
A thread about the horse behind the horse on SMH.
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Because the city authorities stopped them from selling liquor and insisted that there must be no more piano thumping in their houses, the landladies of the bawdy houses of Casper held an indignation meeting one day last week and decided to suspend business entirely, and accordingly all the inmates of the three places on David street were discharged on the first of the month and Saturday morning fifteen of them left town on the east-bound train, it is hoped to return no more.“These people got the notion in their head that they could do just as they pleased so long as they remained in the restricted district, and high carnival was held nearly every night for awhile, and it was seldom that a big fight was not pulled off by some of them two or three times a week. They caused the authorities so much trouble that it kept one man on watch nearly every night to quell the disturbance. But after tolerating it until it could be tolerated no longer, the order was given out to cut out the booze and the music, and this made the madams mad and they have closed up their houses, and threaten to ‘kill the town.’ ...
“[I]f the places are ever opened up again, which they undoubtedly will be before the end of this week if they are permitted to do so, the people should, and no doubt will, insist that the places be conducted along lines that will not disturb the decent people of the town.”
The Royal North West Mounted Police laid to rest Inspector Francis J. Fitzgerald, Constables Richard O. Taylor and George F. Kinney, and their guide, Special Constable Sam Carter, who had become lost and perished in the annual 620 mile trip from Fort McPherson to Dawson City.
They had passed away in January.
The long range patrol was discontinued in 1922.
The Santa Fe New Mexican reported:
Thirty-five or 40 Boer farmers who settled some years ago in Mexico and who want to escape the unsettled and troubled conditions in that country, will bring their families with them to New Mexico and found a colony at Los Alamos, San Miguel County.
Last edition:
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, incorporated.
146 garment workers—123 women and girls and 23 men, out of a workforce of 500, died in Manhattan's horrific Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. Most of the victims were Italian or Jews immigrants 14 to 23 years old. 62 of the victims jumped to their deaths.
The fabric fire in the fireproof building broke out five minutes before end of shift. The doors to the stairwells and exits were locked to prevent unauthorized breaks and to reduce theft

Pyotr Stolypin resigned as Prime Minister of Russia but was back in office by the end of the week at the urging of Czar Nicholas II who was worried about China and who had problems with his proposed successor, Vladimir Kokovtsov.
Last edition:
A bomb made of nitroglycerine was set off near the barracks of Mexican federal troops in Juarez, but without effect.
Las Vegas become an incorporated Nevada municipality.
Last edition:
Final trials began to determine whether the John Browning designed Colt Special Army Model 1910 or the Elbert Searle designed Savage Model 1907 would become the first automatic pistol to be adopted by the U.S. Army. Both were chambered in .45 ACP, a Colt designed cartridge.
The Colt Special Army Model 1910 is familiar to history as the M1911. The Savage, less so.
The Colt would go on, of course, to be adopted and is the greatest military handgun of all time. Still superior, in the minds of many (including the author), to any handgun that came after it.
As a minor note on that, I recently went through security in at a Wyoming court and the Sheriffs Deputy manning it was armed with a high end 1911. I asked him about it. He'd been in the Army, and rejected all the 9mms that came after the M1911.
He's not the only one.
The Silver Spray was caught in a snowstorm on Lake Erie, foundered, and its fishing crew froze to death in the lake.
Last edition:
El Paso was jittery, although not without good reason.
Early in the Progressive Era, California adopted initiatives and referendums.
I'm not hugely keen on them myself.
The Japanese Antarctic Expedition reached its limit at Coulman Island.
Last edition:
The Supreme Court upheld corporate income tax as constitutional.
Last edition:
Mexican Federal forces prevailed at Agua Prieta, the border town that would figure prominently in the Mexican Revolution.
This contest was one of several in the war, and apparently wasn't given a name.
Part of Mt. Vesuvius' crater collapsed following a severe earthquake.
Last edition:
Revolutionaries took the police office in Villa de Ayala, gathered the people and Torres Burgos read to the crowd the Plan of San Luis Potosí. At which occasion Otilio E. Montaño yelled "¡Abajo las Haciendas y Vivan los Pueblos!"
Dr. Simon Flexner announced at a meeting of the Rockefeller Institute the discovery of the cause of infantile paralysis, also known as poliomyelitis or polio.
It was a Saturday.
Emiliano Zapata gathered seventy men in Morelos as the start of his revolutionary army.
Kansas became the first state in the union to subject securities and investment brokers to state regulation.
T/he greatest snow fall in U.S. history concluded in Tamarack, Californian. 451 inches.
Last edition:
Madero's forces unsuccessfully attacked government troops at Casas Grandes, Chihuahua.
Samuel J. Battle was sworn in as the first black officer of the New York Police Department.
Last edition:
Congress appropriated $125,000 for the Signal Corps to purchase aircraft.
The U.S. Army Dental Corps was established.
The U.S. Army began a "torture test" of the John Browning designed Colt M1911 pistol.
Jean Harlow (Harlean Harlow Carpenter) was born. Always of fragile health, she died when she was only 26 years old.
Last edition: