Sunday, October 9, 2016

Page Updates; 2016


 January 5, 2016:

They Were Lawyers:  Nicholas "The Chieftain" Moran.

January 8, 2016:

They Were Lawyers:  Michael Punke

January 9, 2016:

Movies In History:  The List:   This is a January 9, 2016 addition that only lists the movies we've posted and reviewed in this series of posts here on the main page.  As additional movies are added, the page will be updated, but the updates won't be posted on this or subsequent update threads, as that new page only lists threads that appear here, on the main page.

They Were Clerics:   Delores Hart, Noella Marcellino.

January 12, 2016:

They Were Clerics:  Barbara Nicolosi. 

They Were Soldiers:  Sam Elliot.

January 30, 2016:

They Were Hunters or Fishermen:  Craig Strickland, Kenny Sailors, Ariel Tweto, Alfred, Von Stauffenberg, Alexander Von Stauffenberg, Berthold Von Stauffenberg, Claus Von Stauffenberg.

They Were Farmers:  Kenny Sailors.

They Were Soldiers:  Alec Guinness.

February 4, 2016

They Were Soldiers:  Kenny Sailors

They Were Clerics:   Monique Pressley

February 16, 2016

They Were Farmers:  Thomas Jefferson, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, Ulysses S. Grant, Lyndon B. Johnson, Jimmy Carter.

They Were Hunters or Fishermen:  Antonin Scalia, Elena Kagan

March 24, 2016

They Were Hunters or Fishermen:   Lev Davidovich Bronstein (Trotsky), Alfred the Great

March 25, 2016

They Were Hunters or Fishermen:   Chuck Woolery

They Were Soldiers:  Chuck Woolery

They Were Clerics:  Antonio Vivaldi

March 29, 2016

The Were Lawyers:  Patrick Pearse

They Were Soldiers:  James Connolly

April 2, 2016

The Poster Gallery:  Posters of World War One:



May 3, 2016

They Were Soldiers:  James and Walter McIlhenny. 

August 17, 2016

They Were Clerics:  John McLaughlin. 

August 18, 2016 

They Were Solders:  Steve Bannon





September 1, 2016:   

They Were Solders:  Gene Wilder 

September 15, 2016

They Were Lawyers:  Basil W. Duke

 They Were Solders:   Hugh O'Brian

September 27, 2016:

They Were SolderArnold Palmer

October 5, 2016

They were Hunters or Fishermen:   Arthur Davidson, William S. Harley.

October 9, 2016


This page was added.  Like the "they were" threads on this site, this thread was an individual thread on this blog for quite awhile.  I've let this one languish for quite awhile and even forgot that I'd posted it, but ran across it the other day and set it aside as its own page.

Brooklyn defeates Boston in Game 3 of the 1916 World Series, October 9, 1916

From Reddit's 100 Years Ago Today Subreddit:

submitted by dozmataz_buckshank

Boston 3 @ Brooklyn 4

FULL GAME STATISTICS INCLUDING PLAY BY PLAY

Line Score - Final

                1  2  3   4  5  6   7  8  9    R  H  E
                -  -  -   -  -  -   -  -  -    -  -  -
Red Sox         0  0  0   0  0  2   1  0  0    3  7  1
Robins          0  0  1   1  2  0   0  0  X    4 10  0

Decisions

Winning Pitcher Losing Pitcher
Jack Coombs (1-0, 4.26) Carly Mays (0-1, 6.75)

Holscher's Hub: Utah State Capitol. Inaugurated on this day in 1916.

Holscher's Hub: Utah State Capitol:

The Utah State Capitol was inaugurated on this day in 1916.


When you are a business traveler, you see things when you see them. Early morning photo of the Utah State Capitol building.  Taken with an Iphone.


Reuters getting it wrong.

From a Reuters news article:
Cardinals under 80, known as cardinal-electors, can enter a secret conclave to choose a new pope from their own ranks after Francis dies or resigns. Francis, the former cardinal-archbishop of Buenos Aires, was elected in a conclave on March 13, 2013.
Nope, that's not right.

Now this is, of course, from an article that addresses Pope Francis having appointed new Cardinals yesterday.  Reuters, in this article, attempts explain what that means.

And what it states here is that the Cardinal Electors must choose from their own ranks. They do not have to do that.

The only real requirement to be elected to the Papacy is that the elected figure be a male Catholic, and hence eligible for Holy Orders. That's it.  In order to be elected you do not have to be a "Roman" Catholic, only a Catholic (a man from the Eastern Rite could be elected), nor do you even have to be a Priest.  You do have take Holy Orders in order to become Pope, so under the wild hypothetical of a non Priest being chosen you would have to see something like what occurred occasionally in the past where a layman was ordained and then elevated to Bishop (in this case the Bishop of Rome) in a single day.

Will that happen?  Well, no, its not very likely.

But could the College of Cardinals choose somebody outside their ranks?  It's unlikely, but it certainly could happen.

A game so long it didn't even make the afternoon edition. The Wyoming Tribune for October 9, 1916


Yesterday's (i.e., October 8, 1916) spectacularly long and spectacular fourteen inning, one score, World Series game apparently ran to long to make the 3:30 edition of the Wyoming Tribune, which had to accordingly report it the following day.

Also on that day we learn that a Cheyenne girl was on a ship torpedoed at sea, and that the Tribune felt that Wilson's game was up.

The Book of Habakkuk

The oracle which Habakkuk the prophet received in a vision.

Habakkuk’s First Complaint

How long, O LORD, must I cry for help
and you do not listen?
Or cry out to you, “Violence!”
and you do not intervene?
Why do you let me see iniquity?
why do you simply gaze at evil?
Destruction and violence are before me;
there is strife and discord.
This is why the law is numb
and justice never comes,
For the wicked surround the just;
this is why justice comes forth perverted.

God’s Response
Look over the nations and see!
Be utterly amazed!
For a work is being done in your days
that you would not believe, were it told.
For now I am raising up the Chaldeans,
that bitter and impulsive people,
Who march the breadth of the land
to take dwellings not their own.
They are terrifying and dreadful;
their right and their exalted position are of their own making.
Swifter than leopards are their horses,
and faster than desert wolves.
Their horses spring forward;
they come from far away;
they fly like an eagle hastening to devour.
All of them come for violence,
their combined onslaught, a stormwind
to gather up captives like sand.
They scoff at kings,
ridicule princes;
They laugh at any fortress,
heap up an earthen ramp, and conquer it.
Then they sweep through like the wind and vanish—
they make their own strength their god!

Habakkuk’s Second Complaint
Are you not from of old, O LORD,
my holy God, immortal?
LORD, you have appointed them for judgment,
O Rock,* you have set them in place to punish!
Your eyes are too pure to look upon wickedness,
and the sight of evil you cannot endure.
Why, then, do you gaze on the faithless in silence
while the wicked devour those more just than themselves?
You have made mortals like the fish in the sea,
like creeping things without a leader.
He brings them all up with a hook,
and hauls them away with his net;
He gathers them in his fishing net,
and then rejoices and exults.
1Therefore he makes sacrifices to his net,
and burns incense to his fishing net;
For thanks to them his portion is rich,
and his meal lavish.
Shall they, then, keep on drawing his sword
to slaughter nations without mercy?

I will stand at my guard post,
and station myself upon the rampart;
I will keep watch to see what he will say to me,
and what answer he will give to my complaint.

God’s Response
Then the LORD answered me and said:
Write down the vision;
Make it plain upon tablets,
so that the one who reads it may run.
For the vision is a witness for the appointed time,
a testimony to the end; it will not disappoint.
If it delays, wait for it,
it will surely come, it will not be late.
See, the rash have no integrity;
but the just one who is righteous because of faith shall live.

Sayings Against Tyrants
Indeed wealth is treacherous;
a proud man does not succeed.
He who opens wide his throat like Sheol,
and is insatiable as death,
Who gathers to himself all the nations,
and collects for himself all the peoples—
Shall not all these take up a taunt against him
and make a riddle about him, saying:
Ah! you who store up what is not yours
—how long can it last!—
you who load yourself down with collateral.
Will your debtors not rise suddenly?
Will they not awake, those who make you tremble?
You will become their spoil!
Because you plundered many nations,
the remaining peoples shall plunder you;
Because of the shedding of human blood,
and violence done to the land,
to the city and to all who live in it.
Ah! you who pursue evil gain for your household,
setting your nest on high
to escape the reach of misfortune!
You have devised shame for your household,
cutting off many peoples, forfeiting your own life;
For the stone in the wall shall cry out,
and the beam in the frame shall answer it!
Ah! you who build a city by bloodshed,
and who establish a town with injustice!
Is this not from the LORD of hosts:
peoples toil for what the flames consume,
and nations grow weary for nothing!
But the earth shall be filled
with the knowledge of the LORD’s glory,
just as the water covers the sea.
Ah! you who give your neighbors
the cup of your wrath to drink, and make them drunk,
until their nakedness is seen!
You are filled with shame instead of glory;
drink, you too, and stagger!
The cup from the LORD’s right hand shall come around to you,
and utter shame shall cover your glory.
For the violence done to Lebanon shall cover you,
and the destruction of the animals shall terrify you;
Because of the shedding of human blood,
and violence done to the land,
to the city and to all who live in it.
Of what use is the carved image,
that its maker should carve it?
Or the molten image, the lying oracle,
that its very maker should trust in it,
and make mute idols?
Ah! you who say to wood, “Awake!”
to silent stone, “Arise!”
Can any such thing give oracles?
It is only overlaid with gold and silver,
there is no breath in it at all.
But the LORD is in his holy temple;
silence before him, all the earth!

Hymn About God’s Reign
LORD, I have heard your renown,
and am in awe, O LORD, of your work.
In the course of years revive it,
in the course of years make yourself known;
in your wrath remember compassion!
God came from Teman,
the Holy One from Mount Paran.

Selah
 
His glory covered the heavens,
and his praise filled the earth;
his splendor spread like the light.
He raised his horns high,
he rejoiced on the day of his strength.
Before him went pestilence,
and plague* followed in his steps.
He stood and shook the earth;
he looked and made the nations tremble.
Ancient mountains were shattered,
the age-old hills bowed low,
age-old orbits collapsed.
The tents of Cushan trembled,
the pavilions of the land of Midian.
Was your anger against the rivers, O LORD?
your wrath against the rivers,
your rage against the sea,
That you mounted your steeds,
your victorious chariot?
You readied your bow,
you filled your bowstring with arrows.

Selah
 
You split the earth with rivers;
at the sight of you the mountains writhed.
The clouds poured down water;
the deep roared loudly.
The sun forgot to rise,
the moon left its lofty station,
At the light of your flying arrows,
at the gleam of your flashing spear.
In wrath you marched on the earth,
in fury you trampled the nations.
You came forth to save your people,
to save your anointed one.
You crushed the back of the wicked,
you laid him bare, bottom to neck.

Selah
 
You pierced his head with your shafts;
his princes you scattered with your stormwind,
as food for the poor in unknown places.
You trampled the sea with your horses
amid the churning of the deep waters.
I hear, and my body trembles;
at the sound, my lips quiver.
Decay invades my bones,
my legs tremble beneath me.
I await the day of distress
that will come upon the people who attack us.
For though the fig tree does not blossom,
and no fruit appears on the vine,
Though the yield of the olive fails
and the terraces produce no nourishment,
Though the flocks disappear from the fold
and there is no herd in the stalls,
Yet I will rejoice in the LORD
and exult in my saving God.
GOD, my Lord, is my strength;
he makes my feet swift as those of deer
and enables me to tread upon the heights.
For the leader; with stringed instruments.

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Game Two of the 1916 World Series

Game Two of the 1916 World Series, courtesy of 100 Years Ago Today Sub Reddit:
submitted by dozmataz_buckshank

Brooklyn 1 @ Boston 2

FULL GAME STATISTICS INCLUDING PLAY BY PLAY

Line Score - Final

                1  2  3   4  5  6   7  8  9  10 11 12  13 14    R  H  E
                -  -  -   -  -  -   -  -  -   -  -  -   -  -    -  -  -
Dodgers         1  0  0   0  0  0   0  0  0   0  0  0   0  0    1  6  2
Red Sox         0  0  1   0  0  0   0  0  0   0  0  0   0  1    2  7  1

Decisions

Winning Pitcher Losing Pitcher
Babe Ruth (1-0, 0.64) Sherry Smith (0-1, 1.35)
Tight game! Hal Javrin out at the plate, bottom of the 9th
This is the legendary fourteen inning World Series, the longest World Series game ever played, and one in which there was but a single run.  Amazing.

Babe Ruth, we should note, pitched this game. We don't think of Ruth as a pitcher, but he was early in his career, and he was a great one.

Truly a great game.

Poster Saturday: The M1 does my talking.


Blog Mirror: Epochs Field Guide to Camouflage

I'll confess, I find camouflage interesting. 

This is in part because I'm a hunter. 

When I was young, a long time ago now, if you saw camouflage in daily wear, it meant that the wearer was undoubtedly a hunter.  Indeed, when I was in junior high I had a neat winter coat that was blaze orange on one side and had the "duck hunter" (WWII) camouflage pattern on the on the other.  It was reversible, and it was a neat, down, coat.

At the same time, or thereabouts, I joined the Civil Air Patrol.  The Vietnam War hadn't been over long and the CAP actually had some tiger stripe uniforms that it issued to those small enough to wear them.  Tiger Stripe is a neat camo.  I wore those for duck hunting until I outgrew them and donated them to somebody else.  Little did I think they'd become highly collectable.  Oh well.

In recent years, however, camouflage has spread into daily wear big time.  Lots of folks who have never fired a gun and who get no closer to wild game than the pigeons in the park wear camouflage clothing all the time.  I've thought about posting about that here, but I haven't yet.  Now somebody else has, so I'm linking it in:



Introduction



Menswear in the last few years has seen a profusion of camouflage motifs. In the past you would occasionally see camo used in a fashion collection or a subculture like punk, hip-hop or the 1990’s jungle scene. It’s really only in the last decade that it has become a staple, largely driven by heritage–minded Japanese brands and the streetwear scene. This is your field guide to the history, original use & application of camo in modern clothing
It's a neat article, but I should note.  It contains an error in a caption. That caption being:
 A usmc soldier in Frogskin camouflage near Normandy, France.
Nope, that guy is in the Army, not the Marine Corps.  No Marines served in ground combat in the European Theater of Operations (there would be shipboard Marines, of course, and the Marines did have a presence on the ground in Iceland during the war).  The frog pattern camouflage was introduced first in the Army, for snipers, but the average GI associated any camouflage patter in Europe with the Waffen SS, which made wearing it in an American sector dangerous.  So it was withdrawn from Europe.  Sources differ, but the frog pattern uniforms were either simply given to the USMC which kept up with issuing them to some thereafter, or maybe they simply adopted it independantly.  Again, I've seen both stories.

Anyhow, neat article with a neat assortment of camouflage patterns discussed.

Friday, October 7, 2016

A note to myself


The Wyoming Tribune for October 7, 1916: Boston takes game one of the world series

Note, this is the 3:30 pm edition of the Tribune.


Active at the time and in the region. Frank A. Meanea

Frank A. Meanea is one of the most famous of the late 19th and early 20th Century saddlemakers. 

Meanea started off his career by working with his uncle, the also famous (in this topic) saddlemaker E. L. Gallatin.  They located in Cheyenne in the very late 1860s, a period in which Cheyenne was in its infancy.  In 1881 Meanea had become sufficiently well known as a maker that the company began to make leather items under Meanea's name as F. A. Meanea Saddlery.  It would continue to operate under that name until 1928, Meanea's death.  It would retain its Cheyenne base that entire time, although oddly enough there was a period of time in which it had a presence in the Yukon, reflecting that Canadian Territory's pioneering days.

Meanea's is very famous for the Cheyenne style of Western stock saddle, some features of which we still see today. The Cheyenne Roll was a Meanea innovation.  His shop was also associated with a type of Mexican Loop holster and it was Meanea who introduced the Cheyenne Plug (closed bottom) to that type of very widely used Frontier Era holster.

Meanea's shop was substantial, employing over 20 people at the height of its production  He operated not only by direct sales, but by mail order, something that was fairly common at the time.


Game 1, 1916 World Series (courtesy of 100 Years Ago Today Subreddit).

submitted by

Brooklyn 5 @ Boston 6

FULL GAME STATISTICS INCLUDING PLAY BY PLAY

Line Score - Final


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
BRO 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 9 5 10 4
BOS 0 0 1 0 1 0 3 1 x 6 8 1

Decisions

Winning Pitcher Losing Pitcher
Ernie Shore (1-0, 3.12) Rube Marquard (0-1, 3.86)
Video footage of Game 1

Potato Digger


One Sided. Georgia Tech v. Cumberland College, October 7, 1916.

As difficult as it is to grasp, this day is the anniversary of a 1916 football game in which Georgia Tech defeated Cumberland College in football game with a final score of 222 to 0.


Something questions the sportsmanship of something here.

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Illinois Guardsmen return home to warm welcome

Illinois welcomed its Guardsmen back home, just as Wyoming had just sent its off.  Courtesy of 100 Years Ago Today Subreddit.

Bass Pro Shop swallows Cabelas. . . a Distributist Sportsman's Lament


This past week the news broke that Bass Pro Shop bought its rival, Sidney Nebraska based Cabelas.

Ah, pooh.

News, truly, I wish hadn't come.

Now, why, doggone it, as a red blooded American, am I lamenting the time honored business model of one company swallowing another?  Geez Louise man, aren't I for motherhood, apple pie, and unrestrained acquisition?

Well, I'm for motherhood and I like apple pie, but. . . . 

I'm also for subsidiarity. 

Now, before I go on to explain that, I should note that Missouri based Bass Pro Shop says it'll keep the Cabelaas flag flying, so there will be,  they say,in some form, a Cabelas and a Bass Pro.

Well, I'm skeptical.

Generally, quite frankly, that's not how these thing go long term.   Bass Pro Shop and Cabelas are competitors. While they likely do not perfectly overlap, they do to a large extent, and long term, it won't make sense for both of them to keep on. At some point, I suspect, Bass Pro Shop will figure it makes more sense to just have all of those stores be Bass Pro Shops.  

But I suspect it won't be the best for them, for the same reason. 

Which brings me to subsidiarity.

Subsidiarity, according to Wikipedia, is defined as follows:
Subsidiarity is an organizing principle that matters ought to be handled by the smallest, lowest or least centralized competent authority. Political decisions should be taken at a local level if possible, rather than by a central authority.  The Oxford English Dictionary defines subsidiarity as the idea that a central authority should have a subsidiary function, performing only those tasks which cannot be performed effectively at a more immediate or local level.
Put another way:
It is a fundamental principle of social philosophy, fixed and unchangeable, that one should not withdraw from individuals and commit to the community what they can accomplish by their own enterprise and industry. Pope Pius XI, Quadragesimo anno, pg.79
Now, there's a lot to this, but the basic gist of it is as noted above.  The concept is that needs are best met at the local level, and for that matter, the market is best met at the local level.  This isn't always true, but it tend to be.  It's best, generally, for the local employees, and its often best for the local market, or consumer.

As an example of that, I'd note, big chain sporting goods stores (and Cabelas is one, but I'm not pointing at them) often stock weird items for the local market.  We see that here on odd occasion when we'll have a big national chain that stocks something like gigantic fishing poles, or deer stands, neither of which are used here.  One Canadian based sporting goods store that has an outlet here stocks the gigantic fishing poles, and while they're interesting, I'll be they hardly ever sell one.

Which is why I favor a local sporting goods store here that is part of a chain, but just a statewide one.  It's the best store in town, in my view, and this is likely because it knows its market.

Indeed, occasionally there were rumors that Cabelas would come in here and I always hoped they wouldn't. So far they haven't.  But I'd rather have Sidney Nebraska based Cabelas around here than Missouri based Bass Pro.

Which goes to the fact that I tend to still look at Cabelas and Bass Pro as types of mail order outfits that were pioneered by Herters years ago. That is, while they have expanded to have retail outlets, it was really mail order that made them what they were and, in that sense, they occupied a different category than brick and mortar stores.  At least as to Cabelas it wasn't that they were cheaper, as they often were not, but rather that you could order stuff from them that you couldn't otherwise get locally.  So they were like a smaller singular entity in a certain fashion. When they started to have multiple outlets that sort of changed and while I certainly stopped in some of those outlets here and there, I was never really comfortable with it.

The consolidation of these companies always seem to be a market trend and its something that can only occur because of the corporate structure that all large companies adopt.  This gives them the ability to expand to giant size but that also works, at some point, to cause them to absorb their competition.  If corporate business forms didn't work the way that they do, retail operations could not expand like this.  And the absorption doesn't always go that well.  Bass Pro never impressed me that much, for example, as it seemed focused, to my mind, on a certain southern style of fishing that doesn't exist here.  Cabelas seemed more Mid Western to me. 

Well, as noted immediately above, if corporate business forms didn't work the way that they do, retail operations could not expand like this.

And perhaps its sad that they can. 

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Crime in France and the United States. Rates, cause and effect.

News comes to us that Kim Khardashian was robbed at gun point in France.  Now, while I don't admire the Khardashians, who seemingly have made a living out of being famous for being famous and for wearing clothing that's basically indecent, or sometimes no clothing at all, being robbed is bad, and being robbed at gun point no doubt very traumatic.  May she recover from the trauma soon, and perhaps, in addition, take a lesson away about being famous for flashing. . . jewels or whatever.

Anyhow, this shocker, in the US, no doubt comes with the added shock for some that, surely, France being a European nation, and (while its not true) Europe being a big gun free zone (again, not true) surely there's very little robbery in France.

Hmmmm





Gee, this would suggests, um, no prove that the robbery rate in the United is declining to just about half of France's rate.

Well, lets just talk about theft in general.

Here's the burglary rate for the US:



Here it is for France:



Hmm, actually just about the same.

Not that all crimes are equal in both countries.

Here's one of the worst:



And in the US. We come out the worst here by far:



Well, what about murder:









The lesson?

I don't know if there is one, but the simple conclusions some like to draw about implements doesn't seem born out.

Violent Crime in the United States

Corporate inversion