Monday, August 11, 2025

Finished Pictures in a Minute -- August 11, 2025

Chicago Tribune, 25-August-1925

In 1948, Edwin Land started selling his great invention, the Polaroid instant camera. In 1950, the Bolotin Camera Exhange in offered the Polaroid Land Camera for $89.75. 

One of my uncle's had a Polaroid camera in the 1960s, the first one I had seen, and loved to tell people how wonderful it was. At that time, even though I was very young, I wondered how long the photos would last and retain their colors.

Going Holidaying? Take a Camera With You -- 11-August-1925

Toronto Star, 07-August-1925

T Eaton and Company in Toronto offered a staggering variety of cameras, mostly Kodaks.

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Excursion Fares from Pasadena to the Beaches -- August 10, 2025

Pasadena Post, 24-August-1925


The Pacific Electric Railway operated its famous Red Cars on interurban and streetcar routes throughout the Los Angeles area. The PE offered "Week-End Round Trip Excursion Fares from Pasadena to the Beaches."

Saturday, August 9, 2025

Radio Music for Film -- August 9, 2025

Film Daily, 27-August-1925

Radio was a hot topic in 1925. Ufa, the big German film production company, did an experiment with RCA. An audience of 500 at the Briarcliff Lodge, a ritzy hotel in Briarcliff Manor, New York watched Fritz Lang's Siegfried, which was part one of his adaption of Die Nibelungen. During the first half of the film, the article says "there was no orchestra at that showing." During the second half, guests heard a broadcast on RCA,'s station WJY, which carried a score from the Century Theater in New York City. Composer and conductor Hugo Riesenfeld did the arrangement and led the orchestra. It must have been difficult to keep the music in sync with the movie. 

Automobile Blue Book, Volume One, 1919

New York Daily News, 28-August-1925

Springfield Morning Union, 23-August-1925

This article about the broadcast says how the synchronization problem was taken care of: "A trained musician will be stationed with the projection operator who will instruct the operator as to the speed od showing the film in order to coordinate with the music coming in via the air route."

This seems like an expensive way to bring orchestral music to theaters in small towns.


Film Daily, 27-August-1925

Radio Film on Coast

15 Theaters Screen Special Reel and
Hear Voices of Players in Perfect Synchronization

Los Angeles -- Fifteen theaters on Monday night projected a reel specially prepared, and at the same time broadcast through their radio receiving sets a talk by the principals in the picture in perfect synchronization.

A new angle touching on the possibilities of the radio and the motion picture is believed to have been hit upon. While this particular attempt savors strongly of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer publicilty its import cannot be overlooked. The studio prepared a picture with Norma Shearer and Lew Cody as central figures. It was designed to exploit "A Slave of Fashion" in which both appear. By arrangement with the Examiner, Station KFI and the Freed-Eisemann Radio Corp., the picture was projected simultaneously at nine o'clock in fifteen theaters of the West Coast chain, including the Cameo, Alhamra, Criterion, Strand, Circle, Highland, Rivoli, Rosebud, Alvarado, De Luxe, Apollo at Hollywood and Liberty at Long Beach.

While Miss Shearer and Cody talked at the station, the operator in each of these theaters donned headphones and cranked his machine in unison with the ticking of the metronome, all metronomes being calibrated in harmony with the master mechanism at KFI. The master film was also shown at the broadcasting station in order to give the players their cues when to talk, pause, laugh and inflect the voice. The picture in itself was out and out exploitation. It showed Miss Shearer and Cody leaving their homes for KFI and their arrival. In the last portion, extreme close-ups of them speaking into the microphone were shown, revealing their lip movements for an extreme synchronization test.

The results were proclaimed in no uncertain fashion. The exploitation value is held to be so tremendous by M.-G.-M. that another performance will be staged tonight at Loew's State when the broadcasting will be done in full view of the audience, revealing exactly how it is done.

One important figure here expressed the opinion that the test was sufficient proof to him that radio films were a definite possibility and that one reel dramas with all action spoken might soon become a reality through the air.

Douglas Shearer, brother of Norma worked out the details and conducted the first experiment. The Los Angeles critics praised the effort highly.


Partial Success Here
Static Interferes with "Siegfried" Experiment, But Sponsors Claim
It's Feasible

The broadcasting from the Century, of the Wagnerian musical score for "Siegfried" to Briarcliff Lodge for a special showing of this production on Tuesday night may mark a new development.

This initial experiment is the first step in an attempt to develop a practical method for supplying theaters in small towns with special musical scores played by a high grade orchestra in a big city first-run. Joe Fliesler of Ufa sponsored the idea and he arranged with Major General J. G. Harbord, president of the Radio Corp. of America to broadcast the score through station WJY.

By way of contrast, the first half of the picture was shown without any musical accompaniment to the hundreds of guests at the Lodge. Alongside the screen stood the radio sets ready to tune in for the second half. Exhibitors will be interested to know the steps necessary to bring special orchestra music into their theater to synchronize with their screening of a feature.

The Century screening was showing at a speed of 85, and the music was synchronized to that speed. The Briarcliff operator ran his machine at the same speed. The radio operator tuned in a few minutes before the given time of the screening of the second half. As both pictures were being screened in perfect time together, the synchronizing over the radio became purely automatic. It is held to be easy to take up any variations in the music by increasing the speed of the projector.

In this experiment, results were not conclusive as the wrong broadcasting station was selected, Briarclifif Lodge being badly situated to pick up WJY. Static was present, and made necessary tuning out at frequent intervals. But there were stretches when the orchestration 35 miles a way came through perfectly, and in accurate synchronization.

The Ufa was satisfied with results obtained under these unfavorable conditions. It was said that it represented only the first step in a series of experiments. The opinion was expressed that ultimately it will be possible for example for Famous through the new Paramount theater to broadcast the musical score on all its features to every house in neighboring towns which happens to be playing the current feature.

The whole plan is held to be one of mechanical principles involving nothing but proper team work between a radio station, and the theaters which are to receive the synchronized orchestration. Any problems that may arise are said to be only those that confront any owner of a radio set.

Ordinarily the director of the orchestra synchronizes his music to the film. Here the process is just reversed -- the Film is synchronized to the music. The benefit to the exhibitor apparently is that it gives him the radio to appeal to the radio fans, as well as exceptional music of big city orchestras not ordinarily secured even over the radio.

The reaction of the audience at Briarcliff was very favorable, judging from comments heard after the performance.


Busy on Radio Movies

Writing in the Evening World yesterday, George R. Witte stated that Col. Edward H. R. Green, son of Hetty Green, is experimenting with the sending of motion pictures by wireless. He has conducted a number of expensive experiments but to date has kept the extent of his progress secret.

C. Francis Jenkins, Washington inventor, has likewise been working on the transmission of motion pictures through the air and only recently claimed to have perfected his invention. Even more recent than this is the word from Madison, Wis., of the success along same lines met by Douglas F. W. Coffey, a college student who has wirelessed motion pictures a distance of eight miles.

Meanwhile, in the Los Angeles area, fifteen theaters showed a special one-reeler. Stars Lew Cody and Norma Shearer promoted their film A Slave of Passion. They broadcast their dialogue from radio station KFI and synchronization with the film in the fifteen theaters appeared to work. The projectionist in each theater wore headphones and timed their cranking using a metronome. Norma's brother Douglas was involved in the experiment. He later got a credit as recording supervisor on nearly every M-G-M talkie for twenty years.

The showing of Siegfried at the Briarcliff Lodge did not go smoothly because the radios could not pick up the station without static. 

The item also mentions three experimenters who were working on mechanical television. 

Pasadena Post, 24-August-1925

"Radio-Cinema." That is a new one on me.

Long Beach Press-Telegram, 24-August-1925


Friday, August 8, 2025

Cannonball Adderley 50 Years -- August 8, 2025

listal.com

I was probably listening to KJAZ when they announced that sax player Julian "Cannonball" Adderley had died. He was only 46, and he died after having a stroke. The nickname "Cannonball" came from his propensity for eating. "Cannonball" was a distortion of "cannibal." 

He played with the Miles Davis sextet on the album Kind of Blue and other albums.

Mercy, Mercy, Mercy (Live)


Miles Davis - So What (Official Video)


Miles Davis - Straight, No Chaser


San Francisco Examiner, 24-August-1956


Thursday, August 7, 2025

Soap Box Jazz Band -- August 7, 2025

Washington Tribune, 01-August-1925

Suburban Gardens was an amusement park in Washington DC. Unlike most amusement parks in the south, it was not segregated. The Soap Box Jazz Band was a quartet of young men who made their own instruments. I'd call it a jug band, but I don't see a jug.

Washington Tribune, 01-August-1925


Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Women and Children See Negro Die -- August 6, 2025

Kansas City Daily Journal, 08-August-1925

This lynching is particularly appalling because the victim was accused of holding up a car and pulling the woman out. In most states, this is not a capital crime.

 
WOMEN AND CHILDREN SEE NEGRO DIE
MOB CHASES LAWYER AFTER MERCY PLEA
Crowd Indifferent as Rope Brings Death;
Jeering Boys in Lines.

By CEDRIC WORTH
of Journal-Post Staff

EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, MO., AUG. 7. -- A thousand men, women and children, the typical resort crowd here, watched a small mob hang a Negro today to the limb of a tree. The Negro, Walter Mitchell, 30 years old, was accused of attacking Maude Hold, 18-year-old daughter of a farmer living near Lawson last night.

As the mob, which had taken him from the city jail, stopped beneath the tree to which he was to be hanged, Mitchell fell to the ground. He was handcuffed. The crowd of onlookers which had followed the mob from the jail in motor cars and on foot, pressed closer.

"What have you to say," one of the leaders asked as he bent over the form of the negro.

"Oh God," whispered Mitchell, "give me an hour and I'll prove I didn't do it."

A. J. Rowell, a lawyer, who earlier in the day had agreed to defend the negro, attempted to remonstrate with the members of the mob.

Chase Aged Lawyer

"You're hanging an innocent man," he cried. "For God's sake let him pray."

A few members of the mob chased the aged lawyer up a hill, where he hid in the brush.

The rope was placed about Mitchell' neck as he lay on the ground. It was thrown over a limb about twelve feet high. Several men seized the rope's end and swung Mitchell clear of the ground.

The Negro did not utter a sound. As the rope tightened, he shuddered, looking at the hard faces around him -- and then death.

The leaders of the mob dispersed the mob as the crowd grew and took on a holiday atmosphere as the (damaged page) of the Negro was pointed out to newcomers.

A Wabash passenger train of two cars, arriving at the scene just before the Negro was swung clear of the ground stopped and passengers and crew watched the lynching. The train did not move until Mitchell was dead.

Five Attacks on Jail.

Five attacks, led by men from the vicinity of Lawson, were made on the jail before an entrance was gained by a ruse.

The city prison in in the rear of the building which houses the fire station. John F. Cravens, chief of police, was holding the building with the aid of deputies who had been sent down from Liberty.

At 2:15 o'clock a fire alarm was turned in. The fire apparatus dashed into the street where the mob had congregated. Fifty men rushed into the building before the doors to the fire department could be closed by the two deputies in the room at the time.

These men were J. J. Lowe, deputy sheriff, and Columbus Acuff, deputy constable. Lowe stood in front of the door leading to the Negro's cell. About fifty men rushed into the one of them threatened him with a mattock.

"Stand out of the way," the man shouted to Lowe.

Jeering Boys in Mob.

Others seized the deputies. With a single blow, a man who had threatened Lowe broke the lock from the door to the cell.

Mitchell had heard the mob earlier, but did not seem frightened. When the cell door opened, he dropped to the floor and rolled under a bunk. William Snow, his cellmate, was thrust to one side and Mitchell was dragged out to a waiting motor car.

Efforts to make him confess his guilt were unsuccessful.

The mob passed through the streets of the town, at times dragging Mitchell by the rop which had been placed around his chest. He could not walk. His hands were bound. The mob grew as news of the jail break passed through the town.

Women joined the throng with children in their arms. Family parties came in motor cars. Small boys in great numbers were jeering along beside the leaders, who had Mitchell.

Past the Elms hotel the mob went to a point about a quarter of a mile from the nearest dwelling house on the Wabash tracks.

Tell of Attack.

The tree on which Mitchell was hanged was across the tracks from the old Excelsior bottling works.

A search for Mitchell started at midnight and did not end until his arrest by Cravens in the house in which he roomed this morning.

The attack, as detailed by Miss Holt and Leonard Utt, 20 years old, who was with her, was made near her home last night. Utt and Miss Holt were returning to her home after attending a party in Lawson. As they neared the Holt farm, a Negro jumped to the running board, thrust a flashlight into the ford coupe in which they were riding, and order (sic -- JT) them to give him their money. Utt said today he gave the man $2.

Then, according to their story, the Negro seized the girl and pulled her from the car. He threw her to the road and she screamed. Her screams frightened the Negro, who ran into a field. Utt and Miss Holt went to the Holt home and told their story.

Sandals a Clew.

A posse of farmers examined the ground about the place where the motor car had stopped and found tracks made by sandals. Mitchell, who worked for F. J. Strong on the farm adjoining the Holts, is said to have worn sandals.

When Mitchell was arrested by Cravens this morning he had been in bed. A pair of sandals which fitted the tracks and a flashlight such as Miss Holt said Mitchell carried were found in his bedroom, Cravens said.

Miss Holt identified Mitchell at the city hall here this morning. She refused to comment on the attach or on the action of the mob, which appeared imminent.

Her father conferred with ten men of Excelsior Springs and asked them what he should do. They counseled against mob action, and Holt agreed with them. Later he demanded another conference. While it was in session, the mob stormed the jail and took Mitchell.

Assault Photographers.

Three photographers attempting to photograph the lynching were assaulted by members od the mob and one camera was destroyed. Ben Strathman, Excelsior Springs photographer, raised his camera and it was knocked from his hands. Members of the mob kicked it to pieces.

Dan Larimer, a press photographer, was assaulted by several men who had seen his take a picture of the hanging. He fled beneath the slowly moving cars of the Wabash train which arrived as the hanging was taking place and escaped with his camera broken.

An attack on Norman E. Crosswell, Journal-Post photographer failed to break the camera or the plates which he had taken of the mob.

A riot call meanwhile had been sent to Kansas City. Fifty-six policemen, led by Lieut. W. H. Arnold, rushed to Excelsior Springs by motor car. They arrived about twenty minutes after the hanging and W. A. Stevenson, city detective, cut Mitchell's body down.

Not to Hold Inquest.

(damaged page)Leslie (damaged page), coroner of Clay county, disclosed later Mitchell died of strangulation. He will hold no inquest.

Raymond Cummins, prosecution, refused to say last night what action he will take, other than that an investigation will be made. It is possible, he said, that Judge Ralph Hughes of the circuit court will be recalled from Minnewta where he is on a vacation to summon a grand jury immediately.

Mitchell was born in Meriden, Miss., and came North ten years ago. He has a wife in St. Paul, Minn.

A long line of people stood in the street after the body had been taken to the undertakers. There were more women than men in the line awaiting an opportunity to see the body of the Negro.

Several motor cars loaded with Negroes left Excelsior Springs late today in the direction of Kansas City. No trouble between whites and blacks is expected by the authorities here.

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Comic Book -- Brave and the Bold -- August 5, 2025

coverbrowser.com

When I was growing up, DC comic book Brave and the Bold usually featured Batman and another hero, in this case, Green Lantern. The bad guy who has imprisoned Batman in an iron bat is the Time Commander but the villain on the cover is Cosmos, an artificial creature made anew by the Time Commander.

I had this issue.

Monday, August 4, 2025

Pulp -- Brave and Bold -- August 4, 2024

coverbrowser.com

Before the pulps, there were the dime novels, which sometimes cost a nickel. This issue of Brave and Bold, from 06-January-1906, shows That Boy Checkers, who brought a knife to a tiger fight. That Boy Checkers, or Chased Half Way Around the World was written by Lawrence White, Jr. 

Sunday, August 3, 2025

Toonerville Trolley -- Take Them Teeth o' Yourn Out -- August 3, 2025

San Antonio Light, 04-August-1924

I love Fontaine Fox's The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains.

Washington Times, 06-August-1925
  
Washington Times, 30-June-1918


Saturday, August 2, 2025

Krazy Kat -- No "Officer Pupp" Today -- August 2, 2025

San Antonio Light, 07-August-1924

I love George Herriman's Krazy Kat. Ignatz breaks through the fourth wall. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Brooklyn Times-Union, 11-August-1924

I see that Boston radio station WNAC had a show called the "Krazy Kat Kiddies Klub." I'll have to look into that.

Washington Times, 30-June-1918


Friday, August 1, 2025

August 2025 Version of the Cable Car Home Page -- August 1, 2025



I just put the August 2025 version of my Cable Car Home Page on the server:

http://www.cable-car-guy.com/

It includes some new items:

  1. Picture of the Month: Grip car and trailer 6 of Lisbon's Graça line was built by the German Maschinenfabrik Esslingen. I wonder if it was photographed on elevated tracks as a builder's photo. Photo courtesy of Maschinenfabrik Esslingen. All rights reserved.
  2. On the Other Cities page: A ten-year update about the Nova Companhia dos Ascensores Mecânicos de Lisboa, which operated two Hallidie-type cable car lines in Lisbon
  3. On the Cable Tramways in Australia and New Zealand page: The extended 2025 Annual Maintenance Shutdown of the Wellington Cable Car
  4. On the Kansas City page: Added the logo of the modern KC Streetcar
  5. Added News items about cable car operating issues and Muni's psychedlic-wrapped vehicles

Ten years ago this month (August 2015):

  1. Picture of the Month: Car 4 of Lisbon's Camões-Estrela line was built by the German Maschinenfabrik Esslingen. I wonder if it on a transfer table. Photo courtesy of Maschinenfabrik Esslingen.
  2. On the Other Cities page: A new article on the Nova Companhia dos Ascensores Mecânicos de Lisboa, which operated two Hallidie-type cable car lines in Lisbon
  3. On the Cable Car Bell Ringing Contest page, added photos and videos of the 52nd Annual Cable Car Bell Ringing Contest
  4. Added News and information about Muni fare changes

Twenty years ago this month (August 2005):

  1. Picture of the Month: A Walter Rice photo of Powell Street car 25 with the round dash signs it sported until 1982.
  2. On the Cable Car Transfers, Tickets, Tokens and Signage page: Thanks to Walter Rice and Val Lupiz, a collection of Powell Street dash signs. Also an 1898 Cal Cable dividend check.
  3. On the San Francisco page: Walter Rice has two more stories about Samuel Kahn, Market Street Railway's principal owner: "Samuel Kahn Paints a Streetcar White," about private party car San Francisco, and "Samuel Kahn, Inventor," about the creation of the White Front Car, with a copy of the patent
  4. Also on the San Francisco page: Thanks to Phil Hoffman, an item about the movie I Love a Soldier, which featured Barry Fitzgerald as a gripman. Also thanks to Phil Hoffman, an update to the item about the movie In Harm's Way.
  5. On the New York/New Jersey page: More 1887 newspaper articles about the first cable car line in Brooklyn, New York. A CABLE CAR ACCIDENT, about a pedestrian getting injured, and . EXTENDING THE CABLE ROAD, about extending the cable and possibly running cars across the Brooklyn Bridge using the Johnson system
  6. Thanks to Phil Hoffman, added Chronology item about Adlai Stevenson campaigning from the back platform of Powell car 504 in 1956. Added a Time Magazine photo of the event to the article on Photos of Car 44 (retired Powell Street car 504/4) at Pac Bell Park
  7. Added more Chronology items

75 years ago - 1950
Aug 14 - Cal Cable's O'Farrell, Jones and Hyde cable car service north of California Street is replaced by shuttle buses (San Mateo-Burlingame Transit, Ford buses) to Chestnut Street only because of Broadway Tunnel construction.
Aug 21 - The San Francisco Grand Jury reported that during the calendar year 1949 Muni’s Powell Street cable cars lost $145,089. The railway "is powerless to eliminate the loss, as the voters mandated continuance of the Municipal cable cars." Heavy capital expenditures for track and "other essentials" will be required to keep cable cars in operation. The operating costs, per vehicle service hour, were trolley buses $4.72, motor buses $5.15 streetcars (two-man) $ 8.76 and cable cars $9.52.

In January 2024 I started on a long overdue process of cleaning things up on my site. I started with the development pages. Actually, I guess I started the year before with making most thumbnails 200 pixels instead of 100.

Coming in September 2025: 

On the Other Cities page: A ten-year update about the the street-running funiculars in Lisbon, Portugal, with several photos of the Elevador do Lavra

The Cable Car Home Page now has a Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/CableCarHomePage/

The Cable Car Home Page also has an Instagram page:
https://www.instagram.com/cable_car_guy/


Joe Thompson
The Cable Car Home Page (updated 01-August-2025)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/
San Francisco Bay Ferryboats (updated 31-October-2024)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/ferry/
Park Trains and Tourist Trains (updated 31-May-2025)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/ptrain/
The Pneumatic Rolling-Sphere Carrier Delusion (updated spasmodically)
http://cablecarguy.blogspot.com
The Big V Riot Squad (updated obsessively)
http://bigvriotsquad.blogspot.com/