Wednesday, January 31, 2024

COVID-19, Vaccine, Masks, Church, Baseball and School -- January 31, 2024

cdc.gov

California has updated its COVID guidelines on isolation.

covid.ca.gov

Israel has changed the intensity of its operations in Gaza. Famine is spreading in the area. 

Ukraine and Russia appear to be in a stalemate.

Dusty Baker is returning to the Giants as a special assistant. 

Trump lost another lawsuit and will pay $83.3 million.

Catholic Schools Week started at Good Shepherd. 

Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Shellfish Warning -- January 30, 2024


I took this photo at the south parking lot at Rockaway Beach on 26-January-2024. I should have taken a closer shot of the shellfish warning sign. The county is finding high levels of biotoxins in mussels and clams. 



Monday, January 29, 2024

Stow Lake/Gaspar de Portolá -- January 29, 2024

 


The San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department decided to change the name of Stow Lake in Golden Gate Park to Blue Heron Lake. William Stow was a Nineteenth Century politician who was exceptionally anti-Semitic. Growing up I spent a lot of time around Stow Lake. My grandparents liked to take us to the boathouse. I always wanted pink popcorn. Sometimes they would rent a boat to ride around the lake. When I got older, I frequently walked to the lake to climb Strawberry Hill and look at the remains of Huntington Falls and the Sweeney Observatory. 

After protests about his effect on Native Californians, Caltrans removed the statue of Gaspar de Portolá at the park and ride lot by the Community Center. I hope the monument at Sweeney Ridge is still there. 

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Catholic Schools Week, 2024 -- January 28, 2024

ncea.org

Today is the start of Catholic Schools Week.

I'm grateful that my parents put me in Catholic schools for 12 years. I'm also grateful to my teachers.

Good Shepherd School in Pacifica gave our daughter a great education and continues to do the same for many other children. My wife teaches there, and I feel proud to be a part-time member of the faculty. Our daughter teaches at a Catholic school in Daly City. 

Good Shepherd School is worth considering if you live in or near Pacifica:

Today there will a school mass at 11am, followed by an open house from noon-1pm. 

update: 

On Thursday my wife told me that the computer lab had been taken over by the science teacher to display the middle school students' science fair projects. When I arrived on Friday, the teacher and the principal apologized, but I told them that I have a talent for making things work. Friday morning the Second-Grade teacher sent me several students and they helped me carry Chromebooks back to their classroom. They enjoyed working there. I borrowed several second graders to carry the laptops to Kindergarten and I used the lunch break to set up the computers. After lunch, Kindergarten did very well working in their own classroom. 

Today there was a good turnout for 11am mass and the open house. I had one table in front of the television where I show my slide shows. I had one with information about my classes and those for 4-8. I set up four computers so kids could show their parents what they do. It took them a while to get started, but several did. 

The middle school kids did nice work on their projects. On Friday, the teacher asked me if I wanted to judge. I told I couldn't because last time I did it the teacher got mad at me. I gave everyone good marks, finding something valuable in each project. I am not good at judging people. 

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Dog is Member of Fire Department -- January 27, 2024

Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, 29-January-1924

Fireman Jiggs is ready for his shift with the Hollywood Fire Department. 

Friday, January 26, 2024

Melanie, RIP -- January 26, 2024

listal.com

Singer/songwriter Melanie has died. She was pretty and she had a beautiful voice. She wrote and performed music that sticks in my head. "Lay Down" with the Edwin Hawkins Singers hits me in the heart every time. She sang at Woodstock.

LAY DOWN Melanie & The Edwin Hawkins Singers LIVE '70 (Candles In The Rain)


MELANIE Look What They've Done To My Song, Ma ('71)


Melanie - Brand New Key (Audio)


Give Peace A Chance MELANIE with JOHN LENNON ('72)


Tapeworms Head and All! -- January 26, 2024

National Police Gazette, 11-March-1893

Tapeworms are parasitic flatworms that like to set up a cozy residence in your digestive tract. They can grow to be quite long. The Nouffer Pharmaceutical Company offered a cure. 

Thursday, January 25, 2024

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Charles Osgood, RIP -- January 24, 2024

CBS News

Charles Osgood died. I loved listening to his Osgood Files essays on KCBS. We didn't get to watch CBS Sunday Morning very often, but we enjoyed it.

John Belushi 75 -- January 24, 2023

listal.com

John Belushi was born 75 years ago today, on 24-January-1949. He died far too young on 05-March-1982 because of the damned drugs. I first saw him on Saturday Night Live. I remember the samurai, the restaurant guy and the Killer Bees.

listal.com

Animal House and The Blues Brothers made a big impression on me. I have grown to like 1941

listal.com

listal.com

listal.com

Director Harold Ramis was going to make a movie out of John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces with John Belushi, but it never happened. 

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Colored Champions of the Prize Ring -- January 23, 2024

National Police Gazette, 14-October-1893

By the late Nineteenth Century, Jim Crow laws prevented African-American boxers from fighting white boxers. Tom Molineaux was an American who did most of his fighting in Britain and Ireland. Peter Jackson was born in the Caribbean. He settled in Australia, where he became a boxer. He fought in the US and Britain. He tried to fight heavyweight champ John L Sullivan, but Sullivan refused to fight a black man. 


Monday, January 22, 2024

Local Time Tables -- January 22, 2024

Santa Rosa Press-Democrat, 11-January-1924

This handy page gave Santa Rosa residents all sorts of information about transportation schedules. 

The Northwestern Pacific -- and its predecessors -- has always been one of my favorite railroads. It offered southbound service to San Francisco via train and ferry and to San Rafael and Petaluma. Northbound service went to Healdsburg, Cloverdale, Willits and Eureka, and Russian River service went westward to Duncan Mills, Guernville and Cazadero.

The Petaluma and Santa Rosa Railroad was an interurban electric line that connected Petaluma and Santa Rosa. Branches went to Sebastopol and Two Rock. Steamboats carried passengers and freight between San Francisco and Petaluma. The company advertised that people should ship by steamer so the federal government would continue to dredge the Petaluma River. 

The Richmond and San Rafael Ferry Transportation Company survived until the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge opened in 1956.

Burke's (auto) Stage Lines offered service south to San Francisco and points in between. They also offered a bus to Calistoga, Mark West and the Petrified Forest. The Petrified Forest is fun to visit. 


Sunday, January 21, 2024

It Pleases the Cow -- January 21, 2024

Petaluma Daily Morning Courier, 01-January-1924

De Laval milkers "make(S) dairying a pleasure instead of drudgery." 

Saturday, January 20, 2024

If It's Records You Want --January 20, 2024

Boston Guardian, 01-January-1949

Boston's South End Electric Company offered a nice selection of bebop, other jazz and R&B records. The first two on the list were by Charlie Parker. 

Friday, January 19, 2024

Robert Palmer 75 -- January 19, 2024

listal.com

Robert Palmer was born 75 years ago today, on 19-January-2024. Anyone who was alive in the 1980s will remember the video for "Addicted to Love." He died far too young, on 26-September-2003.

Thursday, January 18, 2024

For Those Who Were Forced to Stay Home During the World Series -- January 18, 2024

Washington Times, 07-January-1924

Sportswriter and pioneer radio broadcaster Graham McNamee described the 1924 World Series on a temporary network put together by Westinghouse Broadcasting, including KDKA in Pittsburgh and WJZ in Newark.

Thomas Meighan was a big star in silent films. 

Sadly, the Giants lost the series in 7 games against the Washington Senators. Game seven went 12 innings.

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Al Capone 125 -- January 17, 2024

listal.com

American criminal Al Capone was born 125 years ago today, on 17-January-1899. Too bad. He could have done good things in his life. 

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Black Cat Magazine January 1899 -- January 16, 2024

philsp.com

The Black Cat Magazine was launched in Boston in 1895. It published short stories and was known for printing stories by new writers. I'm concerned about "The Tax on Moustaches."

Monday, January 15, 2024

Happy Birthday, Doctor King 2024 -- January 15, 2024

catholics-united.org

"Never, never be afraid to do what's right, especially if the well-being of a person or animal is at stake. Society's punishments are small compared to the wounds we inflict on our soul when we look the other way." 

Sunday, January 14, 2024

Coulter -- The San Rafael On the Drydock -- January 14, 2024

San Francisco Call, 14-March-1895

North Pacific Coast ferry San Rafael is shown in the drydock. She sank on 30-November-1901 when she was rammed by ferry Sausalito on a foggy day.

William A Coulter did many maritime drawings for the San Francisco Call. Click on the image to see a larger version.

SAN RAFAEL DRYDOCKED
A Thing of Graceful Line and
a Model of Marine Beauty
Is She.
Her Trial Trip Was Three
Thousand Miles on a
Freightcar.

For over a dezen years the San Francisco bay people have observed a graceful white shape move out from its place at the Union ferry landing and slip swift and swan-like away over the water, passing from view before the wakes from her twin wheels had dissolved back to tranquillity again.

Only the latest arrival would fail to pick the fleet North Pacific Coast Railroad steamer San Rafael from her floating contemporaries even before she picked herself so speedily from their company, so well is she known as the greyhound and prettiest thing on the bay. But it is on the drydock, when she is lifted clear from the water, that her beauteous model can best be seen and fully appreciated.

Starting from the stem, the lines fall clear away, gradually diverging till they pass over the noble swell amidships to come together again at the sternpost. Then is learned the secret of the speed that makes this $150,000 boat the racer of the bay craft.

The San Rafael is a perfect model of the old steamer Sausalito, burned at San Quentin twelve or fourteen years ago. They were constructed in New York by Fletcher & Harrison, the noted boat-builders, at an individual cost of $150,000, and were each 205.5 feet in length, 32 feet beam and 9.8 feet deep. The tonnage of the vessels was about 400, and the San Rafael carries a single-beam engine of 750 horsepower, with 50-inch cylinder and 11-foot stroke.

The twin steamers literally took their trial trips -- though at different periods -- on a freight train, being brought in sections overland from New York, put together and launched here.

Her master is Captain John T. McKenzie, one of the oldest steamboat men on the coast, and in his hands this marine beauty and bay racer is the matchless craft her designers intended.

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Albert Biersdadt -- Yosemite Valley, Glacier Point Trail -- January 13, 2024

artgallery.yale.edu

Albert Biersdadt painted "Yosemite Valley, Glacier Point Trail" in about 1873. The rising sun is beautiful.

Friday, January 12, 2024

Motion Picture Dramas the Kodak Way -- January 12, 2024

Omaha Bee, 23-January-1924

Kodak encouraged people to use the Ciné-Kodak camera to shoot home movies and the Kodascope projector to watch home movies or rented professional movies. 

Thursday, January 11, 2024

Time Magazine -- Herbert Bayard Swope -- January 11, 2024

Time, January 28, 1924

Herbert Bayard Swope was a famous newspaper reporter and editor. In 1917, he received the first Pulitzer Prize for Reporting for a series of articles called "Inside the German Empire." In 1921 he edited a New York World campaign against the Ku Klux Klan.

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Max Roach 100 -- January 10, 2024


Max Roach was born on 10-January-1924, 100 years ago today. I was surprised to read that he was 83, and yet he had been around as long as I can remember. They used to play his music and talk about him on KJAZ. He would turn up on television sometimes. He always looked really serious, with the glasses and the suits. He wasn't one of the musicians I wanted to be when I grew up (I never wanted to be a drummer), but he was always there.

He subbed in Duke Ellington's orchestra when he was 16. He was one of the creators of bebop. He played on "Birth of the Cool". He worked with Abbey Lincoln and Clifford Brown. He composed; he taught; he worked for Civil Rights; he led a good life.

Abbey Lincoln & Max Roach group "We insist!" 1964 Belgian TV

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

It Will Satisfy You -- The REAL PEPSI-COLA, Try It -- January 9, 2024

Twin-City Sentinel, Winston-Salem, 26-January-1924

I found a bunch of tiny Pepsi ads in Winston-Salem newspapers from 100 years ago this month.

Monday, January 8, 2024

Coca-Cola -- This Favorite American Beverage -- January 8, 2024

Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 14-January-1924

In this ad, Coca-Cola bottlers in Hawaii included a surfer.

Sunday, January 7, 2024

40 Tiny People -- January 7, 2024

Jersey Observer and Jersey Journal, 02-January-1924

Leo Singer's Midgets were a popular act in vaudeville. I would like to see where he got "4 Tiny Elephants." The photo shows the jazz band. I wish they had made a record. Singer later arranged for the little people used in the 1939 Wizard of Oz

Saturday, January 6, 2024

26 Lynchings in 1923, Against 61 During 1922 -- January 6, 2024

Richmond Planet, 05-January-1924


26 LYNCHINGS IN 1923, AGAINST
61 DURING 1922.
Decline in Mob Murders Laid to Agitation
for Federal Law and Migration.
Mississippi and
Florida Lead With 5 Each.

New York, December. -- Sharp decline in the number or lynchings in the United States during the year 1922 the figure being 26 as against 61 in 1922 was laid to the agitation for a Federal anti-lynching law, and to the northward migration of Negroes, in a statement today by James Weldon Johnson Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. 69 Fifth Avenue, New York.

Mississippi and Florida lead the list of lynching states with 5 mob murders each. Georgia is second with 4. Oklahoma is third with 3. Arkansas, Alabama and Texas have 2 each. Other states in which one lynching occurred are: Louisiana Missouri and Virginia.

Only 7 out of the 26 persons were charged with assault upon women, and in the case of one of the seven the janitor of the University of Missouri, grave doubt was subsequently cast upon the guilt of the mob’s victim. Other offenses for which lynchings occurred include: mistaken identity, aiding in escape, associating with white women, being in an automobile accident, remaining in a town where Negroes were not wanted and frightening white children by walking harmlessly along a country road. Two of the victims of lynching mobs were white men. One colored woman was lynched in Pickens Mississippi.

"Two main causes brought about the decline in lynching in 1923," said Mr. Johnson. "First was the agitation on the floor of Congress, and throughout the country for a federal anti-lynching bill, the measure introduced by Mr. Dyer passing the last House of Representatives by a vote of 230 to 119. The second main cause was the northward migration of Negroes by the hundreds of thousands. This has borne in on the South that lynching will have to be stopped if the best labor the South can get for its plantations and industries is to he retained. Prospects for the enactment of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill in the present Congress are excellent, in the light of President Coolidge’s anti-lynching pronouncement in his message to Congress. It is to be hoped that in a very few years the crime of lynching will have been completely wiped out in America."

Friday, January 5, 2024

Comic Book -- Hop Harrigan -- January 5, 2024

listal.com

Among the characters featured in All-American Comics was Hop Harrigan, an adventurous aviator. He later appeared in a radio program and a movie serial.

Thursday, January 4, 2024

Pulp -- Ace G-Man Stories -- January 4, 2023

listal.com

FBI agents Klaw, Kerrigan and Murdoch were the Suicide Squad in Ace G-Man Stories from 1939 to 1943. They managed to survive a series of suicide missions. Their methods were not delicate.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Toonerville Trolley -- Never Fails to Excite Comment From Strangers -- January 3, 2023

Perth Amboy Evening News, 29-January-1924

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

Washington Times, 30-June-1918


Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Krazy Kat -- Some Use Bricks -- January 2, 2024

Washington Times, 07-January-1924

I love George Herriman's Krazy Kat. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Washington Times, 30-June-1918


Monday, January 1, 2024

January, 2024 Version of the Cable Car Home Page -- January 1, 2024


I just put the January 2024 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: A postcard view of a car on the Johnstown Inclined Plane. People rode on the lower level with the windows and wagons and teams rode on the upper level with the large opening.
  2. On the Cable Cars in Pennsylvania page: A ten year update about the Mauch Chunk Switchback Railway.
  3. On the Decorated Cable Cars page: A list of cable cars decorated for Christmas, Kwanzaa and Pistahan 2023.
  4. On Walter Rice's page about Glen Hurlburt's "Cable Car Concerto," a 1947 composition that represents a ride on the Mason Street line, added an image of an adverisement for Hurlburt's appearance in Carmel.
  5. Added News items about a chance to climb aboard a motorized cable car at Powell and Market and a display of photos from the Muni Archive

Ten years ago this month (January, 2014):

  1. Picture of the Month: A postcard view of the steep Johnstown Inclined Plane.
  2. On the Who page: Added an obituary for incline engineer Samuel Diescher. Also added a profile from the Street Railway Journal about Winthrop Bartlett, who worked on several of the cable car lines in Saint Louis
  3. On the Decorated Cable Cars page, a photo of Cal Cable 52 decorated for Christmas 2013.

Twenty years ago this month (January, 2004):

  1. Picture of the Month: GSPO terminal at Geary and Kearney
  2. Add newspaper articles about the last days of the Geary Street, Park and Ocean and updated the GSPO page
  3. Add new page about Decorated Cable Cars
  4. Add article about Ray McCann to the Who page
  5. Add News item about Cable Car Division Senior Luncheon

Coming in February, 2024: On the Cable Cars in Pennsylvania page: A ten year update about the Mauch Chunk Switchback Railway.

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-January-2024)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/
San Francisco Bay Ferryboats (updated 31-January-2020)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/ferry/
Park Trains and Tourist Trains (updated 31-December-2023)
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/

Happy New Year 2024 -- January 1, 2024

San Francisco Examiner, 01-January-1924

I hope everyone has a happy, peaceful, healthy (especially healthy) and prosperous new year.

Let's work on peace. "Health, Happiness and Prosperity" would be good, too.