Found on EBay

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Here’s another souvenir postcard from the Great White Fleet’s visit to Los Angeles in 1908, for sale on EBay. It was mailed April 20, 1908, in Los Angeles.

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Matt Weinstock


April 28, 1958

 

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Paul Coates


April 28, 1958

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Mystery photo

2008_0428_mystery_pix Photograph by Phil Bath / Los Angeles Times

OK, who are they?

  • Karl Malden (Alexa Foreman). Right. He’s the easy one.
  • Sally Forrest and Milo Frank (Steven Bibb). Absolutely right!

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April 28, 1958

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By Keith Thursby
Times Staff Writer
 

It seems like such a small thing now. The Dodgers announced a deal with Channel 11 to televise eight games against the Giants in San Francisco.

Back in 1958, of course, there weren’t baseball games all over the dial virtually every night.

A story in The Times detailing the deal didn’t predict big money ahead for baseball teams or television stations. The idea was all about the fans.

Dodgers owner Walter O’Malley said the team had been amazed by the number of fans who had written wanting road games televised. He said most of them represented shut-ins at veterans’ hospitals in Southern California.

Vin Scully and Jerry Doggett, then broadcasting the Dodger games on KMPC, would alternate on television and radio.

These days, another broadcasting team and especially an ex-player or two would be required for most teams, although Scully can still be heard on the radio and seen on TV games.

keith.thursby@latimes.com

Thanks, Keith…. Also note The Times’ coverage of proposed slum clearance on Bunker Hill. Angels Flight will be replaced by a moving sidewalk.

Quote of the Day: "Countless plans for redevelopment have been advanced and discarded. Too expensive or too much opposition from owners and tenants."  — Gene Blake, on the latest redevelopment plan for Bunker Hill

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April 28, 1938

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Below, the trial of Police Capt. Earle Kynette in the Harry Raymond bombing gets particularly juicy when the prosecution introduces a large stack of recording discs, apparently of radio speeches, taken from police. Prosecutors charge that the Los Angeles Police Department’s intelligence unit spent most of its time keeping tabs on the administration’s enemies rather than tracking criminals. The names include former mayoral candidates, civic officials, journalists and an evangelist … Nazi Field Marshal Hermann Goering orders the confiscation of Jewish wealth … Child actor Jackie Coogan’s fortune has gone from $4 million to $500,000 … And wedding bells ring for Albania’s King Zog.

Quote of the Day: "If finance would get out of government and government would get out of business, everything would go again." –Henry Ford, on fixing America’s economy

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April 28, 1908

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Above, recall the assassination last month of Durham Stevens, American adviser to the Japanese government, by a Korean youth … Below, a crazy cross-section of stories from early 20th century Los Angeles, difficult to read but worth the challenge: A train from New Orleans arrives with 1,000 alligators for one of the local alligator farms. Notice that although the story says the alligators were en route for 10 days, they only needed a little water and no food  … A Presbyterian missionary named F.W. Bible discusses China’s economic future … Note "Yellow Peril" in the headline… And there’s an update on the construction worker who fell 50 feet from facade of the Masonic Temple. He not only survived landing on his head, he also survived 1908-style brain surgery … The Williams Jubilee singers of Chicago, an African American ensemble, perform "My Old Kentucky Home," "Old Folks at Home" and "Old Black Joe" in a benefit for the black YMCA … And the school superintendent criticizes a city auditor who found that the district’s finances were in disarray, forcing educators to close classrooms and cut teachers’ pay.   

Alligators02 1908_0428_cover

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Mob murders in L.A.


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I spent a little time tracking down the addresses of what the LAPD said were Mafia killings from 1906 to 1951. Even a superficial look reveals problems with the Police Department’s list. As noted elsewhere, the 1934 killing of Ralph Monterastelli appears to be a botched robbery rather than a mob slaying. And in doing research, I found a 1933 list of mob killings that adds some names and locations, so the 1959 list released by Police Chief William H. Parker appears to be incomplete. Still, it’s a starting point.

Note that not all of the killings could be included in the map. The unfortunate Antonio Martimetto, for example, was found floating in a water tank in Elysian Park (Sept. 7, 1921), and it’s unclear where the tank was located. His underworld connections, if any, are likewise unclear.

In the same way, The Times merely says Vinciano "Jimmy" Basile was found shot to death Feb. 2, 1931, in a ditch west of Downey. His murder was clearly a mob killing; we just don’t know precisely where it happened. All we know is that he was standing next to a palm tree on the Vernon-Downey Road when he was killed with a shotgun, according to a witness who lived at 6211 Howe Ave.

And in other cases, we simply don’t know where some crimes occurred. Several victims disappeared and were never found, so we don’t know where they were done in. The unfortunate individuals include men involved in the alcohol trade: Joe Porrazzo (May 16, 1929); Frank Baumgarteker (Nov. 25, 1929) and Joe Ardizzone (Oct. 15, 1931).

Frank Niccoli (Sept. 2, 1949) is listed as disappearing from 1354 N. Havenhurst, but it’s unclear exactly where he vanished or what became of him — except that it was presumably unpleasant.*  The continuing absence of David M. Ogul (Oct. 10, 1949) is likewise unresolved, so there’s no location listed, although I don’t think anybody questions what became of him.

* In an interesting footnote, 1354 Havenhurst also appears in the Robert Mitchum marijuana case.

This is a work in progress, so I’ll try to update as time allows.

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April 27, 1958

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April 27, 1938

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Above, "Negro News" apparently continued  on KGFJ until the beginning of World War II, according to The Times’ radio listings. Below, Police Chief James Davis testifies in the trial of Police Capt. Earle Kynette in the Harry Raymond Bombing. And look at the police intelligence files the district attorney introduces as evidence: Cafeteria owner Clifford Clinton, a member of the 1937 grand jury; the Rev. R.P. "Fighting Bob" Shuler; Los Angeles County Supervisors John Anson Ford and Roger Jessup; and vice investigator Edward W. Atherton.

Quote of the Day: "Are these men criminals?" — Special Prosecutor Joseph Fainer, questioning Police Chief James Davis

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April 27, 1908

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A dispatch from the Washington Post on Haitian leader Pierre Nord Alexis. Yes, this is how foreign figures were covered 100 years ago. No matter how much time I spend with the old newspapers, they still surprise me.

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Great White Fleet

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Above, a souvenir of the Great White Fleet’s visit to Los Angeles, obtained from that wonderful repository of historic goodies: EBay.

And here’s the 100-year-old message, written from Fullerton:

 

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The Kansas (BB-21) was broken up for scrap in the Philadelphia Naval Ship Yard in 1924.

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April 26, 1938

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Below, the prosecution prepares to call bombing victim Harry Raymond in the trial of Police Capt. Earle Kynette … The proceedings are interrupted as bailiffs throw an old drunk man out of the courtroom after he yelled "Look out! Look out!" … Sam Goldwyn says movies are terrible, even the "A" pictures. He blames writers, actors and directors. "They all get too much money, he said," according to The Times … Nazi violence against Jews breaks out in Theusing, Czechoslovakia … State liquor agents are accused of soliciting a bribe to renew a cafe owner’s license..

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April 26, 1958

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This anonymous writer simply couldn’t resist a cheap shot about women’s vanity.   

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Boy Genius

Nov. 8, 1907
Los Angeles

Mars F. Baumgardt is an interesting young man with an even more interesting project: a radio-controlled boat. Although many students’ projects are on display at the 30th Street School, including those of Mars’ brother Howard, it is the boat controlled by wireless telegraphy that interests The Times.

“As nearly as a layman in the rudiments of electricity can understand the proposition, the scheme is about as follows, in brief: The current sent to the boat by wireless is conveyed into a lower compartment, and is the means of setting a clock. This clock in turn moves two levels, sending the boat in a given direction,” The Times says.

Mars, 16, and Howard, 13, are the sons of B.R. Baumgardt, a noted scientist who was involved in establishing the Mt. Wilson Observatory. The entire basement of the Baumgardt home at 626 W. 30th St. has been turned over to the boys for a laboratory, The Times says, “their mother believing in allowing genius to have free swing.”


And what of Mars F. Baumgardt? A Proquest search turns up hundreds of later entries on the boy genius. In a few years, he was director of the W. A. Clark Jr. Observatory on West Adams and by the 1920s was a regular on radio station KHJ, discussing astronomy.

He was an optometrist by trade and an astronomer by avocation, as well as serving on the park commission in the 1930s. He died Nov. 25, 1950, at the age of 60. His brother Howard, below, a dentist, died in 1966 at the age of 71.



Bonus fact: His son, Mars F. Baumgardt Jr., was one of the backers of “Eraserhead.”

Lmharnisch.com

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e-mail: lmharnisch (AT) gmail.com

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April 26, 1908

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Meet an earnest young scientist named Fred Horowitz, who received a wireless message sent from across the city, a newsworthy achievement in 1908. The other young Edison is Mars Baumgardt, whom you may recall from a previous post on the 1947project as the inventor of a radio-controlled boat.* 

Sadly, Fred was badly injured the next month in another experiment. While trying to launch a kite by trailing it from his bicycle, he was hit by a car near Huntington Boulevard and Alhambra Road, The Times said. He suffered a concussion and a broken leg. Unfortunately, The Times never reported further on his adventures with radio. He was the son of Moses Horowitz, a merchant. 922 W. 1st St.

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* The 1947project website seems to be broken and my friends have moved on to their Bunker Hill project, so rather than redo the post, I’ve published a draft version I wrote in 2006.

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Home of the week

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Miracle of miracles, this house at 1233 S. Bonnie Brae is still standing.

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Here’s an image from Google’s street view. Someone in the last century has tinkered with the porch and we have a non-period satellite dish, but by golly it’s still there and that makes me a happy man. The Times doesn’t say too much about Adrian Loeb except to note his name in half a dozen society columns. He was apparently a produce executive in early Los Angeles. I have the notion that I visited this neighborhood for an Architectural Rambling when I was working on the 1947project, but I can’t find the post. The architect, who used the names Cooper Corbett, B. Cooper Corbett and Benjamin Cooper Corbett, flourished in Los Angeles from about 1900 to 1915 and designed many homes in the West Adams district.

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Matt Weinstock


April 25, 1958

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Paul Coates


April 25, 1958

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April 25, 1958

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Above, the L.A. Dodgers appear in a crossword puzzle, always a barometer of popular culture … Below, Cheryl Crane is released from custody … Secret Service agents detain a woman who burst out of a crowd and insisted on seeing President Eisenhower … Vice President Nixon’s remedy for the economy: A tax cut. The Times plays the story on the front page while noting: "Basically, there was nothing new in Nixon’s advocacy of a tax cut…"

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