Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Wednesday, October 1, 2025
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Monday, February 19, 1917. General Frederick Funston dies.
And with his death, it truly seemed that an era had really passed.
Funston was born in Ohio in 1865 and in some ways did not show early promise in life. He was a very small and slight (at first) man, standing only 5'5" and weighing only 120 lbs upon reaching adulthood. He aspired as a youth to the military, after growing up in Kansas, but he was rejected by West Point due to his small size. He thereafter attended the University of Kansas for three years but did not graduate. Following that he worked for awhile for the Santa Fe Railroad before becoming a reporter in Kansas City in 1890.
Only after a year he left reporting and went to work for the Department of Agriculture as a researcher in an era when that was an adventuresome occupation. In 1896, however, Funston left that to join the Cuban insurrection against Spain in Cuba.
Two Battalions of the Wyoming Infantry were to be on their way home, the Boomerang reported.
And Theodore Roosevelt was planning to reprise his Spanish American War role if the US went to war with Germany. Well. . . .Woodrow Wilson might have a say in that.
And the situation in Mexico was apparently getting complicated by a private body of cowboy militia crossing the border in reprisal for the recent death of their fellows.
Finally, the Boomerang reported the situation with Germany as "hopeful".
News came on this Monday (in 1917) that indeed, Wyoming and Colorado state troops were headed home, or at least to Ft. D. A. Russell.
A general with a Cheyenne connection, John J. Pershing, now a national hero and the recent commander of the Punitive Expedition, came out for universal military training. That was big movement, of course, at the time.
And John B. Kendrick was on his way to the U.S. Senate, finishing up his time as Governor by signing the bills that had passed the recent legislative session.
Miss Elanor Eakin Carr's engagement to Howard P. Okie, son of J. B. Okie of Lost Cabin, the legendary sheepman of the Lost Cabin area. He'd take over his father's mercantile interest that year, but the marriage would not be a long one. He died in 1920.
Thursday, December 3, 2015
Friday, December 3, 1915. Mexican border situation serious.
The Casper paper termed the situation on the border "serious".
The retreating British Indian Army arrived at Kut, Iraq.
The British reinforced Matruh, Egypt, to guard against the Senussis.
Last edition:
Thursday, December 2, 1915. A Villa massacre.
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Wednesday, November 3, 1915. Wilson considers ordering troops into Mexico.
President Wilson was considering sending troops into Mexico.
The Austro Hungarians defeated the Italians at the Isonzo River.
The first aircraft with a wheeled undercarriage to take off from a ship did so when Royal Naval Air Service Flight Sub-Lieutenant Fowler flew a Bristol Scout from HMS Vindex.
Last edition:
Tuesday, November 2, 1915. The nighttime attacks at Agua Prieta.
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Wednesday, May 6, 1914. No votes for British women.
The House of Lords rejected the Women's Suffrage Bill. The vote was 104 to 60. A person has to wonder if the recent terror strikes by suffragist had a negative impact.
Cheyenne revealed that Gen. Funson was authorized to "extend his lines in Mexico", by which readers learned the paper was referring to Vera Cruz, not anywhere on the border.
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