Thursday, October 22, 2015

The City of Casper Smoking Ballot Issue



REFERENDUM BALLOT PROPOSITION ON ORDINANCE NO. 15-13: 

AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CERTAIN SECTIONS OF CHAPTER 8.16 OF THE CASPER MUNICIPAL CODE, PERTAINING TO SMOKING IN PUBLIC PLACES.

Ordinance No. 15-13 of the Casper Municipal Code, captioned “An Ordinance Amending Certain Sections of Chapter 8.16 of the Casper Municipal Code, Smoking in Public Places,” allows smoking in taverns, lounges, or bars, enclosed areas within places of employment or service establishments not open to the public, areas of health care facilities not open to the general public or non-smoking residents or patients, private offices by employees, and private clubs when not open to the public. These locations were previously included in, and subject to, the ban against smoking in public places. 

FOR –           Adopts Ordinance No. 15-13, which results in allowing smoking in taverns, lounges, or bars, enclosed areas within places of employment or service establishments not open to the public, areas of health care facilities not open to the general public or non-smoking residents or patients, private offices by employees, and private clubs when not open to the public. 

AGAINST Rejects Ordinance No. 15-13, which would reinstate the prohibition of smoking in taverns, lounges, and bars, employment and service establishments, health care facilities, private offices by employees, and private clubs.


___________________________________________________________________________________

So, voting "FOR" means smoking is allowed back into bars that elect to allow it.

Voting "AGAINST" means the ban stays as is, and smoking in any public place is prohibited.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

No Help Wanted

Somebody pointed out to me that a good indicator of the state of the local economy is the help wanted ads. So I started looking at them recently.



Not all that long ago, the there were columns after columns of jobs being advertised for, many in the oil industry or those that support them.  Man, has that changed.

There's only about five or so jobs in the entire section being advertised now.  As I wondered if this only reflected the weekday paper, I looked again on the weekend.  Same deal, hardly any advertisements at all.

I suppose some of that may simply have to do with the decline in the newspapers as a medium for everything, but most of that is certainly due to a massive drop off in unfilled jobs.

I keep hearing people state that the local economy isn't really hurting.  Hard to believe that, based upon what I'm actually observing.

Huh? Preceptions of rural

Here in this rural Long Island community.
From a New York Times Article.

What on earth does that mean?

Thursday, October 21, 1915. Ojo de Agua.



The U.S. Army and Sedicionistas fought at Ojo de Agua, Texas in the last clash between those two forces.  Sedicionistas, being Constitutionalist, had lost their incentive to fight in Texas given the recent U.S. recognition of Carranza of the de facto ruler of Mexico.  The initial attack was upon signalmen housed in the building depicted above and commenced at 1:00 a.m.  The gunfire attracted cavalry reinforcements.


Three U.S. soldiers, including the NCO in command, Sergeant Schaffer, were killed and eight wounded. The Sediciosos lost five men dead and at least nine others wounded, two of whom later died.  A Japanese man and two Carrancista soldiers were found among the dead.  No further raids by Sedcionistas or those supporting the Constitutionalist occurred, although this raid reinforced the view by American officers that Carranza was not trustworthy.


The rescuing cavalry detachments, it might be noted, came from 2 and 8 miles away, with the latter coming up just as the Mexican forces withdrew.

Elsewhere, other U.S. Army units in Texas were at the State Fair.


Bulgarian troops were repulsed by the British in the Battle of Krivolak.

Whatever It Is, I’m Against It: Today -100: October 21, 1915: All the forces of wi...: Russia declares war on Bulgaria (actually on the 18th, but they didn’t tell anyone for a couple of days). Britain offers Greece a present...

The United Daughters of the Confederacy held their first annual meeting outside the Southern United States, in San Francisco. 

Eight "Russian" children who dropped of elementary school in Sterling, Colorado to work in the beet harvest.  It's not clear to me if they're Russians, or Russian Americans. They might in fact have been Russian refugees, but 1915, would be early for that.

Last edition:

Wednesday, October 20, 1915. Arms okay for Carranza.

Mid Week at Work: Hauling timber on the Government Railroad, Seward Alaska


Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Budget cuts or no, the $5,000,000 will still be forthcoming

From the Associated Press:
LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP) - Despite dire budget forecasts, Gov. Matt Mead said he supports continuing a state program that matches dollar-for-dollar contributions of up to $5 million to University of Wyoming athletics.'
“What we’ve got started here at UW with regard to athletics, with regard to engineering, the science initiative, I don’t want that momentum to stop,” Mead told the Casper Star-Tribune.
We're freezing the budget but we're making sure that UW athletics will obtain $5,000,000 under aforementioned program?

Something seems amiss with that.

Wyoming Fact and Fiction: 5 Periods of Wyoming History

Wyoming Fact and Fiction: 5 Periods of Wyoming History: Wyoming historians divide the history of the state into five periods. Thought it might be fun to take those five periods and try to list my...

The Canadian election, what was it about?



For those following the news today, Canada took a left turn yesterday and returned the Liberals to power, and with them, elected Justin Trudeau as Prime Minister.  Signalling the left turn, or perhaps a u-turn, Trudeau stated "Tonight Canada is becoming the country it was before."

So what was the election really about?

Calls to return a country to a prior era are usually a conservative cri de coeur.  But in Steven Harper's Canada, the opposite seems to be the case.  Harper, the long serving Conservative Prime Minister, drew an increasing amount of ire in this campaign, although he'd been drawing it anyway. As I recently mentioned, it was never really easy from the outside, even for somebody who somewhat follows Canadian politics as I do, as I have a personal reason for being interested in it, to know what exactly it was that Harper did that so offended people. Even now, I really don't know.

What seems to have been the case is that he was, by American standards, mildly conservative and insistent in taking the country in that direction.  Canadian conservatism shares some elements with American conservatism, particularly in the Canadian West (where Harper did well), but it features many dissimilarities.  A Canadian Conservative is to American Conservatism what a Wyoming Democrat is to the national Democrats.  Not really conservative but more middle of the road.

A lot of this election seemed simply directed at Harper himself, and sort of on a personal level, but it's never been clear from the outside exactly what he did.  One voter was quoted in the Washington Post as saying “I normally vote Conservative, but this election I wavered between him and the other parties because Harper can be a bit of a bully, but, in the end, I like what he’s done.”  That view seems fairly common, although clearly the animosity towards him is deeper than that.  It must be, because in order to overturn a government, in a parliamentary election, you have to turn out a local member of parliament.  It's parliament that chooses the Prime Minister.

Beyond that, quite a few people seem to be upset with the economy, which Harper tied to oil production, and with a mild turn to the right in a country which is mildly to the left, by American standards.  Harper was sort of recognizable to Americans as sort of a Western states Democrat, but most Canadians are East Coast Canadians.  Harper hasn't been aggressive on global warming, has been somewhat willing to use the Canadian armed forces overseas, and has been mildly sympathetic with other conservative views.  

One of the oddest things I've seen cited about this election is that some Canadians seem to feel that electing Trudeau will help repair Canadian relations with President Obama, which have been chilly.  Harper the conservative hasn't been getting along real well with Obama the liberal.  But those comments reveal the depth to which voters of one nation fail to understand the political system in another.  At this point President Obama is a lame duck to whom his own party need not pay attention. It doesn't make any difference in anything if Justin Trudeau gets along famously with Barrack Obama, as the moving vans are already in action in regards to the White House.  It will make a difference if he gets along well with the next President, but right now we don't know who that will be and the American election campaign has been particularly odd so far this cycle.

Harper noted that "the people are never wrong" in accepting the results, and this is particularly true when looking at the politics of another nation. Still, as somebody who never knew what it was that Harper did to offend people, I'm not really happy to see Trudeau come in.  I wasn't a fan of his father, and Canada since World War Two has settled into a pattern of political and social thinking that can be worrying.  Some speech in Canada is now beyond the pale in a way that it could never be in the US, mostly out of  a sort of a "it's nice to be nice to the nice" sort of thinking, and whenever the Liberals are in power the Parti Quebecois seems to be assertive.  Beyond that, it seems that the change in direction expresses a vague yearning to return to the Pierre Trudeau era, which is gone.

It is interesting in the context of political trends in the west, but those can only be taken so far.  It's been noted, for example, that the Greeks recently turned hard to the left, and Bernie Saunders remains very much in the running in the Democratic campaign in the US. But then, in the same year Donald Trump is doing well in the US, and just recently the Conservatives did well in the UK, so cross border analysis is probably not terribly revealing.

What may be revealing, at least regarding how unpopular Harper had become for some reason, is that the Liberals were in third place in parliamentary seats prior to this election, and gained 150 seats, a massive rise in their fortunes. The other Canadian left wing part, the New Democratic Party, suffered just as the Conservatives did, loosing 59 seats.  The Conservatives lost 67, but the had more to loose, and in terms of percentage of the parliament they're actually  nearly tied with the Liberals. Of course, with the 59 seats the New Democrats have, they have a comfortable margin in the parliament.The Parti Quebecois gained a few seats at the expense of the New Democrats, although it remains a tiny minority in parliament.  The Canadian Green Party kept a seat in Vancouver, the Portland of Canada.

The Big Speach: Nomen est omen

Nomen est omen.

Roman proverb.  "Names are destiny", or more correctly, Names are omens.  Taken from the play Persa in which a character says, about a slave girl for sale who is named Lucris (Profits), "Nomen atque omen quantivis iam est preti".

So, any merit to that claim?

Monday, October 19, 2015

Tuesday, October 19, 1915. The US extends recognition to Carranza.

The U.S. extended de facto recognition of the  Carranza government. This legitimizes arms shipments to the Constitutionalist.

After a break of a couple of weeks a cross border raid from Mexico occured in which Mexican border raiders boarded a train north of Brownsville and killed several passengers dead.

Italy and Russia declared war on Bulgaria.

Last edition:

Monday, October 18, 1915. Suffrage in New Jersey, Shots at border dance, Constitutionalist advance, Fellowship and beer.

Desperate hopes. Opening oil up to export

Many people are likely not aware that, with certain limited exceptions, oil produced in the United States may not be exported outside of North America.  Refined products, like gasoline or diesel fuel, may be. But crude oil may not be.


This came about as a result of the oil crisis of the early 1970s, following the 1973 oil embargo, when many Americans realized that for the first time a country that had been an oil exporter no longer was.  The thinking behind the law is that keeping petroleum oil within the country would guaranty that said oil would be produced at a lower price for the US market.

The thinking on that bill was frankly not all that well thought out. As oil is heavy and has to be transported anyhow, it was always going to be cheaper to refine the oil in the US, rather than export it overseas for refining. That's the same reason that oil products in Saudi Arabia are ridiculously cheap. They have a lot of it right there.  So the bill likely did nothing, but it wasn't harmful either.

For the same reason, the current bill that proposes to lift the export ban, which the President has said he will veto, won't do anything either.  US oil isn't going to suddenly be shipped to Europe or Asia for refining.

Indeed, if we had that much of it, it'd actually drop the price of oil further, as right now we remain an oil importing nation. 

But the logic behind the proposal is interesting.  It's actually claimed it will keep gasoline low at the pumps while boosting domestic production.

No it won't.  The price at the pumps is determined by the cost of the supply, and production is likewise determined by that. At the current prices, very little new U.S. production will be coming on line or explored for.  Simple supply and demand.

It wouldn't hurt anything either, however.  Being a major consumer with a ready market, the oil will be produced here and solder here anyhow.  It's interesting, however, how an idea like this gains currency when the domestic industry is in a slump for reasons beyond our control.

For a little added prospective on this, the U.S. became an oil importing nation in 1948.  Almost immediately after World War Two.  That was coincident with a big boom in our economy, and the dawn of the big car era.

Mystery dedication



A hand written dedication to my grandfather in this 1943 book, Alaska Bird Trails.  I wonder who the author was and what his connection with my grandfather was?

Monday at the Bar: Courthouses of the West: Kimball County Nebraska Courthouse, Kimball Nebras...

Kimball County Nebraska Courthouse, Kimball Nebraska




This is the Kimball County Courthouse in Kimball Nebraska.  This fine looking courthouse was opened in 1928 and was constructed of Carthage stone, with floors of Ozark gray marble and fixtures made of solid walnut.  MKTH Photo.

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Monday, October 18, 1915. Suffrage in New Jersey, Shots at border dance, Constitutionalist advance, Fellowship and beer.

The Government General of Warsaw was established to govern German-occupied Vistula Land of Poland which had recently been part of the Russian Empire.

The Italian Army tried to capture the bridgeheads at Bovec and Tolmin along the Isonzo River.


Last edition:

Sunday, October 17, 1915: Of redemption, St Ge...

Churches of the West: Roman Catholic Cathedral Santuario de Guadalupe (Cathedral Shrine)

Roman Catholic Cathedral Santuario de Guadalupe (Cathedral Shrine of the Virgin of Guadalupe), Dallas Texas







These photographs are not great, as I was too close to the Cathedral when I took them. Hopefully they convey some idea of the the appearance of this High Victorian Gothic Cathedral.

Dedicated in 1902 as the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, this cathedral was renamed the Cathedral Santuario de Guadalupe in 1977, when another aging Dallas church dedicated to the Lady of Guadalupe was torn down. This cathedral has the second largest parish congregation in the United
States.

The steeple on this cathedral was only completed fairly recently, although it was always part of the original design.

Friday, October 16, 2015

Saturday, October 16, 1915. Frosty mornings.

France declared war on Bulgaria.   French forces occupied the Gevgelija and Strumica rail stations in Serbian-controlled Vardar Macedonia..

The British completed the occupation of Bushehr, Iran.

Carranza was approaching widespread recognition as the head of state in Mexico.


There were rumors that Villa was dead.


He wasn't.

And it was beginning to get chilly.


I've often thought about what this advertisement seeks to address, heating up a home in the teens during winter.  It's not like what we do now and just turn up the thermostat.  Most homes burned something, including the urban ones with furnaces, which typically burned coal.

Cities and towns were smokey.

Cheyenne Light, Fuel and Power offered a quick morning alternative. . . 

Economic viability of entering agriculture, a question.

Quite clearly, early in this country's history getting into agriculture, while it may have been hard, was doable for the majority of people.



At what point did this change in the various regions of the country for average people?  Are there any left where this hasn't changed.

I know that homesteading back in the second half of the 19th Century was a more expensive endeavor than people imagine, with people often saving up for years in order to buy the necessary equipment and stock in order to get started, but at some point entering agriculture, for an outsider, became essentially impossible for an average person, unless they were extremely successful in business, which by definition would mean that they weren't an average person. By this, of course, I mean really entering agriculture, not owning 40 acres outside of town while you work a town job.

When did really entering agriculture become impossible for somebody just trying to enter it?

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Friday, October 15, 1915. The Wright Company sold.

World War One expanded again as the UK and Montenegro declared war on Bulgaria.   French and British forces under joint command of French General Maurice Sarrail and British General Bryan Mahon were mobilized from Salonika in Serbian-controlled Macedonia to take action against the Bulgarians.

The Great War had been going on for a year, plenty of time for European powers to appreciate that it was an unmitigated blood bath. And yet various nations were still itching to get in it. . . and not always making the correct calculations.

Gen. Ian Hamilton was relieved of command of the Allied forces at Gallipoli, paying the price, really, for people who had failed to make the correct calculations.

Orville Wright in 1928.

Orville Wright sold the Wright Company and basically went into retirement at an early age.

The Wright siblings are interesting.  Neither aircraft brother married.  Wilbur was already dead by this time, but Orville would lead a long life.  At this point in time he was still living with his father and sister Katherine.  His father, Milton, was a clergyman and would die in 1917.  Another brother, Reuchlin Wright, was also living at this time, but was married and somewhat estranged from the family.  Yet another brother, Lorin, was also living and was also married. His sister Katherine continued to live with Orville following their father's death, but married in 1926 at which time she was 40 years old.  Orville regarded her marriage as a horrible act of betrayal, and did not speak to her again until he was near death in 1948 at age 76.

Orville Wright, Bishop Milton Wright, Katharine Wright, Earl N. Findley, nephew Horace Wright, John R. McMahon, and Pliny Williamson, all seated on the lawn of Orville's home, Hawthorn Hill; Dayton, Ohio.

Two siblings, twins, had died in their childhood.

The dynamics of the family are unusual. They were all well educated, and obviously highly intelligent.  For some reason the three younger Wrights had a very close bond with their father and were seemingly dedicated to him, and each other, relatively uniquely.  Remaining unmarried for life, as Orville did, was quite unusual at the time, and there's every indication that Wilbur, Orville and Katherine up until her marriage, were celibate and chaste.  There's no indication at all of same sex attraction, as such conditions always are speculated upon in our current day and age.  Orville commented at one point that he didn't have time for a wife and an airplane, which perhaps was correct, but most men do find time for a wife.  

Posthumous modern psychoanalysis has pondered if the two younger Wrights had Asperger's Syndrome, which if possible is impossible to know.  It could be that they fit into that rare category of humans who are simply not very interested in sex or family life, something current people have a very hard time grasping.

Last edition:

Thursday, October 14, 1915. Bulgaria enters the war.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Thursday, October 14, 1915. Bulgaria enters the war.

Bulgaria declared war on Serbia and attempted to break through Serbian lines in the Morava Offensive.  Bulgarian troops also attempted to capture the Vardar river valley in Macedonia.  Altogether, they had thrown nearly 300,000 troops into the war in the Balkans.

The Imperial Russian Navy raided Varna, Bulgaria, with a seaplane carrier and battleship force.

Villista General Rodolfo Fierro when he was thrown by a horse into quicksand.

Last edition:

Tuesday, October 12, 1915. The execution of Edith Cavell.