December 3, 1941: L.A. County Cuts Welfare Costs, Pays Immigrants to Go Back to Mexico — Updated

December 3, 1941: Li'l Abner as Zoot Suit Yokum

March 14, 1941: Legislature drops rule banning relief to "aliens illegally in this country."
December 3, 1941: I have been reading old newspapers for years and very little about Los Angeles history surprises me anymore, but this one amazed me.

To reduce the welfare rolls, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors approves paying $100 [$1,441.19 USD 2009] to immigrants to move back to Mexico. Families were to receive $10 a month for 10 months either through the Mexican government or the U.S. consul, The Times said.

[Update, Dec. 5, 2010, 3:57 p.m.: A headline and previous version of this post said payments would be offered to illegal immigrants. Further research in The Times’ clips shows that in 1941, legal and illegal immigrants were apparently eligible for relief (see the above story from March 15, 1941, in which the state Legislature tried to ban welfare to illegal immigrants). However, it appears that payments were to be offered to all immigrants, regardless of legal status.]

The story is on the jump.
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December 5, 1907: Man Accused of Scheme in Selling Daughter to Gypsies

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

December 5, 1907
St. Louis

A Los Angeles couple have a novel way of making money: Antonio Thompson and his wife sell their daughter Marie to the Gypsies, then go to court to get her back. According to statements taken in St. Louis, Marie has been sold off several times as a Gypsy princess.

The girl’s father obtained a writ of habeas corpus to get custody of Marie, 16, who was living with “King” Peter Adams, 17, in a local Gypsy encampment, The Times said. Thompson claimed that a Gypsy named Leon Lehan eloped with Marie when she was 12 and sold her to man named Elihi. The father says that as soon as Marie eloped, he and his wife set out after her and have traveled thousands of miles trying to get her back.

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December 4, 1959: Matt Weinstock

December 4, 1959: Christmas needyHalf a century hasn’t dulled the tragedy of these Christmas stories.


Start With People and Where Are You?

Matt Weinstock Top public relations executives took a long, searching look at themselves and what they referred to as “continuing attacks” on their work at their recent Miami Beach convention and their conclusions are succinctly reported in the four-page PRSA (Public Relations Society of America) Convention News.

In his keynote speech, the new president, Kenneth Youel, said the society’s job primarily was to raise the stature of public relations as a profession.

“The greatest area for accomplishment,” he said, “the great challenge to public relations leadership is this:  How can we attract more of the right kind of young men and women into public relations?  How can they themselves be prepared for leadership?  I have thought about this many times and inevitably I return to the same starting point — people.” Continue reading

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December 4, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

December 4, 1959: Mirror Cover

Touhy, Jake Factor, J. Edgar Hoover. Et Al.

Paul Coates, in coat and tieRoger (The Terrible) Touhy, prohibition era gangland boss who was released from Illinois State Penitentiary last week, is remembered most for his kidnapping of John (Jake the Barber) Factor.  That crime earned him a 99-year sentence back in ’34.

But the Touhy story which melted that one into insignificance happened in 1942. That’s when he and six fellow Statesville inmates practically drove World War II out of the Chicago newspapers by pulling off one of the most implausible prison escapes in penal history.

After smuggling a small arsenal into the pen, Touhy commandeered a prison garbage truck, which he couldn’t get started until some by-standing inmates rocked it back and forth for him. Continue reading

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December 4, 1959: Mickey Cohen Arrested

December 4, 1959: Mickey Cohen arrested in killing of Jack "The Enforcer" Whalen.
Mickey Cohen is booked on suspicion of murder in the shooting of Jack “the Enforcer” Whalen, along with George Piscitelle and Sandy Hashagen, 18, who was found by The Times at 2284 1/2 Holly Drive. Continue reading

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December 4, 1911: Man Arrested for ‘Masquerading in Female Attire’

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

December 4, 1911

Clarence Westfall, 22 years old, was taken into custody at San Pedro yesterday afternoon when a boat from San Diego docked. He was arrested for having masqueraded in female attire and was taken to the Central Police Station, where he told a story that nearly resulted in his being liberated. When the police received the report from the station at San Pedro, however, that Westfall, in posing as a woman, had endeavored to be assigned to a woman’s stateroom, he was locked up.

He said he was frequently obsessed with the desire to don women’s clothing, do fancy work and generally “act like a girl.” He had about convinced the detectives that he was a fit subject for alienists to examine when he was recognized as a former prisoner. He was locked up on a charge of vagrancy.

A random discovery too good not to share.

Posted in 1908, 1911, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, Crime and Courts, Fashions, LAPD, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Streetcars | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on December 4, 1911: Man Arrested for ‘Masquerading in Female Attire’

December 4, 1907: Shooting on Baldwin Ranch Raises Tensions Between Chinese, Latino Workers


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

December 4, 1907
Arcadia

Charley Chew, the water superintendent on the Lucky Baldwin ranch, had fired two Mexican workers several months ago and one dark night near the Unruh residence, they ambushed him, shooting him in the back. Chew drew his pistol and shot Francisco Ramirez and Miguel Palamoratz in the stomach, then fled.

Badly wounded, Ramirez and Palamoratz struggled to walk about a mile to a friend’s house in a small settlement near the Baldwin store in Santa Anita, leaving a trail of blood along the railway tracks through Baldwin’s vineyard.

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December 3, 1907: Gunman Kills LAPD Officer; Dies in Slow Agony Awaiting the Gallows

Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

December 3, 1907
Los Angeles

Officer Patrick Lyons had been on the force for four months when he was shot in the head while trying to arrest two robbers a little after 11 p.m. at Central Avenue and 14th Street.

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December 2, 1958: Model stabbed, dumped off mountain highway

December 3, 1958: Model Found Stabbed Beside Road
People v. Feasby (1960) 178 Cal.App.2d 723 [3 Cal.Rptr. 230]

[Crim. No. 6783.Second Dist., Div. Three.

Mar. 9, 1960.]

THE PEOPLE, Respondent, v. GERALD BYRON FEASBY, Appellant.

COUNSEL

Ellery E. Cuff, Public Defender (Los Angeles), Richard S. Buckley and Richard W. Erskine, Deputy Public Defenders, for Appellant. {Page 178 Cal.App.2d 726}

Stanley Mosk, Attorney General, William E. James, Assistant Attorney General, and Jack K. Weber, Deputy Attorney General, for Respondent.

OPINION

VALLEE, J. Continue reading

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Black Dahlia: Ask Me Anything, December 2025

In the December Ask Me Anything on the Black Dahlia case, I gave an update on my work in progress, Heaven Is Here!

I also discussed: Continue reading

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December 2, 1958: 90 die in Chicago school fire

1958_1202_extra
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L.A. Daily Mirror Retro Shopping Guide

Book_Cover
Recommended for your gift lists: Mary Mallory’s latest, First Women of Hollywood.
Available at:
Book Soup.

Larry Edmunds Bookshop.

Skylight Books.

Vroman’s Bookstore.

And from Amazon.

Posted in Books and Authors, Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on L.A. Daily Mirror Retro Shopping Guide

December 1, 1959: Matt Weinstock

December 1, 1959: Comic panel from Out Our Way. Outdoors, a cowboy with his back to a fire complains that the rivets in his jeans get hot.

A Lucky Man

Matt Weinstock Lee Shippey sat smiling at a table in the Broadway Department Store yesterday, chatting with friends and autographing copies of his new book, his 11th, “The Luckiest Man Alive.”  Lee, a glowing, healthy 76, means himself.  The book is autobiographical.

Lee, columnist for The Times for 30 years, now living in Del Mar, writes near the end of his book,

“I have been able to do what I wished to do and live as I wished to live.  I have a house full of good books and a world full of friends.

“It is only through our appreciations that we live.  Without them we would be mere clods, even if wealthy and powerful clods.  The man who can appreciate kindness, courage, faith and beauty is very rich. Continue reading

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December 1, 1959: Paul V. Coates – Confidential File

December 1, 1959: Mirror Cover
Arab League bans Elizabeth Taylor’s movies!


Jerry Lewis at Bat for Actor Robinson

Paul Coates, in coat and tieStrange guy, Jerry Lewis.

I’ve known him for years.  I knew him when he was a kid on Broadway, when he had a partner named Martin, and when they were lucky if — between them — they had a sandwich to split.

I remember when they hit the top and split themselves.

I recall, at the time I blamed Jerry in print for the break, and this couldn’t please him at all.

But we still keep in touch.

I hear from him now two, maybe three times a year.
Continue reading

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December 1, 1938: California prepares to execute two killers at San Quentin

December 1, 1938: Babe Ruth's secret to a happy marriage? White Owl cigars!

The secret of Babe Ruth’s happy marriage: White Owl cigars.


December 1, 1938: California prepares to use the gas chamber for executions rather than hanging. Continue reading

Posted in #courts, 1938, @news, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD, Politics, Religion, Sports | Comments Off on December 1, 1938: California prepares to execute two killers at San Quentin

L.A. Daily Mirror Retro Shopping Guide

Sept. 16, 1957, Parker T-Ball Jotter

Note: This is a repost from 2013. True style never goes out of date, after all.

We are being bombarded by stories about Black Friday and Cyber Monday, with videos of long lines at stores and the attendant consumer frenzy.

The L.A. Daily Mirror prefers a more subdued approach to buying gifts during the holiday season. Here’s proof that an ideal retro gift can be practical and inexpensive. It’s the Parker T-Ball jotter, which has changed very little since this 1957 ad.

2025 update: It’s increasingly difficult to find the Parker T-Ball jotter, but not impossible.

Available from Amazon for $8.98.
Available from Walmart for $22.72.

We like ours with the gel refill, medium point. Perfect for doing crossword puzzles.

What’s on your shopping list? If you have a good gift idea, share it with us.

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Movieland ‘Unsuitable’ Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main Title: Lettering over Art Deco artwork

This week’s “unsuitable” mystery movie was the 1933 Warner Bros. film Lady Killer, with James Cagney, Mae Clarke, Margaret Lindsay, Leslie Fenton, Douglas Dumbrille, Russell Hopton, Raymond Hatton, Henry O’Neill, Robert Elliott, Marjorie Gateson, Willard Robertson, William Davidson and Douglas Cosgrove. Continue reading

Posted in 1934, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , , , | 32 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights – Altadena’s Lovely Christmas Tree Lane

Christmas Tree Lane
Christmas Tree Lane in a vintage postcard, courtesy of Mary Mallory.


Note: This is an encore post from 2012.

Nothing says Christmas like the sight of beautiful outdoor twinkling lights lending a bit of romanticism and happiness to the holiday season. Homes and businesses spiffily decorate themselves. Cities light up parks and outdoor trees. The granddaddy celebration of them all is Altadena’s  Christmas Tree Lane, the oldest and largest celebration of its kind in the world.

Merchants thought up ways of drumming up business during the Christmas season even in the 1920s. Pasadena merchant Fred Nash conceived of the idea of lighting outdoor fir trees in December to lure business to his store, drawing the support of his community organization, the Kiwanis. As the Los Angeles Times reported on Dec. 4, 1920, “Santa Rosa Ave., Altadena, will be a lane of illuminated Christmas trees during the holidays. Following out a plan proposed some weeks ago, the beautiful deodar trees on that street will be festooned with colored lights and trimmings, the Kiwanis Club having voted to share the expense with the city.” Only about a quarter of the trees were lit that year for its inaugural season.

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December 1, 1907: L.A. Author Writes of Life in the Hollow Earth (No Sign of Lizard People)


Note: This is an encore post from 2006.

December 1, 1907
Los Angeles

The Times runs a small blurb on writer Willis George Emerson, noting that the National Magazine has begun serializing a new story, “The Smoky God.”

The Times notes: “The story has to do with the discovery of the North Pole, and inhabitants of the interior of the Earth. It is the supposed story of Olaf Jansen, a Swedish sailor, and is told by Mr. Emerson as selections from papers left by the adventurer.”

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November 30, 1959: Matt Weinstock

The Education Race

Matt WeinstockEver since the Russians launched their first Sputnik there has been a furor in American education.

It has been charged that students graduate from high school without a knowledge of fundamentals necessary in today’s society.

It has also been stated that they are coddled and that schooling to most of them is little more than a pleasant social experience.  If we are to meet Russia on equal terms, the outcry goes, we must tighten up, particularly in math and science.

Let us now pay attention to the mother of a child in a west side junior high school. Continue reading

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