda
who reports the clown in her back yard buries bits of bread in a mound
of Red Star fertilizer, and when they're too hard to eat when he digs
them up he dunks them in a water dish.

::

May 19, 1959, Nat Cole WISH YOU WEREN'T HERE

If egos weren't so strong,
Meetings wouldn't be for as long.

-GLADYS FOREMAN

::

 A MAN WHO
last week turned in his large, heavy, expensive Detroit made car on a
sleek little foreign job has already noticed a big psychological
difference. Twice in the last few days other drivers have asked for
help. One called out. "Hey, buddy, how far is Western Ave.?" Never
happened when he sat, a man apart, in the big car.

::

A TROUBLED
young man threatened to leap off the 12-story Broadway Arcade Building
last week, you may remember, and when he didn't some of the nearly
3,000 persons assembled below taunted him by yelling "Jump!" and when
he didn't called him "Chicken!"

It was morbid, all right, but
Mario Corona defends the crowd. This is an impatient age. People,
conditioned by the shoot-em-up guys on TV, want action. And here was
this youth up there on the building, stalling. What was he trying to
do, waste their time?

::

MISCELLANY
— Recommended reading: Peter Ustinov's short story, "The Aftertaste,"
in the May Atlantic. Which prompts the question: How can one man have
so much talent? … Reporter Jimmy Wilson didn't know whether he should
be prepared for a boy or girl so hecross-filed — got some of each. The
big event happened over the week end. "Anybody want to buy a box of
'It's a girl!' cigars?" he asks … Suggested slogan for an
extermination firm: Is this thrip necessary?

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — May 19, 1959