Headline News




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July 26, 1948

By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

Dropcap_q_quaint uiz time: What does this headline mean?

It’s pretty clear we’re talking about baseball, but who are the Twinks and the Suds?

The Twinks were a familiar headline name in The Times for the Hollywood Stars. I never understood the need for the nickname’s nickname. You really need another way to say Stars?

The Suds referred to the Seattle Rainiers, named after a local brewery.
The story was a run of the mill wire report on the doubleheader but there’s one line that really stopped me. The Seattle pitcher is referred to as a "wrong hander."

As a lifelong left-hander, I’ve been called a southpaw, a port sider and even a goofy footer, but a wrong hander?

Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe the pitcher was right-handed.



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July 26, 1938


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aul "the Porpoise" Chotteau collapses within 10 miles of his goal of swimming from Santa Barbara to Venice … A bomb in Haifa kills 50 people, wounds 58 others and touches off rioting … Kentucky Gov. A.B. "Happy" Chandler is recovering after being poisoned … And the city clerk’s office certifies petitions to recall Mayor Frank Shaw. The election is set for Sept. 16, The Times says. Candidates seeking to run against the mayor must qualify by Aug. 22.

ps. The last we heard of Chotteau, in 1960,  he was living in Key West, Fla. He had invented a pontoon boat to be towed by an unsuspecting shark that he would capture and harness. "Sharks make wonderful motors," he said, "Of course, sometimes they decide to go straight down." Hm. Sounds like a plot for "Jabberjaw."

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July 26, 1908

 




Above, developer Samuel A. Selover buys a home at Bonnie Brae and Miramar streets. Selover, whose projects included Belmont Shore in Long Beach, died in 1939. Below, Bonnie Brae and Miramar via Google maps’ street view. Email me



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Nuestro Pueblo

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‘Discovering’ Chavez Ravine




1958_0725_cobbBy Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

The Times published a tidbit about the Hollywood Stars and their owner, Bob Cobb, that made me go looking deeper for more details.

Jeane Hoffman reported that Cobb "discovered" Chavez Ravine as a potential home for a baseball team and in 1954 proposed building a stadium and leasing it back to the city for $1 a year. Hoffman said the plan didn’t work because it was for minor league baseball and Cobb was just a little ahead of his time.

The Dodgers’ plans to build a stadium were still on hold at this point in 1958 after a Superior Court judge ruled the contract between the team and the city was invalid. But what of Cobbs’ idea?

I found a Times story from Dec. 17, 1954, in which Yankees manager Casey Stengel, longtime baseball owner Bill Veeck and Cobb talked to a City Council committee about bringing big league baseball to Los Angeles. According to Paul Zimmerman’s story, the discussion focused on whether the city should expand Wrigley Field or build a ballpark in Chavez Ravine.

"No city in the United States can offer what Los Angeles does," Cobb said. "We need something new, something modern and a place to park 25,000 cars."

Cobb and his Hollywood Stars have long fascinated me. My mom grew up in Los Angeles and her family’s baseball allegiances were split down the middle between fans of the Stars and the Angels. Photos of Gilmore Field made the experience look glamorous and any search of Pacific Coast League games can find tales of wild fights and long doubleheaders. And Cobb was no ordinary owner, with his connection to the Brown Derby–and what other baseball owner had a salad named after him?

After the Dodgers decided to move to Los Angeles–moving the minor league Stars and Angels out of the Southland–Cobb remained civic minded. In searching the website walteromalley.com for any connections between the two owners, I stumbled on a 1957 Times story where Cobb came to O’Malley’s defense.

"I’m shocked at the unbelievable position in which Walter O’Malley finds himself," Cobb told The Times’ Hoffman. "We invited this man to Los Angeles. He didn’t solicit us."

Hoffman said Cobb’s plan for Chavez Ravine was ahead of his time. The 1957 story had another example. "But you can’t stop progress," he said. "We’re going to have not one but two major league clubs here within five years. Where? Well, this second club will settle in Orange County, probably Anaheim. That’s where the Hollywood Stars were going if the majors hadn’t come."

Too bad it didn’t work out. I can seem them now–the Hollywood Stars of Anaheim. Wonder how much they’d charge for a Cobb salad?

keith.thursby@latimes.com

 


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July 25, 1938




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Dropcap_j_1932
oe Shaw resigns as personal secretary to his brother, Mayor Frank Shaw, and elopes to Reno with Buelah M. Fuller of the mayor’s secretarial staff. Curiously enough, Joe Shaw is identified as a lieutenant, which I haven’t encountered before. Perhaps it refers to his former rank in the Navy.

"I have never fully agreed with your expressed desire that I remain an attache of your office during the recent period when heaven and earth have been moved by political malcontents and enemies to find fault with you because of my presence on your staff," Joe Shaw wrote.

"For me to ask to be relieved of service under these conditions has been repugnant to both of us alike, for, whatever the personal desires might be in the premises, they would be distorted and misunderstood by political critics sadly lacking in their makeups any sense of American fair play.

"In spite of their slander, you have continued to repose confidence in me and I cannot adequately put in words what this loyalty has meant to me, especially because of our relationship and in the light of my unblemished record in the United States Navy for 25 years prior to becoming your secretary….

"It seems a curious commentary upon human nature that a small group of gossips would assume that they could convince any considerable proportion of the people of Los Angeles that a man trained as I had been for 25 years in the code of an officer of the United States Navy could be capable of the actions that have  been charged against me by innuendo.

"I now resume my status as a private citizen. As a private citizen I shall be at liberty to answer the slander that has been directed toward me."

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Woman, boy strangled

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Blind Tom dies

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Dropcap_t_1938 he Daily Mirror overlooked the death of "Blind Tom" Wiggins, reported June 28, 1908. Blind Tom played the piano, but he was more than a pianist. He wrote music, but he was far more than a composer. Blind Tom was a sensation and a curiosity, a force of nature. I’m not even sure what term we would use for him today; perhaps "childlike genius" would be the most appropriate.

Whatever Blind Tom was, the piano was his connection to the world. According to accounts from the period, he could use the piano to reproduce any imaginable sound. He was apparently capable of mimicking performances of other pianists and seemingly never forgot anything — at least about music. 

And as you might expect, living in the 19th century, being African American and developmentally disabled, Blind Tom did not have an easy life.

Blind Tom performed in Los Angeles and Santa Ana several times and drew large crowds, according to The Times.  Above left, a program from one of his concerts.

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Warning: The "N-word" appears several times in his obituary, below. 

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Woman disappears

3714 W. Pico, via Google maps.

  July 23, 1958

uth lived in a room at the Shari Hotel, 3714 W. Pico, that she shared with a little dog and a couple of parakeets. The landlord realized she hadn’t been around for a few days, and when he checked on her, he found her pets were nearly dead.

But nothing was written about her until October, when he was finally caught. The Times said investigators searching her belongings learned that she had been a “wartime member of the WAF” and was originally from Plattsburgh, N.Y.* Apparently she worked as a stripper and a model, using the name Angela Rojas. The most important thing about Ruth was that unlike the other victims, she could disappear and no one would notice.

The only person The Times interviewed about her was someone who took her newspaper ads: “She was a seemingly clean-cut, nice kid who was anything but the kind of person you’d expect in that kind of business. She was reliable, the sort who always paid her bills on time.”

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* The Times gave Ruth’s age as 24 and California death records say she was born Dec. 19, 1933. If she had served in World War II she would have been much older. Possibly she served during the Korean War.

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Nuestro Pueblo




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ow this was truly a happy discovery: Someone turned two streetcars into a house. Alas, it’s not there anymore. I would love to know the story behind the home, I’m sure it’s an interesting one.

At left, an update on the campaign to recall Mayor Frank Shaw and federal charges are filed against Peter Pianezzi in the Les Bruneman killing.

Oh, and those $12 dresses at the Broadway? $171.59 USD 2007.

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And commuting was born


 
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Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Except this was published in The Times on July 1, 1901. Today, we shake our heads when we read about someone who works in Santa Monica or downtown Los Angeles and lives in the Inland Empire or the Antelope Valley or in South Orange County. But it’s no different than what people were doing more than a century ago. And we can’t blame the automobile in this era. It’s the streetcar system that allows people to live far from where they work.

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Spring Street revisited




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Photograph by Munsey Studios, winter 1900


Here’s another detail from the photo I wrote about yesterday. These people are on the sidewalk just to the left of the fellow sitting in the wagon.
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Here’s a closer look at the people on the sidewalk. It’s easy to make out the man’s watch chain. The young boy seems to have something pinned to his shirt and the woman appears to be looking directly at the photographer.

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What caught my eye were the signs, "Furnished Rooms," "Cut-Rate Cigar" and my favorite: "Platform Psychic, Independent [Illegible] and Trumpet Medium." I’m going to have to research trumpet mediums and see what they were. Hm. A Times editorial from April 18, 1902, refers to an "independent typewriter and trumpet medium." I wonder if it’s something like "independent writer." The Times editorial writers don’t seem to think much of the paranormal.

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Mystery photo

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Los Angeles Times file photo


Well, who is she?
  • Joan Davis? Alas, no.
  • Tempest Storm? I’m afraid not.
  • Lucille Ball? Sorry, no.
  • Hedy Lamarr? Alas, no.
  • Susan Hayward? I’m afraid not.
  • Paulette Goddard? Alas, no.
  • Martha Vickers? I"m afraid not.
  • Florence Rice or Madge Evans? Sorry, no.
  • Bette Davis? Sorry, no.
  • She is sort of a Lilli Palmer type. (Alexa Foreman). Yes, this is the former Mrs. Rex Harrison (one of them, anyway) in a 1937 photo. Congratulations!

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July 21, 1958

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Dropcap_r_ironworks_3 ather than even make an attempt to explain what’s going on in the Mideast in this period, I’ll defer to Robert G. Neumann, below. I can only echo what Hanson W. Baldwin said Feb. 21, 1958, when he referred to the  "military and political quicksand of the Middle East."

Here’s a quote from Neumann’s piece:

"… but all the other Arab countries, with the qualified exception of Lebanon, live under dictatorships, certainly Egypt above all others. Nor is democracy a meaningful concept among the Arabs."

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Spring Street revisited

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Photograph by Munsey Studios, winter 1900

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Dropcap_i_fairbanks_2 found another image of the Ramona Hotel on Spring Street from about the same era as the earlier picture.  Unfortunately, I scanned it at such great resolution that my computer can’t handle the whole thing so I have to crop it down to smaller pieces. Here’s a lovely detail from the overall shot showing a wagon and a streetcar. And I’ve solved a mystery! The utility poles support the overhead cables for the streetcars. (In later times, the cables were attached to large metal rings in buildings. The streetcars may be gone, but the rings are still visible in many older buildings, including The Times). And I’m so happy to have found the little child sitting on the lap of the man driving the wagon. No car seats in the good old days.
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And here’s a photo especially for the Daily Mirror readers who like the streetcars. Isn’t this a wonderful photograph? Notice the utility pole for the streetcar cable. You can even make out the motorman and a man riding backward to the left. All aboard for Pico Heights!  And I just know that someone is going to send me the history of LARY Car 111. Email me

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Nuestro Pueblo

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The 400 block of Jackson Street no longer exists. It’s in the middle of this complex, as shown on Google Earth:
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I found something really wonderful in researching the temple: A 1950 Sanborn map with an overlay of Little Tokyo from 1940. It’s from Pease Press.

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Spring Street

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Photograph by Munsey Studios

The Hotel Ramona was on the southwest corner of Spring and 3rd streets (305 1/2 S. Spring) on the Ramona Block. It apparently went out of business in 1912, when its furnishings were auctioned off. By 1917 it was replaced by a Beacon shoe store.

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Dropcap_o_baker02 ne thing I enjoy about going through the old photos is that I never know what I’m going to find. Here’s a historic picture of South Spring Street. I am assuming that it’s a contact print from a glass negative because there is incredible detail that’s only visible in a large scan.

For example, there’s the family at left, on the sidewalk just about to walk out of the frame. And there’s a fellow leaning against a carriage waiting for something or someone. Notice the sharp shadows, indicating that the photo was taken in the afternoon. 

Ramona_standard_sewing Adding to the clutter of the street are some large crates or boxes left by the curb. Notice that the back of the buggy advertises Standard Sewing Machines.
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Here’s a detail of the photo. Note that Spring takes an oblique angle at 1st Street. Obviously it hadn’t been realigned yet. We can also see that the sidewalks are crowded and traffic is a little more chaotic than we might expect from the overall picture.

1901_0810_campbell Fortunately, almost every building has signage, so we can make out Campbell’s Curio Store and Eaton Music Company, narrowing the date of the photo to about 1900. We also find signs for Mrs. Keiffer Employment, Reynolds Photo, Dr. Seaton the Chiropodist, and "Tub Baths and Massage."
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Speaking of traffic, notice that we have electric streetcars (the last horse-drawn streetcars didn’t disappear from the city until about 1903).

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But in addition to the streetcars, we have wagons, buggies, coaches and bicycles. Suddenly Spring Street is starting to seem a bit busy.

Below left, a bicyclist and another bike leaned against the curb. In fact, there are several bicycles that have been left against the curb on both sides of the street. In this era, businesses made heavy use of bike messengers and they were often described as young hoodlums.

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And we have pedestrians, crossing in the middle of the street, presumably after the northbound streetcar has passed. One thing that’s missing is crosswalks. Notice the ghost of one shadowy bicyclist who was apparently in motion when the picture was taken. I would guess that our photographer used a fairly slow shutter speed, a tight aperture with the focus set for infinity.

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There’s no such thing as underground cables at this time, so we have utility poles strung with electrical wires.

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What else is missing besides crosswalks? How about streetlights? I don’t see any lighting except for this curious object outside what appears to be the Orpheum Theater at 235 S. Spring.

1900_0205_autos Here’s what else is missing: Automobiles. "The day when the horse is to be a thing of the past on our streets is not yet in sight," The Times said on Feb. 5, 1900.

"The advance of the automobile, while not very rapid in this country, will be sure, but before it can come into general use the price will have to come down considerably, as at present these horseless carriages are practically out of the reach of people of moderate means."

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The Drunkard


 
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I found this program from "The Drunkard" in a scrapbook that I bought years ago and rediscovered while unpacking a box of books today. "The Drunkard" was one of the most popular and long-running plays ever staged in Los Angeles. This particular program dates from the middle of 1934.

      

 
Here’s a post I originally wrote for the 1947project that will give a bit of background:

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n the summer of 1933, expecting nothing but a brief run and modest
ticket sales, two theater people from Carmel, Preston Shobe and Galt
Bell, hatched the idea of staging P.T. Barnum’s 1843 artifact of the
temperance movement, “The Drunkard” by W.H. Smith. In keeping with the
“meller drammer” atmosphere, the producers removed the theater seats
and installed tables so the audience could drink beer and eat a buffet
meal while hissing the villain, cheering the hero and singing "There Is
a Tavern in the Town."

The men had more ambitious plans for the
theater, including historic Italian plays and a Russian version of
“Uncle Tom’s Cabin” recast as anti-capitalist propaganda. But for
reasons none of them understood, “The Drunkard,” which opened July 6,
1933, kept drawing huge audiences and was selling out weeks in advance.

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Strangest of all, people kept coming back to see the play, so
that the producers abandoned the rest of the season. And not just
regular theatergoers but movie stars, like Boris Karloff (who suggested
old-time songs to be performed during the olios), Mary Pickford and
John Barrymore.

W.C. Fields adored the play so much that he
not only saw more than 30 performances, but he also built the 1934 film
“The Old-Fashioned Way” around a production of “The Drunkard,” taking
the role of Squire Cribbs and using many members of the Los Angeles
cast. (That’s Jan Duggan “The Bowery Nightingale” with a ping-pong ball
in her mouth getting whacked by Fields with a ping-pong paddle in “You
Can’t Cheat an Honest Man.”)

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To everyone’s amazement, the play
kept running week after week. The production marked its first year. And
then another. Some cast members left for road shows of “The Drunkard.”
Understudies took on leading roles and became stars of the show. As the
years passed, actors who began as children outgrew their roles and had
to retire. By 1940, there had been 16 weddings among the cast members.

On
an unpainted cupboard in the women’s dressing room, someone tracked the
number of performances and various historic events. On the night of the
2,245th performance, Hitler invaded Poland. On the 3,088th performance,
the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Through the war years, the Theatre
Mart staged special shows for men and women in uniform. By its 7,085th
performance on July 6, 1952, “The Drunkard” had been seen by more than
2 million people.

Finally, the Fire Department cut back on the
size of the audience allowed per show from 340 to 260 and the play was
no longer financially viable. On Oct. 17, 1959, “The Drunkard” closed
with 9,477 performances.

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Neely Edwards, 76, who had been in
the show since Christmas Eve 1933, said: “I was getting kinda tired
anyhow. I can stay home now and relax for a while. Something usually
comes along.”

In 1960, the theater where millions had booed and
cheered the story of temptation and triumph over the evils of Demon Rum
became the headquarters of Los Angeles Press Club.



The neighborhood of 605 N. Juanita Ave., one block east of Vermont, one block south of Melrose, from Google maps’ street view.
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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Stage | Tagged , , , , | 11 Comments

July 19, 1908

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Above, details of the Gilbert B. Perkins home on Hillcrest in Pasadena.
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Dropcap_t_tarzan his was a fun little mystery, complicated by The Times using the wrong middle initial for Gilbert Perkins in the caption.

Perkins sold the home in 1914 to oil executive Frank W. Emery for a reported $125,000 ($2,591,561.05 USD 2007). After Emery died in 1920, the property at 1400 Hillcrest Ave. was sold to Mary Virginia McCormick, daughter of Cyrus H. McCormick, the head of International Harvester. (The Times originally identified her as his sister — ahem).

Mary McCormick apparently planned to demolish the original house to build what The Times called the most expensive home in Pasadena at a cost of $195,000 ($2,289,010.35 USD 2007).  However, a 1927 story says that Mary McCormick had extensively remodeled and renovated the home, which contained about 50 rooms. 

In 1938, Mary McCormick hosted the wedding of her brother, Harold, the chairman of the board of International Harvester, and his private nurse, Adah Wilson. He was 66 and she was 31.

Mary McCormick died in 1941 at the age of 80 at her estate in Santa Monica, The Times said, and her belongings were sold at auction (at left).

She was something of a recluse, The Times said, who divided her time between her two large estates and kept three musicians on her staff of more than 30 servants. She occasionally hired great symphony orchestras to play for her privately, The Times said.

In 1945, after years of neglect, the 24-room mansion, 14-room guest house, two-story, 14-car garage and 26-acre estate was sold for $115,000 ($1,342,082.63) and divided into two parcels. Edward Tobin of Monrovia bought 12 acres and the realty firm of Smith and Son bought the 14-acre parcel.

According to Zillow.com, the present home at 1400 Hillcrest was built in 2004.

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Nuestro Pueblo

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Above, our artist’s view of Bee Rock and below, Bee Rock courtesy of Google Earth.

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Below, suicide at Bee Rock, April 10, 1944.

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