The day after the death of Los Angele Times columnist Harry Carr, members of the Mexican community gathered at Olvera Street to recite the rosary and litany, after which Consuela Castillo De Bonzo and Zacarias Hernandez placed a memorial wreath on the Philip de Neve cross on Olvera Street. Carr had been a champion of Olvera Street.
Valerie Watrous wrote the column "The Woman and Her Job" from May of 1923 to June of 1926. She continued to occasionally write for the newspaper through 1930
Timothy G. Turner, reporter for the Los Angeles Times, stands with his back to the camera, holding a newspaper. His knees are slightly bent, and he faces an ajar door. He wears a hat and suit. Three pictures and a clock hang on the wall.
Photograph of Ralph Trueblood, Los Angeles Times managing editor, seated in profile, wearing a suit and tie. Trueblood was likely photographed in Los Angeles.
Photograph of Ralph Trueblood, Los Angeles Times managing editor, seated, wearing a suit jacket, slacks and shirt with bow tie. Trueblood wears an earpiece with cord seen draped around his torso. Trueblood was likely photographed in Los Angeles.
This is a picture of Los Angeles Times editorial staff, Charles Jackson Berger and Carlton Williams, taken before they took off for Pendleton, Oregon where William Hickman was being held for the kidnapping and murder of Marion Parker.