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Schaber’s Cafeteria and Einar Petersen

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schaber_cafeteria

This remarkable postcard postmarked 1941 of Schaber’s Cafeteria at 620 S. Broadway, showing an Einar Petersen mural,  has been listed on EBay at Buy It Now for $6.99.


The Schaber Cafeteria at 620 S. Broadway was built in 1928 by the Schaber Cafeteria Co. (Alfred T. Schaber, president) on the site of Platt Music Co. with an adjoining See’s Candy at 622 S. Broadway and a Bellin’s Tie Shop at 618 S. Broadway. The cafeteria could serve 10,000 people a day, The Times said.

Hollywood Heights: Mary Mallory on Einar Petersen

620 S. Broadway
620 S. Broadway as shown by Google Street View.

schaber_cafeteria
Einar Petersen mural at Schaber’s Cafeteria, 620 S. Broadway.


The cafeteria, with the motto “A good place to eat, a good place to meet”  opened in April 1928 as what The Times called “the most up-to-date cafeteria in America.” Schaber’s had a Spanish decor and the 10-piece Pryor Moore orchestra played during the dinner hour, featuring “Spanish selections,” The Times said. It also had a Sturtevant “air washer” “which purifies every cubic foot of air,” The Times said.

Nov. 26, 1930, Schaber's

May 14, 1946, Schaber's

In 1946, Schaber’s was sold to Forum Cafeterias for $517,000.

April 2, 1947, Cafeteria In 1956, the cafeteria altered and “modernized” the facade, and added a marquee, The Times said.

And in a footnote to history, in 1949, James Earl Ray, the man convicted of killing the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., committed his first crime by trying to steal a typewriter from the office of the Forum Cafeteria, Times staff writer Jerry Cohen wrote in 1968.

In 1973, The Times reported that the Forum Cafeteria had been acquired by Consolidated Services Inc., giving the address as 680 S. Broadway.

A 1985 story by Ruth Ryon about Petersen’s daughter Norma says that the business, by then called the Broadway Cafeteria, had been converted into a Carl’s Jr. She says that a panorama “blending fantasy and Spanish history on three walls” had been “stretched and framed into two paintings.”

Schaber’s remained a Carl’s Jr. into at least 1987, according to the Los Angeles Public Library’s online directories of Los Angeles.



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