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Downtown LA Notary Downtown LA Notaries serves downtown Los Angeles and surrounding areas. Whether you are in Santa Monica, East Los Angeles or anywhere in between, give Downtown LA Notaries a call and let us prove to you we are the industry leader in all things notary. Si se habla español. Services BUSINESS ENTITIES Corporations Limited Liability Companies Limited Partnerships General Partnerships Limited Liability Partnerships Non-Profit Trademarks and Service Marks Miscellaneous Filings Fictitious Business Names DBA – Doing Business As FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME (FBN) STATEMENT A fictitious business name, assumed name, or DBA (short for “doing business as”), referred to as “trading as” in the US, allows you to legally do business as a particular name at minimal cost, and without having to create an entirely new business entity. You can accept payments, advertise, and otherwise present yourself under that name. AUTHENTICATION (APOSTILLES & CERTIFICATIONS) Downtown LA Notaries provides authentication of public official signatures on documents to be used outside the United States of America. The country of destination determines whether the authentication is an Apostille or Certification. TRADEMARK or SERCIE MARK What is a trademark or service mark? A trademark is a word, phrase, symbol or design, or a combination of words, phrases, symbols or designs, that identifies and distinguishes the source of the goods of one party from those of others. A service mark is the same as a trademark, except that it identifies and distinguishes the source of a service rather than a product. Do Trademarks, Copyrights and Patents protect the same things? No. Trademarks, copyrights and patents all differ. A copyright protects an original artistic or literary work; a patent protects an invention. Certified Translations Spanish to English & English to Spanish Birth Certificate translation Marriage Certificate translation Diploma translation Academic Transcript translation Adoption Papers translation Naturalization papers translation Driver License translation Immigration Documents translation Divorce Decree translation Will translation Death Certificate translation Letters of Reference translation Financial Statements translation Certificate of Moral Character translation Translation of Depositions Apostille Translations Translation of Interrogatories and much more… Additional Services Provided Los Angeles Notary_r2_c2DIVORCE, WILLS, ESTATE PLANNING, POWER OF ATTORNEY, EVICTIONS, HOMESTEAD DEEDS, COUNTY CLERK RECORDER FILINGS, UCC FILINGS, Marriage Licensing / Ceremony, County Clerk Recorder Filing, Incorporate, LLC’s, Fictitious Business Names, DBA, S-Corp, C-corp, Non Profit
Pershing Square is a public park in downtown Los Angeles, California, one square block in size, bounded by 5th Street to the north, 6th Street to the south, Hill Street to the east, and Olive Street to the west. It lies atop a large underground parking garage.History19th centuryIn the 1850s, the location was used as a camp by settlers from outside the Pueblo de Los Angeles, which lay to the northeast around the Our Lady Queen of the Angels' church, the Los Angeles Plaza, and present-day Olvera Street. Surveyors drew the site as 10 individual plots of land, but in practicality it was a single 5acre parcel. Canals distributing water from the Zanja Madre were adjacent. In 1866 the site was dedicated as a public square by Mayor Cristobal Aguilar; it was called La Plaza Abaja, or "The Lower Plaza." At some point the owner of a nearby beergarden, German immigrant George "Roundhouse" Lehman, planted small native Monterey cypress trees, fruit trees, and flowering shrubs in the park and maintained them until his death in 1882.In 1867, St. Vincent's College, present-day Loyola Marymount University, was situated across the street, and so the park informally became known as St. Vincent's Park. In 1870, it was officially named Los Angeles Park. In 1886 it was renamed 6th Street Park, and it redesigned with an "official park plan" by Frederick Eaton. In the early 1890s it was renamed Central Park. During this period a bandstand pavilion was added for concerts and orators. The plantings became sub-tropically lush, and the park became a shady oasis and an outdoor destination. In 1894 the park was used as the staging area for the annual crowning of the queen of 'La Fiesta de Los Angeles.
The James Oviatt Building, commonly referred to as The Oviatt Building, is an Art Deco highrise in Downtown Los Angeles located at 617 S. Olive Street, half a block south of 6th St. and Pershing Square. In 1983, the Oviatt Building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places. It is also designated as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument.The building is named after James Zera Oviatt (born in Farmington, Utah in 1888) who, in 1909, came from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles to work as a window dresser at C.C. Desmond's Department Store. In 1912, Mr. Oviatt and a colleague, hat salesman Frank Baird Alexander, launched their partnership in men’s clothing as the Alexander & Oviatt haberdashery, at 209 West Fourth Street in downtown Los Angeles. Their 'silent partner' was Frank Shaver Allen, a prominent (and wealthy) architect whose career had been destroyed by a sex scandal several years earlier.During annual summer buying trips to Europe, James Oviatt found stylish clothing to bring back to his prospering Los Angeles store. With the emergence of French Art Deco in the 1920s, Mr. Oviatt found the architectural style that would embody the interior design of his 1928 James Oviatt Building and its penthouse.The Oviatt Building was designed by the Los Angeles architectural firm of Walker & Eisen. Excavation for the Oviatt Building's construction was begun in August 1927; the building was completed in May 1928. Its furnishings included a 12-ton illuminated glass cornice and glass arcade ceiling by architect Ferdinand Chanut and glassmaker Gaëtan Jeannin. René Lalique designed and created the molded glass elevator door panels, front and side doors, chandeliers, and a large panel clock. Many tons of 'Napoleon' marble and a massive, three-faced tower clock with chimes (manufactured by the pioneering electric clockmaker, Ateliers Brillié Frères ) were imported from France.
Live music and dancing on selected Sundays or special Fridays or Saturday nights. Check the schedule for info and tickets: http://CicadaClub.com/schedule With the grandeur of a classic Hollywood musical from the thirties, The Cicada Restaurant and Club is a most unique experience that transports you back in time to the glamorous days of Hollywood's golden age of nightclubs. Featuring the finest dance orchestras and entertainment, The Cicada Restaurant and Club is unlike any night on the town you have ever experienced. Situated in the famed Art Deco Oviatt building, downtown Los Angeles' historic Lalique palace, The Cicada Restaurant and Club is a place fitting for experiencing an elegant romantic evening. Originally built as a top-of-the-line haberdashery in 1928, The Cicada Restaurant and Club retains much of the original design that the French designers and artisans of the time created. This spacious nightclub features fine dining on the main floor as well as the mezzanine that overlooks the entire club, an Art Deco mezzanine bar and lounge plus patio seating in the forecourt lobby. No setting in the entire city is more spectacular. The opulent dining and showroom, with giant old-growth oak columns that feature pairs of angels holding bells and gold-leaf ceilings, compliment the fine vintage entertainment and patrons dressed in their elegant evening attire.