A different photo taken on the same occasion appears with the article, "Red and White Union Success, Indian Millionaire and Mate Happy," Los Angeles Times, 02 Mar 1925.
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.
A cropped version of this photograph appears with the article, "NAZIS FROWN ON LEO GALLAGHER: Los Angeles Attorney Banned From Berlin Trial Police Take Him and Three Others From Court Support of Reichstag Fire Defendant Stirs Ire," Los Angeles Times, 15 Oct. 1933: 3
View of Earl Oakley, standing in collared shirt, tie, and jacket. Earl Oakley, an attorney, was held responsible for the death of Arthur G. Anderson when their cars collided at Ninth and Hope streets. Oakley was held on suspicion of drunk driving.
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.
John D. Spreckels III, heir to the Spreckels sugar fortune, possibly consulting with his attorney Louis Beedy regarding Mrs. Roxana Gloria Brown Spreckels' divorce suit.
A similar photograph taken on the same occasion appears with the article, "Bar Condemns A.A.A. Move to Ban Tax Recovery Suits," Los Angeles Times, 20 Jul 1935: 1.
View of E. Elmo Bollinger, county attorney for Mohave County, Arizona, in collared shirt, tie, and jacket. Bollinger filed charges of open and notorious cohabitation against a polygamy colony located in Short Creek, Arizona.
Lillian Rock was visiting Los Angeles in July to attend the National Association of Women Lawyers conference and talk to Southern California women interested in her organization.
Vacationing Pittsburgh lawyer S. H. Patterson claims to have found several discarded cans full of at least twenty pounds of government-issued food along the sidewalk at Third Street and Union Avenue.
The American Bar Association held their 1935 convention in Los Angeles with events at the Biltmore and Philharmonic Auditorium. Approximately 3,000 barristers from around the country were in attendance.