Sunday, August 14, 2022
Today -100: August 14, 1922: Of red clergy
Saturday, August 13, 2022
Today -100: August 13, 1922: Of dead griffiths and national anthems
Friday, August 12, 2022
Today -100: August 12, 1922: Of dry jokes, expulsions, and presidential chewing baccy
Thursday, August 11, 2022
Today -100: August 11, 1922: Of fokkers, pistols, burnt cork, and stunts
Wednesday, August 10, 2022
Today -100: August 10, 1922: You would not want to be crushed by armed force
Tuesday, August 09, 2022
Today -100: August 9, 1922: Of black Republicans, greater battles, and eclipses
Monday, August 08, 2022
Today -100: August 8, 1922: Of life expectancy, extraordinary measures, tongs, and haircuts
Sunday, August 07, 2022
Today -100: August 7, 1922: Beavers against the Klan!
Saturday, August 06, 2022
Today -100: August 6, 1922: Of hibernians, Fascists, einsteins, and crittendens
Friday, August 05, 2022
Today -100: August 5, 1922: Evil shepherds are the worst kind
Thursday, August 04, 2022
Today -100: August 4, 1922: Ask not for whom the Bell doesn’t toll
Wednesday, August 03, 2022
Today -100: August 3, 1922: Ask not for whom the Bell tolls
Tuesday, August 02, 2022
Today -100: August 2, 1922: Just the factas
Monday, August 01, 2022
Today -100: August 1, 1922: Or our revolvers will proclaim their doom
Sunday, July 31, 2022
Today -100: July 31, 1922: Of excommunications, Asia minors, and klandidates
Saturday, July 30, 2022
Today -100: July 30, 1922: Of cockeys, unconvincing parades, and women candidates
Friday, July 29, 2022
Today -100: July 29, 1922: Of betrayed war ministers, hungry hungry intellectuals, lynchings in hope, assassination plans, and helicoplanes
Thursday, July 28, 2022
Today -100: July 28, 1922: Of crashes, jazz, pleasing and serving white people, and prison escapes
Two US army reserve aviators are arraigned for violating NYC’s minimum 2,000-feet limit for flying machines. They were actually flying their military plane at 0 feet at the time they crashed in Far Rockaway, but they were pretty low even before that. If they question the ability of cops to determine if they were flying at 2,000 feet, evidence will be introduced that people could see their faces.
Headline of the Day -100:
James Vardaman, the former governor and US senator from Mississippi, says Woodrow Wilson only opposes his run for senator because the last time he was senator, “I performed my duties... with the intention of pleasing and serving the white people of Mississippi and not to please or flatter the occupants of the White House.”
The IRA blow a hole in the wall of Dundalk Gaol in County Louth, and 105 prisoners, I think just IRAers, escape. Half are recaptured by evening.
Italian Fascists are pouring into Ravenna to fight Socialists & Communists. Several dead. The Fascists give Socialist, Communist & Republican leaders (all of them, or just in Ravenna?) 24 hours to leave the country.
Wednesday, July 27, 2022
Today -100: July 27, 1922: Of shipwrecks and Italian governments (but I repeat myself)
A British company will try to salvage gold from the wreck of the Lusitania. An American company that wanted to do the same asked the US government to protect its plans, since the ship was sunk in international waters, but the government says no.
While the German federal government has yet to use its brand new Republic Defense Act, Bavaria has used its version (which the German Cabinet calls “illegal and unconstitutional”) to ban two anti-Semitic newspapers. I guess this is in aid of the claim that Bavaria’s rejection of the federal act is about some sort of state’s rights principle rather than an attempt to protect monarchists and far-right terrorists.
In Italy, political leaders (Vittorio Orlando, Ivanoe Bonomi) are either refusing or failing to form a government. Outgoing premier Luigi Facta suggests the king get Catholic Party leader Filippo Meda, who brought down Facta’s coalition, to do it.
Tuesday, July 26, 2022
Today -100: July 26, 1922: Of putting the people to work, defying Berlin, and fish civil wars
Henry Ford has a cunning plan to end civil strife in Mexico by opening motor assembly factories and “putting the people to work.”
Headline of the Day -100:
Bavaria has passed its own version of the central government’s Republic Defense Act and will reject any enforcement inside Bavaria of the federal law by the courts and police set up by that law. But it’s their justification that’s most startling: the Weimar constitution allows states to promulgate extraordinary measures if there’s danger coming. In this case, Bavaria is saying that that danger would be the furious reaction of Bavarians to implementation of a federal law to protect the republic from terrorists.
Former kaiser Wilhelm is suing the author Emil Ludwig in a Berlin court to prevent the publication or performance of his play Bismarck’s Dismissal, not because it’s libelous, but on the principle that there should be no portrayal of his ex-highness during his lifetime. Willy’s real complaint is that Ludwig makes Bismarck look better than him (his lawyer is named Dr. Frankfurter, by the way). (Willy will win the case).
Headline of the Day -100: