Above, Sam’s Lunch Room in 1938 and below, Avenue 19 via Google maps street view.
Above, Sam’s Lunch Room in 1938 and below, Avenue 19 via Google maps street view.
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“Undergarments worn during the day should never be worn at night. Remove your undergarments and hang them where they will become thoroughly aired before morning. Do not allow them to remain in the room you sleep in for you must not breathe back into your system the impurities thrown off by the pores.”
–A. Victor Segno,
“How to Live 100 Years,” Los Angeles, 1903 |
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Here’s a 16-page brochure on men’s fashions for 1925 from Silverwood’s, Broadway and 6th Street. Bidding starts at $14.99. |
By Gary Rubin
Times staff writer
Fifty years ago today, sports fans in general and baseball fans in particular woke up to read the startling news that Hall of Famer Mel Ott was dead after surgery for a kidney injury suffered in an automobile accident in New Orleans. He was just 49.
Baby boomers may not be all that familiar with Ott, but in a 21-year playing career, all spent with the New York Giants, Ott was one of great power hitters of all time, finishing with 511 home runs, a National League record that stood until broken by Willie Mays in 1965.
Though not particularly big, at 5-9, 170, Ott generated great power with a unique batting stance. As the pitch came in, the left-handed Ott would raise his right foot at least a foot.
In a confrontation over a divided Berlin, a Soviet official says the government plans to give control to the East Germans by Christmas, and some Soviet troops are reportedly going home. President Eisenhower vows to maintain the occupation of West Berlin. The central issue was whether the U.S., Britain and France would accept East German participation in the organization that controlled the city’s military and commercial air traffic. Continue reading
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Here’s a nice sharp image of a streetcar passing City Hall. It’s been listed on EBay with a starting bid of $5. |
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If you were ever looking for a prototype of the alcoholic, brawling, self-destructive author, you might consider Thomas T. Chamales, Before he died at the age of 35 when He In October 1958, Chamales In
And then, on the night of March 20, 1960, He was survived by a daughter from his marriage with O’Connell and two sons from a previous marriage. Curiously, and perhaps tragically, Chamales’ Update: The only copy of any of Chamales’ books in the Los Angeles Public Library is in Spanish! |
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"The Maltese Falcon" will be shown at the Warner Grand in San Pedro at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 22, 2008. Tickets are free for L.A. Conservancy members–while supplies last. If you’re a member of the Los Angeles Conservancy, RSVP to Deandra Rosales or Debra Espinoza at 310.548.2493 by 5 pm on Friday, November 21, or bring your membership card to the box office on Saturday after 3 p.m.
Tickets for non-L.A. Conservancy members are $5/$10 and can be purchased at www.warnergrand.org |
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At left, a poster from the 1912 Selig film "The Peculiar Nature of the White Man’s Burden" is on EBay. Bidding starts at $9.95 or buy it now for $150. |
The crash of a Marine plane near El Toro derails the Santa Fe’s San Diegan, but no serious injuries are reported.
Ernest E. Hargis, who had been a city ambulance driver for 20 years, is found beaten to death with a hammer and shoved under an abandoned car at 13037 Osborne St., Pacoima. Hargis was building a home at the site, The Times said.
Further investigation found that Hargis had been hiring former jail trustees and itinerant laborers to help him on his house. James Edgar Holmes, a former psychiatric patient, was accused of the killing. Holmes admitted killing Hargis but said it was in defense during an argument over a star drill he was using to bore holes in concrete.
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Here’s an outfit with lots of sequins from Bullocks Wilshire. Now listed on EBay. Buy it now for $149.99. |
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Here’s another item by the vaudeville team of Williams and Walker on EBay. Bidding has reached $26.55.
Here’s a recording of "She’s Getting More Like the White Folks Every Day." |
![]() Above, Chef Wyman’s recipes for Thanksgiving, 1928. And thanks to Mary McCoy of This Book Is for You and On Bunker Hill for the tip. |
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Thanksgiving Family Secrets
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RAISIN BROWN BREAD
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| In bowl mix milk with white vinegar. Let stand at room temperature 10 to 15 minutes.
Mix Butter clean 12-ounce coffee can. Pour in batter. Cover Remove from heat and let stand on rack Each serving contains about: 126 calories; 136 mg sodium; 2 mg cholesterol; 1 grams fat; 28 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams protein; 0.33 gram fiber. |
Thursday November 17, 1994
By CHARLES PERRY,
TIMES STAFF WRITER
Most of my family was living in California by the 1880s, and their various culinary heritages–New England, Southern and Midwestern–had begun to take on a uniform Californian quality by the time I was on the scene. But not my Perry grandfather, the only one of my grandparents not born out here. He came from a rather New England-y part of upstate New York, where Perrys westering in from Massachusetts had been thick on the ground since the early 18th Century, and a mere 60 years of living in California hadn’t altered his tastes.
The rest of the Thanksgiving meal was a menu a lot of people would recognize: turkey with sage stuffing, cranberry preserves, mashed potatoes, candied yams (possibly due to my Southern grandmother’s influence), succotash, green and Jell-O salads, corn bread and hot rolls. But for Granddad’s sake, we always had brown bread.
Insofar as people outside New England know of brown bread, they think of it as something to make canapes and cream cheese sandwiches with, and possibly to eat with baked beans. To Granddad, and consequently to us, it was a bread–a dark, sweet, dessert-like bread you ate at Thanksgiving and Christmas.
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Brown bread is more like an English steamed pudding than an oven bread. The traditional shape is cylindrical, because for many decades people have usually steamed it in an empty coffee can, rather than a pudding mold.
One theory is that New Englanders invented brown bread because they couldn’t make an English risen loaf with cornmeal, and wheat often didn’t do as well in the local climate as rye. Meanwhile, New Englanders always had a lot of molasses on hand due to their trade contacts with the Caribbean, so why not make pudding?
For Thanksgiving Grandmother often made her own starchy brown pudding from graham flour, which was like a cross between brown bread and fruitcake. When both were served at the same meal, we sometimes felt we’d reached the limit of how much dense, spongy, sweet brown stuff a person could eat. But it wouldn’t have been Thanksgiving without brown bread.
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Daschle Finds Himself in Another Tight Spot
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Iven Kincheloe III, the 1-year-old son of a distinguished X-15 pilot who died in July 1958 in the crash of a jet fighter at Edwards Air Force Base, is recommended for an appointment to the Air Force Academy in 1972.
An Air Force Base in Michigan was named for the elder Kincheloe in 1959. An award for test pilots is also named after him . Whether his son pursued a flying career is unclear at this point. There’s nothing further in The Times about him. |
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Here’s a vintage number from Haggarty’s, an upscale store in Los Angeles and Beverly Hills. Now listed on EBay with bidding starting at $24. |
![]() AP photo Eric Holder, deputy attorney general under Janet Reno and likely attorney general under President-elect Barack Obama. |
Prosecutor Has Made Jury Study a Specialty
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