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1919-1994                                  VIGILANCE FOREVER -           75 years of The Signal                                              9

       ■ The 1920s



                  oann  aon









       Newhall Signal

       tested its new


       wings in 1920s



       By CAROL ROCK
       Signal staff writer

               1920s  were  characterized  by
       The
            historian A.B. Perkins as a decade
            when  "nothing  much  happened"
       outside of the St.  Francis Dam disaster
       and the "Buffalo Tom" Vernon train rob-
       bery.
         The Signal was still  a fledgling,  get-
       ting used to its wings and townspeople.
       Spaces between stories were often filled
       with large ads reading, "Boost Newhall,"
       editorials  called people  who  didn't get
       involved in their community ''flat tires"
       and the tops of pages carried the slogans,
       "The  Newspaper  With  A  Backbone,"
       and, "For Each Other, Not Against Each
       Other."
         The  Signal  was  far  from  perfect.  It
       didn't have  the  date  on  every  page  or                                                                     Photos courtesy of SCV Historical Society
       even  page  numbers.  There  were  typos   Was it a sign of things to come?  Even  in  1929, there was an occasional  traffic jam in Saugus for events such
       and  sometimes pages  ran upside down   as the annual  rodeo.  Here, motorists  crowd the street  lined by  Saugus  Cafe  and  the Saugus  Station  (left).
       -  or completely  blank.  But the  paper   Below, students of 1926 pose in front of Soledad School, established in  1890 in  present-day Canyon Country.
       always had strong support from the com-
       munity.                             life unto  death."  Obituaries  always  ran
         They sold all  kinds  of things  at The  on the  front  page,  never  on the inside,
       Signal  office,  such  as  Brunswick  and cards of thanks from bereaved fami-
       records, fuse plugs, note pads and school  lies commonly accompanied them.
       pads,  cards  and  "No  Shooting  or   There  were  three  different  editorial
       Hunting"  signs.  The  Signal  office  was  regimes  in  the  1920s,  starting  with
       where people came to register to vote. It  Edward Brown,  founder  of the  Signal.
       was  the  area's  printing  shop  and  was  Upon  his  death  in  1920,  his  widow
       pretty proud of its work, according to an  Blanche  Brown  took  the  reins  and
       ad  from  September  1924:  "W WAnted brought in Thornton Doelle as her assis-
       Your  Printing  Business.  If  We  Can't  tant. Blanche's papers were full of news,
       Please You DON'T COME AGAIN!"       the society column ran on the front page
         Humility  wasn't  politically  correct  and Thornton, whose real job was with
       then.                               the  Forest  Service,  wrote  several
         But the  pages reflect a gentler time.  columns  and  poems.  In  addition,  they
       People  didn't  always  die  in the  paper;  occasionally  ran  a  column  called
       rather,  they  were  "called  to  their  "Peanut  Pietro,"  written  totally  in
       reward,"  "met their  maker"  or "passed  Mexican slang.  Readers'  tolerance  was
       away." The Signal also shared a lot more  certainly different then.
       details,  in  melodramatic  style;  of just   Newspaper ownership apparently did
       how someone made their crossing to the  not  provide  enough  of  a  Ii ving  for .
       Great  Beyond.  And  we  mourned  as  a  Blanche, as  she sold insurance through-  lessee  and  editor.  He  filled  the  pages  to  Outdoor  Life,")  "Boquets,"  and  a
       family.  For  the  death  of  President  out 1924 to supplement her income. (We  with  graphics,  poetry  and  colorful  short-lived  scandal  column  entitled
       Warren G. Harding in August 1923, The  know from the  ad that ran consistently  columns,  like  "Soledad  Snapshots,"  'They Tell Me," bordered by the striking
       Signal wrote, 'Then came the sad news  on the back page of the paper.)   ''Porcupine Quills (Extracted Painlessly  Navajo pattern later known as swastikas.
       of a  relapse  which  severed  the  tender   In January  1925,  while  Blanche still  from  Live  Porcupines,")  "Pine  Tree   He was a colorful editorial writer, tak-
       cord which holds us from passing from  owned  the  paper,  Doelle  took  over  as Needles (Pointed Paragraphs Pertaining
                                                                                                                               Please see 1920s, page 10
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