
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 Queen of Spades, by Tchaikovsky, was performed at the New York Metropolitan Opera, in German.
Momofuku Ando (Japanese: 安藤 百福, Hepburn: Andō Momofuku) born Go Pek-Hok, Chinese: 吳百福; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gô͘ Pek-hok) in Taiwan. He invented ramen noodles in 1958.
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Morocco signed an accord with France, which they no doubt regretted, allowing the French to occupy Casablanca and Quijada in return for military training. It was part of a loan deal. Morocco would ultimately end up being bent over by France, and Spain.
This is similar to the current proposal, in a way, to bend Ukraine over and take its minerals, proposed by Donny Trump. It's another bad idea that Ukraine probably would like to give the US the middle finger salute for, but Donny is too dense to understand that life isn't transactional, the pathetic bloated twit.
Well, if nothing else, it gave us a great movie in the end. . .
Stock in Sears began trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
I miss Sears being what it once was.
Allen Brooks, a black man in his 50s or 60s and accused of raping a young white girl of about 2 years old was lynched in Dallas, Texas.
Was he guilty?
Well, without knowing more, and I don't, it seems awfully unlikely. And that's the point. He was deprived of a fair trial and murdered.
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1st Lt. Benjamin Foulois became the first US military pilot after making a solo flight on a Wright Flyer.
He'd go on to serve a long, but not uncontroversial career. As a result, he retried unceremoniously under a cloud in 1935. He thereafter warned of the dangers of resurgent German airpower, and he offered to return to service, with a combat command, during World War TWo, but was not taken up on the offer. He died in 1967 at age 87.
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An avalanche in Washington killed 96 people, mostly passengers of a stranded passenger train.
A thunderstorm triggered the tragic event at Wellington, Washington. It's the deadliest avalanche in U.S. history.
General Hermes Rodrigues da Fonseca was elected President of Brazil.
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The last bare knuckle boxing match in the US took place in Passaic, New Jersey, between boxers Leo Baker and Dave Smith. They fought 32 rounds without gloves, with the match ending in a draw.
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A grand jury in Newark, New Jersey indicted the National Packing Company and its subsidiaries, Armour, Swift, Morris, and G.H. Hammond of conspiracy to monopolize the nation's meatpacking industry. Executives were also indicted.
Funny. . . it's every bit as monopolized now. . .
The early 20th Century, of course, saw a dedicated effort to deal with the excesses of capitalism. Those efforts were, to a large degree, successful.
And forgotten.
Thomas Edison's electric street car was demonstrated in New York.
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France gave Morocco 48 hours to ratify an agreement to replay $12,000,000 owed as indemnities or face tariff forfeitures. Morocco, depending upon the tariffs, agreed.
It's almost like you shouldn't make your finances the captive of foreign nations. . . .
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Largescale working class protests occurred in Berlin over the Prussian three class franchise which gave the wealthiest 1/5th of German voters 2/3s of the seats in the German parliament. Bayonets were used on protestors, but nobody was killed.
This was part of the system which lead to the German revolution of 1918 which brought down the monarchy and lead to the end of World War One, something that our current political overlords may wish to remember, given the current oligarchic nature of the United States.
The name of San Pedro Bay was changed to Los Angeles Harbor.
I hate these geographic name changes.
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The Boy Scouts of America was founded.
Founded on the British example, which was spreading like wildfire, Chicago publisher William D. Boyce brought the organization to the United States. It grew at an enormous rate early on, and was a real powerhouse for much of the pre 1960s era, bringing in a youth movement based on the outdoors and muscular Christianity.
The organization, looking back, began to to take a hit into the 1960s, which was perhaps inevitable. Grounded strictly in manly virtues, the 1960s introduced a growing feminization in western males, something that the Strauss-Howe Generational Theory notes to be a reoccurring phenomenon. At the same time, the protestant churches began their decline, although it was not obvious at the time, and muscular Christianity declined with them. The organization attempted to adapt, but the trend was pretty set in.
Today the damaged organization still includes 1,000,000 youth, of which 176,000 are unfortunately female. 130,000,000 mostly male Americans have participated in its programs since 1910, including me, albeit only briefly, and not including my father or grandfather, although one of my cousins was an Eagle Scout.
There's a lot on this website about the BSA, which is probably odd for a website run by somebody whose has a thin association with them at best. But they were a major movement in American, and indeed Western, culture, and their demise is also telling.
Related threads:
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An explosion at Colorado Fuel and Iron's mine at Primero, Colorado, killed 75 miners.
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