***************************************************************************** * T A Y L O R O L O G Y * * A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor * * * * Issue 7 -- July 1993 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu * * All reprinted material is in the public domain * ***************************************************************************** CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE: The Case Against Thomas Dixon Fragments from the Police File "The Humor of a Hollywood Murder" Part 4: Love Letters, Frozen Horror, Untamed Hollywood, Frank Mayo vs. The Press, Tall Tales #1: Walter Underwood ***************************************************************************** What is TAYLOROLOGY? TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond Taylor, a top film Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life; (b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor murder on Hollywood and the nation. Primary emphasis will be given toward reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it for accuracy. Reader input is welcome, in the form of "Letters to the Editor," short articles, and contributed source material. ***************************************************************************** The Case Against Thomas Dixon If the early press reports are to be believed, Thomas Dixon was once a prime suspect in the murder of Taylor, but he was soon overshadowed by a flood of other suspects. When director King Vidor gained access to the police file in the mid-1960s, it appears that any references to Dixon had long been purged from the files, except for the one reference in Mary Miles Minter's official statement. Following, in chronological order, are some press items which refer to Dixon, linking him with Mary Miles Minter prior to Taylor's murder, or suggesting his involvement in murder. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * December 28, 1921 LOS ANGELES TIMES A romance of interest to filmdom and the public, soon to be consummated in marriage, if all reports are to be believed, is that between Mary Miles Minter, Lasky star, and T. E. Dixon, son of the lead-pencil king. Mr. Dixon has just arrived in the city and is a guest at the Ambassador. Asked concerning the romance he did not deny the engagement. Miss Minter herself, when she came from a visit to New York so long ago as a year ago last summer, admitted to a TIMES representative she was engaged to Mr. Dixon. At that time she said business matters connected with her film work caused her to desire to keep the engagement a secret, but she showed a handsome diamond and ruby ring, the gift of her fiance. Mr. Dixon said yesterday that business had brought him West. ...Miss Minter met Mr. Dixon when on a visit to New York. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * January 7, 1922 BILLBOARD The pretty blonde motion picture star, Mary Miles Minter, has been engaged so many times to various millionaires that when we hear a rumor circulated that the knot has at last been tied we are prone to look upon it as another publicity stunt issued by the overactive brain of a hard-working press agent. The gentlemanly bridegroom in the present case happens to be Thomas E. Dixon, son of a millionaire pencil manufacturer. The rumor says that at a Christmas party held in Hollywood, Cal, the young couple evaded their friends and ran off, to be married. The mother of Miss Minter, Mrs. Charlotte Shelby, left New York for the Coast December 28, and before going she is quoted as saying that she knew her daughter was engaged to Mr. Dixon, but that she did not believe there was any truth in the report of her sudden marriage. ...Mr. Dixon is 27, a Yale graduate, and was a captain in the Aviation Corps during the war. He makes his headquarters at the Yale Club in New York City, but left for California three weeks ago. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * December 29, 1921 LOS ANGELES EXAMINER Mary Miles Minter, film star, and Tommy Dixon, heir to the Dixon lead- pencil millions, denied their engagement in concert last night. "People are continually announcing engagements for me that I know nothing whatever about," said Miss Minter. "Tommy and I are just good friends, aren't we Tommy?" and Tommy nodded his head mechanically like a reluctant little boy who had been coached against his will. ... * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * April 1922 PICTURE PLAY (from a description of the wedding of Lottie Pickford and Alan Forest, which took place on Jan. 7, 1922) Among those present were:...Mary Miles Minter, Thomas Dixon... ...Although Mary Miles Minter says she is not engaged to Thomas Dixon, son of the leading pencil manufacturer, she evidently finds him an ideal escort. And her mother doesn't object to having the young folks slip away to the movies in the evening. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * January 21, 1922 LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (from an interview with Mary Miles Minter on the movie set) ..."It's the first time he [Dixon] has been here in two weeks," Miss Minter said. "I would like for the world to know that Mr. Dixon is a very dear friend--a charming fellow--a wonderful acquaintance, but he is not my affiance. "...I have known Mr. Dixon for five years. "I met him in 1917, when I was touring around trying to do my little bit in Liberty Loan campaigns. "Since that time we have been the best of friends. About one year ago we became engaged--but it was a conditional engagement. We kept it secret for that reason. "When Mr. Dixon came to California during the holidays the engagement was called off, despite rumors to the contrary. And that's all. "I have not seen much of him recently, and it is by the merest coincidence that he is visiting in the studio today. "I regard him as a friend. But I do not love him. And, until I love someone, I will never marry. "That's the true story of my romance, if romance it has been. To me, however, it has just been a dear, sweet friendship, and my real romance is yet to come." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 3, 1922 LOS ANGELES RECORD Detectives today were known to be quietly seeking a young New York broker, whose identity is being kept secret, to question him in an effort to bring to light more facts about the murder. This young man is said to have been prominent in movie society. He is described as a friend of a prominent movie actress. ...Detectives gave no intimation of what light they believed he might possibly shed on the mysterious slaying. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 6, 1922 SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER The EXAMINER learned late tonight that a prominent rich young New Yorker, formerly engaged to marry one of the most beautiful stars in the film world, has mysteriously disappeared, and because this actress was a close friend of William D. Taylor, the director murdered in his home last Wednesday night, a nation-wide search has been instituted for the missing man. He is reported to have checked out of his hotel last Wednesday afternoon and to have departed from Los Angeles the following day, shortly after Taylor's body was discovered. ...According to the authorities, this man was jealous of Taylor and upbraided the actress for having anything to do with the director. He is said to have employed one or more men to follow her, and on one occasion recently, when she visited the Taylor bungalow, to have flown into a rage. This occurred several hours after the visit, when his detectives reported the matter to him. A stormy scene ensued and the actress is said to have broken off her engagement on the spot. Efforts toward a reconciliation were made later by the young man, but to no avail and he is said to have been brooding and drinking heavily ever since. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 6, 1922 NEW YORK JOURNAL ...Detectives today are centering their investigation of the film director's murder on information about a triangular love affair, in which the slain man, a popular screen actress and a scion of a wealthy Eastern family are said to have played the leading roles. ...The new love triangle theory projected itself strongly into the case today when the police announced that they had learned a wealthy young New Yorker, at one time reported engaged to marry a leading actress of the film world, had mysteriously dropped from sight the day following the murder of Taylor. Other investigators learned that the actress in question was a close friend of the murdered man, and are proceeding on a theory that the former fiance, discovering the close relationship existing between the screen star and director, may have been driven to commit murder by his rage which followed this revelation. ...Announcement was made that investigators have been detailed to trace the movements of the young man, who checked out of one of the leading hotels of the city the day after the murder and has not been seen by friends since. Police are acting on the report that the suspect fled to San Diego in hopes of escaping across the border into Tiajuana. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 7, 1922 LOS ANGELES EXAMINER Located by the EXAMINER late last night and questioned until midnight by Deputy Sheriff Harvey Bell and George Pross, manager of the Burns Detective Agency, the wealthy young New Yorker, who had been engaged to a motion picture star frequently mentioned in connection with the William D. Taylor murder mystery, gave an account of himself, which, in the opinion of the officers, practically eliminates him from consideration. The examination of the young man occurred in a downtown hotel and was of special interest because of his close attentions to two of the actresses most conspicuous in the social life of Taylor. He was able, state the officers, to account for every hour of his time on the night of the murder. Interest had centered in this picturesque character for several days, largely because he was known as the rejected suitor of the star who, herself, was said to be infatuated with Taylor. Police and sheriff's officers were instructed to find this man, who had checked out from the fashionable hotel where he was a guest on Wednesday afternoon and, apparently, had disappeared. Information coming to THE EXAMINER late yesterday afternoon enabled one of its representatives to locate him. He was found in his room at a downtown hotel and his interrogation followed. His elimination is regarded by the police as one of the most important contributions to the case in that it removes a possibility which had engaged the efforts of several officers, and thus narrows the field in which investigation must be prosecuted. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (from Minter's official statement to W.A. Doran, made on February 7, 1922) ..."Thomas Dickson [sic] is the only one to whom I have been even remotely engaged, and that was a freak of despondency." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 8, 1922 SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE The angle eliminated today was the theory that the New York broker who came here, ostensibly to marry Miss Mary Miles Minter, might have slain the director out of jealousy. It was well known that Taylor idolized the girl. It was learned today, however, that the young man did not flee the city the day after the murder from any apprehension. The management of the hotel at which he was guest, had requested him to leave. The broker brought a film actor and two extra girls into his room. It is declared that the quartet was noisy and that people in nearby rooms summoned the hotel detective. The latter declares there was much drink in the place. He says further that when he asked the women to leave the men assaulted him. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 9, 1922 SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER One of the theories related to a wealthy young man who had been in love with her [Minter], was known to be extremely jealous and of highly emotional character. Until today it had been supposed that this young man had been eliminated from the case having, as it appeared, furnished a complete alibi. But a checking up on persons to whom this man referred for his alibi brought forth the startling revelation that they had not been with him the night of the murder, as he had claimed. It will now be necessary for this person to supply other evidence of his movements on the night of February 1 or his arrest as a suspect undoubtedly will follow. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 9, 1922 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS Here is the theory of the Taylor murder mystery that is coming to be accepted by criminal investigators from Sheriff Traeger's office, a theory not without certain substantiation that the investigators have quietly been gathering the last forty-eight hours. ...She [Minter] flouted one who had formerly been the most favored of her suitors, treated him with open contempt. She snapped her fingers at him in disdain, and, when she did, there grew in his heart a hate for Taylor as unreasoning as the star's affection. He went to Taylor's home on the night of Feb. 1, according to the theory, first to suggest, then to threaten and demand that Taylor break with the girl--his girl. ...Hate broke the leash and the despised and rejected suitor turned loose the weapon he had brought to use only as a last resort. He fired. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 11, 1922 SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE A young New Yorker, whose father is a wealthy manufacturer, has been brought under suspicion because of his devotion to the same pretty actress. He has been hanging around Hollywood, and reports, now believed to have had their inception in his own love-sick brain, that he was engaged to the actress, have been circulated. He was questioned early in the police investigation and gave what appeared to be a satisfactory story of his whereabouts. Persons whose names he brought into the statement of his movements on the night in question have contradicted him, according to the investigators, and this has brought him under the shadow again. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 12, 1922 NEW YORK AMERICAN Arthur James, motion picture writer and an authority on the cinema, made a spirited defense of Mary Miles Minter last night. He has known the Los Angeles star and her family since Mary's babyhood. He told this story of her recent reported betrothal to a young broker here: "The poor youngster is so pursued by admirers that she sometimes is compelled to say yes when they propose to her, in the hope of getting rid of them. Now this latest affair: "The young chap bothered her to marry him until one day she said she would--in Los Angeles on New Year's Day. It was a jest. "Well, on New Year's day the young man appeared in Los Angeles and telephoned Mary to remind her that it was her wedding day. She was at a family dinner. "She exclaimed that she had forgotten all about the wedding and that she would have to beg off. No doubt she likes the young fellow, but I don't believe she ever took the affair seriously." ***************************************************************************** ***************************************************************************** Fragments from the Police File (From official transcribed statements made to the district attorney during the investigation into Taylor's murder) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (February 1922 interrogation of Arthur Hoyt, one of Taylor's friends) Hoyt: Mind you, I am saying this from memory, but he [Taylor] said, "What am I going to do? She [Minter] comes here--threatens to make a scene. I try to get rid of her, doing all in my power--finally, when I did get her to go, she said, 'Well, you will have to drive me home,'" and he said, "No, you got here and you will have to go alone." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (February 1922 interrogation of Harry Fellows, Taylor's Assistant Director) Q: Did she [Miss Minter] appear fond of him? A: Yes, she did seem to be very fond of Mr. Taylor--and seemed to chase him around the studio and things like that. As far as I know, Mr. Taylor never really thought an awful lot of Miss Minter--I mean more than just to like her for a nice little girl....He thought more of Miss Normand than he did of anyone I have ever known. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (February 1922 interrogation of W. A. Robertson, one of Taylor's friends) Q: Were you ever present when Mr. Taylor mentioned Mary Miles Minter? A: Yes--last Saturday night. Q: Who if anyone else was present? A: Mr. Hoyt. He [Mr. Taylor] said she had been pesticating around there and got to be a great deal of annoyance: she would come to his house and kick up a fuss. Q: What did he tell you about her kicking up a fuss? A: She threatened to scream. She was very obnoxious to him. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (March 1926 interrogation of J. Marjorie Berger, Taylor's tax accountant) Berger: I arrived at my office between 7 and 7:30 on the morning of Feb. 2, 1922. My telephone was ringing. I answered the phone. Mrs. Charlotte Shelby said "Marjorie, I have something terrible to tell you. The man that was in your office yesterday afternoon is no more. He is dead." I said what do you mean? What do you know about it? Where are you now? She said "I am at the New Hampshire home." I said, "Well, aren't you afraid to be alone?" She said, "Well, Mr. Smith stayed in the house last night." ***************************************************************************** ***************************************************************************** "The Humor of a Hollywood Murder", Part 4 Love Letters [1] February 9, 1922 ST. LOUIS STAR "I love you, I love you, I love you," wrote the movie actress to the late film director, thereby proving that movie actresses do, after all, have a pretty large vocabulary. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 9, 1922 PITTSBURGH POST Those love letters in Hollywood screenland show how far some women will mush along to keep from washing dishes. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 10, 1922 Bide Dudley NEW YORK EVENING WORLD In our opinion the love letter, so-called, written by Mary Miles Minter to Taylor, the film director, who was murdered, means nothing at all of importance. Being personally acquainted with Mary and her family, we are familiar with the little film star's nature and we are sure she might write just such a letter to any man friend who had been her benefactor and admirer. She would mean nothing by it other than an expression of such love as a happy- go-lucky girl might have for her father or an uncle. Everybody calls Mary "Dear," and every good friend of hers, male or female, kisses her when they meet. In the theatrical and film world a kiss isn't a very serious affair. Mary has always been a carefree innocent girl, closely chaperoned by her mother, a very estimable Southern lady. We saw Mary in New York last June, just before she sailed for Europe, and in front of fifty people at a dinner at the Hotel Biltmore she kissed us. We mention this so that, after we are shot, it won't be used to besmirch the reputation of Mary Miles Minter, who is today just as sweet and innocent as she was when she appeared as the barefoot kiddie in "The Littlest Rebel" eight years ago. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 11, 1922 DETROIT NEWS "Why Were Mabel Normand's Letters Put Into a Boot!"--Headline in the Taylor case. We give up. Why WERE Mabel Normand's letters put into a boot? Because maybe they were foot notes! * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 11, 1922 James Schermerhorn DETROIT TIMES The dumb darling of the photo drama who indicated her adoration of the wonderman director by painting a picture of life with him in the hills, he fetching the water and doing the cooking (she can only make tea) while she divided her time between dusting and cuddling in his arms in some soft, flimsy stuff, offers the most tangible clue in the connection with the taking off of William Desmond Taylor. What was there to live for, with an eternity in the kitchen confronting the cultured man? * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 14, 1922 NASHVILLE BANNER Mabel Normand's "Blessed Baby" letters to the now defunct William Taylor were found in an old boot in the Taylor residence. And it was because of such letters as Mabel and Mary Miles Minter wrote him that Taylor put his foot in it. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 15, 1922 SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS To "Six-Cylinder Love," "Spanish Love," and "Desert Love," [2] the Taylor case has added "Four X Love." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 15, 1922 DETROIT NEWS Most of the folly and most of the ecstasy of the world has been written into love letters. Down Los Angeles way the sudden taking off of a motion picture director has revealed in superlative quantity the common impulse that exists to let the emotions expand under the witching stimulus of a flowing pen. One love letter is very like another; in this one thing the world changeth never. It has all been said. Dido might have held the pen of Mabel Normand in the hour she suspected Aeneas had his mind set on his famous getaway; Cleopatra might have written like the Minter girl when Antony's eye seemed to be roving a trifle free. Nothing original is to be found in love- letters, probably because there is nothing original in love. This is not astonishing. The thing that bemuses understanding is that in this day of highly-developed inventive genius no substitute has been adopted for the paper-and-pen love letter. What is disappearing ink for if not kindly to erase the follies of yesterday under the blushing second though of today? Should it not be a Medean law that all love letters are returnable to the sender by registered return mail, special delivery? Apparently the itch to write may not be appeased and the letters must be written; but must we and our children and generations yet unborn forever read and re-read the eternal secret of what one person thinks of another in that "first fine careless rapture," or otherwise, which is found in the love letter? * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 15, 1922 CLEVELAND PRESS We must admit we are greatly astonished by the number of letters found in Taylor's home. We had no idea there were that many movie actresses who knew how to read and write. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 15, 1922 Sophie Irene Loeb NEW YORK EVENING WORLD Written Words, Like Bullets, Can Never Be Recalled "Do right and fear no man, Don't write, and fear no woman." How many tragedies would be averted if these two simple lines were followed. And now the latest one is filling the pages of the press, in which a murder was committed, and in which love letters play a highly prominent part. Doubtless Mabel Normand is at present wishing she had never written those letters to William D. Taylor, because of the great trouble they have already caused her in this complex situation. People do not realize how silly they can be until they read over the love letters that they wrote long after the love is gone. And when they appear in cold type, in the headlines of a newspaper, they look foolish indeed. Only a person who has been the writer can understand the feeling of seeing his lovelorn missives, written at midnight, just after seeing him or her, finally brought out in the broad daylight where everybody can see them. Young people should be very careful to whom they write love letters. Better say it with words and save the pricks, that come from a pen-point. As to the case mentioned, I cannot help wishing that Mr. Taylor had either burned Miss Normand's letters or returned them to her. Had he followed the wisdom of the great poet of his country, he would not have failed to do this. For Kipling has wisely put this way as the only way for a gentleman to follow: "If She have written a letter, delay not an instant, but burn it." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 16, 1922 SAN FRANCISCO BULLETIN Much of the most sensational matter has been, with more or less wisdom, suppressed or diluted, and much can never be printed in any family newspaper. One of the stars whose name has been brought into the case with regularity-- not Miss Normand--went so far as to threaten one of the newspapers with a libel suit but changed her mind when informed that a photographic copy of the letter that had been partly published, [3] was kept and would be exhibited in court should suit be brought. There will be no suit. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 18, 1922 HARTFORD COURANT A great many ways have been devised by means of which the average person may waste a lot of time, but we think the most perfect plan yet suggested is the deciphering of the code letters received by the late motion picture director William Desmond Taylor. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 18, 1922 TULSA TRIBUNE Some day there will be a law against the publication of love letters written by women. It is a brutal and needless expose of the weaker sex's emotionalism. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 21, 1922 Adela Rogers St. Johns L.A. EXAMINER Nobody can keep a lot of fool girls with blond curls from falling in love with a man. No one can keep them from writing notes to him, if they haven't been taught that love letters are the most dangerous things in the world to sign except checks. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 22, 1922 MEMPHIS NEWS SCIMITAR A whole lot depends on location. For instance X in algebra is said to represent the unknown quantity; on a greenback it has the voice of 10 silver bucks, or a hundred dimes. On a Hollywood perfumed note it puts you under suspicion--no matter what your chauffeur says. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 24, 1922 CINCINNATI TRIBUNE Of what significance is the fact that letters from Mary Miles Minter were found in one of the slain man's boots? Does this prove anything other than his boot was too large for his foot and that he had stuffed the toe a bit? * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * March 2, 1922 SEATTLE UNION-RECORD One movie stars writes love notes like a 13-year-old grammar school girl; another reads the POLICE GAZETTE. Where is this wonderful artistic taste that the movie people have been telling us about? * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * March 3, 1922 SACRAMENTO BEE In writing to a movie queen (or king) it is always well to refrain from expressions of love, and also not to sign your name, otherwise, in case of murder, detectives may nab you immediately, on suspicion, and publish to all the world your tender missives. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * March 18, 1922 Irma MOVIE WEEKLY Have you heard about how all the girls in Hollywood are rushing madly to get their letters back from their sweethearts old and new? Why, sweethearts away back as far as the third before the last are being begged for their letters! Just perfectly nice girls are as anxious as can be. Because, as one of them said to me--she's engaged to a film star--no matter how innocuous your letters may be, if you're in love with a man you're just bound to write mushy stuff that would look awfully silly in print. Who can tell when something might happen to him, and they might be using that goo stuff as evidence! * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 11, 1922 NEW YORK MAIL Certain tender missives found in the rooms of a man who was murdered in California are causing no end of trouble for the ladies who wrote them. Even though they may be nothing more than innocent expressions of pure affection, the authors doubtless are agonizing over the possibility that they may be read by a laughing public. It makes little difference that about 98 per cent of the adult readers have written love notes themselves. There is a curious quirk in the average mind that always regards a love letter--another's love letter, of course--as funny. Yet boys and girls go on writing them, and so do men and women, and every once in a while they keep turning up at awkward moments to plague the writers beyond measure. What, then! Shall people stop writing them? Heaven forbid! When love itself goes out of fashion, when moonlight and starshine cease to play pranks with the emotions, when a scented envelope loses its charm, when men are too cold to thrill and women too indifferent to please, when sense has outlawed sensibility, when all the Omars shall cling only to barren reason--then and not until then shall the love note be outlawed, without benefit of clergy. Discretion, to be sure, would prevent the sending of many a dainty confection of words, but who is Discretion that he should pretend to be a lover? It was of Discretion that Hafiz was thinking when, as Kipling translates him, he advises that a letter from "Her" should be burned, adding: "Tear it to pieces, O Fool, and the wind to her mate will return it." But just now the question is not of letters to any "Her" who has an obstreperous mate in the background. It was Emerson--or was it?--who advised one to walk ten miles before writing one letter. But that is nonsense. There is a better and safer way than that, if one must court safety. And that is to write the letter, to put one's soul into its composition, to write singing words fit for Philomel's melody--and then to tear it up without sending it. Frozen Horror February 8, 1922 LOUISVILLE COURIER-JOURNAL Moviedom's New Art Taylor, the Hollywood movie director, will not have died in vain if his death shall have taught some of the screen "stars" to act. Mary Miles Minter, who admits she wrote to Taylor scented notes laden with X's and "I love you--I love you--I love you," discovered, by looking into a mirror, that she could act when she heard of Taylor's murder. "It was terrible," says Mary. "I rushed at once to my mirror and looked at my face. I was appalled. I kept the expression and hurried to mama. " 'Mama,' I cried, 'did you ever see this expression on my face before?' " 'No,' she said. 'It is perfect frozen horror. You've never done it before.' " [4] Now if Mary can only keep that frozen horror in cold storage until she can get it on the screen in her next picture, movie fans may yet see on Mary's face something which, like Mary's mother, they never saw there before. And if Mary has been stirred to deep facial emotion by Taylor's taking off, is it not likely that many, many other screen stars were similarly stirred? Mary was only one of those stars whose orbits encircled Taylor. It may be that these others lacked Mary's thought to rush to mirrors and inspect their faces when they heard of Taylor's assassination: that they failed to grip the frozen horrors thus revealed and before they melted hurry away to mammas or other witnesses just as good. But no doubt they have learned a lesson from Mary and will be better prepared to improve their opportunity the next time one of their dear ones is snuffed out. Probably they could cut out the rush to mirrors, for do they not carry mirrors around with their powder rags, anyway; while as for mamma, to make sure of having her within reaching distance before the thaw, couldn't they declare a Pekingeses holiday and attach the leash to mamma? There would seem to be great possibilities of Mary's discovery how to acquire new facial expressions. In a free and easy colony like Hollywood it ought not be difficult to provide for the slaughter of some loved one whenever a star feels the need of a shock that will be good for a frozen horror or other similar tragic refrigeration. Moreover, this field for the renaissance, or origination, of the art of acting in moviedom which Miss Minter has opened up is by no means limited to the production of emotions of horror and grief. It should be even more fertile in products of joy, exultation and ecstasy. If a star could fill an icehouse with frozen horror for use in the films by having one of her lovers snickersneed, [5] she could lay in a yet more plentiful stock of joy by having one of her enemies kiboshed. And with its rivalries and jealousies, moviedom abounds even more in enemies than in lovers. None of its stars would ever be at a loss to pick out an enemy for the butcher whenever she felt the need of a boost of her joy emotions. The supply of enemies would last as long as moviedom lasted. There would be the rub. With such a system of stimulating acting in practice, how long would moviedom--Hollywood, at least--last? Might not Hollywood, by the incessant slaughter of lovers and enemies, ultimately be exterminated? Even so, there seem to be some people who would not be inconsolable for that. For instance, there is that Eastern moving picture magnate, Herbert Brenon, who thinks "it would be a jolly good thing if Hollywood were abolished" at once. [6] * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 10, 1922 LOUISVILLE COURIER-JOURNAL For the broadening of Mary Miles Minter's newly discovered art it is a pity that this twinkling screen star was not in rushing distance of a mirror so that she could have discovered what was the frozen expression on her face when she saw that Mabel Normand beat her to it and fainted dead away right there in front of the whole show at the Taylor funeral. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 12, 1922 JACKSON NEWS Mary's Horror For an original way of displaying deep emotion at the death of a friend, Mary Miles Minter wins the lace soup ladle. Poor Miss Minter could not tell how she felt until she saw her face. Even then she needed mama to tell her it was an emotion she had never "registered" before. It's fortunate the news didn't come while Mary Miles Minter was in the dark, for then she never would have known just how she did take it. The death of loved human beings has been a most fertile source of artistic expression. The poetry, prose, music and drama of the world would suffer irreparably if they were deprived of their eulogistic pieces. It remained for Miss Minter, however, to invent a new form of artistic eulogy--the frozen-horror movie face. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * March 19, 1922 LOUISVILLE COURIER-JOURNAL Bon Voyage, Mary! Dear Mary Miles Minter, who made famous the frozen-horror face, has sailed for Honolulu, Hong Kong and other points east. So far as can be learned, she has packed her emotions in her suitcase, fearing to leave them behind on her bureau. It's never safe to be separated long from one's emotions. While some of them are preserved by freezing, others are known to melt, disintegrate and decay. With her emotions, Mary Miles has placed her mirror. There they are side by side, so that when Mary tries on an emotion, she can see its effect immediately and thus find out just how she is feeling. For example, if she nestles in a quiet corner of the hurricane deck and is subjected to the blandishments of the flirts that haunt the seven seas, she should have her emotional kit by the side of her steamer chair. Otherwise, she'd be at a dead loss to react in the proper manner, being wholly ignorant of her feelings until she looks in the mirror. In this connection, a theory regarding this charming damsel has been conceived. It will be remembered that when the news of the death of her friend, William Desmond Taylor, was brought to her, she not only registered perfect frozen horror, but was able to carry the expression to her mamma and have it interpreted. It is said by close analysis of Mary Miles' makeup that the term "frozen" is not strictly accurate, but is merely used as a metaphor. It is said, further, in explanation of this gift of preserving an expression, that Mary Miles has no trouble at all in exercising it. Mary Miles, they say, is concrete from the neck upward and impressions upon such a skull last extraordinarily well. A pleasant voyage to Mary Miles! Untamed Hollywood February 5, 1922 Skye T. Errier CHICAGO TRIBUNE The American Occupation of Movieland Movieland, Southern California.--The marines have landed and have the situation well in hand. The devil dogs constitute the Army of Occupation of Movieland and will remain here until peace has been established and Movieland formally annexed to the United States. All bars have been closed and the marines are now raiding the peanut stands. No unpleasant incident occurred during the occupation except the burning of the beautiful library belonging to one of the native queens, consisting of two books, one by Nietzsche, the other by Freud, a telephone directory, and a copy of the Police Gazette. A large number of the chiefs and natives assembled this afternoon, and I read to them the provisions of the Volstead act, which they had never heard of before. They cheered vociferously until they discovered that it also applied to cocktails. I also read them the constitution of the United States, and they thought it was very pretty. They seem to be a good natured people, willing to obey our laws as soon as they find out what they are. A large number of the inhabitants have expressed the wish to go to America, and have offered to take the oath of allegiance, but as most of them are being held as witnesses to something or other, their requests could not be complied with. Some of the inhabitants are demanding a plebiscite, but I do not think that the claims of America to sovereignty on the ground that the country formerly belonged to the United States will be forcibly disputed. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 16, 1922 S. Kye Terrier BOSTON HERALD The American marines, who are now in complete possession of Movieland, report no further casualties. A drastic curfew law has been put in force and all the inhabitants of Movieland are required to be in their houses by 7 o'clock in the evening. This drastic rule caused much excitement, as most of the residents of this strange country were not in the habit of getting up until that hour unless they were posing in a picture. The provost marshal issued an announcement today that caused much comment. "The night," said the provost marshal, "is the time for sleeping." The natives of Movieland said they never heard of such an outlandish thing. The provost marshal also declared that February, March and April must be regarded as closed months for grouse, quail, directors, scenario writers, black bear, tourists and game of all kind. Whether or not these will be permitted to be shot in the future rests on Will Hays, the new governor-general of Movieland, who has not yet arrived. Movieland is fast becoming Americanized, and its annexation can be looked for in the near future. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 11, 1922 Arthur Baer NEW YORK AMERICAN Shooting Stars State of California is going bankrupt trying our moving picture actors for murder. They have started in to improve movies by shooting all movie actors. If your wife gets celluloid bug and wants to go to California for film career, don't waste money on railroad ticket. Keep her at home and shoot her yourself. Day in Hollywood opens up with close-up of jailhouse, cut-back to scene of crime and fade out of coroner's chariot. Latest artillery practice in Los Angeles is great break for one star now in Mr. Jail's house. California has had so many cannon parties that State has run out of witnesses. Therefore, they've got to let him off so he can serve as foreman of jury in this latest and more modern assassination. Old-time actors used to get flowers over footlights. Enthusiasts used to follow Booth, Bernhardt, Maude Adams with handful of flowers. Nowadays, friends of movie actors follow them with whole carriage full of blossoms. They may get plenty of blooms, buds and bouquets, but they never smell 'em. Hollywood doesn't take disarmament conference seriously. Let's go back to pie throwing stage again. If we have choice of embalmer's or baker's wagon, we'll take pastry limousine. Movie actors once roamed plains in countless numbers. But ruthless extermination will soon make 'em scarcer than moths on iceberg. Good actors are getting scarce. If Hollywood stars must have their matinee scenarios written by Krupp's, why don't they shoot their understudies? * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 16, 1922 NEW YORK POST Hollywood's Wilds to be Explored A voyage more hazardous, it is said, than the Traprock expedition to the South Seas will be started on Saturday, when the Sherwood-Connelly-Barton- Howard mission to the wilds of Hollywood sets sail from these shores on the steamship Ruth Alexander of the Admiral Line. The make-up of the expedition, it was announced today, would be Robert E. Sherwood, motion picture critic of Life, Marc Connelly, one of the two principal authors of "Dulcy"; Ralph Barton, the art-artist; and Sidney Howard the play-playwright. Going to Havana and then through the Panama Canal, the party will cruise up the coast of California to a point due west of the Los Angeles movie colony, where they will disembark and, with the aid of native guides, proceed inland. "We are fully aware of the risks we are taking," declared Chief Bob Sherwood of the expeditionary force today. "However, our minds are made up. We shall not return until we have found the answer to the much mooted question, 'What's all the shootin' for?' " According to one report, bullet-proof suits will be distributed as the explorers near their destination. "Among other things," added Chief Explorer Sherwood, "we are hopeful that our visit will be productive of a number of reforms. This is not merely the beginning of the See Hollywood First movement. If Hollywood is to be made safe for democracy it must get over its absurd idea of modesty, its chronic distaste of publicity. The inhabitants must come out in the open, give their names to the papers and not shrink like wild violet from the white light of the public gaze. We hope by our example to cure them. I trust I make myself clear." The expedition will return to civilization in about six weeks. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 17, 1922 Foster Ware NEW YORK POST Game Laws for New Hollywood According to news dispatches, one of the largest motion picture producers is about to found a new colony. For the good of the service, the following rules and regulations are proposed. (1) No shooting shall be permitted during business hours. (2) Persons contemplating acts of violence against leaders of the industry shall be required to serve due notice of their intentions, so that vacancies resulting therefrom may be filled with the least possible delay. (3) Use of loaded firearms for professional purposes is strictly forbidden except by William S. Hart, Tom Mix and William Farnum. (4) All stars shall consent to be frisked before and after attending social functions. (5) No alibis shall be allowed within the reservation unless accompanied by at least one eyewitness. (6) No murder shall be reported to the authorities until all those concerned have had opportunity to destroy incriminating evidence. (7) Lights out at 8 p.m. (8) After 8 o'clock all persons must be found in their homes, dead or alive. (9) No star shall be permitted to have more than twenty-five nor less than twelve accredited suitors in any given season. (10) No interview given to the press shall be considered valid unless preceded by the conventional "not guilty." (11) Deaths from natural causes are forbidden within the reservation unless absolutely necessary. Frank Mayo vs. The Press February 8, 1922 CHICAGO HERALD-EXAMINER Wants Colony Burned (New York)--"Burn it up! The Hollywood film colony is a pernicious influence. Scatter it, abolish it--something ought to be done. Burn it up--I say." Frank Mayo, screen and stage star and a resident of Hollywood as a member of the Universal Company, made this statement here today. "If I express myself bitterly, I am expressing what every self- respecting actor in Hollywood feels," he said. "The best thing that could happen to moving pictures would be to abolish the Hollywood colony. "Why don't we actors who have respect for our art and ourselves get together and demand a 'clean up' of the undesirables? What good would that do? You forget that some of the biggest stars in the business are among the undesirables. They have been raised to positions for which they are not fitted. They receive enormous salaries. They haven't the brains or desire to improve themselves and they spend their money like drunken sailors. They make us all suffer. It isn't fair, and I, for one, resent it." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 9, 1922 LOS ANGELES HERALD Hollywood Up In Arms At Frank Mayo An avalanche of indignation followed today in the wake of the statement credited to Frank Mayo, film actor, in a New York dispatch yesterday, in which the Hollywood motion picture colony was severely criticized. Publication of Mayo's interview brought instant protest. The actor's ears must have "burned" continually since yesterday if the superstition holds good, for all Hollywood "panned" him unmercifully. For the moment he was as big a subject for conversation as was the Taylor murder. Mayo's unexpected attack on the Hollywood motion picture colony was described as "ravings" and "an example of the lengths to which some notoriety- seeking individuals will go to get their name in the paper." Scores of picture celebrities and studio executives strongly condemn Mayo's act. At every studio protests were heard. Mayo recently figured in a sensational divorce suit. As one prominent star put it, "Persons who live in glass houses should not throw stones." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 16, 1922 Paul Smith, U.S.N. OAKLAND TRIBUNE (letter to the editor) A Sailor's Protest While reading a copy of your edition of February 7 we Gobs happened to notice the story of Mr. Frank Mayo, entitled "Burning--Hollywood--Scatter It." He used the expression his class spent their money "like a drunken sailor." We believe this to be a very poor way of comparison. Seems to be some mistake, or brainless judgment on his part. When, where did he get the phrase? We do not know his position during the war, but only as a movie man. But I take it that he was in no service, or he would give his title a second thought. I would suggest that Mr. Mayo and all other actors live on navy pay awhile and see how drunk they could get. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 11, 1922 SAN FRANCISCO CALL-POST A sweeping denial of an interview credited to him and in which he was quoted in dispatches from New York as scathingly scoring the Hollywood film colony recommending that it be "wiped out" is contained in a telegram received today from Frank Mayo, motion picture star. A storm of criticism followed in the wake of the reputed interview with Mayo. From various sources in Hollywood he was classed as "an actor seeking cheap notoriety." Several organizations, including well known film stars, were said to be contemplating action against him. Among these organizations are the Motion Picture Directors' Association, the American Society of Cinematographers, the Assistant Directors' Association and the Writers' Guild. Mayo, charging that he was misquoted in New York, wired today as follows: "Have just seen what was sent to California papers purporting to come from me. I never saw such a distorted story in my life. It is true I talked to a reporter about my personal appearances in New York, said I did not live in Hollywood, but I thought it needed more amusements. Absolutely nothing more. Was thunderstruck and heart broken at way personal talk was used. I have never made any statement against anybody or any place in my life. Please make this denial as strong as possible. Hollywood suits me and I am coming back to California and my friends in the profession with the same feeling I always entertained." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * March 12, 1922 CHICAGO TRIBUNE Frank Mayo spent several hours in town last week on his way from coast to coast. He wasn't a bit happy. He says he was misquoted in a certain newspaper, and as a result the world's down on him. He was quoted as saying that Hollywood should be cleaned up--or burned up--or something, WHICH, he says, he never asserted. There may have been wild parties, he admits, but he never was in any of 'em and never saw anything of the kind. But the picture people think he's done 'em dirt, and they haven't hesitated to let him know it. Moreover, deplored poor Mr. Mayo, he got in bad with the navy, they having read that he had said the Hollywood folk spent their money "like drunken sailors." "I've been writing lots of letters," Mr. Mayo said mournfully, "and I'm beginning to get myself squared." This husky star has been in New York. Circumstances sound like maybe a little birdie told him he'd better hie him to the woods and keep real still for a long, long time! Tall Tales #1: Walter Underwood February 10, 1922 LOS ANGELES EXAMINER A man believed to be an important witness, if not an actual conspirator in the murder of William Desmond Taylor, is in secret custody of the police at Topeka, Kansas. He admits that he was an intimate acquaintance of Edward F. Sands, fugitive valet-secretary to the slain motion picture director, and attended many orgies of women, liquor and "dope" in the Taylor bungalow. Further admissions indicate that he was with Sands the night of the mysterious murder and that two days after it he embezzled more than $1000 from the Pacific Electric Railroad in Los Angeles to effect the escape of the pair. The suspect was taken off a Santa Fe train at Topeka, which left Los Angeles Monday evening. He took his arrest calmly. "Well, you've got me," he remarked to Sheriff Robert Miler, who boarded the train and grabbed him, "and you've got a big one." Then he admitted his name was Walter Underwood and that he was employed by the Los Angeles interurban line until his departure. "What made you depart?" he was asked. "Well, I embezzled more than $1000 and had to go," he said. "But my father is worth $300,000 and he will get me out of this scrape." "What do you know about the Taylor murder?" asked Sheriff Miler. "I knew Sands and Taylor well," he said. "I have been on many parties at the Taylor bungalow, where Mabel Normand and other actresses were present. (Miss Normand, seen at her home here last night, denied ever knowing Underwood or ever having heard his name.) "In fact, I was on a wild party with Sands a night or two--well, it was so wild and long drawn out I don't recall exactly when it ended." "Would the party have been in progress the night of the murder?" "Well--say, are you trying to hook me for that murder?" he suddenly exclaimed, and refused to talk any more. The man admitted that he was acquainted with both William Desmond Taylor and Sands, and saw Taylor a week before his death. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 10, 1922 RICHMOND NEWS LEADER "It was a woman who did it," Underwood said when questioned about the murder. "I know nothing about it, but it was jealousy that caused it." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 11, 1922 TOPEKA CAPITAL That the celebrated movie actresses whom he declares took part in the wild parties at the home of the murdered director never used their real names, but were known by nicknames, such as May, Kitty, Babe, or some other similar pet name, was the declaration of Underwood. "The women I met at Taylor's house were never formally introduced to me as Miss Normand, or Miss Minter," Underwood declared. "Then how did you meet them?" he was asked. "Didn't some one, a mutual acquaintance, introduce you?" "No, we just went in, and the rest of the party were there, and during the evening I would hear someone call one of the actresses Kitty, or something like that. If I had occasion to talk to one I would apply my own pet name to her." "Then how did you know that some girl whom you met at this fellow Taylor's house was really Miss Mabel Normand or Miss Mary Miles Minter?" "Oh, I guess I know them when I see them," he replied. "I don't need to be told who anyone is around there." "Aren't you just trying to kid the public and get a lot of fun out of this Taylor and Sands story?" "No kidding, I really knew them. Both of them." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 10, 1922 CHICAGO AMERICAN (Topeka)--Undersheriff Carlson said, "Underwood knew both Sands and Taylor and he told me that, from what he knew of the latter, he suspects a woman committed the murder. "Underwood said he belonged to one of the so-called 'Oriental' clubs of which Taylor was also a member. My prisoner informs me that he has attended parties at the club, and that he several times attended them with Taylor and others from the moving picture colony at Hollywood. "Did he tell you anything of what went on at those parties?" the undersheriff was asked. "Is the man a drug addict?" "No," the undersheriff replied, "Underwood is not a 'dope.' He told me he was present only at 'open house' parties of the club, and that the worst excesses he ever witnessed were those committed by men and women who became intoxicated, or who stupefied themselves with drugs, which, he said, they took without embarrassment in the presence of other guests. "It is a question how much the man really knows. From his conversation he either knows something, or he is just seeking publicity." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 10, 1922 LOS ANGELES RECORD The theory that Walter Underwood knew Edward F. Sands or had any knowledge of the crime was flouted by W. T. Maddex, Underwood's step-father. "The boy was a lover of notoriety," he said. "I am certain that he never knew Sands or Taylor either. He would sometimes tell his mother in an off-hand way that he had met some of her friends or acquaintances on the street and it would later develop there was no truth in his story." According to Maddex, Underwood was a lover of adventure. Maddex admitted that authorities had made the right arrest in connection with the embezzlement charge. "We have both told Walter above all things else to be honest," Maddex said seriously. "I have many times heard his mother tell him that." Maddex, although he has the utmost confidence and friendship of Pacific Electric officials, by virtue of the fact that he was formerly manager of the Redondo line, said he would make no move to soften his step-son's punishment. "I had concluded that since Walter is 31 years old he is old enough to understand fully what he did. If he was let off this time, it might mean only a repetition of the offense." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 11, 1922 LOS ANGELES EXAMINER Walter Underwood frequently had recourse to certain little "pills" to quiet his shaking nerves while employed as an assistant cashier at the Pacific Electric Railway ticket office. This was made known by friends and co-workers of Underwood yesterday. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 12, 1922 TOPEKA CAPITAL A continual examination of Underwood yesterday failed to throw any light on the Taylor murder mystery. It is doubtful, Sheriff Miler said, if Underwood really knew either Taylor or Sands, although he has insisted all along that he did. When asked point blank yesterday if he would know Taylor or Sands if they were in the room, Underwood just laughed and refused to admit or deny anything. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 13, 1922 TOPEKA CAPITAL Underwood Is a Fake, Local Officers Believe That Walter Scott Underwood is telling his story of acquaintances with William Desmond Taylor and Edward F. Sands to win notoriety, is the belief of Sheriff Miler and other officers. "I did not put any stock in his story after I caught him in a lie the night I took him from the train," Miler said. "After he had told me he had not been in his stepfather's home in the last three weeks, he told a story about his being taken to his stepfather's home in Taylor's car less than two weeks ago. When I called him on it, he told me I had listened too closely to his story. He quit talking about Sands and Taylor then." Officers from Los Angeles probably will arrive today to take Underwood back to California. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 28, 1922 SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE (Los Angeles)--Underwood said Taylor lived in constant terror, apparently of unseen enemies who menaced him. According to Underwood, he met Sands at Seventh and Broadway on the day following the death of Taylor. "Well, I'm heading south. I probably won't see you again," Underwood says Sands told him. "Where are you going?" Underwood says he asked. "Probably Mexico--possibly South America," Sands replied, according to Underwood. Underwood said: "Some weeks previous to the murder I was sitting alone in a downtown cafe when Taylor and a party of friends entered and took the table next to mine. He was in a jovial mood, and within the next thirty minutes, observing that I was alone, invited me to join his group. I accepted. "In the party were a number of women I recognized as having seen on the motion picture screen--women that were known the world over as actresses of the first degree. I will not give their names, because I do not wish to involve any of them in this unpleasant affair. "These same women, however, I saw on numerous occasions when I was a guest at the Taylor bungalow on Alvarado. I have my own theory regarding the slaying and the connection of these people with it, but as to this angle I have nothing to say." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * February 28, 1922 DENVER POST (Los Angeles)--...Undersheriff Eugene Biscailuz, informed of these statements, interviewed Underwood in his cell in the city prison and dismissed him from consideration. "He's having a lot of fun," Biscailuz said. (to be continued) ***************************************************************************** NEXT ISSUE: Wallace Smith: February 8, 1922 "The Humor of a Hollywood Murder" Part 5: The Kidnaping of Henry Peavey; Doug and Mary Run the Gauntlet; The Fourth Estate; Psychic Visions ***************************************************************************** NOTES: [1]Mabel Normand's letters (dubbed "Blessed Baby" letters because that was allegedly Taylor's term of endearment for her) vanished from Taylor's home until they were discovered in the toe of a boot. They were never published. Three of Mary Miles Minter's letters to Taylor were published, including the famous "I love you" letter. [2]These were popular stage plays at that time. [3]This is an obvious reference to the third published letter written by Mary Miles Minter. [4]This was originally reported in the dispatches of Edward Doherty. [5]"snickersnee"-- large curved sword, from The Mikado. [6]See NEW YORK TIMES (February 6, 1922). ***************************************************************************** For more information about Taylor, see WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow Press, 1991) Back issues of Taylorology are available via Gopher or FTP at uglymouse.css.itd.umich.edu in the directory pub/Zines/Taylorology