Photograph of the affidavit of H. D. Hollenbeck, dual resident of Los Angeles and Welton, Arizona, given in concurrence with Aimee Semple McPherson's disappearance/kidnapping. The document puts forward Hollenbeck's sworn account of his whereabouts from May 18, 1926 through July 10, 1926. The document is dated July 10, 1926 and is signed by both H. D. Hollenbeck and a Notary Public for the County of Los Angeles.
Photograph of a hand-drawn diagram that depicts Aimee Semple McPherson's account of her escape from her kidnappers in Sonora, Mexico. A dotted line, representing the U.S./Mexico border, extends across the upper third of the image. Below, the Sonoran town of Agua Prieta and its surroundings are depicted. Above the dotted line, Douglas, Arizona is represented. Notations and scale markers are also included in the diagram. A compass rose sits in the upper right corner. Signatures of witnesses Jackson Bergh and Mayor (of Agua Prieta) Ernesto Boubion are in the lower left corner.
Some of the autographs include: General Peyton C. March, Lieutenant Hunter Liggett, Major General George Cameron, Lieutenant General R.L. Bullard, Major General H.E. Ely, Major General William S. Graves, Major General Omar Bundy
Frankie Bailey (Francesca Walters) collected signatures from hundreds of the "great and near-great" during her thirty-year career (ca. 1896-1926) on the stage and silver screen. These signatures were inscribed onto a single apron. Frankie would sew in the signed names to preserve them. Reported in "Bungalow Apron Real Hall of Fame: Actress Conceived Idea at Beefsteak Feast," Los Angeles Times, 6 Dec. 1925: 16.
Frankie Bailey (Francesca Walters) collected signatures from hundreds of the "great and near-great" during her thirty-year career (ca. 1896-1926) on the stage and silver screen. These signatures were inscribed onto a single apron. Frankie would sew in the signed names to preserve them. A similar image taken on the same occasion appears with the article "Bungalow Apron Real Hall of Fame: Actress Conceived Idea at Beefsteak Feast," Los Angeles Times, 6 Dec. 1925: 16.