Jim Timony was enraged to be placed under arrest along with cast members for obscenity charges regarding the film "Ladies by Request" and denied that the show was in any way obscene.
View of William F. Menton in collared shirt, tie, and jacket. Menton was selected as the Orange County district attorney to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of district attorney Kaufman.
View of defense attorney, William J. F. Brown, left, in collared shirt, tie, jacket, Mrs. Bonnie Taylor, middle, in hat, shirt, holding husband's arm, Earl W. Taylor, right, in collared shirt, tie, and jacket, seated in courtroom with unknown individuals in background. Mr. Taylor, writer's agent and operator of the Hollywood Writer's Bureau, was charged with petty theft for illegally taking money from Miss Hilda Parvey and Madam Nan Kee, writers who claimed Taylor promised their stories would be turned into movies. Mr. Taylor was acquitted by the jury on October 14, 1935.
Jim Timony was enraged to be placed under arrest along with cast members for obscenity charges regarding the film "Ladies by Request" and denied that the show was in any way obscene.
Mr. and Mrs. William P. McCracken Jr. at a train station. Mrs. McCracken Jr. stands on the first step of the train. Mr. McCracken Jr. was the former assistant Secretary of Commerce and served as secretary of the Bar Association.