May 19, 1908

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The Irish giant of jujitsu, Leo McLaglen, is accused of vanishing with the proceeds of a match at 1933_0523_jujitsu
Chutes Park–but not to worry. He’ll be back in 1933 to help train the LAPD in the martial art (see photo above). He’s a captain in the international police, The Times says in a May 23, 1933 story.

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Times backs Dodgers

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May 18, 1958


By Keith Thursby

Times staff writer


Baseball stadium or zoo?

OK, that wasn’t quite the choice for Los Angeles voters when they went to the polls June 3 to vote on Proposition B. But both were mentioned in a Times editorial endorsing the Dodgers’ contract with the city.

The editorial was timely, coming on the heels of a two-day legislative session on the Dodger deal. And as for the zoo reference, here’s part of a paragraph deep in the unsigned editorial. You’ll notice the voter is referred to as "he," another reminder that this is from 1958:

“He can vote for Proposition B with a much clearer fiscal conscience than he could vote for a zoo, because the zoo would continue to be a charge on all taxpayers, including those in the outlying districts. A zoo is a good thing to have — and we shall have one — but a baseball yard is just as good in its own way and it will never cost the taxpayers anything for maintenance.”

According to the Los Angeles Zoo’s website, the city’s first zoo opened in 1885. The current zoo opened in 1966.

keith.thursby@latimes.com


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May 18, 1938

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1938_0518_page Above, Esther Sichler shows off her skill in a match at Elysian Park with a .38: A 3-inch group at 25 yards, breaking all women’s records in target shooting, The Times says. Her husband is a sheriff’s deputy, the story says … The U.S. attorney general says the raid on the gambling ship Rex was legal. To be in international waters, the ship would have had to be 14 miles off Santa Monica, The Times says … The defense in the Harry Raymond bombing asks the court to dismiss charges against Police Capt. Earle Kynette–a typical courtroom maneuver.

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May 18, 1908

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At left, the saga of a man who wanted a ride on a train, rather desperately … Above, a wild night in a rented car racing around downtown at 40 mph ends in a fiery crash with a carriage by the plaza that The Times calls a "near tragedy," which means that everybody survived but don’t ask what happened to the horse …

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Dodger Deal

May 17, 1958


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By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

“I own the oil rights in Chavez Ravine. The city is trying to steal them from us. We’ll have to fight for our rights.’

The
quote is found on the second page of The Times’ story covering the
state Assembly committee hearings into the Dodgers’ contract with the
city of Los Angeles. The words were credited to Glen Walters,
identified as an ex-actress and a resident of the Palos Verdes area of
Chavez Ravine.

According to The Times’ story, she rushed the
speaker’s stand shortly after a noon recess had been announced and was
eventually escorted out. The Times may have made a big deal of the
incident (with photo and a mention in the headline) but the story also
included a lot more back and forth between city and state officials.

A quote from both sides of the debate:

Mayor
Norris Poulson, asked whether the Dodgers would leave Los Angeles if
Proposition B lost: “I’m sure they will and we’ll be the laughingstock
of the United States.”

City Councilman Patrick McGee,
criticizing the Dodgers’ offer to give the city Wrigley Field as part
of the Chavez Ravine deal: “Wrigley Field is nothing more than a white
elephant. The Dodgers don’t want it. So they just threw it into the
deal to make it look like a good deal.”

A note of political
realism in the story: There would be no report from the committee in
time for the election. Chairman Ralph Brown said the committee had
until the following January to file its conclusions.

keith.thursby@latimes.com

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Harry Raymond bombing

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Los Angeles Times file photo

The prosecution rests in the trial of Police Capt. Earle Kynette, so I
thought I’d post some photos of the Harry Raymond bombing… This is the remains of the garage at 955 Orme St. after the explosion…

1938_0117_raymond_mg_caskell_herod  Los Angeles Times file photo

Police fingerprint expert M.G. Gaskell looks for evidence on the remains of Harry Raymond’s 1937 Chrysler.


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Los Angeles Times file photo

Doctors treat Harry Raymond after the bombing. Note the pack of cigarettes stashed under his pillow. The doctor bending over Raymond is Charles F. Sebastian, son of the former Police Chief Charles E. Sebastian.

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Building of the week


May 17, 1908

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Mystery photo 3

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And this one?

  • OK, Ronald Reagan and his wife, Nancy, are the easy ones. Who is the Mystery Man on the left?
  • Merv Griffin? Sorry, I’m afraid not.
  • Edwin Meese? Alas, no.
  • Jesse Unruh? I’m afraid not.

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May 16, 1958

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May 16, 1958: Above, The Very Rev. James Pike becomes Episcopal bishop of California. 

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In 1961, a group of Georgia Episcopalian leaders accused him of heresy, saying that he "expressed disbelief in the virgin birth of Our Lord, the doctrine of the Holy Trinity as stated by the church and the necessity of salvation through Jesus Christ alone."

Pike died in 1969 after he and his wife became stranded when their car broke down in the Judean desert.

Above left, Joseph "Sugar Joe" Peskin, a factor and former juke box figure, is pistol-whipped … and a dozen patrol cars respond to a brawl at Betsy Ross High, a school for "problem girls" at 717 N. Figueroa.

At left, the generosity of the Dominican Republic’s Gen. Rafael Trujillo toward Hollywood starlets (Zsa Zsa Gabor and Kim Novak) also extends to Joan Collins.

Quote of the Day: "Moslems teach one god and three wives and we teach one wife and three gods and it’s no wonder we are losing the continent."
–Former Bishop James A. Pike, on returning from Africa

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May 16, 1938

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May 16, 1908: Wanted — Home for 1,000 Ostriches!

May 16, 1980: Cawston Ostrich Farm of South Pasadena is looking for 250-500 acres suitable as a home for 1,000 ostriches.

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Paul Coates


May 15, 1958

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Paul Coates


May 15, 1958

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May 15, 1958


May 15, 1958

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May 15, 1958

1958_0515_massacre At left, a double feature of "Fort Massacre" and "Steel Bayonet." You sure don’t have to wonder what those movies are about, do you? Below, the Soviets launch another satellite and Washington prepares to welcome Vice President Nixon back from his Latin American tour … A major narcotics dealer is indicted on charges of selling heroin at Lucey’s Restaurant, 5444 Melrose, across from Paramount … On the jump, Hugh Bentley, vice crusader of Phenix City, Ala., is honored on "This Is Your Life."
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May 15, 1938

1938_0515_thomas At left, John Charles Thomas performs in "Blossom Time." Below left, shots are fired in a raid on water taxis taking customers to the gambling ship Rex, right out of Raymond Chandler. Authorities also seize 51 Rex employees … In a secret Nazi trial, Baron von Cramm is sentenced to prison for improper relations with a Jewish woman … On the jump, Rex operator Tony Cornero poses with lawmen who raided the ship … And prosecutors search L.A. hardware stores for detonator wire in response to jurors’ questions in the trial of Police Capt. Earle Kynette in the Harry Raymond bombing.
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May 15, 1938

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Butterfinger, the health food. Well, at least we know what became of the ad agency that called beer "liquid bread."

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Home of the week

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Above, the home at Presidio Drive and Lorado Way in 1938 and in Google’s Street View, below. According to Property Shark, this neighborhood in View Park is 72.3% African American, 22.6% Hispanic, 14.1% Asian and 8.4% white (note that the figures add up to more than 100% because some people indicate more than one ethnicity. Welcome to L.A.). Zillow estimates the value of the home at $481,635 to $650,510, which is quite a range.

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May 15, 1908

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Above, the Wright Bros. suffer a setback due to pilot error.
Don’t despair, because in less than two years,  Aviation Week will
bring aeroplanes to Rancho Dominguez … Below, crime briefs from
"life’s seamy side": James Mulhall, partner in Venice’s Ship hotel, is
in custody on charges of mail fraud after his son contacts authorities
about his "commercial trickery" … A young girl is accused of stealing
an alligator purse from the dressing room of the Orpheum Theater … An
arsonist in Chicago tries to set fire to a school … And a robber holds up
Tong Yen’s jewelry store.

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Matt Weinstock


May 14, 1958

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