Sunday, December 31, 2023

Today -100: December 31, 1923: I got nuthin’


Nuthin’

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Saturday, December 30, 2023

Today -100: December 30, 1923: Of tax cuts & arms sales


Bankers, railroad presidents, lawyers, real estate operators and industrialists are just some of the diverse range of people expressing support for Treasury Sec. Andrew Mellon’s tax-cut plans, the details of which were (finally) released yesterday. They say the cost of living will go down and a dollar will again be worth... wait for it... a dollar.

The US will sell the Obregón government in Mexico military supplies to defeat the Huerta uprising, including millions of rounds of ammunition, but not the cruisers Obregón wanted. Or airplanes.

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Friday, December 29, 2023

Today -100: December 29, 1923: Of pardons, names, and microphones


Chicago bootlegger Philip Grossman, the guy Calvin Coolidge pardoned who turned out not to be in prison but a fugitive, admits having paid thousands to a Republican politician for that pardon. His commutation may now not come through. Update: okay, I’ve now checked Wikipedia. The district court will send him back to prison, saying the president doesn’t have the power to pardon in contempt of court cases (the contempt consisting of selling booze when a court had told him not to), because that would violate separation of powers. The Supreme Court in 1925 will rule that presidents do have that power.

The New York Nursery and Child’s Hospital picks the names that will be foisted on foundlings in 1924. These are chosen “at random,” but assigned by sex. Annnnd race, although I don’t see anything especially racial in the names chosen. For example, white Protestant boys (are there no Catholics or Jews? do they get surrendered somewhere else?) will get names like Frederick Olmstead, Alexander Halliday, and Stephen Oliver. White Protestant girls will be Elizabeth Kemberley, Anne Draper, Margaret Dryden, etc. While black boys will be William Clinton, George Getty, Ralph Phime, etc. 

Dr Phillips Thomas has invented a microphone that can record insect noises too high for the human ear, so we can find out what they're saying about us.

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Thursday, December 28, 2023

Today -100: December 28, 1923: Of cane-guns, private business transactions, bombs, prohibition courts, and hypnotized cops


The Japanese Cabinet resigns, taking responsibility for the attempted assassination of Prince Regent Hirohito. Immediately, on the same day. A young Communist, I guess, used a cane-gun, which is cool, right? Hirohito continues on to the Diet, which he opens “with customary ceremonies” without members of the Diet (dieticians?) knowing what had happened until later.

Spain foils a Communist plot, which may or may not be real, against the dictator Gen. Primo Rivera, whose name I’ve run out of puns for. Many arrests are made.

In the slow-moving Senate investigation of Tea Pot Dome led by Robert La Follette, Harry Sinclair of the eponymous oil company refuses to answer questions about his “private business transactions.”

A bomb is thrown at a Jewish women’s society ball in Vienna, with one killed & 43 wounded. The cops think the perps are from the Society of Awakening Hungarians.

Federal judges rule that the IRS’s “Prohibition Court,” created to collect taxes from bootleggers, is unconstitutional. It notes some of the people “taxed” had not been convicted of bootlegging.

Headline of the Day -100:  



In Sebenico, Croatia. The cop was told to “shoot” a piece of wood at the audience. Finding that it wouldn’t fire, he switched to his service revolver, which did, then arrested three audience members. When brought out of the trance, he went insane and was committed. I don’t think I believe this story.

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Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Today -100: December 27, 1923: Of anti-Semitism


Romanian police and troops are standing guard at the universities in Bucharest, Jassy & Klousenburg to protect Jewish students from violence. Some professors are refusing to lecture in the presence of soldiers.

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Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Today -100: December 26, 1923: A normal course


Former Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos will return to Greece, as requested by 270 members of the Constituent Assembly, but says he won’t take over his old job and will just be mediator and adviser to his country (yeah, sure) to get it back to “a normal course,” whatever that means.

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Monday, December 25, 2023

Today -100: December 25, 1923: Of pardons, assassinations, and raids


Pres. Coolidge issues 11 pardons, including for an 18-year old Mexican woman 14 months into a drugs sentence, a guy who was blinded by an accident in prison, and a black man (several of the pardonees are black) who, as a minor, killed his stepfather to stop him beating his sister 21 years ago. One pardoned Chicago bootlegger, Philip Grossman, was probably put on the list accidentally, or because of bribes, but he’s not actually in prison and has been a fugitive from justice for the last year. He’ll surrender now to get his commutation.

After 25 minutes, a Paris jury acquits Germaine Berton, the 20-year-old anarchist who assassinated Marius Plateau, leader of the far-right monarchist Camelots du Roi, in January. Her lawyers described it as a political act and essentially put the Camelots on trial, correctly pointing out that they preach and practice violence against radicals. Thanks to France’s weird judicial system, that means the Camelots’ lawyer can participate in the trial.

The federal Prohibition cops conduct a raid in Williamson County, Illinois of supposed moonshiners and bootleggers, taking in 75 people. The feds operated without the knowledge of local cops, using volunteers. You know, Klansmen.

The Irish Free State releases Countess Markievicz.

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Sunday, December 24, 2023

Today -100: December 24, 1923: Of propaganda, dazed Greeks, and illnesses the require vibratory stimulation


Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes shows his “evidence” that Soviet Russia is conducting propaganda in the US: an article from last year in Izvestia about the close relationship between Russia and the Third International, whose president, Grigory Zinoviev, hopes that the Workers Party of America “will now more successfully conduct its work among the millions of American proletarians.”

Headline of the Day -100:


A republic? A new king (evidently Britain is ready and willing to supply one)? The return of Eleftherios Venizelos as prime minister for the 4th time?

Although the Irish Free State is releasing many interned political prisoners, Éamon de Valera is still in his cell, reading Einstein.

For her (ahem) Christmas stocking:




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Saturday, December 23, 2023

Today -100: December 23, 1923: Vive l’anarchie


Anarchist Marcelian del Val is executed in Toulon for killing 3 cops. He refuses a mass, saying “I mock religion.” His last words: Vive l’anarchie.

Russia is adopting the metric system, phasing it in by 1927.

Chief Deskaheh is trying to get the League of Nations to recognize the Iroquois as an independent state.

Germany has been slow in developing radio, and the government is hampering it with strict, indeed ridiculous, rules. To even purchase a radio, one must get a license after proving oneself a citizen of Germany of good moral character. No one is allowed build their own radios, and the models they’re permitted to buy can receive only certain stations and not transmit. Chancellor Wilhelm Marx will soon make the first broadcast by a prominent German person.

Canada will soon hang its first Eskimos. Ottawa says this is necessary to stop Eskimos committing murders, so many murders.

The French navy airship Dixmude (originally a German zeppelin seized as reparations) is feared lost in the Sahara, caught in a gale. It did, in fact, blow up off the coast of Sicily, killing 52 passengers and crew, the largest air disaster to date. Only 2 bodies were ever recovered.

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Friday, December 22, 2023

Today -100: December 22, 1923: Of reeds


William Randolph Hearst is throwing his weight behind Sen. James Reed of Missouri to be the Democratic nominee for president, although Reed hasn’t shown much interest in the job. If that fails, Hearst may just let his papers support Coolidge.

Russia says the papers US Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes is citing as proving Russia encouraged US Communists to prepare for revolution are forgeries.

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Thursday, December 21, 2023

Today -100: December 21, 1923: Not taking no for an answer


The South Dakota Ford-for-President Club ignores Henry Ford’s refusal to run for president and will go ahead working to put his name on the ballot.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will investigate Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes’ accusation that Russia conducts propaganda in the US for the overthrow of the government. Some congresscritters think Hughes is just making shit up. Hughes cites an alleged instruction from Grigory Zinoviev to US Communists to prepare for revolution. 

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Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Today -100: December 20, 1923: No persuasion was sufficient to put them straight


France awards Marie Curie a pension of 40,000 francs per year for herself and her children on the 25th anniversary of the discovery of radium.

Henry Ford says once again that he isn’t running for president and endorses Coolidge. He says 90% of the people “feel perfectly safe” with Cal. In fact, he suggests that the C-Man is too busy running the country to campaign, so everyone should just concede the election to him, I guess.

What’s the opposite of a beer hall putsch? Rumor was that another Nazi coup was scheduled during a performance of Tosca, but it didn’t happen.

A bill granting dictatorial powers to the Bavarian government fails to win 2/3 of the votes in the Landtag.

10 members of the Russian group Laboring Truth are arrested because “no persuasion was sufficient to put them straight.”
 
The KKK sets off 12 bombs on the campus of the University of Dayton, Ohio, a Catholic institution and burn a cross. You’d think that would make the NYT, wouldn’t you? It doesn’t. 

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Tuesday, December 19, 2023

Today -100: December 19, 1923: Principles!


Greece orders King George and Queen Consort Elisabeth into exile. She’s the daughter of the king of Romania, so that’s where they’ll go.

The State Dept replies to a Russian telegram about negotiations leading to US recognition, saying the US government “is not proposing to barter away its principles.” The next paragraph is a demand that Russia restore property confiscated from US citizens, if you were wondering what those principles are.

Italy warns France it wouldn’t accept an independent Rhineland, much less annexation by France of the German territories it’s currently occupying.

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Monday, December 18, 2023

Today -100: December 18, 1923: But certainly no better


William Gibbs McAdoo announces his candidacy for president. He says the US won’t “progress in any direction through the Republican policies of stand-stillism and wishful thinking”.

A French court-martial is trying 40 German Düsseldorf police for breaking up a demonstration of Rhenish separatists on September 30th. A couple of French soldiers were injured, but the main charge is that the police didn’t obey French orders not to do anything.

Former kaiser Wilhelm wins a libel suit against an editor who published a story claiming that in 1895 Willy caused a naval officer on the royal yacht to commit suicide. Evidently he rode a bicycle off a mountain path into the sea.

New Jersey Gov. George Silzer approves the extradition to Georgia of a negro, Silas Parmore, accused of killing the Iron City police chief. Silzer says if anything happens to him, there will be no more extraditions to Georgia. An all-white Georgian jury will sentence Parmore to hang, but the state Supreme Court will overturn the verdict and he’ll be acquitted in a second trial 2 years from now, at which point Georgia Gov. Clifford Walker will write to Gov. Silzer that this proves that “the State of Georgia and its people are no worse than those of other States.”

A.W. Birch, owner of a hotel in Marlow, Oklahoma, is shot and killed defending (unsuccessfully) a black porter in his employ from a lynch mob. The all-white town doesn’t allow black people after dark.

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Sunday, December 17, 2023

Today -100: December 17, 1923: Of counter-offensives, rocket men, and something electrical


Mexican Pres. Obregón launches a counter-offensive against the rebels with however much of the army still obeys him. The former general will evidently lead the troops in person.

Today -100 is the 20th anniversary of the first powered flight by the Wright brothers.

Is this the next step?


Has Henri (?) Melot invented a jet plane? One without a propeller, and therefore able to reach higher altitudes?

New York Edison asks



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Saturday, December 16, 2023

Today -100: December 16, 1923: I am delighted that a President of the United States has discovered the First Amendment to the Constitution


Coolidge commutes the sentences of 31 people still in prison for convictions under the Espionage Act during the Great War, for, you know, speaking against the war. Just in time for Christmas! In doing this, Coolidge is following the recommendations of a committee set up by Harding. Sen. William Borah says “I am delighted that a President of the United States has discovered the First Amendment to the Constitution and has had the courage to announce the discovery.”

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Friday, December 15, 2023

Today -100: December 15, 1923: They’re expected to nominate Calvin Coolidge sober?


In the French Chamber of Deputies, Socialist MP and future PM Léon Blum says the government’s Ruhr policy obtained neither reparations nor security, and indeed imperiled both.

Prohibition officials are already planning to prevent the attempts of bootleggers to bring into Cleveland next June the huge quantities of booze required to lubricate the Republican Convention.

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Thursday, December 14, 2023

Today -100: December 14, 1923: Wait, is he saying that Winston Churchill was... drunk? Unpossible!


Hiram Johnson is furious at the RNC decision to over-represent the South at the National Convention, which he sees as a Coolidge move to pump up the number of tame delegates. Yup, but another reason is that blacks in the North are threatening to bolt the party.

Rep. Frank Clark (D-Florida) protests the rule against congresscritters having sofas in their offices.

The French women’s suffrage bill is running into trouble, as was the custom. The current version does have women voting at 21 instead of 25, but includes a provision for fathers to have an extra vote for each of their children (including illegitimate ones). The Chamber rejects the government’s request for a postponement until it can come up with a position on women’s suffrage. The government is also considering a bill to make voting compulsory.

Lord Alfred Douglas is sentenced to 6 months in prison for criminally libeling Winston Churchill, who he accused of having taken bribes to lie about the Battle of Jutland. After an amusing trial in which Bosie’s lawyer hectored Winnie on the stand, the jury is out 7 minutes, even after hearing from a witness who saw Churchill in “an unfortunate condition” outside Boodle’s Club in 1913. Churchill denies having ever been a member of the club.

Polish Jews have been paying smugglers to get them into Germany.

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Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Today -100: December 13, 1923: Of yucatans, counsels of dormancy, duels, and equal pay


The Mexican rebels claim to have taken Yucatan. 

The Republican National Committee restores the over-representation of the South at its Convention.

Democratic presidential candidate William Gibbs McAdoo calls Coolidge’s State of the Union address a “counsel of dormancy.” He says the US can, contrary to Cal’s claim, afford tax cuts and the Bonus at the same time.

Dueling is experiencing a minor resurgence in France, the latest being between aviator Raoul Moupin and writer Albert Nitar. Moulin is hit in the shoulder.

A referendum in Boston turns down equal pay for women teachers.

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Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Today -100: December 12, 1923: Of alliterative princes


The French Chamber of Deputies again takes up women’s suffrage, and as usual some idiot proposes instead to give male heads of families an extra vote for each child they have (including illegitimate ones). A measure to give the vote to women over 25 is accepted in principle.

Prussia, annoyed that people still refer to former kaiser Wilhelm as “kaiser,” strips him of the title. He is now Prince of Prussia, the same title his son has.  (Update: Next month Prussia will defend this, saying also that the Hohenzollerns never had the right to the name Hohenzollern. The name hasn’t appeared on their birth & death certificates, etc.)


Jewish students are beaten up by Christian students at Budapest University. Authorities are threatening to close the U.

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Monday, December 11, 2023

Today -100: December 11, 1923: Of bonuses, ended dictatorships, and Bohemians


Coolidge calls for a $300 million in budget cuts per year. He says he opposes the soldier Bonus because it would make tax-cutting “impossible for years to come.” He finds no “sound reason” for the Bonus. Able-bodies vets can just get jobs.

Rebels are headed, by train, for Mexico City.

Headline of the Day -100:  


Rather than ask for a renewal of his dictatorial powers from a Chamber which has tamely given him every damn thing he asked for, he wants elections for a new Chamber to give him dictatorial powers without the accusation that it is unrepresentative.

The Republicans are adjusting the apportionment of delegates to the 1924 Convention. California feels short-changed (presumably to screw over Hiram Johnson?), as do black people from the South, which is seeing its delegates cut in half because, well, no one votes (or is allowed to vote) Republican in the South. Traditionally, many of the Southern delegates have been black, providing tame backing for the party leadership, which paid them well for it. Now the party is thinking it’s been 60 years since the Civil War and they might someday be competitive in the South, so they’ve been ditching their black supporters there. One fun way to do that is to hold the conventions that pick delegates in segregated hotels.

People at the Greenwich Village Historical Society complain about the influx to the neighborhood of long-haired male and bob-haired female Bohemians.

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Sunday, December 10, 2023

Today -100: December 10, 1923: Hey, it worked for James T. Kirk


William Jason Fields, incoming Democratic governor of Kentucky, will not attend his own inaugural ball because there’ll be dancing and he doesn’t believe in dancing (he’s a Methodist, you see) and will ban it from the executive mansion.

The Huertista rebels capture Jalapa, the capital of Vera Cruz state.

Three “adventurers” will soon start a two-year voyage on a 36-foot yawl. They’ll be looking for a tribe of Indian Amazon-type warrior women (oh, and they’re supposed to be white) they expect to find at the sources for the Amazon River, having believed a tall tale by a sea captain. “The main purpose of our venture is to find a new type of feminine beauty.”

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Saturday, December 09, 2023

Today -100: December 9, 1923: We’re going to Cleveland!


The Reichstag passes an emergency powers act allowing Chancellor Wilhelm Marx’s Cabinet to do whatever it wants without further Reichstag authorization for an indefinite period. The vote is 313-18, with 39 left-wing members of the Social Democratic Party ignoring the party whip and staying away.

Pres. Coolidge decides that the 1924 Republican Convention will be held in Cleveland (they’ve been using Chicago exclusively since 1904 but support for Hiram Johnson is strong there so...). The Republican Party is thinking about sending out 2,000 trained speakers to explain Treasury Sec. Andrew Mellon’s plan for reducing taxes mostly on the rich (dropping surtaxes from 50% to 25%). “Duh, we’re Republicans” would seem to cover it.

The Nash County, North Carolina commissioners protest Gov. Cameron Morrison’s sending troops to Nashville to prevent the lynching of a black man on trial for assaulting a white woman. Morrison, not exactly innocent of participating in racist violence in the past, says he’ll use “every particle of power given me by the Constitution of this State to prevent lynchings”.

The Ku Klux Klan contributes $25 to a small negro church, the Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, in Greenport, Long Island, which is building a new church.

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Friday, December 08, 2023

Today -100: December 8, 1923: Just OK


The Oklahoma Legislature passes the weak anti-Klan measure, banning mask-wearing in public but not requiring the publication of membership lists.

Berthold Brecht’s first play, Baal, premieres in Leipzig.

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Thursday, December 07, 2023

Today -100: December 7, 1923: Down with imposition!


Calvin Coolidge gives his State of the Union (still not called that) Speech. “For us peace reigns everywhere.” How nice for us. He is against joining the League of Nations but for the World Court, with qualifications. He is for tax cuts (boy is he for tax cuts). He is against the bonus for veterans. He wants to build up the Coast Guard – with power boats! fun! – to fight booze smuggling. He won’t recognize Soviet Russia, but has nothing against US citizens doing business with it. He favors an anti-lynching law, though not at great length.

British elections: Stanley Baldwin’s Tories lose 80 seats in Parliament, bringing them to 258. Ramsay MacDonald’s Labour Party gains 49 seats, bringing them to 191, and David Lloyd George’s Liberals gain 43 seats, bringing them to 158. No one has close to a majority.

Frederick Pethick Lawrence, whose career in electoral politics was stalled by his pre-war involvement in the militant women’s suffrage movement and perhaps by his pacifism during the war, and will later be the last Secretary of State for India before it receives independence, enters Parliament at 51 after defeating Winston Churchill. During World War II Pethick Lawrence will be briefly Leader of the Opposition (the small part of the Labour Party that didn’t join the National Government), facing Churchill during prime minister’s questions.

Labour Party Secretary Arthur Henderson loses his seat (although two of his sons win seats), as does Sir Reginald “Blinker” Hall, who ran Naval Intelligence and the code-breaking Room 40 during the Great War.

Lady Astor retains her seat.

Secretary of Labour Sir Clement Anderson Montague-Barlow, which is not a very secretary-of-labour name, loses his Salford seat to, hm, Labour Party member Joseph Toole, which is a very labor-type name.

The Liberals’ position is weakened, despite its increase in MPs, by the loss of many of Lloyd George’s closest associates.

The number of women MPs increases from 3 to 8, including future first female Cabinet member Margaret Bondfield (Lab).

A revolution starts in Mexico, as was the custom. The cause is the attempt of Pres. Álvaro Obregón to impose Gen. Plutarco Calles as his replacement next year (Obregón is not allowed to run for re-election). It’s led by Finance Minister Adolfo de la Huerta. Motto: Down with imposition! It is expected that Obregón will declare himself dictator.

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Wednesday, December 06, 2023

Today -100: December 6, 1923: Of speakers and peace


Rep. Frederick Huntington Gillett  (R-Massachusetts) is re-elected Speaker of the House on the 9th ballot after a brief Progressive rebellion. This is the last time a speaker was not elected on the first ballot until Kevin McCarthy.

No Nobel Peace Prize will be awarded this year.

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Tuesday, December 05, 2023

Today -100: December 5, 1923: Of dictatorships


German Chancellor Wilhelm Marx calls for unity, saying Germany is “actually at the end of our economic and financial strength.” And by unity, he very much means the continuation of near-martial law and dictatorial powers. Socialists – well, some of them – are likely to agree to the continuance of these powers in the hands of the non-Marxist Marx, with the compromise of a toothless advisory committee, because they really don’t want to face a new election. 

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Monday, December 04, 2023

Today -100: December 4, 1923: Of remissions, fighting for number 2, and relics of early Victorianism


Pres. Coolidge remits the 60-day sentence of NYC Controller Charles L. Craig (D) for contempt of court for criticizing the actions of a judge in a traction case in 1921. The NYT front page has been filled with stories about this for months, which I have not read. The White House is pointing out that this is a “remission,” not a pardon, and thus not a vindication for Craig, who they were afraid was enjoying the prospect of martyrdom too much.

Winston Churchill (L-Until-It’s-No-Longer-Convenient) pleads with the voters to make the Liberal Until It’s No Longer Convenient Party the chief opposition party rather than Labour, to fight the Tories’ abandonment of free trade.

PM Stanley Baldwin says the Conservatives, not the Liberals, are the party of progress. “They don’t know it, but they are a relic of early Victorianism and are picking their way in patterns and crinoline overmildewed,” whatever that means.

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Sunday, December 03, 2023

Today -100: December 3, 1923: Of pogroms and suicides


Pogroms in the Ukraine allegedly killed 200 Jews in the last month. The Red Army cavalry seems to be largely responsible.

Headline of the Day -100:  


French royalist (Action française) leader Léon Daudet is having his son Philippe’s body exhumed in order to prove that the 14-year-old was murdered by anarchists instead of committing suicide, or maybe that anarchists drove him to suicide. Daudet will pursue this for years, winding up sentenced to prison in 1927, escaping prison (from a 5 month sentence!) and going into exile until he’s pardoned in 1929.

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Saturday, December 02, 2023

Today -100: December 2, 1923: Of vicious mules and Barrymores


The Oklahoma Supreme Court reverses the damages award of a lower court to a man bitten by an army mule he was trying to rescue from a train wreck. The Court says “the vicious tendencies of mules are open and notorious,” so the guy assumed the risks when he approached the mule.

Which Barrymore would you go to see on Broadway, John in Hamlet or Lionel in Laugh, Clown, Laugh?

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Friday, December 01, 2023

Today -100: December 1, 1923: Of excellent understandings and indicted guvs


The Italian Chamber of Deputies discusses the possibility of a commercial treaty with the Soviet Union, which would entail official recognition. Mussolini says “The understanding between Italy and Russia in excellent.”

Indiana Gov. Warren McCray is indicted 8 times, with 192 counts, including embezzlement, forgery, issuing fake checks and promissory notes, etc.  When a reporter read him the charges, he laughed and asked “Wasn’t arson included?” He definitely did some of that shit trying to prop up his farm, but mostly he failed to do the Klan’s bidding or take its bribes.

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Thursday, November 30, 2023

Today -100: November 30, 1923: Of Marxes, Klux wreaths, and Fascism’s charm


Wilhelm Marx of the Zentrum Party, the Catholic party, will form a minority government of the same 3 parties in Stresemann’s cabinet, indeed with most of the same people in the same roles. Stresemann will be foreign minister. None of those 3 parties is the Social Democratic Party, on whose tolerance in the Reichstag Marx will nonetheless depend. Marx is the 4th person in a row Pres. Ebert asked to try to form a government, the other option being a new election, which would be... troublesome given the French occupation of part of the country and the rise of Nazis and other far-right groups.

Assistant Navy Secretary Teddy Roosevelt Jr. rejects an offer of support from the Ku Klux Klan for his run for governor of NY. “Americanism never goes masked,” he says.

Kluxers show up at the dedication of a monument to local Great War dead in Cedarhurst, Long Island and get into a fight with American Legionnaires determined to prevent them laying a wreath with the letters K.K.K.

Talking with the chief rabbi of Rome, PM Mussolini denies that the Fascist government has even considered an anti-Semitic policy. He regrets that foreign anti-Semitic parties seek to exploit “the charm which Fascism exercises throughout the world.”

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Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Today -100: November 29, 1923: Of pies, Rhenish republics, whippings, and hunger-strikers


Coolidge wasn’t willing to accept a free Thanksgiving turkey, but he’s evidently okay accepting a free 2½-foot pumpkin pie.

For the record, so am I.

Josef Matthes dissolves the separatist Rhineland Republic of which he was the head. It had broken into competing factions and a coup was in the works, led by someone Matthes claims is a Prussian spy. Also, he says, the provisional government was led partly by incompetent people and partly by dishonest ones.

The Putnam Lumber Company pays $20,000 to the family of Martin Tabert, who was whipped to death in a convict labor camp in Florida with which the company contracted for slave labor.

The Bishop of Cork, Daniel Cohalan, refuses Christian burial for Denny Barry, an IRAer who died during a hunger strike at the Newbridge internment camp. The bishop claims he based his decision on the Church position on suicide, but adds that the Republicans are “a wicked and insidious attack on the Church.” Over the years the Catholic Church’s position on hunger-striking has tended to depend on national politics. During the hunger strikes of Bobby Sands et al in 1980-1, the British Catholic Church said hunger striking was suicide, the Irish Church that it wasn’t.

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Tuesday, November 28, 2023

Today -100: November 28, 1923: Not valid in Jewish hands


Calvin Coolidge rejects all offers of a free Thanksgiving turkey, will buy his own.

A “civil christening” is held in the Russian Free Opera House in Moscow, which is like a Christian christening except, you know, Communist. Isadora Duncan and her troupe dance to Schubert’s Ave Maria. The baby’s mother says she was inspired by reading the biography of Rosa Luxembourg.

Pomerania (or the town of Stolt? unclear) issues a local currency, backed by rye (although not made of rye bread. Dammit, I want some dark rye with cream cheese now). Printed on the bills: “Not valid in Jewish hands.”

The Italian Cabinet decides that PM Mussolini’s emergency dictatorial powers should be extended. How long? However long he wants.

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Monday, November 27, 2023

Today -100: November 27, 1923: Don’t laugh at religion


Nominations are closed for next month’s British Parliamentary elections. 50 of the 615 seats are unopposed. Of the remaining candidates, 500 are Tories, 443 Liberals, 420 Labour and 20 other. Neither Conservatives nor Labourites are willing to stand aside for Liberals, so there’ll be a large number of three-cornered contests. There are 34 women running (8 will win, but the other 26 are all running against incumbents). T.P. O’Connor is the Father of the House of Commons, the longest-serving MP, having sat since 1885; he is the last remaining Irish Nationalist MP, although representing Liverpool.

The campaign we’ve been hearing the most about is Lady Astor’s in Plymouth, where she’s been facing a systematic heckling campaign. Making some sort of case against socialism based on religion, she responds to jeering, “Don’t laugh at religion” and calls it blasphemy. She responds to one heckler (his remarks are not given), “Don’t be cheeky, or I will knock that pipe out of your mouth.” Must be one of those zingers she’s known for.

King Alfonso of Spain, visiting Italy, is invested a corporal in the Fascista militia.

Adolf Hitler starts a (snicker) hunger strike in jail.

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Sunday, November 26, 2023

Today -100: November 26, 1923: Hello America


Radio broadcasts from Britain are heard in the US for the first time. US stations stop broadcasting at 10pm Eastern to facilitate the test, although some jackasses in Chicago and San Antonio couldn’t manage to stay off the air the whole 30 minutes. 8 British stations from London to Cardiff to Glasgow participated in the experiment.

Former German treasury minister Heinrich F. Albert will attempt to form a caretaker government. This would be a cabinet of non-partisan technocrat types, without the backing of a majority in the Reichstag. Albert was in the US before it entered the Great War trying to keep the US out but also overseeing spying and sabotage.

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Saturday, November 25, 2023

Today -100: November 25, 1923: Of maybe-chancellors and bombings


The feds & the Philadelphia cops think the bombings of the Spanish and Italian consulates was the work of Spanish Communists boomily protesting the agreement between Mussolini and Primo Rivera, or the Prime-Duck Pact, as no one calls it.

Siegfried von Kardorff of the German People's Party (DVP) refuses Pres. Ebert’s request that he attempt to form a government, after he fails to get support from the right-wing German National People’s Party (DNVP) or to get Stresemann to take the post of foreign minister. So Oskar Hergt of the DNVP will try to do so. And fail.

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Friday, November 24, 2023

Today -100: November 24, 1923: I know of only one man who was flogged and did not get what he deserved


Bombs explode at the Spanish and Italian consulates in Philadelphia.

Gustav Stresemann loses a vote of confidence 230-155 and resigns as German chancellor. He and his cabinet will continue in office until a replacement is named.

French PM Raymond Poincaré wins a vote of confidence 506-70.

Gen. Hans von Seeckt, commander-in-chief of the Reichswehr (didn’t he challenge Stresemann to a duel some time back?) bans and orders dissolved the Communist Party (KPD), the Nationalist Party, and the National Socialists.

Pro-Klan members of the Oklahoma Legislature defeat a bill to make membership lists of secret organizations public. One senator declares that the Klan stands for law n’ order: “I know of only one man who was flogged and did not get what he deserved.” Ousted Gov. Jack Walton is indicted for 7 counts, coinciding with 7 of the charges for which he was impeached.

A circuit court orders Chicago to issue a license for a birth control clinic. Judge Fisher thinks knowledge of birth control methods would not materially lessen morality.

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Thursday, November 23, 2023

Today -100: November 23, 1923: If you have a better man, bring him out


German Chancellor Gustav Stresemann admits that “the development of internal German conditions is driving toward radical tendencies,” which he blames on France. Facing forthcoming motions of no confidence from the left and right, he proclaims, “If you have a better man for the job, bring him out.”

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I’m assuming being only slightly drunk is illegal in Russia. This is Serge Essenin, Isadora Duncan’s husband. She will shortly announce that she is done with him.

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Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Today -100: November 22, 1923: Of notes, Saxons, and surprisingly feisty dead Bavarians


Britain gets France to tone down the note to Germany on monitoring the size of its military. The issue of the return of the crown prince is dropped entirely.

Ousted Saxon Prime Minister Erich Zeigner is arrested, while Beer Hall Putsch leaders like Ludendorff still roam free.

Bavarian radical Kurt Eisner kills a peasant trying to assassinate him. Which is impressive, since Eisner was actually assassinated in 1919.

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Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Today -100: November 21, 1923: Of spies, hunger, and butterfly jazz


Lothar Witzke, the only German spy convicted in the US during the Great War, is released from prison and will be expelled from the country.

Hunger-striking prisoner Dennis Barry dies in Newbridge internment camp, the first hunger-strike death under the Irish Free State.

Giacomo Puccini wins a lawsuit against the Ricordi music publishers for a fox-trot containing an excerpt from Madame Butterfly. Puccini claimed his dignity had been affronted by the jazzing of his music.

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Monday, November 20, 2023

Today -100: November 20, 1923: Brain fever, huh? That’s one term for it.


The Oklahoma State Senate removes Gov. Jack Walton from office on the first count of impeachment, abusing his pardon & parole power, by a unanimous vote. Walton’s defense had withdrawn from the trial. The Senate goes on to convict on 10 other counts: padding the state payroll, dispersing a grand jury, suspending habeas corpus, issuing deficiency certificates when there was no deficiency, raising excess campaign funds, illegally seeking gifts, and general incompetence. He is acquitted of other charges.

Vienna University is closed after violent attacks on Jewish students. Similar attacks take place in the university of Jassy, Romania.

Adolf Hitler, held in Landsberg fortress under guards “selected for their powers of resistance to Hitler’s magnetic personality,” is said to have brain fever.

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Sunday, November 19, 2023

Today -100: November 19, 1923: Of occupations, konklaves, and broken clubs


French PM Raymond Poincaré says France will occupy the Ruhr not only until reparations are paid, but until every other provision of the Versailles Treaty is met.

Poland says if Germany and Bavaria don’t stop persecuting Jews, Poland will persecute Germans.

The New Jersey state organizer of the Ku Klux Klan says the Klan will soon be strong enough in the state that they can take off their hoods. Dr. William Gudlidge, National Konklave (that’s a title), at a Klan-only meeting at the First Reformed Church of West Hoboken, claims there are negro societies in Chicago and New York pledged to marry only white women. And that the Catholics plan to take over the Navy in 1926, expelling all Protestants. And that Jews are trying to destroy pure womanhood through their control of commercial vice.

A Citizens’ Vigilance Committee forms in Atlantic City to combat the Ku Klux Klan. Mayor Edward Bader (business partner of Nucky Thompson, a very fictionalized version of whom was played by Steve Buscemi in Boardwalk Empire) tells cops to “break your clubs over their heads.”

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Saturday, November 18, 2023

Today -100: November 18, 1923: Of protection, equal rights, spotless generals, and zebras


The British elections begin. PM Stanley Baldwin’s platform includes: higher duties on imported manufactured goods, using those as a bludgeon to negotiate lower foreign tariffs, imperial preference in imports. He claims to be concerned by unemployment and thinks protective tariffs are the only way to deal with it. It’s only been a year since the last elections, so this one is entirely down to Baldwin, who wants a mandate for protectionist tariffs. He might come to regret this decision.

The Duchess of Atholl is standing for Parliament, despite having been a prominent campaigner against women’s suffrage. She will win.

Pres. Coolidge meets a delegation from the National Woman’s Party, who ask his support for the Equal Rights Amendment. Sidestepping that, he tells them he’s sure Congress will respond favorably.

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The Bavarian branch of the German Officers’ Association finds his behaviour “spotless” and says the poor naif was deceived by Hitler.

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Countess Hardwick of the Hohenlohe royal line, after an ill-fated trip to the Budapest Zoo. I haven’t been able to confirm this story, but Christian Prinz zu Hohenlohe-Langenburg, who I presume is related to her, was charged in 2008 with killing mountain zebras in Namibia. Not sure if the Hohenlohe-Zebra feud continues.

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Friday, November 17, 2023

Today -100: November 17, 1923: Of the spirit that is necessary for cooperation and entente, acquittals, and royal furniture


Britain won’t agree to any further sanctions on Germany, especially France’s plan to seize ports. And it won’t agree to an ultimatum to Germany to expel or surrender former crown prince Friedrich Wilhelm, a demand Britain points out is not covered by the Treaty of Versailles. Yesterday PM Stanley Baldwin suggested in Parliament that France is being so bitchy that Britain “could not continue indefinitely to maintain the spirit that is necessary for cooperation and entente.” French PM Raymond Poincaré responds that France has not been stubborn and intransigent. France has sooooooo been stubborn and intransigent.

Mussolini also opposes expanding the occupation.

The two men who assassinated Vatslav Vorovsky, the Soviet delegate to the Lausanne Conference, last May, are acquitted by a Swiss jury after a trial that largely focused on the evils of the Bolshevik government. The Soviet Union will start a boycott of Switzerland.

Former kaiser Wilhelm says he had no idea former crown prince Friedrich Wilhelm was going to Germany. Indeed, he goes to court to get back some of the family furniture the crown prince was sending to his estate in Silesia.

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Thursday, November 16, 2023

Today -100: November 16, 1923: Of revitalized parties and territories


Sen. Hiram Johnson (R-Cal.) and William Gibbs McAdoo (D) announce their candidacies for president. Johnson calls for a “revitalized Republican Party, the instrument neither of static reaction nor destructive radicalism.” McAdoo just reminds everyone he’s Woodrow Wilson’s son-in-law, probably. 

The American Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines (i.e., white people), finding Filipino agitation for independence and opposition to appointed Gov.-Gen. Leonard Wood to be interfering with bidnizz, calls for the Philippines to be declared a territory, ending what little autonomy it has.

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Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Today -100: November 15, 1923: Yay Yeats


Former Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm, back in Silesia on his 50,000-acre estate, says he intends to mind his own business.

Germany will stop paying unemployment in the Rhineland and Ruhr on the 25th.

William Butler Yeats is awarded the Nobel Prize for literature.

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Tuesday, November 14, 2023

Today -100: November 14, 1923: Of reconciliations, passports, and crown princes


In the UK, the divided Liberal Party is divided no more. Asquith & Lloyd George reconcile and will march off into irrelevance hand in hand.

Germany denies having issued passports and visas to ex-kaiser Wilhelm.

France proposes that Germany be punished for letting the crown prince return and for non-compliance with Allied inspections of its military (Germany says it can’t ensure inspectors’ safety in the current climate) with the seizure of Hamburg.

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Monday, November 13, 2023

Today -100: November 13, 1923: Caught!


Hitler is captured.

Rumors say that former kaiser Wilhelm has received passports from Germany, will return, and he or his son will be reinstalled as kaiser next month.

The Supreme Court upholds California and Washington laws banning people who are barred from citizenship (i.e., Japanese) from owning land.

Albert Einstein flees Berlin after receiving anti-Semitic threatening letters.

Treasury Sec. Andrew Mellon proposes reducing taxes on earned income.

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Sunday, November 12, 2023

Today -100: November 12, 1923: Monstrous fallacies are the worst kind of fallacy


Bavarian Dictator Gustav von Kahr calls the Beer Hall Putsch “utopian,” attempting “to pick the fruit before it was ripe.”

Winston Churchill declines to stand for Parliament in Bonar Law’s old seat. He does say that the Conservative Party’s turn towards protective tariffs is “a monstrous fallacy.” 

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Saturday, November 11, 2023

Today -100: November 11, 1923: Of deeply ignoble shit, words of honor, and unexiles


Woodrow Wilson addresses the nation on radio through 3 powerful radio stations, other stations agreeing to go off air during the 10-minute speech. He calls the US’s isolationism since the Great War “deeply ignoble,” “cowardly and dishonorable.”

Ludendorff, who was indeed captured, is released on his word that he won’t do another coup. Reports are that he then went home and committed suicide. He did not.

Former Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm leaves his Dutch exile for his estate in Silesia. Everyone’s in a tizzy. The Allies present the Netherlands a note objecting to the departure, handing it over 15 minutes after the princeling crossed into Germany.

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Friday, November 10, 2023

Today -100: November 10, 1923: The beer probably didn’t help


The Beer Hall Putsch is over. 16 putschists are dead and a few cops.

There really doesn’t seem to have been a plan. Hitler declared a coup and then everyone sat around the beer hall drinking for several hours. Eventually, Erich Ludendorff shouts “We’re marching” and leads an attack on the Bavarian War Ministry. Today’s paper is saying the storm troops are fought off by soldiers (police?) and pretty easily dispersed. This is wrong. In fact, they occupy the building without a shot fired.

Bavarian “Dictator” Gustav von Kahr, Reichswehr Gen. Otto von Lossow, and police chief Col. Hans Ritter von Seisser, who had all pledged support for the putsch at the beer hall but were unaccountably then allowed to leave by Ludendorff after they solemnly promised to come back later (hoo boy was Hitler pissed at that one), now say they were acting under duress and didn’t mean it. God knows they’re all hostile enough to the federal German government and insubordinate to its orders that it was not unreasonable to assume they’d go along with the putsch.

Ludendorff and Hitler are variously reported to have been captured or to be in the wind, with Hitler possibly suffering a gunshot wound.

The NYT calls the attempted putsch “a crazy movement inspired and directed by persons better fitted for the comic opera stage than for a serious effort to overthrow the Berlin Government,” referring more to Ludendorff than Hitler, who the editorial fails to mention.

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Thursday, November 09, 2023

Today -100: November 9, 1923: Of putsches with beverages


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This is the Beer Hall Putsch. Invading a meeting in the Bürgerbräukeller beer hall in Munich called by Bavaria Minister-President Eugen von Knilling, Hitler, accompanied by a few hundred SA, fires a shot into the ceiling,  shouting “The national revolution has broken out!” and announces the overthrow of Bavaria’s government, naming State Commissioner Gustav Ritter von Kahr as National Protector (Reichsverwehr) and Gen. Erich Ludendorff as head of the German army. Von Kahr takes a while to agree, saying he’s only doing it as a viceroy of Prince Rupprecht. Hitler says he’ll be German chancellor. He says there will be a march on Berlin.

In Berlin, a proclamation by Chancellor Gustav Stresemann and Pres. Friedrich Ebert points out that Hitler is a foreigner who only recently became a German citizen (actually, he hasn’t done that). “The success of this crazy mutiny can bring only a new catastrophe to Germany.”

No one thinks the army (Reichswehr) can be trusted to put down the putsch.

France warns Germany that it won’t tolerate a dictatorship in Germany.

The Netherlands says it will prevent former Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm going to Germany.

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Wednesday, November 08, 2023

Today -100: November 8, 1923: Of surpluses, duels, impeachments, and inspections


Candidates backed by the Ku Klux Klan sweep Ohio elections.

The Senate is investigating Charles Forbes, who was head of the Veterans’ Bureau until Harding fired him last February for continuing to sell off “surplus” hospital supplies, presumably for a kickback, after Harding told him to stop doing that. This was one of many, many, many grifts he engaged in, which I believe are only being made public now.

Supposedly Gen. Hans von Seeckt, commander-in-chief of the Reichswehr, challenges Chancellor Gustav Stresemann to a duel, evidently because he thinks the chancellor is being too soft on Bavaria.

The federal district court rejects Jack Walton’s request to stop his impeachment as Oklahoma governor.

France demands that Germany allow the resumption of inspections to ensure its military isn’t larger than the 100,000 allowed by the Versailles Treaty. I think the idea is to include all the paramilitary groups, storm troopers etc towards that limit.

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Tuesday, November 07, 2023

Today -100: November 7, 1923: Of elections, impatient fascisti, the influence of passion and prejudice, and hunger strikes


In yesterday’s elections, NY voters approved a bonus for veterans of the Great War. Ohio, by 56%, removes words in the state Constitution restricting the franchise to white males. Vermont elected Porter Dale (R) to the US Senate. Governors: Albert Ritchie (D) in Maryland, Henry Whitfield (D) in Mississippi, and William Fields (D) in Kentucky.

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This article entirely fails to mention the head of the Klan in Indiana, D.C. Stephenson, who will probably show up in the news at some point.

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The dick pics in question are paintings put up by former Ohio Sen. Charles Dick as collateral for a loan. His wife’s name, I mention for no particular reason, is Carrie Dick.

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Gov., er suspended Gov. Jack Walton of Oklahoma appeals to federal district court to stop his impeachment, saying he can’t get a fair trial in the state senate, where many members are “under the influence of passion and prejudice” against him.

The Glasgow Central Division Liberal Party invites Winston Churchill to stand for Parliament in the by-election to replace the late Andrew Bonar Law. Churchill, meanwhile, is suing Lord Alfred “Bosie” Douglas for libel.

Some of the IRA hunger strikers held by the Free State give up after being told that Éamon de Valera isn’t joining them.

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Monday, November 06, 2023

Today -100: November 6, 1923: Of knight hawks, traditional German sports, and crown princes


In Atlanta, Philip E. Fox, editor of the Ku Klux Klan newspaper The Knight Hawk, shoots dead William Coburn, lawyer for the Klan’s Wizard-Emeritus William Simmons.

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The German army masses on the Bavaria-Thuringia border to prevent Nationalist/monarchist/Nazi forces in the former attacking the latter. Pres. Ebert issues a proclamation warning of the dangers of civil war, saying that Germany has the facilities to put down any putsch and will use them ruthlessly.

The French military order German police out of Kaiserslautern’s town hall so separatists can occupy it and declare a Palatinate Republic.

During all this, former Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm has been given a passport by Germany allowing him to end his exile and move to Silesia, but the Allies are discussing whether to allow it.

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