Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Friday, February 25, 2011
Saturday, February 25, 1911. Battle of Casas Grandes and Kelley Creek.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Nice Post on what every American should learn about U.S. History
I'm often amazed by how little people know about the history of our nation. Nice to see somebody in the trenches considering it.
Monday, February 21, 2011
Heating
I don't know how the winter has been elsewhere, but here it's been a really cold winter. We've been down below OF repeatedly, including today.
Our house has electric heat. I actually like it quite a bit, but it's been having trouble keeping up in the really cold weather. Most houses around here have gas heat.
Most office buildings, if they're big ones like the one I work in, have a boiler. Ours has a boiler, but for some reason it's having trouble today.
This building was built in about 1917 or so. Not much insulation in it. When the heat isn't working, it's real darned cold in it.
For that matter, it was probably pretty cool in it back in the day during the winter, which is likely why men wore so much wool for office work in those days.
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Monday, February 20, 1911. Combating the plague.
Lincoln County Wyoming was established.
The Chinese government ordered villagers to burn their dead in order to combat the bubonic plague.
Last edition:
Thursday, February 16, 1911. A resolution to annex Canada voted down.
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Office machinery and the written word.
Just recently, I resumed using the Dragon voice recognition system for dictation. For those not familiar with it, it's a program that jacks into your computer, and you speak into a microphonewhich then processes the spoken word immediately into print. This is the second time I've experimented with. The first time, I grew frustrated with it and, after the system collapsed, I abandoned using it and simply typed things out on my computer. I'm a pretty fast typist, so this was working well, but any way you look at it, it's slower than speaking. This time around, the Dragon system seems to be working very well, so I've very happy with my resumed use of it.
Anyhow, what a revolution in the process of generating pleadings and letters this is. When I first started practicing law, some 21 years ago, we were using Dictaphones. Now those are practically a thing of the past. For those not familiar with them, a Dictaphone is a specialized tape recorder that allows the speaker to dictate the document. This ended up, at that time, in an audiotape which was handed over to the secretary, who then listened to it and typed out the document. The secretary handed that back to you, and then you manually red lined it for changes. This process could take some time.
This, of course, was an improved process of dictation as compared to the original one, which entailed calling a secretary in to your office and dictating the document to her. She took it down in shorthand. My mother, who had worked as a secretary in the 40s, 50s and 60s, could take excellent shorthand as a result of this process. Now, shorthand is nearly as dead of written language as Sanskrit.
Even earlier than that, legal documents were processed through a scrivener, a person whose job was simply to write legibly. That person wasn't normally the lawyer.
I'm not sure if this entire process is really quicker than the older methods, but it is certainly different. My secretary only rarely sees a rough draft of anything. That rough draft goes on my computer, and I edit it from there. About 80% of the time, by the time I have a secretary proof read a document, it is actually ready to go. Those entering the secretarial field, for that matter, generally no longer know how to take shorthand or even how to work the Dictaphone machine. They're excellent, however, on working the word process features of a computer.

All this also means, fwiw, that the practice of law, at least, is a much more solitary profession than it once was, at least while in the office. Generating a pleading, in a prior era, was more of a community effort in a way. The lawyer heard the pleading for the first time, in many instances, as the same time his secretary did. Over time, most secretaries were trusted to make comments on the pleadings. In the case of letters, they were often simply expected to be able to write one upon being asked to do so, something that still occurs to some degree today. But for pleadings, today, a lawyer tends to wall himself off by himself while drafting them, and any outside input tends to start after a relatively complete document has been drafted. Of course, with computers, it's much easier to circulate drafts and to change documents as needed.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
What one building says about the march of history.
Thursday, February 16, 1911. A resolution to annex Canada voted down.
U.S. Representative William Stiles Bennet (R-New York), a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, introduced a resolution proposing that the United States annex Canada, after unsuccessfully opposing the reciprocal trade agreement with the country.
He was a sore loser.
The proposal had no chance of passage but rightfully angered Canadians, who had kicked American a** twice in prior armed attempts to annex it.
The resolution failed 9 to 1. Today Republicans would show dronish servitude to King Donny the Mad and vote to approve it.
Life magazine issued its "Socialist Number"
The illustration was by William Balfour Ker, and quite striking. The choice was intentional as Ker, who generally did illustrations, including for Life, was a dedicated Socialist, and one who lived an unconventional lifestyle as was common for radicals of the period.
Last edition:
Wednesday, February 15, 1911. Bogosity then and now and "Viva Diaz!"
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
365 Days With A Model A.
The author notes that this is because he doesn't feel that everything should have a computerized element to it. I couldn't agree more.
Wednesday, February 15, 1911. Bogosity then and now and "Viva Diaz!"
NAVARRO IN JUAREZ; REBELS GO SOUTH; Mexican General with 1,000 Men Greeted with Cries of "Viva Diaz!" -- Met No Insurrectos.
Headline in the New York Times.
Compulsory domestic service? Crud, most women had that then, and still do today.
A completely ineffective medicine that purported to be a remedy for the treatment of tuberculosis made up of olive oil, squill root, almonds, nettle and red poppy petals was granted U.S. Patent 1,368,974.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is probably ready to back it as we speak or read, assuming he's not recounting his glory days of sniffing coke off of toilet seats.
Ah. . . the best and the brightest. . .
Last edition:
Tuesday, February 14, 1911. Madero reenters Mexico, John Browning patents the 1911.
Monday, February 14, 2011
Tuesday, February 14, 1911. Madero reenters Mexico, John Browning patents the 1911.
Madero crossed back into Mexico from Texas to assume command of Mexican revolutionaries, and to evade a U.S. warrant for his arrest.
John Browning was issued a patent:
The House of Representatives approved a controversial reciprocal trade agreement between the United States and Canada, by a 221-92 margin.
Niobrara County, Wyoming, was established.
Last edition:
Monday, February 13, 1911. Taking Durango.
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Monday, February 13, 1911. Taking Durango.
The Acting Secretary of State to the Governor of Texas.
Department of State,
Washington, February 13, 1911.
Your telegram of the 10th instant. Department informed by Embassy at Mexico City that Mexican Government does not just now desire to ask for permission to move troops over United States territory.
Huntington Wilson
Troops under Jose Luis Moya took Durango. 55 years old, and therefore into advanced years by the standards of the day, he was an unusual example of a wealthy man who joined the revolution. He'd lose his life in its service in May, 1911.
Today In Wyoming's History: February 13: 1911 Campbell County created.
A coal and hydrocarbons producing county, the population of the county has grown by a factor of nearly ten since my birth, and doubled since I graduated from high school. I vividly recall going there for swim meets in the late 70s and early 80s at which time it was an incredibly rough county.
Nicaragua's President Juan José Estrada declared martial law after an explosion in Managua destroyed a large quantity of arms and ammunition.
Last edition:
Sunday, February 12, 1911.
Saturday, February 12, 2011
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Thursday, February 9, 1911. Establishing the size of the House of Representatives.
The House of Representatives approved the Permanent Apportionment Act of 1929, increasing the number of U.S. Representatives, beginning in 1913, from 391 to 435, the number that it has had ever since.
This has created unequal representation and something really needs to be done to change it.
Voters in the Arizona Territory approved the proposed state Constitution.
Writer Jack London, who was a Socialist, came out in support of Socialist revolutionaries in Mexico.
The Army intended to deploy lighter than air craft near El Paso in an attempt to figure out what was going on in the revolution near there.
Indentured servitude for Chinese workers in British Malaya was abolished, effective June 30, 1914.
Last edition:
Wednesday, February 8, 1911. Revolutions.
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Wednesday, February 8, 1911. Revolutions.
Fighting raged on in Mexico, notably by Juarez.
The civil war in Honduras ended with an agreement to free elections supervised by the United States.
Perhaps Honduras can return the favor and watch the 2026 elections which Trump might be planning to steal.
Nasir al-Mulk assumed power as the new Regent for the 12-year-old Shah of Persia.
A dedication was made in Tampa to the traitorous rebels of the 1860 to 1865 period.
Last edition:
Tuesday, February 7, 1911. Mexican Revolutions.
Monday, February 7, 2011
Tuesday, February 7, 1911. Mexican Revolutions.
Gabriel Tepepa and Lucio Moreno started their rebellion. Their uprising was not coordinated with other Mexican revolutionaries, and most importantly not with Emiliano Zapata who was awaiting the return of Torres Burgos from his mission to Madero.
What this helps demonstrate is that the revolution that Madero sparked was never completely unified, and indeed, there were Mexican Revolutions, not a Mexican Revolution.
Orozco was fighting near Juarez in the Battle of Smelter View.
Last edition:


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