A similar image taken on the same occasion appears with the article "Girl Takes Pilot Test in Aviation: Plea for License to Fly Sent to Commerce for Action," Los Angeles Times, 17 Jun. 1928: B1.
A.J. Glover, editor of Hoard's Dairyman and president of the Holstein-Friesian Association of America is visiting Los Angeles on a tour of the milk and cattle-producing centers of the country.
Dino is the editor of the Filipino Observer Spokesman and chairman of the Philippine Inaugural Commonwealth committee. The Los Angeles inaugural program for the Philippine Commonwealth will be given on November 15th at The Times Building.
Mrs. Gladys Carter is being held in custody for the murder of 20-year-old Frances Walker after fatally shooting Miss Walker and critically wounding herself with a bullet wound to the chest.
Attorney George Stahlman is photographed holding a Ponderosa lemon, a variety which grows much larger than the common type. In his other hand, he holds a regular lemon for comparison.
Attorney George Stahlman is photographed holding a Ponderosa lemon, a variety which grows much larger than the common type. In his other hand, he holds a regular lemon for comparison.
Bishop Magee of St. Paul opened the sixtieth annual Southern California Methodist Conference with 400 ministers from congregations south of Fresno and from Arizona.
Charges of manslaughter have been filed against Charles F. Mayes in the death of Jessie H. Eddy, whom Mayes struck at a crosswalk at Glendale Boulevard and Park Avenue. Mayes fled the scene but was tracked down by his license plate number.
The history of the locket's ownership is traced as such: after Washington's death it was given to Col. Tonsard. In 1916 it was given to Maud Yoder by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stocker - Mrs. Stocker's maiden name was Clara Baldwin, daughter of E.J. Baldwin. Col. Tonsard is assumed to be an ancestor of Stocker's mother, who was a friend of Maud Yoder.
Miss Bull is to be honor guest at the Supreme Council at Salt Lake City in recognition of her honor of reaching her majority without being absent from any meeting of the society of the Order of Job's Daughters.
A photograph of a portrait of Tetzlaff, with white lines drawn onto the surface cropping his face and black arrows pointing to it. A paperclip can be seen at the edge of the photo.
Constantino Adame (Father of Arturo Adame).This photographs was taken at Ocean View Photo Studios in Redondo Beach, CA.Copies of this photograph were mailed to family members in Pavepero, Michoacan, Mexico as postcards.
McInerny succeeds Byron Cox; other elected officials were vice-president Dr. Lee G. Symington, second vice-president F. L. Hastings, treasurer E. F. McConnell and executive secretary T. Cedric Browne.
Left to Right: Joaquin Morales (son), Manuel Morales (son), Trinidad Morales (mother), and Andrea Corral (daughter, 7 years old). This photograph was taken in a studio for Andrea's first communion. At the time, the family was living in East Los Angeles in Maravilla on Kern Avenue.This image is a reproduction of the original photograph.
Mrs. Deveda Smith was awarded divorce from husband Francis H. Smith and custody of their five-month-old son William after testifying of his verbal abuse, violence and alcoholism.
Barnitz, in suit jacket and bow tie, writes on a sheet of paper with a pen. On his desk there are various sheets of paper, rolled-up blueprint plans, a paper weight, and an ink well. On the wall behind him is a calendar. Behind him and to the right, is a window with the shade pulled down.
Theater and film actress Dorothy Libaire, photographed at the Los Angeles Superior courthouse upon the occassion of her divorce from husband, Russion film and theater director Marion Gering. According to Libaire, her husband believed that people involved in theater should not be married. The two were married on November 28, 1930. Gering directed Libaire in the 1932 film "Madame Butterfly," starring Sylvia Sidney and Cary Grant. Libaire played the part of "Peach Blossom." They separated on January 22, 1936.
Dr. D.P. Wilson is the former consulting psychologist at the Federal Penitentiary at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where he has studied 10,000 cases of marriage. He is now the consulting psychologist of the Los Angeles Institute of Family Relations. One of Dr. Wilson's many claims is that, "Marriage of an educated man to an ignorant woman will succeed, whereas the marital ties between an educated woman and a man inferior to her mentally will ultimately be severed by divorce."
Dr. Kegley practiced medicine as an eye, ear, nose and throat specialist in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, for forty years before coming to Southern California six years ago. He is survived by his wife and their two sons and daughter.
University of Minnesota graduate and tuberculosis specialist Dr. James Homer Burgan is to erect a laboratory and sanitarium for his new treatment of tuberculosis, which involves a serum extracted from female swine.