Voices — Jevne’s Groceries




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Ray M. Whitt Jr. writes from Spain:

My grandfather, Benjamin Adelbert Gray, worked for Jevne’s Grocery Store at 40 Spring Street. He and his family, including my mother, Maurine Gray Whitt, now 100 years old, lived at that time on Bunker Hill, near the store. My grandfather drove a small delivery vehicle, in those days known as a panel truck. Many of the customers ordered groceries delivered to their homes. Portions of the Jevne Grocery Store were eventually incorporated into Ralphs Grocery Store. I took special joy in seeing the old Ralphs TV ads which, looking back, pictured their Model-T panel truck and its driver on his way to deliver groceries. He never tired of telling of his career in the grocery business.

My grandfather’s real career was as a tailor. Preferring to work for himself, he specialized in custom made quality fancy clothing for women. His artistic work gained him a steady waiting list of clients. He worked well into his eighties in the Los Angeles area. He died in 1976.

My grandfather befriended another employee of the Jevne grocery, LeRoy Cleveland, who was to be a long-time resident of Glendale. After working at Jevne’s he enjoyed a long career with the U.S. Postal Service.


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Another Night at the Haig




1950_0310_haig_2

Richard Koch writes:

1951_0223_haig
I have a question.  Sometime in the late 90’s I was in Los Angeles and I was researching the location where the famous Haig was.  I just wanted to stand there and take some pictures at this sacred spot in jazz history.  In Leonard Feather’s Encyclopedia of Jazz it was listed at 638 S. Kenmore Street.  This was at the time before I was on-line and of course before Google even existed.  I had a difficult time finding 638.  Between north and south at Wilshire there seemed to be some numbers missing.  I gave up out of frustration.   Do you have anything on this famous “West Coast” club?

1956_haig_3
Well, Richard, the Haig is a little before my time, but the online Los Angeles city directories show that the Haig was right where Feather said it was, 638 S. Kenmore. Times stories describe it as being across Wilshire from the Ambassador. The 1942 city directory shows there was a restaurant there, but doesn’t give the name. 

Let’s dig a bit more. The 1956 street directory also lists the Evanston Apartments at 630 S. Kenmore. So it would seem logical that if we went just south of the apartments we would find the former location. And here’s what’s on Google maps’ street view:



Posted in #Jazz, Music, Nightclubs | 3 Comments

Found on EBay — Myer Siegel

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1926_0131_myer_siegel

A calendar from the Myer Siegel clothing store of Los Angeles has been listed on EBay.  Bidding starts at $7.99.

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Voices — Christine Collins, June 9, 1932




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Baby Burned to Death on Stove, Dodgers Scout Players, January 25, 1959

1959_0125_burned_baby

Whenever someone tells you the past was a "kinder, simpler time," show them this article. I’m unable to find any further stories on this tragic incident.

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My boyfriend embarrasses me because he won’t race his car….
An advice column by … Dick Clark? Yes it’s true.

What does he tell the girl who can’t get a dance partner because she wears glasses? Let that "inner beauty we’re talking about shine through extra bright." And "keep your clothes and hairdo neat and be sure you dance better than any of your girlfriends."

I’m 16 and my boyfriend is 28. Do you think he is too old for me?

Yes.

1959_0125_theater_01

Frank Sinatra, workaholic.

1959_0125_theater_02

Sinatra dislikes title "Ocean’s Eleven" and wants to call the film ….


1959_0126_sports What was big money for bonus babies in 1959?

"We spent $850,000 for players last year but we think we got our money’s worth," Midwest scouting supervisor Bert Wells told a meeting of Dodger scouts. Frank Howard received $108,000 to sign with the Dodgers and Ron Fairly got $120,000, according to Wells.

General manager Buzzie Bavasi tried to correct the record a couple days later, telling The Times’ Frank Finch that "Howard got closer to $120,000 than Fairly did."

Either way, sounds like they were bargains.

–Keith Thursby

 

Posted in #Jazz, Dodgers, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, Music, Rock 'n' Roll, Sports | 4 Comments

Found on EBay — 1959 Thomas Guide.

Thomas_guide_ebay_1959
Another vintage Thomas Guide has been listed on EBay. This one is from 1959. Bidding starts at $9.95.
Posted in books, Downtown, Freeways | Comments Off on Found on EBay — 1959 Thomas Guide.

Matt Weinstock — January 24, 1959




1959_0124_weinstock

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January 24, 1959: Paul Coates — Confidential File

January 24, 1959: The body of Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer remains in the morgue because of a fight between his ex-wife and his parents.

Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood, Homicide, Paul Coates, Television | 1 Comment

Voices — Christine Collins, March 8, 1932




1932_0308_walter_collins_01

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The Ghosts of Wrigley Field, January 24, 1969

Wrigley_field_1944_1004_final
Photograph by Hal Moulin / Los Angeles Times

Wrigley Field, Oct. 3, 1944, as the San Francisco Seals defeat the L.A. Angels.


"Roadside Baseball" looks
at Wrigley Field

1969_0124_john_hall


John Hall wrote a couple of columns bidding farewell to Los Angeles’ Wrigley Field.

"It was another time, another place. It was Wrigley Field, 1925-1969, may it rest in peace. The demolition crews are at work and the creaky old place at 42nd and Avalon will soon be nothing but a vacant lot, " Hall wrote.

Wrigley Field had been home to the minor league Angels and for a year the expansion major league Angels. There were memorable brawls with their crosstown rivals, the Hollywood Stars, who also called Wrigley home for a few seasons early in the stadium’s life. The ballpark also had been the site for prize fights, football games and countless other high-profile events.

A 1925 photo in The Times showed William Wrigley Jr. with his new ballpark being finished behind him. "There are several novel features … Yes brothers, it’s going to be some plant," The Times promised.

Movies such as "The Pride of the Yankees" were filmed there as was television’s "Home Run Derby".

Then-Angels publicist George Goodale was the voice of Hall’s Jan. 24 column, for good reason. Goodale worked for the Pacific Coast League Angels and "researched and recorded every game of note in Angel history dating back to 1903."

Among the memories: Wrigley Field was the first place all three DiMaggio brothers–Joe, Dom and Vince–played together on the same field, according to Goodale.

And there was a game the Angels lost to the Hollywood Stars. "My lowest ebb was the time the Stars had a 15-0 lead," Goodale told Hall. "[Fred] Haney was the Hollywood manager and he squeezed home the 16th run."

Wrigley_field_1969_0319_final

Photograph by Cal Montney / Los Angeles TimesStanley Evans, left, and Kenneth Thompson visit Wrigley Field as it is being demolished, in a photo published March 21, 1969.

The Angels played there in 1961 and fittingly, a former minor league Angel star closed out the ballpark’s season in the majors. Steve Bilko, who hit 56 home runs with the Angels in 1957, homered in the last home game of 1961.

"Now that thing called progress is taking it away for good," Hall wrote.

His Jan. 29 column focused on the plans for the area, which included a community health center that would "rise and breathe where the ivy on the ballpark fences once climbed and reached for the same sun."

–Keith Thursby

Posted in City Hall, Columnists, Dodgers, Downtown, Sports | 3 Comments

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Pasadena

Bullocks_collegienne_ebay
A hat from the Collegienne department at Bullock’s Pasadena has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $5.99.

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Matt Weinstock — January 23, 1959




Money Well Spent

Matt_weinstockd
"We’re in a fight for survival," Ernest K. Lindley, the tall,
thin, wry chief of Newsweek’s Washington bureau, told a gathering at
the Press Club. "Unless we get the free world on its feet with large
infusions of capital and overhaul our educational system Russia could
beat us within the lifetime of the people in this room."

"I’m a taxpayer, too," he went on, "but after traveling around the
world I feel that foreign aid is the best money we spend to hold off
communism." He doesn’t think we spend enough.

Lindley, here to accept an honorary membership in UCLA’s Kappa Tau
Alpha journalism society from his former schoolmate at Oxford, Prof.
Joseph A. Brandt, said of a recent visit to Russia.

1959_0123_schizo
"THE TERROR
is gone but the indoctrination program has taken its
place. It is now implanted indelibly in the Russian people’s minds that
capitalism is the villain responsible for all things bad."

Meanwhile, the Russian leaders are doing a pressure selling job of their own bill of goods.

Lindley came away from the satellite countries feeling very sad. "There
the people know better but they can’t do anything about it. The lesson
of the Hungarian revolt keeps them subdued."

He related a story he heard in a satellite country. A group of boys was
being inducted into the Young Pioneers. In a kind of incantation each
boy was asked, "Who is your mother?" "The Communist Party," he was
supposed to reply, "Who is your father?" "Nikita Khrushchev." "What do
you want to be when you grow up?" "A scientist." To the last question
one boy replied, "An orphan."

* *

FOR SOME obscure reason Guilio Amfuso’s car went dead in Westwood Villiage. After getting it pushed to a service station he phoned MTA and asked how he could get to Burbank by bus. He is an assistant TV story editor at Warner Bros.

The girl consulted schedules for 10 minutes, occasionally checking in
with a discouraging comment, and finally outlined a frighteningly safe-
potentially a three-hour trip. "My advice," she said, "is to buy
another car."

* *

SITE UNSEEN
In ’60, we feel we must mention
With just a wee touch of gloom.
The Democrats met in convention,
Will plot in a smog-filled room.
RICHARD ARMOUR

* *


1959_0123_burlesque
WHILE DRIVING
up to Vandenberg AFB Wednesday for the launching of the satellite Discoverer, which was postponed, Jim McNamara of KLAC
came to a turnoff near the base with a sign he thought stated "Old
Missile Road." He followed it a couple of miles, saw it lead nowhere
and turned back. When he saw the sign again — "Old Mission Road."

* *

OUT AT Northrop they’re telling of the first earth expedition to reach the moon.

The
earth men were exploring a crater when suddenly they were surrounded by
hundreds of small furry creatures, bouncing about andwheempting happily. 

"Where is your leader?" the boss earth man asked. After much whoofling and whampling,
one little Furry pointed to a cave. There the earth men found a Furry
on a stone throne. He was much larger than the others and had a
hypodermic needle sticking in his head.

"Are you the leader of the Furrys?" the boss earth man asked.

"Oh no, sir," was the reply, "I’m the Furry with the syringe on top."

Okay, fellows, back to work.

* *

AT RANDOM – Dennis Affleck,
7, of Manhattan Beach, saw a picture of Saturn at school and when he
got home he exclaimed, "Mommy, I saw a planet with a Hula Hoop around
it" . . . Add ads that don’t seem to mean what they state: From another
paper: "Beaut,Ine. married epl. After 12 p.m." (It was under apartments for rent.) And another ahemmer from a North Side paper: "1 rm. apt. for rent in exchange for night companionship"  

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Paul Coates — Confidential File, January 23, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Scroll Crusade Strikes Deeply

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You ask me, I say Burton Chace is carrying this "economy-in-government" crusade too far.

Let
him cut financial corners by buying cheaper wastebaskets or by
scrapping the jazzy two-tone commodes in the new Board of Supervisors
barracks. Let him introduce resolutions that all county golf courses be
trimmed to 17 holes.

That far, I’ll go along. I’m a reasonable man.

But on the stunt he tried to pull this week, I draw the line.

The honorable Mr. Chace came out in favor of less scrolls to "distinguished" citizens.



1959_0123_mirror_cover

Above, the killing of Bobbie Long, which James Ellroy once linked to the killing of his mother, though he has since withdrawn from that theory.


Stating
that he didn’t think it was necessary for the county to cite the
Pasadena Rose Queen and each of her six princesses every year, he
admonished his fellow supervisors:

"We’re passing out so many scrolls that it’s becoming more of an honor NOT to receive one."

That’s his story.

But now, hear mine.

Never once as a kid was I singled out from the masses for some special achievement.

While
other youngsters in my neighborhood were getting gold stars for coming
to school with their teeth brushed, I was constantly being passed up by
our teacher, who repeatedly made me the butt of a tiresome little joke
about "knowing where the yellow went."

That woman really bugged me.

Even my mother’s comforting words didn’t help.


1959_0123_mirror_strangle

"Don’t let it grate on you, sonny," she used to tell me. "Some people are just cut out to be nothing."

"You’re more than a mother to me, Mom," I told her. "You’re a pal."

And
with her inspiration, I ran away from home at the age of 33 and joined
a newspaper. I did this on the theory that any reporter who can spell
his name is bound to get an accommodation for something — even if it’s
only for drinking.

The results were instantaneous. As soon as
I got a byline, the phone calls started coming in. Invariably, they
followed this pattern:

"Mr. Coates? This is Henry B. Schwarzkopf of the South Whittier Men’s and Women’s Mixed Bowling Society calling."

"What can I do for you, Hank?" I ask.

After a pause, he says incredulously, "That’s funny."

"What’s funny?"

Becomes Man of Year

"You
called me Hank and that’s my nickname," he answers, continuing, "I’m
chairman of our club’s entertainment committee and we’ve just named you
Man of the Year for your outstanding good works of a civic nature in
the community."

1959_0123_locks_martin
"Why, I hardly know-"

"We’re going to make the award at our annual banquet next Saturday."

"Well, I’m certainly flattered. I really don’t deserve such an honor."

"The
only thing," Schwarzkopf continues, "we got a p.a. system but we
haven’t worked out the entertainment program. Could you get us a few
people like, say, FrankieLaine or Doris Day?" 

I explain that both Frankie and Doris are on a USO tour in Oriente Province.

"Can’t you get anybody?" he asks disappointedly. "We were even going to give you a plaque."

I
explain that I can’t. And then in a voice which I must admit is
somewhat apologetic, he asks if I can switch him to Matt Weinstock.

So I’ve never made it as anybody’s Man of the Year.

But,
about two years ago, I did get a scroll from the Board of Supervisors.
It changed my whole personality. Made me outgoing. Gave me a sense of
being somebody, at last.

Now Burton Chace says it’s an honor not to receive one.

I only hope he’s happy. It doesn’t matter that he’s destroyed me.

But how can he sleep at night after what he did to those little Rose Parade princesses? 

Posted in Columnists, Front Pages, Homicide, Paul Coates | 1 Comment

Voices — Christine Collins, February 27, 1932

February 27, 1932: Parole for Walter Collins is denied.

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Mystery photo

2009_0119_mystery_photo

Los Angeles Times photo

This fellow isn’t a movie star (although he does have some credits on imdb). But he is a famous Los Angeles figure and I came across his photo file the other day. The pictures are too good not to share. Update: This is Fred Otash, about to testify in the L. Ewing Scott case. The man got around.

2009_0120_mystery_photo

Los Angeles Times photograph
We’ve had one correct guess: Please congratulate Kip Brown for recognizing our mystery guest.

Update: "Moises Vivanco, calling ‘You a big fat liar,’ grapples with Freddie Otash," April 23, 1957, in the Yma Sumac contretemps. Otash operatives Bill Lowe, left, and Norman Placey watch.

2009_0121_mystery_photo

Los Angeles Times photograph
Update: Sept. 3, 1959, Otash, right, with jockey Kenneth "Kenny" Godkins, waiting to appear before the grand jury in an investigation of horse racing. Otash was indicted on four counts of race fixing and horse doping.   (Otash got six months in jail. Godkins was later sentenced to prison on drug charges).
2009_0122_mystery_photo

Photo by Don McCormack / L.A. Times

Update: Aug. 30, 1957, Otash, right, with surprise witness Christine Overhamm and defense attorney Arthur Crowley in the Confidential magazine trial.
2009_0123_mystery_photo

Photo by George Rose / L.A. Times
Please add Carol Gwenn to the people who recognized our mystery guest as (in James Ellroy’s words) "The late, great Freddie Otash." This photo was taken in 1981 for a Times story by Bill Overend in which Otash recalled his days as a vice officer.
Posted in Mystery Photo | 4 Comments

Police Investigate Sunset Strip Club, January 1959


Photograph by Larry Harnisch / Los Angeles Times

On a recent trip to the city archives, the Daily Mirror looked into the agenda packets for the Los Angeles Police Commission. We found an investigation of an application for a cafe permit at Pandora–later Pandora’s Box–8118 Sunset Blvd. The file reveals attitudes toward gays, includes an account of an arrest for prostitution, takes a look at jazz (those cats were noisy), describes the neighborhood (which also included the Garden of Allah and Sherry’s) and shows the challenges faced by restaurant operators–and police–in the 1950s.

“Location frequented by prostitutes and homosexuals,” hearing examiner said. Continue reading

Posted in #gays and lesbians, Food and Drink, Hollywood, LAPD | 2 Comments

Found on EBay — Robinson’s

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Robinsons_jacket_label_ebay

A jacket from J.W. Robinson’s dated 1914 has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $4.99

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Paul Coates — Confidential File, January 22, 1959




CONFIDENTIAL FILE

Another Claimant to ‘Brave’ Oscar

Paul_coates
There was new confusion today in the "Who Wrote ‘The Brave One?’ " Oscar derby.

Now the window of Juan Duval, a Spanish-born writer-dancer-actor, claims the story idea for the Academy Award-winning picture was his.

She has a $300,000 suit pending against the King Brothers, producers of
the film claiming "The Brave One" was stolen from a story her husband
wrote.

Only last week blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo "confessed" to
the press he was the mysterious "Robert Rich," who two years ago failed
to claim the Academy Award for Hollywood’s best original movie story of
1956.

Trumbo, jailed for contempt of Congress in 1950 for refusing to answer questions of the Un-American Activities Committee, says he’s ready now to accept the Oscar if the Academy will give it to him.

Disputes Claim

1959_0121_alfalfa_ro
Trumbo discounts Mrs. Duval’s claim. He told me he wrote both the screenplay and the story on which it was based.

The widowed Mrs. Carmen Duval, a shy, soft-spoken Los Angeles secretary, has an impressive portfolio of documented evidence.

Controversy
as to who wrote the motion picture has been brewing in Hollywood since
the Academy’s banquet of 1957, when no one would claim to be the
"Robert Rich" credited with authoring Herman and Frank King’s
much-honored production.

A nephew of the King brothers by the
name of Robert Rich denied that the inspiration was his, but at the
time, Frank King assured Academy officials that the mystery was only a
temporary one.

Now, two years later, Mrs. Duval has appeared with two scripts written by her husband which she claims were the basis for "The Brave One."

Both were registered in 1952 — the first, "Corrida de Toros," with the Radio Writers Guild; the second, "Gypsy Shadows," with the Screen Writers Guild.

Similarities in Plot

Each
had remarkable similarities in plot to the award-winning motion
picture, which dealt with the love of a Mexican boy for a fighting
bull.

Mrs. Duval charged that her husband’s "Corrida de Toros"
script was submitted to the Kings in 1952 through an acquaintance,
Eugene Gould, who was a stockholder in the brothers’ enterprise.

"That’s true," Gould told me by phone yesterday. "I met Mr. Duval through a friend of mine and I read his script. I liked it and volunteered to submit it to Mr. King."

Didn’t Like It

He
added that when he picked up the script a week later, Maurice King said
that he personally had read it and that he did not care for the story.

"Some
time later," Gould continued, "I ran into Frank King and asked what
their next production would be. He said, ‘The Boy and The Bull,’ and
started to tell me the story.

"I stopped him after he related
part of it and said, ‘That sounds like the story I gave Morry.’ He said
to me, ‘What are you talking about?’ Then he turned around and walked
away."

I asked Gould if he was still connected with King Productions.

"I have a few thousand shares in the company," he answered.

He paused, then added: "But if ‘The Brave One’ was from Juan Duval’s original story, I see no reason why I should hide anything to keep him from getting credit."


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10 Feared Drowned in River; Ballplayer Hopes for Comeback, January 22, 1969

1969_0122_cover

1969_0122_meyers Here’s a weird story about a baseball player I never heard of.

Lee Meyers was making a comeback, hoping to get a job with the first-year Kansas City Royals. This was news, apparently, because Meyers was a local kid who was potentially rich and previously married to actress Mamie Van Doren. She was no stranger to seeing her name in the paper associated with an athlete, such as former Angel Bo Belinsky.

Meyers and Van Doren were married in 1966 and divorced by 1969. By then, Meyers had quit the Cubs and the Giants. As for the money, he told writers he would inherit $1 million on his 21st birthday and another $1 million when he turned 30.

John Weibusch’s story in The Times let Meyers talk and talk and he was a pretty good talker. Here’s a favorite quote: "Listen, I’ve just been misunderstood in the past. I got a lot of bad publicity. Well some of it was good–but most of it was bad. You wanna hear my life story?"

I tried to find a later reference to Meyers in 1969 editions of The Times and came up with only one story. He was mentioned in a feature on Boston’s Tony Conigliaro, because Conigliaro was then dating Van Doren.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Front Pages, Hollywood, Sports | 1 Comment

Musial, Campanella named to Hall of Fame, January 22, 1969

1969_0122_sports

1969_0122_campanella Roy Campanella, whose Dodger career was cut short by a car accident before the team moved to Los Angeles, was elected to baseball’s Hall of Fame.

"I never had any idea I’d even play in the majors, much less make the Hall of Fame," said Campanella, the National League’s most valuable player in three of his 10 seasons in Brooklyn. "It shows we’re living in the right country."

The wire story published in The Times noted Campanella’s remarkable career path. He started as a 15-year-old playing in the Negro Leagues for $15 a week, then became a star with the Baltimore Elite Giants. He signed with the Dodgers in 1946 and reached the majors in 1948. He was partially paralyzed after a car accident in January, 1958.

Stan Musial, also a three-time National League MVP, was selected in his first year of eligibility. Incredibly, it took the Hall of Fame voters four tries to elect Campanella.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in Dodgers, Front Pages, Sports | 1 Comment