Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Monday, September 28, 1914.
Sunday Morning Scene

From Churches of the West: Cathedral of the Madeline, Salt Lake City Utah: where there is more on the same..
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Sunday, September 27, 1914. Cossack barbarity.
German forces forced back the French around the River Somme near Albert.
Belgian volunteers encountered German troops at Buggenhout, but retreated in the end to Mol.
The Russians forced back the Germans at Osowiec Fortress.
Cossacks attacked Jewish residents in Lwów, causing 40 civilian casualties.
Last edition:
Saturday, September 26, 1914. FTC created.
Friday, September 26, 2014
Saturday, September 26, 1914. FTC created.
The Federal Trade Commission was established by the Federal Trade Commission Act.
Modern populists probably regard it as government overreach, as they seemingly think everything is in their ignorance.
Belgian infantry and cavalry attempted to cut off the retreating German Landwehr but failed to do so at Buggenhout.
German South West African troops defeated troops of the Union of South Africa at the Battle of Sandfontein in Namibia.
Last edition:
Friday, September 25, 1914. Battle of Buggenhout.
Friday Farming: Sheepherder, 1940s
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Student Revolt in Jefferson County, Colorado
Well, in part, getting a walk out rolling in nice weather probably isn't as hard as it might seem, but beyond that the protests are focused on the following, according to the Denver Post:
Community members are angry about an evaluation-based system for awarding raises to educators and a proposed curriculum committee that would call for promoting "positive aspects" of the United States.I'm not sure what an "evaluation based system for awarding raises to educators" actually means. That's vague enough that, without further explanaion, it'd be hard to know what they're talking about really. As for the curriculum, the post reports the following:
The curriculum proposal, crafted by board member Julie Williams, calls for a nine-member panel to "review curricular choices for conformity to JeffCo academic standards, accuracy and omissions," and present information accurately and objectively.
Interesting how this has worked. The students apparently are offended and feel that they're going to be fed propaganda, and are reacting. So, accidentally, the materials are resulting in civil disorder and social strife.
Williams' proposal calls for instructional material presenting "positive aspects" of U.S. heritage that "promote citizenship, patriotism, essentials and benefits of the free enterprise system, respect for authority and respect for individual rights." Materials should not, it says, "encourage or condone civil disorder, social strife or disregard of the law."
Logic would or should dictate that students just get the straight scoop on stuff, whatever that is, science, history, or whatever. In recent years that has always been the case, on the political right or the political left. At least in Jefferson County, students appear to have taken note to some extent.
Of course, the nice weather doesn't hurt either.
Friday, September 25, 1914. Battle of Buggenhout.
The Belgians launched an offensive at Buggenhout, near Antwerp.
French forces captured the German fort at Kousséri, German Cameroon.
Oregon's Pendleton Roundup was on.
Last edition:
Tuesday, September 22, 1914. A big day for the German Navy.
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Some Gave All: Sharp, Franklin, Taylor, Doe, and Kelly, and the b...
Holscher's Hub: Competing modes of transportation.
Holscher's Hub: Mystery Plant
And what if Ireland. . . ?
As everyone knows, Scotland voted yesterday to keep on being a member of the United Kingdom, effectively keeping the United Kingdom as a entity. Without Scotland, no matter what it called itself, the country that was the United Kingdom would really be England. Indeed, in some ways that was the point of Scot's separatist. England has the dominant political and economic role in the United Kingdom, although perhaps a bit oddly in recent years, Scotland effectively has home rule on most things, and a vote in the English Parliament, while England lacks a vote in the Scottish Parliament.
Mid Week At Work: WPA Poster
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
At war with ISIL
The Big Speech: Socrates on Youth
Young people nowadays love luxury; they have bad manners and contempt for authority. They show disrespect for old people and love silly talk in place of exercise. They no longer stand up when older people enter the room; they contradict their parents, talk constantly in front of company, gobble their food and tyrannize their teachers
Monday, September 22, 2014
Tuesday, September 22, 1914. A big day for the German Navy.
The U-9 sank three British armored cruisers in the North Sea. The SMS Emden bombarded Madras, India. The SMS Scharnhorst and Gneisenau entered the port of Papeete, Tahiti, and sank the French gunboat Zélée and freighter Walkure.
Royal Naval Air Service No. 3 Squadron based at Antwerp, Belgium, attacked German airship hangars at Cologne and Düsseldorf, Germany. No serious damages was inflicted. It was the first British air raid on Germany.
Last edition:
Monday, September 21, 1914. Edges of the war.
The Big Picture: Fort Marion, St. Augustine Florida.
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Episode 49: Vikings Among the English and French | The History of English Podcast
Fascinating episode.
Monday, September 21, 1914. Edges of the war.
German forces in German New Guinea surrendered to the Australians.
The Germans laid siege to Osowiec Fortress in Poland.
The French took Ukoko in Neukamerun (now Gabon) in a naval landing.
Last edition:
Sunday, September 20, 1914. The Irish Nationalist Volunteers.
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Lex Anteinternet: Pabst, Schlitz and Colt 45 to get Russian owner - ...
While I posted my first entry in jest, this does bring back to mind an earlier post, which mentioned how many local breweries there used to be. In short, there were vast numbers. And there are starting to be vast numbers again. Denver Colorado and the surrounding region seems to introduce a new brewery per week. Seriously, there's something like well over 100 small breweries in Colorado now, just in the Denver region.
But there were also a lot of large breweries making regional nor nationally distributed brews in the late 19th and for most of the 20th Centuries. Budweiser is the best known example, but Pabst was another, having a major market share in its day.
Well, through the process of globalization and consolidation, the number of these companies has grown smaller. Their brand names are still there in many (but certainly not all) cases. Budweiser, Pabst, etc., are still around. But they're part of bigger outfits. Budweiser belongs to a Belgian alcohol concern. Pabst will now belong to a Russian one.
This is simple, and global, economics, but it also brings to mind our earlier discussion on distributist economics. Here, however, local breweries exhibiting the principle of subsidarity are plentiful, and some of them have grown in size themselves, repeating the original histories of Pabst and Budweiser.
Sunday, September 20, 1914. The Irish Nationalist Volunteers.
John Redmond called on the Irish Republican Irish Volunteers to volunteer for British service, which most did.
Irish enlistment in the British Army in the Great War was large-scale, as it would prove to be again in World War Two. Enlistees in the British forces received little recognition after the war, however, as the Anglo Irish War and following independence tainted it.
Ottoman general Essad Pasha Toptani organized an armed force of 10,000 men to invade Albania, having received the support from Serbia and Italy to do so.
The German cruiser SMS Königsberg sank the British cruiser HMS Pegasus at the Battle of Zanzibar.
Last edition:
Friday, September 18, 1914. The Irish government and two acts.
Friday, September 19, 2014
Pabst, Schlitz and Colt 45 to get Russian owner - MarketWatch
The Russians owning Pabst?
What is the world coming to?
Wyoming Brand Lard
A lard can, depicting lard that was packed at my family's packing house in Casper Wyoming, before we owned it.
This must have been a brand name that the prior owner used, probably in the 1930s, maybe in the 1920s.
Interesting to see this. I don't even think of lard being packed by a local company, and of course they sold regionally so it wasn't really local, but still, interesting glimpse into history, both regional and personal.
Scotland votes No.
The United Kingdom of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will continue to be. As was really self evident, a "Yes" vote for independence would have meant the end of the United Kingdom, leaving it effectively the country of England with two much smaller nationalities appended to it.
Good for the majority of Scottish voters, who recognized that it is their country, and in the modern world, a Scottish separation from the United Kingdom would not have made political, national, historical, or economic, good sense.
Friday Farming: Fall Wheat
Here's How Young Farmers Looking For Land Are Getting Creative : The Salt : NPR
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Computerization, Transportation, Globalization, and the loss of the local
Friday, September 18, 1914. The Irish government and two acts.
The Government of Ireland Act received royal assent, but was suspended for the duration of the war by the Suspensory Act.
Last edition:
Thursday, September 17, 1914. German New Guinea surrendered to Australia.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Thursday, September 17, 1914. German New Guinea surrendered to Australia.
German New Guinea surrendered to Australia.
Last edition:
Wednesday, September 16, 1914. The Siege of Siege of Przemyśl commences.
Mid Week At Work: Enduring investigation.
Caption reads:
Navy's crack speed pilot faces Senate Committee seeking reason for resignation. Lieut. Al Williams, crack Navy speed pilot who recently resigned rather than accept a transfer to sea, appeared before a special Senate Naval l Affairs subcommittee today. The committee is investigating the reason for the resignation of the noted pilot. In the photograph, left to right: Senator Patrick J. Sullivan, Wyoming; Lieut. Williams; Senator Millard E. Tydings, Maryland, chairman; and David S. Ingalls, Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Aviation
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
University of Wyoming Women's Rugby: Wyoming v. U...
After seemingly picking on (but not intending to) American football the past few days, I offer these recent photos I took of women's rugby at the University of Wyoming.
I don't have a clue what the rules are, but rugby is really fun to watch, and I've always liked it. This is the first time, however, I've seen the women's team at UW in action.
It's a fast moving game, which is part of what I like. It shares a common ancestor with American football, but to those of us who are big fans of it, American football seems slow. Rugby is a much faster paced game.
Played without padding or helmets, it's also one which features a lot of injuries, but it doesn't seem to share the same percentage of really severe injuries, perhaps because of the lack of armor in the game.