Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Friday, March 13, 2015
Toyota Landcruiser: The Prime Mover of the Third World Military.
Whatever that pattern is, they don't import it here. Universal (i.e., light small 4x4 trucks of the Jeep type) have gone from being a product offered solely by Willy, to being one, as I've noted before, that was offered by many manufacturers, to include Toyota, Rover, Nissan, and Ford, amongst others. Now the numbers have dwindled back down so that the only common one is the Jeep once again, now a Chrysler product, unless you include Toyota's somewhat larger option. Mercedes does make a Jeep type vehicle that's imported into the US, but you rarely see one. And I know at least Steyr makes one overseas. Jaguar, the current owner of the Rover brand, might as well.
No matter, it's Toyota that has the light military vehicle role all sewn up all over the glove. Every third world army everywhere, and every mobilized irregular guerrilla outfit, uses them too. They must be a fantastic light truck. While I know it'd be very politically incorrect, were I in the Toyota advertising department, I'd propose the slogan "Toyota Landcruiser: The prime mover of the third world army".
Old Picture of the Day: Planting Corn
Old Picture of the Day: Spring Potato Planting
Old Picture of the Day: Beans
Old Picture of the Day: Preparing the Ground
Old Picture of the Day: Old School
Old Picture of the Day: Spring Planting
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
WHEELS THAT WON THE WEST®: An Interview with John Mohler Studebaker
Words of endurance: Toward the Flame | 1870 to 1918
And the link to the Gutenberg text provides even more great illustrations!
Thursday, March 11, 1915. The Bluff War ends. Carranza promises protection to foreigners.
The Paiute leaders of the Bluff War surrendered.
The armed merchant cruiser HMS Bayano was sunk off of Scotland by the U-27. Only 26 men survived.
The German auxiliary cruiser SMS Prinz Eitel put in at Newport News for internment. It's engines were worn out from raiding in the Pacific and South Atlantic. After the U.S. entered the war she was refitted as a troop ship and used by the U.S.
Carranza promised his government would protect foreigners in Mexico.
Related threads:
Thursday, February 25, 1915. The Cottonwood Bluff War.
Last edition:
Tuesday, March 9, 1915. Sailing to Mexico.
Monday, March 9, 2015
Tuesday, March 9, 1915. Sailing to Mexico.
Lex Anteinternet: Today In Wyoming's History: March 10. Daylight Sa...
Bah. If only the legislature, rather than proposing to study the transfer of Federal land management to the state, proposed to study ending Daylight Savings Time and these time changes instead. Ack.
Sunday, March 8, 2015
Lex Anteinternet: The best-laid schemes o' mice an' men: Lex Antein...
Our earlier post here discussed oil going down to $40/bbl:
Lex Anteinternet: The best-laid schemes o' mice an' men: Lex Antein...: I've been bumping up this thread from time to time: Lex Anteinternet: Lex Anteinternet: Lex Anteinternet: $40/barrel? : A couple of we...At the time I started this series of threads out, $40/bbl sounded absurd, and there were plenty of naysayers. Since that time, it's dropped down that low, but then rebounded to $60/bbl. Now, however, some industry analysts are noting that the supply is so over stocked that there's a real chance of it going down to $20/bbl.
That's simply amazing.
And it would truly be devastating to American oil exploration. At that level, it would be at an all time low, lower than its ever been, by a significant margin.
Layoffs in the industry are still going on, and they'd have to accelerate at that point. There's be no way around it. What the overall impact on the economy would be I can't say, other than that's so low it would probably have a temporary deflationary impact. But for the oil industry, it'd be devastating.
Lex Anteinternet: Protesting Too Much: Lex Anteinternet: The return...
Lex Anteinternet: Protesting Too Much: Lex Anteinternet: The return...: I've commented several times on this year's legislative efforts regarding the Federal lands in the state, with a comment on the...passed. Although not without the irony of one of the sponsors otherwise noting that the Legislature is spending too much money on tasks forces that could otherwise simply be handled by legislative committees. No doubt, of course, he doesn't see it that way, as this study could not be handled by a legislative task force.
We'll see how this plays out, but my prediction is that the state will come back with a study that shows it could do a better job of managing the Federal land, even though I doubt it could. It'll propose that the the Federal government, which represents the 300 plus million landowners, who will decline the state's suggestion, and the state will be mad. So, $100,00 will be spent on a dubious proposition that has no chance of becoming reality.
That won't be all, however. Local sportsmen, a large contingency of voters, won't forget this, and they largely have no beef with Federal land management. This will, in the end, come back to haunt some of those who supported this bill, and it'll turn out to be a bill which actually has very few who really support its goals outside of those who think it will expedite use for industry and free local industry from Federal control. In reality, that same industry isn't really doing much complaining about Federal oversight, however, and is used to working with the Federal government. So this will be a gift that just keeps on giving, but not in the anticipated manner.
Sunday Morning Scense: Churches of the West: Church of the Resurrection, Casper Wyoming
Saturday, March 7, 2015
Protesting Too Much: Lex Anteinternet: The return of a perennial bad idea, the transfer o...

I've commented several times on this year's legislative efforts regarding the Federal lands in the state, with a comment on the Wyoming bill being here:
Lex Anteinternet: The return of a perennial bad idea, the transfer o...: Every few years Wyoming and the other western states get the idea that the Federal government ought to hand over the Federal domain to the ...I may have commented on it here (I don't recall) but I wrote my local state senator and my local representative on this, knowing that my rep was one of the sponsors of the bill. I noted in that, that I would take backing such bills into future consideration next time I vote, as I feel many people will.
My rep wrote back, to his credit, but complained a bit that I seems to think there was some conspiracy to take away the Federal lands. Given as the original bill proposed to do just that, I found that objection to my opposition a bit strained. After all, it was a topic in last year's statewide elections and then it showed up in the legislature. Why wouldn't I be suspicious.
Following on that, it occurs to me that there were "take" bills of various types in the Wyoming, Idaho, Colorado and Utah legislators, all in the present session.
Hmm. . . . .
I hadn't thought of any of this in conspiratorial terms, but now I really do wonder a bit.
In recent years, one thing that Wyoming's legislature has seen is some pretty stout effort to bring it into regional efforts that are of a strongly libertarian bent. These haven't worked, but they have been well financed. I have to wonder about these bills now, and if they are indeed part of a wider effort.
The irony to them, of course, is that the philosophical and legal basis for such "take" concepts are so extremely poor. You can't "take back" something you never owned, and never had a legal right to, and the ideal that the Federal government poorly manages this asset and we will do better is strained in an era when it seems that various state agencies are always stretched for funds.
Well, anyhow, folks backing such bills best be careful. This state isn't really capital "C" conservative so much as it is "leave me the heck alone" and use of the public lands by common people is a part of the local culture. Recent efforts here which have attempted to bring in what's going on in national politics haven't been successful, and there's a reason for that. If fisherman, hunters, hikers, ATV users, etc., figure that somebody is outstretching a grasping hand, they may be inclined to cut it off.
Friday, March 6, 2015
"This land is my land, but shouldn't be your land". Misbegotten hostilitiy to ranchers using the public lands
This land is your land This land is my landWoodie Guthrie's misunderstood protest song, This land Is Your Land.
From California to the New York island;
From the red wood forest to the Gulf Stream waters
This land was made for you and Me.

If you've lived in the West, or follow news regarding lands of any kind, you've seen the claim made at some point. Ranchers who lease the public domain are "welfare ranchers" who should be driven off the public domain, so it can be turned over to hordes of SUV driving weekend users, who will be kinder to the land in their light hiking gear, even if they used more fuel to get there than a third word nation consumes in a year.
The popular concept of the war is that it represented an armed expression of unadulterated greed. While greed cannot be dismissed as an element, the larger question remains. What was it all about?
The cattle industry, as we know it, didn't really come about until the conclusion of the Civil War. Prior to that, the most significant meat livestock in the US was pork. Swine production produced the basic farm meat for most Americans, which is not to say that they didn't eat cattle, they did, but cattle production was fairly small scale in the East, and much of it was focused on dairy and mixed production. Meat cattle were more common in the South, and while it's popular to note that American ranching was a development of Mexican ranching, it was also very much a development of Southern ranching practices. This, in fact, partially gave rise to the Johnson County War, as will be seen.
At any rate, the American Beef Cattle industry was born when the railroads penetrated into Kansas after the Civil War, and returning Texas cattlemen found that the herds in their state had gone wild, and greatly increased. Cattle in Texas, up until that time, had followed the Mexican practice of being raised principally for their hides, not for meat, but the introduction of rail into Kansas meant that cattle could now be driven, albeit a long ways, to a railhead and then shipped to market. An explosion in urban centers in the East provided a natural market, and soon the cattle industry in Texas had switched over to being focused on shipping cattle for beef.The Texas industry spread north as well and by the 1870s it was making inroads into Wyoming, although really only southern Wyoming for the most part. At the same time, and often forgotten, a dramatic increase in herds in Oregon, the byproduct of early farm herds and pioneer oxen herds, produced a surplus there that caused herds to be driven back east into Wyoming at the very moment that northern Wyoming opened up for ranching.But what was ranching like here, at the time?It was dominated by the fact of the Homestead Act, a bill passed during the Civil War in order to encourage western emigration into the vast public domain. But the bill had been written by men familiar only with Eastern farming, and it used the Eastern agricultural unit, 40 acres, as a model. That amount of acreage was perfectly adequate for a yeoman farmer, and indeed after the Civil War "40 acres and a mule" was the dream of the liberated slave, which they hoped to obtain from the Federal government. But 40 acres wasn't anywhere near adequate for any sort of livestock unit in the West, and most of the West wasn't suitable for farming. In the West, additionally, the Federal homesteading provisions oddly dovetailed with State and Territorial water law.
Water law was the domain of states or territories exclusively, and evolved in the mining districts of California, which accepted that claiming water in one place and moving it to another was a necessary right. This type of water law, much different from that existing in the well watered East, spread to the West, and a "first in time, first in right" concept of water law evolved. This was to be a significant factor in Western homesteading. Additionally, the Federal government allowed open use of unappropriated public lands for grazing. States and Territories, accepting this system, sought to organize the public grazing by district, and soon an entire legal system evolved which accepted the homesteading of a small acreage, usually for the control of water, and the use of vast surrounding public areas, perhaps collectively, but under the administration of some grazing body, some of which, particularly in Wyoming, were legally recognized. In the case of Wyoming, the Wyoming Stock Growers Association controlled the public grazing, and had quasi legal status in that livestock detectives, who policed the system, were recognized at law as stock detectives.
This was the system that the large ranching interests accepted, developed and became use to in the 1870s and 1880s. Large foreign corporations bought into Western ranching accepting that this was, in fact the system. It had apparent legal status.
But nothing made additional small homesteading illegal. And the penalty for failing to cooperate in the grazing districts mostly amounted to being shunned, or having no entry into annual roundups. This continued to encourage some to file small homesteads. Homesteading was actually extremely expensive, and it was difficult for many to do much more than that. Ironically, small homesteading was aided by the large ranchers practice of paying good hands partially in livestock, giving them the ability to start up where they otherwise would not have been. It was the dream of many a top hand, even if it had not been when they first took up employment as a cowboy, to get a large enough, albeit small, herd together and start out on their own. Indeed, if they hoped to marry, and most men did, they had little other choice, the only other option being to get out of ranch work entirely, as the pay for a cowhand was simply not great enough to allow for very many married men to engage in it.
By the 1880s this was beginning to cause a conflict between the well established ranchers, who tended to be large, and the newer ones, who tended to be small. The large stockmen were distressed by the carving up of what they regarded as their range, with some justification, and sought to combat it by legal means. One such method was the exclusion of smaller stockmen from the large regional roundups, which were done collectively at that time, and which were fairly controlled events. Exclusion for a roundup could be very problematic for a small stockman grazing on the public domain, as they all were, and this forced them into smaller unofficial roundups. Soon this created the idea that they were engaging in theft. To make matters even more problematic, Wyoming and other areas attempted to combat this through "Maverick" laws, which allowed any unbranded, cow attended, calf to be branded with the brand of its discoverer. This law, it was thought, would allow large stockmen to claim the strays found on their ranges, which they assumed, because of their larger herds, to be most likely to be theirs (a not unreasonable assumption), but in fact the law actually encouraged theft, as it allowed anybody with a brand to brand a calf, unattended or not, as long as nobody was watching. Soon a situation developed in which large stockmen were convinced that smaller stockmen were acting illegally or semi illegally, and that certain areas of the state were controlled by thieves or near thieves, while the small stockmen rightly regarded their livelihoods as being under siege. Soon, they'd be under defacto siege.

That's true of the Federal lands, for everyone. Ranching helps keep it that way. And there's something to be said for that in addition, we'd note.As I went walking I saw a sign there
And on the sign it said "No Trespassing."
But on the other side it didn't say nothing,
That side was made for you and me.
Thursday, March 5, 2015
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Resources | Inequality for All. It's graphics
Mid Week At Work: Coast Artillery
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Wednesday, March 3, 1915. The Navy Reserve established.
The Unites States Naval Reserve was established.
Most Navy officers in wartime are actually part of the Navy Reserve. It's stunning to think that it did not exist until 1915. It's stunning to think what would have resulted after the US entry into World War One without the Navy Reserve.
The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, the predecessor of NASA, was founded in the United States. The Committee was instituted to supervise and direct the scientific study of the problems of flight, with a view to their practical solution.
The GOP would likely eliminate it today.
Mount Mitchell State Park was established in Yancey County, North Carolina, the first state park North Carolina.
The GOP, which had no presence in North Carolina at the time, would probably oppose it today.
The Ocean-to-Ocean Bridge in Yuma, Arizona, was completed.
Last edition:
Monday, March 1, 1915. Locusts.
Monday, March 2, 2015
Lex Anteinternet: Random Snippets: Blogger difficulties
Lex Anteinternet: Random Snippets:: Odd how this program works, a slight addition and a bumping up of the past item moved all the prior items to the next page. No idea why. ...Every once and awhile, this program (Blogger) just gets oddly glitchy. Some feature that has worked forever, will quite working. Right now, a couple of the page feeds don't work. When this happens, I have to take them off, and reload them a couple of days later. It's as if they acquire a memory and cease functioning. Once they function, they work again fine forever.
Now, it's viewing any half way long post on the front page as being really long, and rolling over to the next page. Again, no idea why. There's longer posts that haven't done that.
Hopefully it returns to normal somewhat soon.
Random Snippets:
No idea why.
_________________________________________________________________________________
And still doing it, but not for the next page. Hmmm. . . . .
The war news.
One of my cousins is transcribing correspondence between our grandparents, prior to their being married. I'm very glad she is, it's been most interesting.
These date from mid winter of 1916-1917. It's entering to see how the Great War shows up in them, as a casual reference, as they corresponded back and forth from Quebec to Charleston, South Carolina.
January 12, 1917:
I saw by the paper last night that Humbert Mariotti’s father was dead. Also that the Irish Rangers have been broken up as a unit in England and that Major O’Brien and Trihey(?) are returning to Canada along with others, and they are sending the boys in drafts to the front. Isn’t it too bad. I think it is a shame.
January 19, 1917:
I saw by the paper this morning that Judge Doherty had made a statement that the Irish Rangers were going to Ireland and thought they would go to the Front as a unit. Also that as far as the particular officers mentioned as returning to Canada, he knew nothing about it. So I guess Mr. McCrory will be going alright.
January 24, 1917:
I heard this noon through a girl in Marguerite’s office that Jim McCrory was engaged to May Wittels (if this is the way to spell it) and wanted to marry her before he left, but she didn’t want to until he came back. Do you think it is true? I guess May must be delighted if it is true, but it seems to me she would have married him before going, if it is true. Anyhow, she has some very pleasant memories of happy moments she passed in the office, hasn’t she? Only it was mean of Percy Minto (?) to always intrude.
January 29, 1917:
I saw by the papers this morning that the Irish Rangers are having a great time in Ireland. Col. Trihey is still in Canada. I do not know whether he is going back or not. I believe for a while during his absence Mr. McCrory was in command. It seems Edgar Reynolds is not at all liked by the men under him. He was exercising his usual authority.
February 8, 1917:
February 13, 1917:
I saw by the Star bulletin just as I came along that there was quite an accident on the Grand Trunk Pacific. A train coming eastward conveying 300 French Canadian soldiers jumped the rails. I think 2 were killed and 40 injured.
February 14, 1917
I wonder if the U.S. went to war if they would have to censor the mails between there and here. They would soon get to know ours, dear, and let them go through.
Regarding staying there indefinitely, dear, this will not be necessary, but don’t you think it would be advisable to stay there, for say, a year or so after the war, as people say that times will be worse after the war for a couple of years until things get settled. If you get an increase by the end of April we could get married and instead of renting a house and (paying for) or buying furniture, we could board and with the money you would have in the bank you could put it into stocks. Of course if things were very good there we could stay on after the war.March 14, 1917
March 17, 1917
At noon today, there was an extra out with the news that a U.S. ship had been sunk. If true, I wonder if they will go to war.
Last night it seems there was some kind of a soirée in Outremont at which Henri Bourassa presided, and this morning all the store windows and poles throughout Outremont had little posters on them about eight inches long and five inches wide marked “Down with CONSCRIPTION. A bas la CONSCRIPTION”. I presume it must have been some of his party who did it. It seems in the East end the same thing has been done.
March 20, 1917
Greta Morris told me in speaking of Ralph Goodchild that he got married before going away to some very nice little girl from Kingston. I was quite surprised, as I had heard nothing about it, although I have seen Winnie several times lately. It seems he met her this summer while at some summer resort down the St. Lawrence where his regiment was located, and became engaged to her while there. Of course his battalion went overseas shortly afterwards, so I presume she has gone along with him.
The war news this morning seems to be very good. The English and French are driving the Germans out of France at a great rate, according to our newspapers. I hope it is true and that it will continue.March 23, 1917
Last night the 245th battalion, Kitchener’s own, left for overseas. Two of the Rolland boys, Stuart and Charlie, who are cousins of the Terrouxs were with them. Stuart was to have brought his wife along with him but at the last moment found she could not go. Of course they were very much disappointed.