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Tag Archives: 1907
October 21, 1907: L.A. Doctor Wants to Exterminate Cats Over Their Diet of Diseased Rats
October 21, 1907: Dr. E.O. Sawyer wants to kill all the cats in town because cats feast on diseased rodents and then come home to be babied by families laboring under the misguided notion that they somehow “own” the cats.
Continue reading
October 20, 1907: Winsor McCay, ‘Little Nemo’ and The Imp
October 20, 1907: Winsor McCay and his cartoons never completely go out of fashion and are periodically rediscovered. Living in the era of legacy comics, bland writing. weak drawing, and panels the size of postage stamps, it’s easy to forget comics once ran a full page. And then there’s Imp. Continue reading
October 19, 1907: Toku, Abandoned by Man Who Claimed to Be Wealthy, Denied a Divorce
October 19, 1907: Visiting Japan, K. Tsuneda met a young woman named Toku. Claiming that he was a wealthy Stanford student, Tsuneda married Toku and they came to the U.S. so his new wife could get an American education. She learned that Tsuneda wasn’t rich or a Stanford student. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, Crime and Courts, Education, Immigration
Tagged #Japan, 1907, crime and courts, divorce, immigration
Comments Off on October 19, 1907: Toku, Abandoned by Man Who Claimed to Be Wealthy, Denied a Divorce
October 17, 1907: All-White USC Football Team Starts Race Riot Over Tackle by Black Player From Whittier
October 17, 1907: A Black player from Whittier State tackles a player for USC’s all-white team, setting off a fight between the teams. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, African Americans, Sports, Streetcars, Transportation
Tagged #USC, 1907, African Americans, racism, sports, Whittier
Comments Off on October 17, 1907: All-White USC Football Team Starts Race Riot Over Tackle by Black Player From Whittier
October 16, 1907: Man With Three Wives Believes in Marriage but Not Divorce
October 16, 1907: George S. Best is a great believer in marriage and strongly opposes divorce, which is why he has three of one and none of the other. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, Crime and Courts
Tagged 1907, bigamy, crime and courts
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October 15, 1907: Fire Threatens Orpheum
October 15, 1907: Fire breaks out in the four-story building housing the Orpheum Theater and the Elks Hall. Entertainer Minnie Seligman made the smoke and sound of fire engines part of her act. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, Downtown, Fires, Spring Street, Theaters
Tagged #Orpheum, #Spring Street, 1907, Fires, Minnie Seligman, theaters
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October 14, 1907: ‘In 9 cases out of 10, Where There Is a Shooting, There Is Also a Woman’
October 14, 1907: There was Oscar E. Otto, a young chauffeur with a hot temper and a gun. There was his 19-year-old wife, the former Irene E. Jester, “a silly little creature with futile tears and French heels.” And there was J.C. Henderson, another chauffeur with a gun and better aim or more luck. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, Homicide, LAPD
Tagged #guns, 1907, domestic violence, homicide, tragic affairs
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October 12, 1907: Contractor Leaves Dead Dogs in Street to Break Contract; A Foul Wind From Fertilizer Plant Blows Over Boyle Heights
October 12, 1907: After repeated complaints to police because half a dozen dead dogs had laid in the streets for two weeks, the health department tried to charge C.T. Hanson, who held the contract for removing carcasses. But according to the city attorney, Hanson was only guilty of not abiding by his contract and nothing more. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, City Hall, Environment
Tagged 1907, Boyle Heights, City Hall, Environment
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Col. John Bryson, 1819 – 1907 | Ex-Mayor Was Millionaire L.A. Developer
October 11, 1907: John Bryson, self-made millionaire and developer of the Bryson Block, dies. He had separated from his wife and was almost constantly in the company of his longtime nurse, Gladys Lamberton. He was hurriedly buried in a secret ceremony at Rosedale Cemetery. Continue reading
Posted in 1819, 1907, City Hall, Obituaries
Tagged 1819, 1907, Architecture, Bryson Block, obituaries
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Oct. 10, 1907: The Want Ads
October 10, 1907: George Sumi’s Japanese Employment Agency. Most reliable in the city. Continue reading
October 9. 1907: Trellis, The Confidence Woman
October 9, 1907: She was known as Trellis C. Harris or Trellis Blessing—or Edna Hall. But her method was always the same. She would commit some theft, then fake an epileptic fit, spitting up blood from a capsule hidden in her mouth. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, Black Dahlia, Crime and Courts, LAPD, Pasadena
Tagged #fraud, 1907, crime and courts, Pasadena
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October 8, 1907: Sewage-Eating Fish Spread Disease at Local Markets, Health Officials Say
Note: This is an encore post from 2006. October 8, 1907Los AngelesHealth officials and a deputy district attorney have joined to urge the Board of Supervisors to ban fishing within a half-mile of the city’s Hyperion line that pours sewage … Continue reading
Posted in 1907, Environment, Food and Drink
Tagged 1907, Environment, food and drink, sewage
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October 5, 1907: White Neighbors Fight Hilliard Stricklin’s Retirement Home for Blacks
October 5, 1907: Hilliard Stricklin wanted to do something for his fellow Blacks: A facility for the elderly and orphaned children, naming it in honor of his mother. White neighbors thought he was bluffing until workers showed up on the site. And then they were furious. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, African Americans
Tagged 1907, African Americans, housing, racism, segregation
1 Comment
October 3, 1907: The Mystery of Felt Lake
October 3, 1907: Chester Silent, one of the most promising students at Stanford, disappears…. Continue reading
October 2, 1907: Patient Dies After Chiropractor Treats Spine With Mallet and Drill
October 2, 1907: Thomas H. Storey, an unlicensed chiropractor, has a patient lie with his head on one chair and his knees on another. Storey gets on the patient’s back so all his weight is resting on the spine. Next, he puts his knee in the small of the patient’s back. Then he twists the neck. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, 1909, Crime and Courts, Medicine
Tagged 1907, chiropractors, crime and courts
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September 30, 1907: The Quick Brown Fox and Friends From A to Z
September 30, 1907: A list of sentences using all the letters of the alphabet. “Pack my box with five dozen liquor jugs seems to have fallen out of favor.” Continue reading
Posted in 1907, Books and Authors
Tagged 1907
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September 28, 1907: L.A. Motorcycle Club Backs Ban on Loud Pipes
September 28, 1907: Members of the Los Angeles Motorcycle Club have written to officials in support of a measure banning loud exhaust pipes on motorcycles. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, City Hall, LAPD, Transportation
Tagged 1907, loud pipes, motorcycles
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September 27, 1907: Child Welfare Officer Cites Ringling Bros. for Underage Performers
September 27, 1907: A child welfare officer cites Ringling Bros. for having underage performers — on the circus’ last day in town. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, LAPD, Theaters
Tagged 1907, circus, crime and courts, Gerry Society, Ringling Bros.
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September 26, 1907: Disharmony for Conductor of Long Beach Band
September 26, 1907: Marco Vessella, conductor of Long Beach’s Royal Italian Band, has had nothing but trouble with Special Officer W.D. Cason after firing him from his job as ticket taker. On one September evening, Vessella and a young lady were waiting for a streetcar when Cason taunted him, calling him “spaghetti face” and “a longhaired dago.” Continue reading
Posted in 1907, Crime and Courts, Music, Pasadena
Tagged 1907, crime and courts. Marco Vessella, Long Beach, Music
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September 25, 1907: The Melancholy Prizefighter
September 25, 1907: Meet Joe Gans, a boxer whose name once echoed among fans of the ring now buried in the dusts of sporting history. Gans may well have been one of the finest fighters whoever lived. Continue reading
Posted in 1907, 1910, African Americans, Sports
Tagged 1907, 1910, African Americans, Harry Carr, sports
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