May 6, 1938

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Germany plans to move thousands of Austrian Jews, and The Times buries the story with a one-column hed on Page 8. Below, how does Margaret Bourke-White get those terrific pictures? Why she smokes Camels! 

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May 6, 1908: Shocked Judge Grants Divorce; Bodies Found at Indiana Murder Farm

May 6, 1908: A scandalous divorce!

Above, an update in the divorce case of Henry Lord … The judge doesn’t even bother to hear all the testimony before dissolving the marriage. What became of Augustine Emanuel Lord and coachman Harry Cameron? Alas, The Times is no help. It would be interesting to know the rest of the story. Below, nothing quite says “read me” like the headline “Gruesome Mystery” … Unexplained disappearances, lots of bodies buried in the backyard and other strange events make for an early 20th century “death farm” in Laporte, Ind. In a few days, special excursion trains brought more than 15,000 curiosity seekers to the Gunness place.

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Mystery photo

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OK, who are they?

  • Max Baer (right)? Sorry, no.
  • Carmen Basilio (right)? Sorry, no.
  • Robert Ryan? Alas, no.
  • Montgomery Clift? I’m afraid not.
  • Fernando Lamas? Sorry, no.
  • Ricardo Montalban and Johnny Indrisano? (Alexa Foreman) Absolutely right! The photo, dated Feb. 13, 1950, shows Montalban working with Indrisano for the film "Right Cross." Indrisano, a veteran prizefighter, died in 1968 at the age of 62.

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Cinco de Mayo


May 7, 1895

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Above, the earliest reference I can find to Cinco de Mayo in The Times: A celebration in Tucson featuring the Philharmonic Band, otherwise known as the Club Filarmonico Tucsonense, led by Federico "Fred" Ronstadt. And, yes, that’s the same family as Linda Ronstadt.

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Below, the earliest reference I can find to a Cinco de Mayo celebration in Los Angeles.

May 6, 1896

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May 5, 1958

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Above, migration of Los Angeles Jews to the Westside and the San Fernando Valley is reflected in the sale of the Eastside Jewish Community Center, 2317 Michigan. Below, Los Angeles begins Cinco de Mayo celebrations with a Sunday picnic, with more events to follow … Valley clubwomen are being asked to return stolen cages of parakeets that were lent as table decorations for a charity ball … The Times runs a historic picture of Mission La Purisima from 1885 by Adam Clark Vroman and a 1958 photo showing the mission’s restoration … Edward Teller and Clark Kerr are among the dignitaries addressing UC alumni at the Disneyland Hotel. Teller says that by 1973, it will be possible for one nation to control the world’s weather.
 

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May 5, 1938

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Above, Thelma Todd’s famous (or notorious) Inn … Below, George Sakalis says he was offered $3,000 to keep his mouth shut in the trial of Police Capt. Earle Kynette in the Harry Raymond bombing … Jackie Coogan says he brought a lawsuit against his mother and stepfather over his earnings as a childhood actor because his stepfather was going to cash a $100,000 life insurance policy for $7,500 … Mussolini reportedly tells Hitler, during the Fuehrer’s visit to Rome, that he has nothing to gain from a military pact with Germany. On the jump, George Farley goes on trial on charges of killing Deputy City Marshals Leon W. Romer and T. Dwight Crittenden when they tried to serve an eviction notice. Farly, 54, an African American, has entered dual pleas of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity.

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May 5, 1908


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Above, an update in the Brownsville incident … Below, arson destroys a "spite house" next to 1712 W. Adams … Ministers of the First Christian Church help raise money toward a legal test case on the Bible in public schools …  Population of the city of Los Angeles, as determined in a school census, is 305,000, The Times says. There are 65,000 children in the city younger than 17.   

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Super stadium


May 4, 1958



By Keith Thursby

Times Staff Writer

  It’s a familiar story when a sports team trades in its home for a bigger, brighter facility with more luxury suites and a higher price tag.


I remember when Anaheim Stadium underwent a face lift to lure the Rams out of Los Angeles. I started going to Angels games in 1967 and for the most part the teams were awful and the crowds small. But the stadium was comfortable and convenient with its own special touches.


There were no seats in the outfield and you could watch freeway traffic beyond the fences during a game. Cars stopped on the freeway shoulder to watch the game and eventually a police car would arrive to clear out the cars. That was the highlight some nights.

Then the powers-that-be decided to enclose the stadium to add seats for the Rams, ruining the place for pure baseball fans. There was money involved, of course, but back then, multipurpose stadiums were popular. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, San Francisco and San Diego all had stadiums that were shared by the football and baseball teams. Not pretty places, but functional.


Now we’re in a retro phase that started when Camden Yards was built in Baltimore. It’s the fashion to find a downtown area that needs freshening up and put in a ballpark with good views, close seats and a feel for the city and its history. And only baseball is played on these fields.


The latest version of Anaheim Stadium, or whatever it’s called these days, is closer to its original design. Much of the touches added when the Rams moved in are no longer part of the ballpark (it’s probably the best thing Disney did as the team’s owner). The seating capacity is smaller and the bad seats for baseball are for the most part gone.


The Dodgers’ plans to build around Dodger Stadium can be lumped in this group, because part of the stated idea is finding a way to keep the Dodgers in Dodger Stadium.


Back in 1958, baseball was undergoing one of those generational shifts caused in large part by the Dodgers and Giants moving to California. A story published in This Week magazine, which was distributed in The Times, offered a sense of desperation and inspiration from the game’s leading official.


Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick suggested a new kind of ballpark that he said could solve the game’s problems. The stadium could be used all year, in any weather, for everything from baseball to curling matches. He called it a sports palace.


What kind of features would be part of this palace? The story includes an artist’s conception of the super stadium with a movable or translucent roof, multi-level parking, air conditioning, restaurant, movie theater, race track and subway station. Frick called the concept an ultra-modern community center. Oh, yeah, there would be a field for baseball too.


"Sure, it would cost a fortune," Frick told writer Al Hirshberg. "But so does a one-sport park. Why spend something like $10 million for a park you can’t use in winter or bad weather when, for a few million more, you can build the kind of plant I have in mind? It would pay for itself in a few years."


Some of the commissioner’s comments about financing such a venture seem, well, refreshing.


"As a baseball man, you’d go to a city and offer to pay your share. You can’t say, ‘If you don’t build a sports palace I’ll take my ballclub somewhere else.’ "


Frick served as baseball commissioner from 1951 to 1965. The closest thing to a sports palace built during Frick’s era probably was the Houston Astrodome, which opened in 1965 and was home to baseball’s Astros and football’s Oilers.

keith.thursby@latimes.com

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Dinah Shore


May 4, 1958


By Keith Thursby

Times Staff Writer


Dinah_shore_1942_0607_bruno_bwThe Dodgers’ contract with the city of Los Angeles heated up as a political issue in the spring of 1958. Proposition B was on the June 3 ballot and stories started appearing with some regularity in The Times about various groups or politicians weighing in on either side of the issue.


Television would not be left out of the discussion.


Dinah Shore (at right in a 1942 photo by Bruno of Hollywood) was one of the top names in TV in 1958. She had graduated from a 15-minute show to an hour program on Sunday nights. Cecil Smith, The Times’ entertainment editor, profiled her as busy and happy — but worried about the Dodgers.


Shore recounted seeing the Dodgers lose, 15-2, at the Coliseum and an exchange with team owner Walter O’Malley:


“I kept telling Mr. O’Malley how sorry I was. But some man called up to him, ‘Don’t worry, Walter, we’ll get ’em next time,’ and Mr. O’Malley said: ‘Such wonderful people; in Brooklyn, they’d have thrown a pop bottle at me.’ ”

Then came the politics:

“But if he loses Chavez Ravine, what’ll he do? That’s what worries me, what’ll he do?”

keith.thursby@latimes.com

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May 4, 1938

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Above, Myrna Loy, co-star of "Test Pilot." Below, vegetable peddler George Sakalis tells of police intimidation in the trial of Capt. Earle Kynette … In Rome, throngs of Italians cheer a smiling Adolf Hitler, yelling "Viva!" and "Heil!" … The National Confectioners’ Assn. brings a lawsuit against 20th Century Fox over a scene in Shirley Temple’s "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" that implies candy bars are unhealthy. On the jump, Domino cigarettes are mild on your throat and your pocketbook.

Quote of the Day:

"Uncle Henry bought me a candy bar."

"A candy bar! Take the child to the kitchen and give her something decent to eat!"

–"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm"

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May 4, 1908

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Above, the Lincoln Day Club meets. Below, fighting in the Khyber Pass … A fire at the New Avelina Hotel kills at least 10 in Fort Wayne, Ind. … San Francisco prepares to welcome the Great White Fleet, which is hit by a gale at Monterey … Wedding bells ring for Prince Wilhelm of Sweden and Russia’s Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna. 

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Matt Weinstock


May 3, 1958

 

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May 3, 1958

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A crazy chase–just to beat a traffic ticket? And below, the Headdress Ball!

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May 3, 1938

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Note that William Grant Still took part in the rehearsals for these performances of "Lennox Avenue."

 

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Here’s a link to more information from Duke University about William Grant Still.

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Home of the week


May 3, 1908

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Look what I found! Another 100-year-old home, as shown on Google maps street view:


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According to The Times, the Los Angeles Investment Co. developed a portion of what was known as the College Tract. The development consisted of 80 acres divided into 450 lots. The Times gave the boundaries as Gramercy, 48th Street, Wilton Place and Arlington Avenue, which don’t form a rectangle, unfortunately. Houses ranged from modest bungalows to large, two-story homes. Home buyers were given two years’ use of adjoining lots, which the company left vacant, The Times said. The builders also created small, landscaped parks throughout the development.

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Matt Weinstock


May 2, 1958


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Paul Coates


May 2, 1958

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May 2, 1958

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Above, gentlemen, save your marriage and get your hands in the dishpan! Below, 20 are arrested in an East L.A. gang fight … Two bandits hold up a Beverly Hills jewelry store … A 17-year-old mother reaching across the car seat to grab her fallen baby loses control of the car and kills her child in a spectacular crash … and the Pirates win.

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October 3, 1907: The Mystery of Felt Lake


October 3, 1907
Stanford University

October 3, 1907: Chester SilentChester Silent was among the most promising young men of Delta Tau Delta at Stanford. The son of Judge Charles Silent and prominent in Los Angeles social circles, Silent, 22, had excelled in his studies and upon graduating with a law degree in the Class of 1907 had begun graduate work at Stanford and was expected to head to Harvard.

His fraternity brothers described him as being fairly quiet and reserved—at least among strangers. He didn’t drink or smoke and had little to do with women. His only health problem seemed to be his eyesight, which was so weak that his father wondered whether to let him return to Stanford. But after a summer of tramping around the family ranch in Glendora, Silent found that his vision was well enough that his father allowed him to go back.

A studious young man, Silent usually locked himself in his room to pore over his books and was always eager to help his fraternity brothers with their classes. At the same time, he could be boisterous and was the leader of the Deltas’ roughhousing.
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May 2, 1938

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Above, a waitress from the Red Parrot Cafe is thrown from a speeding car at Sunset Boulevard and Spring Street … Below, engineers are working on ways to prevent flood damage by the Los Angeles River. In addition to experiments in forest areas to learn more about debris from mountain watersheds, workmen at Soto Street are excavating the river bed and lining the channel with concrete …  The trial of Police Capt. Earle Kynette resumes after a weekend break … The court begins examining prospective jurors to determine if they can read and write and whether they know enough English to understand legal proceedings. 

Quote of the Day: "For instance, a prospective juror is given the word ‘larceny’ and then requested to say which of the following terms has a like meaning: large opening, theft, Swedish and market."

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