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* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
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* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
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* *
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* Issue 81 -- September 1999 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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Review: "Balboa Films"
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"Balboa Films": Response from the Authors
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Charlotte Shelby's 1929 Statement
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Mary Miles Minter's "Engagement" to William Desmond Taylor
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Reporting the Taylor Murder: Day Ten
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What is TAYLOROLOGY?
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TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
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Taylor, a top Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
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death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
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scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
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(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
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murder on Hollywood and the nation; (d) Taylor's associates and the Hollywood
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silent film industry in which Taylor worked. Primary emphasis will be given
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toward reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it
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for accuracy.
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Review: "Balboa Films"
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We were eagerly awaiting publication of the book BALBOA FILMS: A HISTORY
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AND FILMOGRAPHY OF THE SILENT FILM STUDIO, by Jean-Jacques Jura and Rodney
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Norman Bardin II (McFarland, 1999). We were hopeful that it would throw some
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additional insight into William Desmond Taylor's professional or personal
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life during the time that Taylor worked for Balboa, from June to November
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1914. Unfortunately, although the book devotes nearly ten pages to Taylor,
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it adds nothing of significance to his historical record and contains a
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number of inaccuracies. The book's authors relied heavily on Giroux's book
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A DEED OF DEATH for the Taylor material, and were evidently totally unaware
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of WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (which had an appendix listing errors in
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Giroux's book--Taylor's first Balboa film was not "The Awakening," and when
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Taylor left Balboa he went next to Favorite Players, not to American Film).
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Also, the Taylor/Balboa filmography in BALBOA FILMS is less accurate and less
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inclusive than the the Taylor/Balboa filmography in WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR:
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A DOSSIER. BALBOA FILMS even scrambles the dates when Taylor was working for
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Balboa, erroneously dating a clipping which supposedly places Taylor with
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Balboa in January 1914, during which time he was actually living and working
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in Santa Monica, for Vitagraph. Probably the book's biggest omission
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regarding Taylor is failing to mention that Taylor directed the feature "Rose
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of the Alley", starring Jackie Saunders. (One contemporary source crediting
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Taylor was reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 74.) BALBOA FILMS states that Taylor
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directed "The Awakening", and "A Great Secret", but we have never seen any
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contemporary information crediting him with either; on the contrary, we saw
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clippings that Edwin August was directing his own Balboa films, and in all
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Taylor's extensive personal publicity he never claimed to have directed Edwin
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August. Those two films were also not mentioned in the Taylor filmography
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researched by Alan Gevinson. On the other hand, in addition to "Rose of the
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Alley," Gevinson's filmography for Taylor included "At Police Headquarters,"
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"Reformation," and "The Cost of Crime" (possibly all three were different
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working titles for the same film), none of which were mentioned in the BALBOA
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FILMS book. BALBOA FILMS devotes most of its Taylor pages to Taylor's life
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story and the murder, which occured seven years after Taylor left Balboa, and
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repeats other inaccuracies found in A DEED OF DEATH.
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Our hope was that BALBOA FILMS would fill at least a gap or two
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regarding Taylor's career at Balboa. Instead, BALBOA FILMS represents a step
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backward in Taylor scholarship. (Of course the book has considerable value
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in non-Taylor aspects of film history.)
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"Balboa Films": Response from the Authors
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A copy of the above review was sent to the authors of BALBOA FILMS, and they
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responded with the following letter, which is included here with their
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permission.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Dear Mr. Long,
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You are very kind to have given us notice of your review before making it
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public. Obviously, you are a gentleman who believes in fair play. In this
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response, Mr. Bardin joins me in thanking you for the opportunity to make a
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few remarks on behalf of our book BALBOA FILMS.
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First of all, the purpose of our book has been to document a missing chapter
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in film history. Till now, most film historians have considered Balboa
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Studios minor as a pioneering film plant. In time, our book might very well
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change that perspective. To that purpose, we have written the first and only
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book on Balboa, while making bold claims about this forgotten jewel of the
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silent era, inviting our readers to rediscover the rich contributions and
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innovations that took place at the Long Beach film plant, between 1911 and
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1922. Secondly, we also wanted to showcase some of the key figures at
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Balboa, like William Desmond Taylor, using their fascinating careers as
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examples to make this history come alive.
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Of course, it goes without saying, that we wish we had known of your research
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earlier. You are definitely the expert par excellence on William Desmond
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Taylor, as we consider ourselves the experts on Balboa Studios. In any case,
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research on both Balboa Studios and Taylor complement each other. In other
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words, our book and your web site, along with your publications, help promote
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each other, enhancing Taylor's reputation through his association with
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Balboa, where he got his start as a film director.
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Most unfortunately, we did not come across your book during our research.
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While doing research at various venues, we combed diligently through the
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Balboa scrapbook, spending many weeks at the Historical Society of Long
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Beach, and that scrapbook became our greatest resource in making specific
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additions regarding Taylor's debut as a director, during his tenure at
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Balboa. At the time, apart from the scrapbook, we only had Giroux's book on
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Taylor, A Deed of Death, which barely mentioned Taylor's association with
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Balboa Studios.
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For example, from the scrapbook, p. 105, we learnt that William Desmond
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Taylor was director for A Great Secret, a three-reel drama (White Star), made
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for William Fox, released October 19, 1914. On the same page in the
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scrapbook, I found an unidentified article that gave the plot to the story.
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You can find this filmography entry in our book on p. 217.
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In addition, on page 201 in our book, we explain that the same scrapbook,
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p. 101, provided us with Taylor's name as director for The Awakening, a
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three-reel drama (White Star), released October 5, 1914, made for William
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Fox, the same page providing us also a lengthy summary of the story. Here,
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in our filmography entry for The Awakening, we also refer to Robert Giroux's
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A Deed of Death, and included there Giroux's notion that Taylor made his
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directorial debut with this film.
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Furthermore, thanks to your notices to us, we are now aware of a discrepancy
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in our book about a date concerning Taylor tenure at Balboa--January 16,
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1914. We too had found in the scrapbook, as you also noted, Taylor's joining
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Balboa in the month of June, 1914 (p. 45 of the scrapbook, page 82 in Balboa
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Films). I also have another article from the scrapbook out of the L. A.
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Tribune, dated January 16, 1914, about the trip with Taylor, Saunders,
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Manning, et al. to Chatsworth Park. When I return from my trip, after July
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22, 1999, I'll go back to the Historical Society to verify the date for that
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trip to Chatsworth Park. As you said "January 16, 1914" doesn't jive with
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the timeline of Taylor's tenure at Balboa, starting in June, 1914.
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As you include in your MS Word file via e-mail [containing the Taylor-at-
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Balboa portion of WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER], we also had stated in
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our book that Taylor was the first Vice President of the Photoplayers Club.
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In fact, by carefully gleaning the scrapbook, we had all the same films in
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our filmography as you listed--The Criminal Code, Rose of the Alley, The
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Judge's Wife, An Eye for An Eye, Tricks of Fate, Dividing Walls, A House
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Divided, The Man with the Green Eyes, except for our inclusion of The
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Awakening and A Great Secret, and except for our exclusion of the titles you
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include--The Price of Crime (or The Cost of Crime), Reformation, and At
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Police Headquarters. While we included in our filmography Rose of the Alley
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and a summary found in the scrapbook, we had not identified it as having had
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Taylor as director, and the same is true in our listing of The House Divided,
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though we were happy to discover that Rose of the Alley was one of the
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scenarios written by Jackie Saunders. In brief, we used the resources in
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the scrapbook thoroughly and cautiously, happy to be able to identify so many
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works associated with Taylor at Balboa, but as you might remember, some bits
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and pieces of the same film were scattered in many parts of the scrapbook.
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Consequently, you have meticulously gleaned some details we had omitted about
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Taylor's work embedded in that scrapbook, but then our filmography does
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include most of the same details, as well as fresh bits of information
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retrieved from the same scrapbook not made public for 85 years, until the
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publication of BALBOA FILMS.
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I suspect there is more that could be said about the adventure of putting
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this book together, a true labor of love, including the years of deep
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digging, while sifting and putting together many tiny grains from scattered
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sources. Mr. Taylor was a fascinating romantic figure, associated with
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Balboa's meteoric success, and Taylor was a complex personality, "a director
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extraordinaire," who merited the ten pages we devoted to him. You may have
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noticed we converted about five of those ten pages into a screenplay to
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create a filmic touch in our treatment of Taylor. Frankly, we wanted to
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honor Taylor as a key director in early Hollywood who deserves much attention
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and more research to follow, beyond his tenure at Balboa. To that purpose,
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in the bigger picture of our complete history of Balboa Studios, we hope also
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to trigger more reader response, like your own. We only regret we didn't
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know earlier of your voluminous work on Taylor, since, together, our combined
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research and publications provide much that corroborates, with the shared
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goal of promoting further study into the fascinating pioneers of early
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Hollywood, those brave 'sailors of fortune' who transformed Southern
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California into the film capital of the world.
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Sincerely and gratefully yours,
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Jean-Jacques Jura & Rodney Bardin
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Co-Authors of Balboa Films
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Charlotte Shelby's 1929 Statement
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In 1929 Charlotte Shelby made her first public statement regarding the Taylor
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murder. It was reported in the press as follows:
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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December 24, 1929
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LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
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...[Statement by Charlotte Shelby:]
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"After seven years of silence, I now unsolicited give my first published
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statement regarding reference made to me in connection with the death of
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William Desmond Taylor.
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"I feel in justice to myself, my name, my integrity, my rights as a
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citizen of the United States, that I must express my indignation at the
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injustice done me.
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"I returned from Europe, after three and a half years spent in search of
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health, on November the seventeenth of this year.
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"I am glad to be in Los Angeles, now that the Taylor case is reopened,
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as my name has been published as one of the possible suspects concerning
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Mr. Taylor's death.
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"I have been maligned, and by innuendo, directly or indirectly,
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implicated in connection with the tragedy.
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"There is not one single word of truth in anything that has been said
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concerning me with the case, nor has any public official the slightest
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evidence which would serve in any way to prove, or even indicate that I ever
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did have, or now have information which would lead to the arrest of the
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person responsible for Mr. Taylor's death.
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"There was reference in the newspapers Saturday intimating that the
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district attorney's office sought to connect with the Taylor case 'a person
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who had left the United States.'
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"If this refers to me, I am here and desirous of a full investigation
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and vindication of my name and to stop the circulation of insinuations that
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have been repeatedly made that I am one of four persons implicated.
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"I have nothing to conceal. I am willing, and always have been, to talk
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to any authorized person from the district attorney's office, and will repeat
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to the district attorney what I am saying now, if he wishes to see me.
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"In 1926, when my name was first connected with the case, I made
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requests on Asa Keyes, when he was district attorney, to issue a statement in
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justice to me.
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"I made this request through my attorney, and it was after the greatest
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difficulty that Mr. Keyes consented to see me, and then upon his own
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conditions--that is, he would not receive me in his office, nor in any public
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place, nor with the knowledge of the press.
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"I told him of my every action the day preceding the tragedy, and of the
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following day of the tragedy, and of the day following.
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"I told Mr. Keyes where I had spent the evening and with whom.
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"My attorney and I invited his questioning me, thereupon demanding a
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statement vindicating me.
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"His statement was promised within three days, but I was unable to get
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this satisfaction.
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"I now appeal as a woman of honor and integrity, one who never wronged
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anyone, contrary to all reports to the public, for justice and to clear my
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name of slander and misrepresentation.
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"I am now reestablishing my home in Los Angeles.
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"I feel I have a right to live peacefully and enjoy the confidence and
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respect of my fellow men."
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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December 24, 1929
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LOS ANGELES TIMES
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...Mrs. Shelby declared in her statement that, at her request, she had
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made a complete statement of her connection with the case to Asa Keyes, when
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the latter was District Attorney.
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"That statement was taken down by a reporter and took the form of an
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official document," she declared last night. "It explains my every movement
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at the time the murder was committed. It was taken in the presence of
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Attorney John Mott and Mr. Keyes and, I presume, is a matter of record in the
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District Attorney's office.
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"Despite rumors, all my dealings with Mr. Taylor before his death were
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almost exclusively business. I only met him socially on one or two
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occasions. I discussed business with him, as he was my daughter's director.
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I was naturally interested in the scenarios of pictures she was to appear in
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and read them with Mr. Taylor. He was present on one occasion when he gave a
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dinner to the cast of a picture in which Miss Minter was appearing. Outside
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of this, I knew nothing of Mr. Taylor's private life. I did not know his
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friends. I have no knowledge nor any opinion as to who may have killed him.
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"Although I freely gave my statement to the authorities, from time to
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time innuendos have appeared that I was 'implicated' in the case. I resent
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that and believe that the time has come to insist on my complete vindication.
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I waited at home all day today hoping that Mr. Fitts would call me and grant
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me an interview, in order that the matter may be settled for once and for
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all. The call did not come, but I still believe that the District Attorney
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will grant the justice that is due me."
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Mary Miles Minter's "Engagement" to William Desmond Taylor
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In a written statement made in 1923, Mary Miles Minter stated that
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although she wanted to marry Taylor, he had never asked her to marry him--
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they were NOT engaged. She stated:
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"We were never engaged in the sense that he had asked me to marry him
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and I had promised. I had always hoped that sometime we would be married.
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But I had planned in my own mind--never with Mr. Taylor--that as soon as I
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had made enough money so that mother and sister could be assured of a
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comfortable income for the rest of their lives--that perhaps we would be
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married. But not engaged in the sense of wearing a ring, or of telling
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one's friends of an intention to marry or of telling my mother. Marrying
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Mr. Taylor was just my dream--a dream which, voiced to film, always met
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with the answer that it was impossible." [Los Angeles Times, August 15,
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1923]
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Yet in 1937 interviews, she stated that she "had been honorably engaged to
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marry him" (Taylor) and that they had become engaged on September 6, 1919.
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[See TAYLOROLOGY 74.]
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On the surface, it would appear that these contradictory statements
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cannot both be true; either she was engaged to Taylor or she wasn't. Either
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the first statement distorted the truth or the second statement was only her
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fantasy. But perhaps further clarification can be found in a statement she
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made in the 1960's, wherein Minter described a conversation she had with
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Taylor:
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"[Taylor said:] 'I know your mother fears I shall take you away from
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her. If she only knew, I'm her greatest ally, because with the
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discrepancy of our ages I'm not the right person for you. I love you more
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than anything else in the world, but I'm all too aware of the fact that
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I'm old enough to be your father. You want a home, a family of your own,
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a rural setting. Give yourself a fair chance. I love you enough to want
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your happiness above my own.' I told him that no thing, no amount of
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years or younger men or anything on earth would change my love for him.
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He looked at me a long, long time and finally said: 'Mary, you are my
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little white rose--I want you, I love you with all my heart and soul. Now
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listen earnestly to what I have to say. If you will really try to let
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some more suitable man capture your heart but by the time your contract is
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finished have not done so, then by the living God, I am going to claim you
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for my own. But this I require of you--that you give yourself a fair
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chance.' We sealed the pact with a kiss."
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If the above statement is essentially accurate, then it gives additional
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insight into her relationship with Taylor, and would explain the earlier
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statements. If indeed Taylor made that statement, then it could easily be
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viewed both ways, depending on her state of mind when looking at the memory:
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(1) they were never engaged (since Taylor never asked her to marry him),
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(2) they were indeed engaged (since Taylor promised her that if she followed
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those instructions then he would marry her after her contract expired).
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Of course, even if Taylor made that statement, it does not prove that he
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meant it. He could well have been playing for time, figuring that in the
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next few years Minter would hopefully fall in love with someone else, someone
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closer to her own age; and that this statement would spare her the anguish
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(and tantrum) of an actual break-up between Minter and Taylor.
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Needless to say, this is all just idle armchair speculation.
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Reporting the Taylor Murder: Day Ten
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Below are some highlights of the press reports published in the tenth day
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after Taylor's body was discovered.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 11, 1922
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Frank Bartholomew
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PITTSBURGH SUN
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Los Angeles, Feb. 11--District Attorney Woolwine, leading the manhunt
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for the murderer of William Desmond Taylor, was believed to have struck the
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straight trail today.
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From out of the conflicting, tangled mass of evidence and suspicion the
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chief investigator emerged with three theories as to the three unknown
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quantities in the case--the assassin, the instigator, and the motive.
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The slayer--now believed beyond all doubt to be the mysterious figure in
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muffler and cap seen leaving the dead director's home on the evening of the
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crime, lurked behind a clump of bushes while Taylor talked with Mabel Normand
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on the sidewalk before his residence, according to fresh evidence in
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Woolwine's hands today.
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The instigator--believed to have been a wealthy, jealous rival of
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Taylor, has been under constant surveillance by the police, and the sifting
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of statements of stars and leading lights of the film world yesterday at the
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district attorney's office, pointed still more directly to this young man.
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The motive--which at first thought to be have been blackmail, has been
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definitely established as jealousy, the district attorney's office is
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convinced.
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With these three leads, the district attorney's office was today
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definitely launched in an attempt to establish the theory that the murder was
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committed by order of a wealthy Easterner, jealous of an actress. Facts
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regarding three other suspects have been temporarily shelved, and all efforts
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are being concentrated upon evidence that will convict or exonerate the man
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in question...
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The fact, disclosed by testimony reiterated in the confines of the chief
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investigators' private office, that Taylor had recently been considered as
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interfering in certain love affairs of the motion picture world here,
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strengthened the investigators' belief that a young man, maddened by
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jealousy, plotted his death.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 11, 1922
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Mabel Normand
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LOS ANGELES RECORD
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"My Own Story" by Mabel Normand
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Film Star Writes Story of Last Visit with Slain Movie Director
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This is my own story of just what happened on the night of my last visit
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to William D. Taylor, the evening of February 1.
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In response to a telephone call left by Mr. Taylor at my home during the
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afternoon of the day he was killed I stopped at his house between 7 and 7:15
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in the evening.
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The purpose of my call was to pick up a book which Mr. Taylor had
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purchased for me that afternoon, knowing particularly that I wanted it.
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He had already sent one book to my home but had requested me to stop for this
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one, which I assumed he had purchased later.
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Upon my arrival I was let in by Henry Peavey, Taylor's valet, who
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informed me Mr. Taylor was conversing with someone over the phone. In a few
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moments after my arrival Mr. Taylor said good-bye to the party with whom he
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was conversing and left the telephone.
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He greeted me. He had just finished dinner and his man had cleared away
|
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the table but he asked me if I would not let him have something prepared for
|
|
me or go out to dinner with him later. I declined, explaining that I was
|
|
tired and that I had an early studio call to make the next morning.
|
|
I said that I intended to go home early, have dinner and go to bed.
|
|
For 25 minutes Mr. Taylor and I sat discussing various books and photoplays.
|
|
About 20 minutes to eight, I prepared to start for home. Mr. Taylor
|
|
walked with me to where my car was parked at the curbing.
|
|
There was a copy of the "Police Gazette" in the car which he noticed.
|
|
He chided me for having it in my possession, remarking that Freud, Haeckel
|
|
and Nietzsche were hardly compatible with such literature.
|
|
After an exchange of repartee for a few minutes, I finally bade him good
|
|
night and directed by chauffeur to drive me home.
|
|
Before I left, Mr. Taylor promised to phone me at my home within one
|
|
hour. He never did.
|
|
As William (my chauffeur) pulled away from the curb I looked back and
|
|
saw Mr. Taylor standing there, gazing after me. I waved my hand.
|
|
That was the last time I ever saw Mr. Taylor alive.
|
|
Within a few minutes I was at my home. I retired, having dinner served
|
|
to me in bed about 8:15.
|
|
The first knowledge I had of Mr. Taylor's death was when Edna Purviance
|
|
phoned me the following morning about 7:30. She told me that Mr. Taylor's
|
|
valet had been seen rushing from Mr. Taylor's home, screaming that his master
|
|
was dead.
|
|
I have no idea who killed Mr. Taylor or what was the reason for his
|
|
death.
|
|
I would only be too proud to announce the fact had I been engaged to
|
|
Mr. Taylor, but such a statement would not be true.
|
|
I held Mr. Taylor in highest esteem, regarding him as a very learned,
|
|
cultured gentleman, with whom any woman might be proud to associate.
|
|
Mr. Taylor and I had much in common and during the long period of our
|
|
friendship I had made a study of the French language and philosophy in which
|
|
I had been interested for some time. I am also interested in these things
|
|
now.
|
|
So far as revealing the contents of any letters written by Mr. Taylor to
|
|
me or by me to Mr. Taylor is concerned I have no reason to fear any
|
|
consequences which might result from such disclosures except the natural
|
|
embarrassment of having personal correspondence revealed to the public gaze.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 11, 1922
|
|
Eleanor M. Barnes
|
|
LOS ANGELES RECORD
|
|
"No Woman in Taylor Case"
|
|
|
|
"Find Sands!"
|
|
This laconic suggestion of Mrs. J. M. Berger, income tax specialist, is
|
|
the solution of the William Desmond Taylor murder mystery.
|
|
"No doubt of it in my mind," said Mrs. Berger, a young business woman,
|
|
with a wealth of bronze hair, and brown eyes. "Edward F. Sands is the man.
|
|
I am sure."
|
|
Mrs. Berger opened her mail as she talked about the motion picture
|
|
director who had called at her office in the H. W. Hellman building just a
|
|
few hours before he was slain in his bachelor apartments.
|
|
"He was here in the afternoon to attend some business," she explained.
|
|
"I help not only motion picture folks but many prominent business men on
|
|
their income tax returns."
|
|
"Had he expressed a fear of Sands?" Mrs. Berger was asked.
|
|
"Yes, he had talked about his former valet-secretary's forging his name,
|
|
and about the 'Alias Jimmy Valentine' note that he had received.
|
|
"I did not know Mr. Taylor intimately--only in a business way, but I
|
|
knew some of the most intimate details of his business which I have told to
|
|
the district attorney in an effort to clear up the mystery.
|
|
"I swooned at the inquest. I am sorry I gazed at his body which was the
|
|
color of his khaki suit.
|
|
"I do not think there is a woman in the case.
|
|
"Why--" her white hand pointed to a large picture of Mary Miles Minter
|
|
that was hanging on the wall of her room.
|
|
"Of course little Mary loved Mr. Taylor--who didn't? We all loved him.
|
|
He was one of God's gentlemen, and he was far above the average in politeness
|
|
and intelligence, from what I saw of him.
|
|
"I had spent many, many hours with Mr. Taylor, but I had never heard of
|
|
an enemy, except Sands. If the police find him surely, if he cannot explain
|
|
his whereabouts on that night, he should be questioned carefully.
|
|
"Now, little Miss Mabel Normand is a fine girl. Of course my dealings
|
|
with her have been purely business, but I think from what I have seen that
|
|
Miss Normand was very worth while. Of course, Mary Miles Minter is only a
|
|
child.
|
|
"Her letters, published, are purely those of a very young girl, and as
|
|
Mr. Taylor said, 'a child.'
|
|
"I had asked him how she was on that day he called here and he said 'she
|
|
has a touch of tonsillitis and temperament,' and that was all there was to
|
|
it.
|
|
"I cannot believe a woman had anything to do with it. As to his
|
|
changing his name--well, Billy Taylor may have had a reason, I do not know.
|
|
If he had had an unfortunate experience in his life, perhaps he wanted to
|
|
forget it.
|
|
"I only know that he was a perfect gentleman, and that I hope the police
|
|
never rest until they apprehend the assassin who robbed the world of such a
|
|
fine man."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 11, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES RECORD
|
|
Sands' Dog Points Way to Arrest
|
|
|
|
A high-bred Airedale dog bounded into the Taylor mystery Saturday and
|
|
started investigation along a new line which may result in locating the
|
|
murderer.
|
|
The dog was either given away or sold by Edward F. Sands shortly before
|
|
he left the employ of Taylor.
|
|
Men intimately acquainted with Sands' peculiarities say that he was very
|
|
fond of this animal and that he would never have parted with it except to
|
|
some one in whom he had implicit confidence.
|
|
If the present owner can be found considerable light will be thrown on
|
|
Sands' recent activities, it is believed.
|
|
Interesting theories regarding Sands were advanced Saturday by neighbors
|
|
who had observed his conduct while he was in the motion picture director's
|
|
employ. One of these neighbors, a woman of high intelligence, announced she
|
|
had reached the conclusion that Sands is not the guilty person.
|
|
"He appeared to me," she said, "to be a big healthy animal, lazy,
|
|
selfish and mindful first of his personal comfort. I gain this impression
|
|
not only from what I have heard, but from what I have observed of the man as
|
|
he passed our home daily. Men of the type Sands apparently was do not murder-
|
|
-murder would mean mental discomfort and these men think first of their own
|
|
well being."
|
|
This woman was greatly impressed by the theory that blackmailers had
|
|
been at work. She was of the opinion that letters that had fallen into the
|
|
hands of professional blackmailers may be an explanation of the mystery...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 11, 1922
|
|
SAN FRANCISCO CALL
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--...District Attorney Woolwine, who has a national
|
|
reputation for fearlessness in conducting the affairs of his office, is
|
|
working from seventeen to eighteen hours a day on the case, despite the fact
|
|
that he has not been a well man for several months.
|
|
Sometime ago he was stricken with ptomaine poisoning and later he
|
|
suffered an attack of grippe. He had not entirely recovered from this when
|
|
the trial of Arthur C. Burch, accused of the murder of J. Belton Kennedy,
|
|
reached its height. He received another setback and had to let assistants
|
|
handle the case a few days. The prosecutor was so weak he could hardly stand
|
|
when he made his final pleas to the jury in the Burch case.
|
|
He is conducting the Taylor murder inquiry in a well formulated manner
|
|
and, although sessions are held in secret, it is known that they are much
|
|
like court sessions.
|
|
It is the belief of newspaper reporters that a prominent motion picture
|
|
producer may be one of the next persons summoned to appear for questioning
|
|
regarding his knowledge of Taylor and his associates. Other widely known
|
|
film stars also are scheduled to appeared before the investigators....
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 11, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXPRESS
|
|
...Meanwhile the police were searching for L. D. Dailey, alleged
|
|
roommate of Walter Thiele at 333 East Fourth street, to question him
|
|
concerning the slaying. Dailey, the police assert, is the owner of a blood-
|
|
stained cap found in Thiele's room. The alleged connection of the two men
|
|
with the case is being closely guarded by the police.
|
|
Thiele was arrested early this morning by detectives from central police
|
|
station. He is accused of committing a burglary on the night the murder
|
|
occurred and is being held in the city jail on that charge.
|
|
Back of it all, however, the police intimate, is the theory that the man
|
|
has information in his possession which would prove of value to the probe of
|
|
the mystery. He is scheduled to appear first before Capt. David L. Adams of
|
|
the police detective bureau, before deputies in the sheriff's office and
|
|
finally before District Attorney Thomas Lee Woolwine.
|
|
Questioned at police headquarters early today, Thiele said that he had
|
|
come to Los Angeles about three months ago from Placerville, Cal. He was
|
|
planning to return to his home when he was arrested.
|
|
Relative to the blood-stained cap in his possession he said that the
|
|
article belonged to Dailey, a man that he described as a "hasher out of
|
|
work." He became acquainted with the man about three weeks ago, he stated,
|
|
and had offered him lodging in his own room...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 11, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES HERALD
|
|
...Rumors that Miss Normand went to the Taylor home to force Taylor to
|
|
return her letters were branded as "vicious falsehoods" today by Charles
|
|
Eyton, general manager of the Famous Players-Lasky corporation.
|
|
"These stories will be retracted or I'll know the reason why," Eyton
|
|
said.
|
|
"Miss Normand went to Taylor's home that night to get a book. She
|
|
didn't try to get her letters until after the murder had been committed.
|
|
I was in his home after the inquest with the public administrator when she
|
|
called and asked for them.
|
|
"There is a tendency on the part of certain interests to dish dirt about
|
|
a man who cannot now defend himself against scandalous insinuations. They
|
|
shall retract this particular statement or I'll know the reason why."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 11, 1922
|
|
LONG BEACH TELEGRAM
|
|
A woman, middle aged and of the quiet, intellectual type, known to have
|
|
been deeply in love with William Desmond Taylor, slain film director, while
|
|
actresses showered him with affectionate attentions, was expected to be
|
|
called to the district attorney's office to be questioned today in an
|
|
entirely new, and important phase of the investigation of the mysterious
|
|
murder.
|
|
Taylor's tragic death, it was stated, caused the woman to go into
|
|
seclusion and deep mourning. The woman's name was withheld, but it was
|
|
learned that she was known in filmdom as a scenario writer.
|
|
The unrequited love of the woman for Taylor, it was learned, extended
|
|
over a period of years. No suspicion is directed against her, but
|
|
investigators believe she may be able to throw light on Taylor's life which
|
|
may reveal a tangible clew.
|
|
A theory that Taylor may have been slain by blackmailers was revived
|
|
today when it was reported that the district attorney's office had been given
|
|
new information suggesting that he was killed because he tried to defend a
|
|
motion picture actress from whom blackmailers had attempted to extort money.
|
|
It was reported that the actress had appealed to Taylor for protection
|
|
from a gang of blackmailers whose headquarters are believed to have been in
|
|
New York, but whose operations were nation wide in scope. It was regarded as
|
|
a possibility that the director may have defied the blackmailers--a move that
|
|
may have resulted in his death.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
Edward Doherty
|
|
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--...The report that the movie interests are not
|
|
only trying to block the investigation but are also trying to complicate the
|
|
mystery by injecting new mysteries, new theories, new angles into it,
|
|
persists in spite of all denials...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
NEW YORK TRIBUNE
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--Four detectives are guarding a house in West
|
|
Fourth Street, this city, tonight, awaiting the coming of a man who will be
|
|
arrested and charged with the murder of William Desmond Taylor. The man
|
|
sought is the man from whom Walter Thiele, arrested as a suspect in the
|
|
Taylor case last night and released, obtained a bloodstained cap--a cap such
|
|
as was worn by the murderer of Taylor
|
|
The police declare the man for whom they are waiting is a drug addict.
|
|
They have asked that his name be withheld until the arrest. They have
|
|
searched his home, and declare they have evidence to connect him with the
|
|
slaying.
|
|
It was stated that the detective department also believes that one of
|
|
the most important persons in the film world, whose name has not even been
|
|
whispered in connection with the murder, and one who had a motive unsuspected
|
|
until today, is involved in the murder.
|
|
Joe Nolan and Al Manning, of the Sheriff's office, also are working on a
|
|
new angle in the case, it is said, and another woman star is involved...
|
|
Henry Peavey, Taylor's servant, was questioned by Woolwine late this
|
|
afternoon. Woolwine had been told that Peavey was seen talking to a rough
|
|
looking man back of the Taylor house in Alvarado street a few nights before
|
|
the murder. Peavey was brought in by two detectives. He remained closeted
|
|
with the inquisitors for some time and came out smiling, saying he had told
|
|
every thing he knew.
|
|
Asked about the "rough looking man," he said he didn't know anything
|
|
about him--he wouldn't associate with any rough characters. This is the
|
|
second time Peavey has been taken to the district attorney's office...
|
|
Sands, Taylor's secretary, is still being hunted. He is reported here,
|
|
there, everywhere. He is said to have been Taylor's brother. He is said to
|
|
have been this shadowy personality and that. But the murder charge prepared
|
|
by the District Attorney's office, some time ago, has not yet been lodged
|
|
against him, and this is thought significant.
|
|
A plausible new theory which came to Woolwine's attention overnight was
|
|
that Taylor was killed because a woman haunted by blackmailers had confided
|
|
in him and they feared him. This actress, twice arrested, is said to have
|
|
paid tolls on folly for years, and to have gone to Taylor, hoping he could
|
|
protect her. The blackmailers are said to have been part of a band of opium
|
|
runners, supplying the woman with drugs and taking her money under threats of
|
|
exposing her.
|
|
The actress had been a drug addict for years, was in the depths, was out
|
|
of the picture game for a time. And she made a desperate "comeback." She
|
|
went to an eastern sanitarium and remained there until the luster came back
|
|
to her eyes, the tint to her cheeks, the ambition into her system. She
|
|
returned to the studios and made a smashing success in her first picture.
|
|
But the blackmailers and the venders of narcotics kept after her, gave
|
|
her no peace. Taylor was her friend. She had heard he was an adventurer, a
|
|
soldier, a miner on the Yukon, a man not afraid to use guns, and one who knew
|
|
how to use them. So, it is thought, she told him her troubles and he agreed
|
|
to protect her.
|
|
In this connection, it may be recalled that Taylor, speaking of
|
|
blackmailers, once said, "The only way to get rid of them is to kill them."
|
|
Since Taylor's death, it is said, the victim of the gang, nervous,
|
|
lonesome, desperate, has again taken to the drug.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--Miss Gene Ross, silhouette artist, who lives in
|
|
the Ambassador hotel, gave this afternoon a word silhouette of William D.
|
|
Taylor. She had regarded him she said, as a man of drab personality, a
|
|
camouflage man who fitted into the background, whose clothes were somber,
|
|
dull, colorless, whose conversation was quiet, vague and submerged.
|
|
But on the Saturday night before his death, she says, she noted a change
|
|
in the man. He had come to her studio in the Ambassador hotel with Miss
|
|
Claire Windsor.
|
|
And while Miss Windsor was looking over the studies in black an white,
|
|
Taylor paced the floor, nervous, fear in his manner, his walk, the tension of
|
|
his hands. She knew he was afraid of something, she said. He paid no
|
|
attention to either herself or his companion, yet he seemed to wince and
|
|
stare when persons passed by the door.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
Edward Doherty
|
|
NEW YORK NEWS
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--A dozen Wall Street explosions, with the
|
|
assassination of a President thrown in, could scarcely shock the good,
|
|
average, decent, movie-going, hero-worshipping people of America as have the
|
|
all but unbelievable revelations of this last week.
|
|
In the cities with their first-run publics, just as at the crossroads
|
|
where only one night a week is movie night, the gods and goddesses of the
|
|
silent drama have been accepted for years at the face value of the flawless
|
|
characters they invariably are cast to portray.
|
|
Disclosures attending the Arbuckle investigation and trials were taken
|
|
mostly with a shrug. Save for the surviving principal--and he a professional
|
|
buffoon, a funny man from whom one would no more expect nobility in private
|
|
life than in the pictures--those involved were comparative unknowns.
|
|
But in the quagmire bared by detectives delving into the mysterious
|
|
murder of William Desmond Taylor, one of the greatest of the great among
|
|
directors, are floundering stars held in international esteem--the strong,
|
|
the brave, the surpassing fair, the innocent, the guileless, the very man
|
|
whom fans would have sworn by, the very girls for whose reputations tens of
|
|
thousands of ardent though distant admirers would have fought at the drop of
|
|
a hat.
|
|
Beyond quibble or question the "dirt" is out.
|
|
After having built up motion pictures to the position of the nation's
|
|
fifth industry, after having uplifted scores of possessors of pretty faces
|
|
into the financial clouds, the country has awakened with a shock to the
|
|
realization that virtue is only screen deep.
|
|
To all who read the newspapers has been vouchsafed a glimpse behind the
|
|
screen. Fans of yesterday stand figuratively at the peephole, shuddering yet
|
|
spellbound...
|
|
William Desmond Taylor himself was the guiding spirit of one of the
|
|
weird Hollywood cults. That was the discovery which brought the "dirt"
|
|
deluge.
|
|
In the movies Taylor, supremely well-educated, a cosmopolite, made his
|
|
mark as an artist. The pictures he directed brought him fame and a salary of
|
|
$38,00 a year. On that income nothing was unattainable. It would appear he
|
|
might have wed filmland's premier comedienne or the sweet-faced little girl
|
|
with the blonde ringlets who numbers her undeclared lovers by the million.
|
|
But it seems that Taylor preferred the bachelorhood he had regained by
|
|
flight. Edward Sands, his first valet--now sought in connection with the
|
|
murder--was more his intimate than his servant. Sands resented his
|
|
employer's off-hand attentions to women.
|
|
Harry [sic] Peavey, the big Negro who succeeded to Sands's situation,
|
|
proved another of the same sort. He was a male soprano. He dearly loved to
|
|
do fancy work.
|
|
The police learned that Taylor had frequented strange and vicious places
|
|
where drug addicts gathered, chiefly recruited from the blase element of
|
|
Hollywood, actors and actresses who had wearied of their fabulous salaries--
|
|
who affected to be wearied even by adulation...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
While members of the local police and detective departments were running
|
|
down every available clew in the probe into the mystery murder of William D.
|
|
Taylor, noted film director, two representatives of a nationally known
|
|
detective agency recently assigned to the case were engaged in a thorough
|
|
quiz of every person living in the court in which the director formerly
|
|
lived.
|
|
And Mrs. M. S. Stone, mother-in-law of A. W. Wachter, of 412-A South
|
|
Alvarado street, gave one of the most interesting recitals that has yet come
|
|
to the attention of officers. She said:
|
|
"I was walking slowly up Alvarado street, going to the home of
|
|
Mr. Wachter for dinner."
|
|
Mrs. Stone lives at the Duke Apartments on South Carondelet street, and
|
|
frequently goes to the Wachter home for dinner, generally walking north on
|
|
Alvarado street from Westlake Park to the latter home.
|
|
"As I crossed from the west to the east side of Alvarado street, at
|
|
Sixth, I saw a man standing on the corner, apparently waiting for a car. But
|
|
he didn't board the car that came along, and as I was rather nervous about
|
|
walking up the street in the dusk, I waited momentarily on the corner."
|
|
The man stopped in front of the Hotel Alvarado, according to Mrs. Stone,
|
|
and transferred something from his left hip pocket to the right hand pocket
|
|
of his coat.
|
|
"Then he started rather aimlessly up the hill, on Alvarado street,"
|
|
Mrs. Stone continued.
|
|
"I walked on behind him, and when he reached Maryland street he turned
|
|
north out of Alvarado."
|
|
Maryland street is the one that runs directly behind the apartments
|
|
occupied by Taylor.
|
|
Mrs. Stone said that when she noticed the man at first she said to
|
|
herself that he would have been well dressed except for the fact that his
|
|
suit did not appear to fit well at the collar--that it bulged uncertainly in
|
|
the rear, and that his collar was not visible.
|
|
"At that time," Mrs. Stone said, speaking of the man's turning into
|
|
Maryland street, "I thought it might have been Taylor's chef."
|
|
She knew Edward F. Sands, Taylor's former valet and chauffeur, as his
|
|
chef, having seen him in the court at various times wearing the white cap
|
|
common to cooks. But this man was taller.
|
|
She described the man she had seen as being 5 feet 9 inches in height,
|
|
wearing a dark suit, tan oxfords and dark socks. Also, she said, his hair
|
|
was dark, that his neck and earl lobes were thick and his skin ruddy. She
|
|
said he wore a cap, although she could not distinguish whether it was plaid
|
|
or checked. But she did not get a good look at his face when she first
|
|
encountered him.
|
|
Later in the evening, after Mr. and Mrs. Wachter had left the house, she
|
|
took little Lynette Wachter, her granddaughter to bed. Just as they were
|
|
mounting the stairs, about 8 o'clock, she though she heard a pistol shot, but
|
|
fearing to frighten her charge, she did not mention it. But after arriving
|
|
upstairs, she went to the window and looked out.
|
|
"I had a strange feeling," Mrs. Stone said, "and thought at the time
|
|
that I was glad my daughter lived on the south side of the court, because of
|
|
the shrubbery on the north side.
|
|
Mrs. Stone said that Mr. and Mrs. Wachter had returned home about 11:30
|
|
o'clock in the evening.
|
|
N. J. Harrington, of 408-A South Alvarado, threw further light on the
|
|
case, and also added to its mystery.
|
|
Last August, he said, he was returning home after dark one night. After
|
|
putting his car in the garage, he passed the house occupied by Taylor and saw
|
|
a man peering into one of the windows which was not fully curtained.
|
|
"He was about 5 feet 9 inches in height," Mr. Harrington said, "about 30
|
|
years of age, and weighed about 160 pounds. He had regular features and was
|
|
dressed in a gray suit and cap. No, it was not Sands. I had seen him too
|
|
often in the court to mistake him."
|
|
And on the Monday preceding the murder--
|
|
When Harrington again walked by the Taylor home, he saw two men at
|
|
Taylor's front door. They apparently had rung the bell and when no one
|
|
answered, they were talking between themselves on the veranda. One was much
|
|
smaller than the other, and one wore a cap, the other a hat.
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Lawrence of 400-A South Alvarado also told an
|
|
interesting story.
|
|
The family was downstairs on the evening of the murder until about 8:30
|
|
o'clock, when Mrs. Lawrence went to the bedroom upstairs.
|
|
"My husband said he heard a short conversation--portions of it--a
|
|
woman's laugh, a man say good-by, and then a car driving away," Mrs. Lawrence
|
|
said. Their apartment is the nearest in the court to Alvarado street.
|
|
"That is all we know."
|
|
But about a week before Taylor's murder, Mrs. Lawrence said she went
|
|
home alone one night, before 7 o'clock, and saw two men loitering behind
|
|
their home.
|
|
And several days previous to Taylor's death, a man came to the Lawrence
|
|
home inquiring for Taylor.
|
|
"He looked enough like Taylor to have been his twin," Mr. Lawrence said.
|
|
Miss Edna Purviance, film actress, who lives at 402-A South Alvarado, in
|
|
the house next to the one occupied by Taylor, said:
|
|
"I was not at home the night of the murder, so of course I did not hear
|
|
or see anything unusual."
|
|
She explained that she and her mother had been away from home until
|
|
about 11:45 o'clock.
|
|
"Reports in the newspapers that I tried the door and rang the bell at
|
|
Mr. Taylor's home, when I noticed lights burning there, are false," Miss
|
|
Purviance said.
|
|
"There is nothing unusual to me in the sight of lights burning in a
|
|
private home at midnight, and I certainly did not try to enter the house that
|
|
night."
|
|
E. C. Jessurun of 406-A South Alvarado, and owner of the court, admitted
|
|
that he had heard the shot which it is believed ended Taylor's life.
|
|
"I had been ill for about three weeks," he said. "My wife and I were
|
|
talking and reading when I heard the report.
|
|
"I sat up, hearing the noise, but figured it was only an automobile back-
|
|
fire, so lay down again."
|
|
Vern Dumas of 408-A South Alvarado said that he noticed one of the
|
|
window curtains in Taylor's home slightly awry when he came home the night of
|
|
the murder. He walks home directly by the Taylor house, through an areaway,
|
|
after putting his car in the garage.
|
|
"But I didn't notice particularly," he said: "It looked as if a table
|
|
had been pushed against it."
|
|
Both Dumas and H. H. Lewin commented on the preciseness with which
|
|
Taylor's body was arranged on the floor.
|
|
"It looked as if he had been laid out in a coffin for burial," both
|
|
said.
|
|
Then came an interview with A. W. Wachter of 412-A South Alvarado.
|
|
He said that on Thursday night, more than a week after Taylor's murder,
|
|
a Marmon coupe had driven up in front of the entrance to the court.
|
|
Wachter is in the automobile business, and says he can tell the make of
|
|
a car by the hum of its engine.
|
|
"The engine remained running," Wachter said, "but the lights were turned
|
|
out. A man ran to the door of Taylor's home and rang the bell, but when no
|
|
one responded, he ran back to the car, jumped in, the lights were flashed on,
|
|
and the car sped away."
|
|
Wachter said that the night before the murder he had seen Mabel Normand
|
|
and Taylor get in a coupe and drive away.
|
|
On the night of the murder, he said, he was away from home from before 8
|
|
o'clock until about 11:15 or 11:30, but that about 4 a.m. on February 2 he
|
|
had risen and looked out the window, noticing the lights burning in Taylor's
|
|
home.
|
|
C. A. Fitzhenry, a friend of Wachter, who visited him frequently, told
|
|
Wachter that on several occasions, upon leaving the court, he had seen a man
|
|
in a black overcoat and black Fedora hat standing at the corner of Maryland
|
|
and Alvarado streets.
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Buckner of 412-B South Alvarado street, also told an
|
|
interesting story.
|
|
They were at a dancing party on the fateful Wednesday night, they said,
|
|
and did not return home until about 4:30 o'clock Thursday morning.
|
|
"We noticed the lights then," both said, "burning in Taylor's home."
|
|
They thought nothing of it, however, but when Mr. Buckner arose at 6
|
|
o'clock to investigate trouble with their hot-water heater the lights were
|
|
still burning.
|
|
"I thought it strange at the time," he said.
|
|
Later they were awakened by the screams of Henry Peavey, Taylor's negro
|
|
servant.
|
|
"He was running about the lawn and walks, screaming that Mr. Taylor was
|
|
murdered," Mrs. Buckner said.
|
|
Mr. Buckner hurried over to the house, being one of the first to arrive
|
|
there. He also was the man who notified the police of Taylor's death.
|
|
"I noticed and commented on the fact that the body was laid out
|
|
precisely," Mr. Buckner said.
|
|
"The cuffs and collar were straight and his clothing not disarranged at
|
|
all. I thought it strange at the time that a man murdered should fall in
|
|
such a position."
|
|
Mr. Buckner noticed that Taylor's wrist watch, just visible below the
|
|
cuff at his left wrist, showed the hour as being just 8 o'clock when he saw
|
|
it. He said he thought the watch was still running.
|
|
And Douglas MacLean, of 406-B South Alvarado, told one of the most
|
|
interesting stories of all.
|
|
Mrs. MacLean was the one who saw the mystery man leaving the Taylor
|
|
house just after the shot was fired.
|
|
Her description of the man has been given time and again, and both say
|
|
that they have been bothered greatly by detectives and newspaper men,
|
|
repeating over and over the same story.
|
|
"Mrs. MacLean and I had just finished dinner," Mr. MacLean said.
|
|
"The night being rather chilly, I had gone upstairs to the bathroom, to
|
|
get a small electric stove we have there, and bring it downstairs.
|
|
"I heard a report like a shot, but thought it merely an automobile
|
|
backfiring.
|
|
"Mrs. MacLean also heard it. She went to the door and glanced around.
|
|
She saw the man on Taylor's porch. He was standing with the screen door in
|
|
his hand, apparently looking about. He then turned back to the door as if
|
|
speaking farewell, and after doing so left the porch, walking down the walk
|
|
toward Alvarado street. No, he didn't run, nor did he seem hurried."
|
|
Mrs. MacLean said she did not see the man's face. In fact, it's rather
|
|
hard to distinguish anyone at that distance in the court, because of the
|
|
peculiar lighting system.
|
|
And Mr. MacLean, to demonstrate this fact to the detectives, went from
|
|
his house to the porch of the Taylor home and posed in the same manner as the
|
|
man whom his wife had seen.
|
|
"Mrs. MacLean thought nothing of the incident," he concluded, "and we
|
|
started playing dominoes together, doing so for some time before retiring."
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
A man suspected by at least six police investigators of having first-
|
|
hand knowledge of the slaying of William Desmond Taylor, internationally
|
|
known film director, has been identified by the detectives working on the
|
|
case and by some of the witnesses questioned by Dist.-Atty. Woolwine in the
|
|
past few days, and his arrest is believed to be a matter of hours.
|
|
This was indicated by Captain of Detectives Adams when he admitted that
|
|
several places where the suspect is expected to appear were guarded by his
|
|
officers yesterday. The man's name is known to The Times, but is withheld at
|
|
the request of the authorities.
|
|
A belief that the suspect may be the man who killed Taylor was
|
|
strengthened yesterday following an all-night investigation of facts
|
|
uncovered Friday.
|
|
The man, the officers now believe, is the owner of the blood-stained cap
|
|
found by the police and has been in hiding since the night of the murder.
|
|
His actions have been traced sufficiently to convince a number of the
|
|
investigators that he was either implicated in the slaying of Taylor or is
|
|
withholding some important information. His home in an apartment-house on
|
|
West Fourth Street was searched by the officers armed with a search warrant
|
|
early yesterday morning.
|
|
Later the search for the man shifted to a downtown location and out of
|
|
town.
|
|
"The man is in town, we are certain of this," one of the detectives on
|
|
the case said early yesterday morning. "We know all about his actions, and
|
|
as soon as we can lay our hands on him we will place him under arrest on the
|
|
charge of murdering William D. Taylor."
|
|
That the officers are on the right track was indicated by the fact that
|
|
the cap found by the police was taken to the District Attorney's office and
|
|
there exhibited to Miss Mabel Normand and William Davis, her chauffeur,
|
|
shortly before midnight Friday. Immediately after the reported
|
|
identification of the cap the officers left the District Attorney's office
|
|
with orders to arrest the suspects.
|
|
The arrest of Walter Thiele by Detectives Lloyd and Roberts on the
|
|
charge of suspicion of burglary had only a remote connection with the
|
|
investigation concerning the suspect. The officers admit that Thiele may be
|
|
able to give them some information about the man, but stated emphatically
|
|
that Thiele had no knowledge of the crime or anything directly connected with
|
|
it.
|
|
Henry Peavey, colored valet for Mr. Taylor, was summarily called to
|
|
Dist.-Atty. Woolwine's office late yesterday following the discovery of new
|
|
and important information regarding the murder. Peavey had previously been
|
|
questioned at considerable length in Mr. Woolwine's office by Chief Deputy
|
|
Doran.
|
|
The valet arrived at Mr. Woolwine's office shortly after 8 p.m.
|
|
yesterday and was closeted for a considerable time with the District
|
|
Attorney, Mr. Doran and officers of the police department and of the
|
|
Sheriff's force.
|
|
The instructions for the officers to bring Peavey to the office where
|
|
the investigation into the murder mystery has been centralized came shortly
|
|
after a new witness had been in long conference with the officials.
|
|
The witness, whose name was said by Undersheriff Biscailuz and Deputy
|
|
Sheriff Nolan to be Henry Britt, but which was signed by the young man as
|
|
Edward F. Arto, was taken to Mr. Woolwine's office from Sheriff Traeger's
|
|
headquarters. He refused to give his name to newspaper men.
|
|
Mr. Arto, as he signed himself, said he overheard a conversation either
|
|
the night of the murder or the night before between Peavey and another man
|
|
regarding Mr. Taylor's affairs. The nature of the conversation aside from
|
|
that Mr. Arto declined to divulge, but he believed the information of value
|
|
to the investigators.
|
|
Mr. Arto was going to the home of some relatives near the Taylor
|
|
apartments on South Alvarado street about 7:10 p.m. when he heard the two men
|
|
talking. He gave a rather vague description of the strange man but said he
|
|
was an American apparently, wore a cap and aroused Mr. Arto's sus[....(gap)]
|
|
stated. Peavey strenuously denied that he held any such conversation.
|
|
The Taylor home faces south into an apartment court and the rear of the
|
|
building is flush with the sidewalk on Maryland street. It was at this point
|
|
that the conversation took place, the witness stated...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
Santa Barbara, Feb. 11--"The Whitney family have the greatest respect
|
|
for Miss Mary Miles Minter, we are good friends, but we know of nothing that
|
|
would throw light on the killing of William Desmond Taylor, who was Miss
|
|
Minter's director in Santa Barbara," said H. R. Whitney, whose wife,
|
|
Charlotte Whitney, was Miss Minter's secretary.
|
|
Efforts to see Mrs. Whitney failed, because she was with friends, and
|
|
the family said would not be back tonight, that they did not know where she
|
|
had gone.
|
|
The talk developed that a member of the Los Angeles Sheriff's office was
|
|
here two days ago and had a long talk with Charlotte Whitney in connection
|
|
with the associations between Mr. Taylor and Miss Minter, but "he could get
|
|
nothing of importance, because Mrs. Whitney knew nothing," the husband said.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
BOSTON ADVERTISER
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--The startling theory was advanced by some of the
|
|
investigating officials tonight that the actual assassin of William D. Taylor-
|
|
-$85,000 a year movie director--was employed by a powerful man in the motion
|
|
picture industry.
|
|
It is their theory that the assassin may have been checking up on the
|
|
film directors' movements for several nights before his opportunity came to
|
|
strike the death blow.
|
|
These officials go so far as to speculate that the man who may have
|
|
employed the assassin was so well known that he could not afford to be seen
|
|
near the house when the crime was committed.
|
|
If, in fact, a certain man powerful in the motion picture industry is
|
|
found to have been involved, then it will occasion no surprise amongst the
|
|
police who are checking up on him that he should have employed an assassin.
|
|
Against this it is contended that no man, particularly one in the
|
|
position of the magnate referred to, would risk placing himself within the
|
|
power of the other.
|
|
However, it is pointed out that men have employed assassins before this
|
|
and that it proved to be very much against the interests of either class to
|
|
expose the other.
|
|
It is because of the probability that inquiries are being made of
|
|
private detective agencies of the city, especially the more obscure and least
|
|
reputable, to find if their operatives were ever employed to watch Taylor
|
|
and, if so, by whom.
|
|
It will be remembered that on the morning following the murder the
|
|
tracks of a man were found in the alley, and nearby were several cigarette
|
|
ends. It was concluded then, and the supposition has never been disproved or
|
|
discounted by any evidence secured since that time, that the man who stood
|
|
there long enough to smoke six cigarettes was watching Taylor's house.
|
|
Dwellers in the vicinity saw another man two nights before the murder.
|
|
His attention was centered on the Taylor home.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
Oscar Fernbach
|
|
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--Has Mabel Normand, film actress, who last night
|
|
was grilled for nearly four hours by District Attorney Thomas Lee Woolwine in
|
|
his quest for light on the murder of William Desmond Taylor, told all that
|
|
could in any way have a bearing on the mystery?
|
|
This was the question uppermost in the mind of Woolwine today as he
|
|
resumed his investigation of the killing of the film director.
|
|
The district attorney is not yet prepared to answer it in the
|
|
affirmative.
|
|
It developed today that during the quizzing of Mabel Normand, Woolwine
|
|
was in great measure actuated by the theory that Taylor may have been slain
|
|
by some blackmailer from whom he was trying to shield not himself, but the
|
|
actress.
|
|
A supposition which bears no mean weight is that Miss Normand, during
|
|
her last sojourn in New York, was made the objective victim of a blackmailing
|
|
gang--perhaps that of "Dapper Dan" Collins, who with another man and two
|
|
women is believed to have been in Los Angeles just a few days before the
|
|
murder.
|
|
Miss Normand, the theory goes, may have confided her troubles to Taylor.
|
|
If she had, the firm director might have been engaged in an effort to rid her
|
|
of her persecutors and might have defied them.
|
|
Nothing was stated by Mabel Normand last night, in answer to Woolwine's
|
|
questions, to support this theory. But before much time has elapsed Woolwine
|
|
will again interrogate the film star.
|
|
Today she was in a highly nervous state, the result of the long
|
|
inquisition of the night before. But to all inquiries she repeated
|
|
steadfastly: "I have told absolutely everything I know."
|
|
Outside of his proposed further investigation along this particular
|
|
line, the district attorney, it was learned today, will summon to his office,
|
|
Mrs. Julia Crawford Ivers, the well known scenario writer. Mrs. Ivers was a
|
|
warm friend of Taylor's and was admittedly an ardent admirer of his great
|
|
intellectuality. She had worked in conjunction with him at the Morosco
|
|
studios, at the time when Taylor was directing Constance Talmadge. Since
|
|
Taylor's death, Mrs. Ivers has been in practical seclusion, denying herself
|
|
to all interviewers.
|
|
Woolwine does not believe that the scenario writer has any knowledge of
|
|
the immediate circumstances that resulted in the murder of Taylor but is said
|
|
to feel that Mrs. Ivers may have received the confidence of the director on
|
|
matters relating to his past, and that some detail may furnish a base upon
|
|
which to build more than merely a plausible theory of the causes that led
|
|
ultimately to the killing in the Alvarado Street bungalow...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
Pauline Payne
|
|
ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--That the shadow of an assassin's murderous weapon
|
|
may have fallen across the drab life path of William D. Taylor as early as
|
|
the Saturday night prior to his slaying was revealed tonight by Gene Ross,
|
|
the beautiful young silhouette artist whose studio in the Ambassador hotel
|
|
was visited by the director on that evening.
|
|
Declaring that he came to her studio, accompanied by Claire Windsor,
|
|
motion picture girl, Miss Ross, in a dramatic and graphic manner, described
|
|
today for the first time the strange actions of the victim in the sensational
|
|
mystery.
|
|
"I had always considered Mr. Taylor the most colorless individual I had
|
|
ever known until last Saturday evening--a man o' the mists as far as his
|
|
personality was concerned--but he seemed on that farewell meeting like a man
|
|
gripped by a terrible and dread fear.
|
|
"Biting his lips, he paced the floor, back and forth--back and forth--
|
|
with an endless monotony--while Miss Windsor examined some of my studies in
|
|
black and white.
|
|
"Nervous, absent minded, haggard, and acting in a most peculiar manner,
|
|
he seemed to shrink from even the shadows of passersby, until my attention
|
|
was attracted to his unusual actions.
|
|
"Always dressed in gray in the night time, and in khaki tones usually
|
|
about the motion picture 'lots,' Mr. Taylor had often impressed me as being a
|
|
man who was an adept at submerging himself into any background.
|
|
"Even his way of walking was quiet and unobtrusive. Quiet like a
|
|
camouflaged man, or so, he seemed to me, so remarkable did he succeed in
|
|
obliterating his own individuality both physically and mentally.
|
|
"Yet on that Saturday night--the last time I ever saw him alive--Mr.
|
|
Taylor stood out most vividly because of the overhanging sense of horror or
|
|
secret fear, which seemed to have mastered him.
|
|
"I used to know Mr. Taylor quite well, while I was sketching art titles
|
|
for the Famous Players. We frequently met on the studio lots. And I have
|
|
often marveled at the drabness of the man.
|
|
"Being an artist, I suppose the lack of color in both his attire and
|
|
personality struck me more forcibly than his other associates. He should
|
|
have dressed in dark blues or blacks, or some decided color, but instead of
|
|
that he was continuously in what I called to myself his camouflage tones--
|
|
gray and khaki. Not even a bit of jewelry or a striking cravat to relieve
|
|
the dullness of his costuming."
|
|
According to the analysis of the murdered director, made today by the
|
|
young artist, Mr. Taylor's appeal to women rested fundamentally upon that
|
|
very ability to submerge his own personality and exaggerate the individuality
|
|
of those with whom he came in contact.
|
|
"Mr. Taylor was never in the least forward with women," said Miss Ross
|
|
today. "In fact, he was rather diffident. But I believe that the secret of
|
|
his attraction to women was that he was ever ready to talk of them, of their
|
|
interests, of their achievements, their hopes and ambitions.
|
|
"Then, too, Mr. Taylor was a man of profound culture and could discuss
|
|
art, music, the drama, literature or politics with charming facility.
|
|
"It is a noteworthy fact, however, that he never referred to his own
|
|
past life, his own interests, hopes or fears in his conversations with
|
|
others.
|
|
"A man of great poise, that Saturday night, first time I beheld him with
|
|
the veil stripped from his face perhaps. And I beheld then a man evidently
|
|
under a ghastly strain of some sort--a man with taut nerves. Even his voice
|
|
was changed. Usually he spoke in a calm, colorless, beautifully modulated
|
|
voice, but that night his remarks came in jerks."
|
|
Was it on this night that the "man o' the mists" beheld the shadow of
|
|
his assassin's murderous weapon, raised for the fatal blow?`
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
A. Chester Keel
|
|
SHREVEPORT TIMES
|
|
Los Angeles, Feb. 11--...The man whose testimony had let to recalling
|
|
Peavey, Taylor's negro cook-valet, to Woolwine's office has been dubbed the
|
|
"secret man." The district attorney's office gave out his name as Frank
|
|
Britt. Investigation reveals that his true name is George F. Arto. Why the
|
|
district attorney wishes to conceal his true name has not been learned.
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Arto told Universal Service that he was calling on a neighbor of
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Taylor's sometime between 7:30 and 8:15. He passed in the rear of the
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bungalow court to reach the house as has been his custom. Just short of
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Taylor's home he said he saw Peavey talking to a short, heavyset man.
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Peavey was questioned for nearly an hour. After he had been dismissed
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Woolwine said that he had not divulged anything new.
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Peavey denied Arto's statement. He said that he did not talk to any
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person let alone a man such as Arto described.
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The district attorney apparently despaired of a solution of the case
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today. Immediately after dismissing Peavey, he called in all the detectives
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working on the case. It was the second conference of the day and lasted
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until after 5 o'clock. At the conclusion, Woolwine was asked whether he
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planned to question witnesses tonight. He said that he did not think so.
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Woolwine indicated, however, that he would resume the investigation
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tomorrow.
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Public Administrator Frank Bryson may bring suits, if necessary, against
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a number of leading persons in the film world to recover thousands of dollars
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loaned to actresses and others by Taylor. In his checkbook were found many
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stubs on which was written "loan." The amounts on these stubs total
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thousands of dollars and indicate that Taylor was a man of great liberality.
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A revelation of the day was the amount of "crank" letters written to
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persons interested in the case. Mabel Normand has received on an average of
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100 a day. Most of them were from movie "fans" who expressed great sympathy
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|
for her. One was from the vice president of a bank in Texas, which she
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prizes very highly.
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Captain of Detectives David L. Adams has received the most curious
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|
assortment. They range from those giving advice to others containing
|
|
"confessions." One man wrote from Wisconsin "confessing" that he had killed
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Taylor. He even described the murder.
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|
Investigations by county detectives virtually eliminate the son of a
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wealthy eastern family. He established an alibi...
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 12, 1922
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FRESNO REPUBLICAN
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Roused from early morning slumbers and dreams of traps filled with fur
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animals, Harry Sanborn, 37, trapper, prospector, adventurer, hermit, early
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yesterday morning satisfactorily proved to Sheriff W. F. Jones, Deputy
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Collins, and three representatives of The Republican that he was not Edward
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F. Sands, former valet of William Desmond Taylor, murdered Los Angeles motion
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picture director.
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|
Reports received in Fresno late Friday night stated a man whose
|
|
description tallied with that of the sought Sands was living in a hovel in
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the San Joaquin river bottom, two miles from Lane's bridge and 17 miles from
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Fresno...
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 12, 1922
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LONG BEACH PRESS
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That there was no woman connected with the mysterious murder of William
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|
Desmond Taylor, veteran film director, is the belief of Mrs. J. M. Berger,
|
|
income tax specialist who assisted the slain man to make out his tax report a
|
|
few hours before he met his death.
|
|
Mrs. Berger's clientele includes many prominent movie people mentioned
|
|
in connection with the Taylor case. She knew Taylor, Mary Miles Minter and
|
|
Mabel Normand well.
|
|
She volunteered information on the business of life of the slain
|
|
director to District Attorney Woolwine today.
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|
"There's no doubt in my mind that Edward Sands, the fugitive ex-valet of
|
|
Taylor, was the murderer. Taylor mentioned to me on the afternoon of his
|
|
murder that he was forced to keep close watch on his personal checks since
|
|
Sands had forged his name on several occasions."
|
|
Taylor is said to have mentioned the fact to other friends that Sands
|
|
could imitate his handwriting, with almost flawless precision.
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|
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 12, 1922
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SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER
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Los Angeles, Feb. 11--The private stock of liquor, declared to be of
|
|
excellent brands and almost rare in the days of prohibition, that was found
|
|
in the home of William Desmond Taylor, murdered film director, today
|
|
furnished a problem for the government officials.
|
|
The liquor, under the strict "dry" law of the country, cannot be turned
|
|
over to the heirs of the slain director and may have to be destroyed.
|
|
Public Administrator Frank Bryson brought the matter to the fore by
|
|
applying to the local prohibition officials for a permit to remove the liquor
|
|
stock from the Taylor residence to his office.
|
|
It was stated the permit likely would be granted, but that the liquor
|
|
may have to be destroyed later unless an order is issued in federal court
|
|
permitting its donation to some hospital for medical purposes.
|
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|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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|
|
February 12, 1922
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Thomas Lee Woolwine
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NEW YORK AMERICAN
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Los Angeles, Feb. 11.--In the William Desmond Taylor case, the police
|
|
officers have been busy night and day working upon various theories, and the
|
|
statements of a great number of persons that we thought might tend to throw
|
|
some light upon this mysterious killing have been taken by the District
|
|
Attorney.
|
|
We are, of course, but little beyond the very threshold of the
|
|
investigation, but I must say that so far nothing has developed that gives us
|
|
the slightest intimation as to who perpetrated the ghastly deed.
|
|
In all my experience I have seldom if ever come in contact with any case
|
|
that is so devoid of substantial clues. There remains a great deal to be
|
|
done, and we can only hope from day to day that this situation may change.
|
|
I have been informed that articles have been carried by the public press
|
|
outside of the city of Los Angeles to the effect that the police authorities
|
|
are not using their best endeavors to unravel this mystery, but from daily
|
|
contact with officers working on the case I have never seen any intimation of
|
|
such an attitude upon the part of any of them.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
SYRACUSE POST-STANDARD
|
|
Saratoga, Feb. 11--A film starring Mary Miles Minter, actress whose name
|
|
has appeared in the Hollywood murder mystery surrounding the death of William
|
|
Desmond Taylor, has been canceled at one of the leading motion picture
|
|
theaters here.
|
|
In addition, the manager announced, films showing either Mary Miles
|
|
Minter or Mabel Normand will be banned until both actresses have been
|
|
satisfactorily cleared of all connection with the murder case.
|
|
The Minter picture was to have been the feature of next week's bill.
|
|
It had been advertised and announced throughout the city. But this evening
|
|
the manager of the theater decided he would not show it.
|
|
He said that the banning of the films did not mean that the theater
|
|
interests considered Mary Miles Minter and Mabel Normand have more
|
|
explanations to make in the murder scandal, but that because their names have
|
|
figured prominently as being possibly in love with the murdered man it was
|
|
thought best to keep them from the limelight until their connection with the
|
|
case has been cleared up.
|
|
|
|
*****************************************************************************
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|
*****************************************************************************
|
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Back issues of Taylorology are available on the Web at any of the following:
|
|
http://www.angelfire.com/az/Taylorology/
|
|
http://www.etext.org/Zines/ASCII/Taylorology/
|
|
http://www.silent-movies.com/Taylorology/
|
|
Full text searches of back issues can be done at http://www.etext.org/Zines/
|
|
or at http://www.silent-movies.com/search.html. For more information about
|
|
Taylor, see
|
|
WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow Press, 1991)
|
|
*****************************************************************************
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