The three tickets for New York City offices – mayor, controller, president of the Board of Alderman – are chosen, with the Democratic ticket headed by John Hylan, a Tammany Democratic ticket headed by Jimmy Walker, and a Republican one headed by... well, it hardly matters, does it? He’s some dude in the fountain pen business.
Monday, August 11, 2025
Sunday, August 10, 2025
Today -100: August 10, 1925: The day of oratory is past
William Butler Yates says “The day of oratory is past, not only in Ireland but everywhere in the modern world.” He says that in the absence of decent speech-making, it will be the job of the Abbey Theatre (Dublin) to teach clarity of expression.
William Green, president of the AFL, warns black union members not to attend the American Negro Labor Congress organized by the (Communist) Workers’ Party: “It will not be held to benefit the race but to instill into the lives of that race the most pernicious doctrine – race hatred.”
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100 years ago today
Saturday, August 09, 2025
Today -100: August 9, 1925: Of marching kluxers and huge gorillas, but I repeat myself
35-40,000 Klansman from all over... well, from the North-East, mostly, march through Washington D.C. (the parade had a permit, it’s not a March on Rome thing) from the Capitol to the Washington Monument. They do not wear masks, in compliance with a D.C. ordinance. Many do hold their arms out in evident imitation of the Italian Fascist “Roman salute.” It rains at the end, so no giant-cross burning.
Some British Pathé footage of the parade.
By the way, after William Jennings Bryan’s death, some Klan chapters celebrated him, under the impression he was a member.
British Air Secretary Sir Samuel Hoare will fly over the North Sea in one of the secret flying boats being developed.
The NYT likes the Tod Browning / Lon Chaney film “The Unholy Three”: “Think of having such a combination as a midget, a strong man and a ventriloquist! ... There is also a huge gorilla that figures in this picture, and even the way in which this animal is employed makes a wonderful cog in the story.” Rewatching it recently I was surprised how good Mae Busch was; I mostly remember her from her multiple roles as the one-note wife of Oliver Hardy, was. The “midget” who disguised himself as an infant was Harry Earles, 22 or 23, who was also in the sound remake, “Freaks,” and “the Wizard of Oz,” but mostly worked in circuses with his 3 diminutive siblings.
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100 years ago today
Friday, August 08, 2025
Today -100: August 8, 1925: Of beebs, right arms, and lynchings
Rudyard Kipling joins a committee of inquiry into the future of British radio broadcasting after the British Broadcasting Company’s monopoly expires next year. Does that strike anyone else as incongruous? He’s only 59, but wireless just feels a bit futuristic for him. The article doesn’t say how many people are on the committee, but it includes just one (1) woman, Meriel Talbot, former director of the Women’s Branch of the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries.
Jimmy Walker cuts the legs out from under NYC Mayor John Hylan’s main issue, saying he (Walker) has fought for the 5¢ fare for years and “would rather cut off his right arm” than increase it.
Former Italian Prime Minister Vittorio Orlando resigns from the Chamber of Deputies, in protest at the Fascist tactics during the Palermo elections.
A mob of 1,000 people lynch a black man in Excelsior Springs, Missouri. The lynching could be seen from a train.
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100 years ago today
Thursday, August 07, 2025
Today -100: August 7, 1925: Slow news day
Mayor Lawrence Quigley of Chelsea, Massachusetts is arrested, along with 43 others, for conspiracy to violate Prohibition.
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100 years ago today
Wednesday, August 06, 2025
Today -100: August 6, 1925: Of traffic peerages, walkers, and cities wicked and reckless of life
Tammany Hall decides to run State Sen. Jimmy Walker against John Hylan in the Dem. mayoral primary. Now if they can just keep him out of the speakeasies. Gov. Al Smith has been quiet on the intramural squabble thus far, although it’s no secret that he haaaaates Hylan.
A few days after the Grand Jury said it would question NYPD Commissioner Richard Enright on the “PD” signs he’s been handing out for display in the cars of a “traffic peerage” of prominent people who are not members of the PD, making them immune to traffic-law enforcement, the police, following Mayor Hylan’s order, ask for the signs to be returned.
A mere 60 years after Elizabeth Garrett became the first woman given a licence to practice medicine in Britain through a loophole that allowed her to join the Society of Apothecaries, the Royal College of Surgeons will admit women, with voting rights and everything.
Chicago Mayor William Dever asks Chicagohoovians to help dispel the “apparently general impression that our city is wicked and reckless of life.” For example, the newspapers reported that there have been 227 murders this year, when there were actually only 112, not counting all the times cops shot alleged criminals. I don’t think that’s as reassuring as he thinks it is.
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100 years ago today
Tuesday, August 05, 2025
Today -100: August 5, 1925: They are waiting, and so am I
NYC Mayor John Hylan is urged by his biggest fan, Henry Fruhauf of the Hylan Five-Cent Fare Club, to remain in the mayoral race even if he loses the Democratic primary, since politicians can control the primary but not the general election, and yes I’m mostly reporting this for the name of that “club.” Hylan really has no other issue than the 5¢ thing (that said, as I write this, before the 2025 mayoral primaries, Zohran Mamdani is campaigning on making the buses free, just like the Staten Island ferry, but he does have other issues).
Ex-kaiser Wilhelm tells a Budapest newspaper, “The so-called democracy of today means death to the nation. It is an inadequate form of government, and the people within their hearts prefer the monarchy, or one-man rule. I trust in the character and fidelity of the German people. They are waiting, and so am I.”
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100 years ago today
Monday, August 04, 2025
Today -100: August 4, 1925: Of ethnic cleansings and occupations
Greece is threatening war against Bulgaria. Ahead of a scheduled mutual ethnic cleansing in October, Greeks in Bulgaria are being killed, Greece says, in order to force Greeks to flee so their property can be grabbed.
US marines end their 13-year occupation of Nicaragua, except for 4 who desert to stay with their Nicaraguan wives.
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100 years ago today
Sunday, August 03, 2025
Today -100: August 3, 1925: Of concentration camps and anniversaries
Those ethnic Germans deported from Poland are currently quartered in the decrepit Schneidemühl concentration camp. It was a World War I prisoner of war camp, but I was a bit startled to see “concentration camp,” a term I thought hadn’t yet migrated to German from English, where it was coined for the Boer War.
Coolidge has been president for two years.
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100 years ago today
Saturday, August 02, 2025
Today -100: August 2, 1925: The word “undesirable” was just sitting there
Eugene O’Neill’s “Desire Under the Elms” is banned in Britain by the Lord Chamberlain, who calls it “abhorrent.”
Count Antonio Cippico, Italian Fascist senator and Italian delegate to the League of Nations, says Fascism is “remolding the national soul of the Italians by severe discipline.” He says Italy’s territory is “insufficient to support her people,” so it requires either new colonies (its “share” of Germany’s former colonies) or for its emigrants need to live in other countries as groups and without losing their Italian citizenship.
Spain has its first ever divorce, that of the Baron and Baroness de Valasco.
There are something like 100,000 refrigerators in homes in the US.
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100 years ago today
Friday, August 01, 2025
Today -100: August 1, 1925: Of ethnic cleansings and occupations
The expulsion of Poles from Germany and Germans from Poland is happening. The Poles are mostly miners who lived in the Ruhr and have been sent to Silesia, which already has all miners it needs. The ethnic Germans are mostly farmers who lived in German Poland for generations and don’t speak German.
The French occupation of the Ruhr ends after 2½ years. German airplanes will again be allowed to fly over the Ruhr, and Ruhrihoovians will be allowed to own radios.
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100 years ago today
Thursday, July 31, 2025
Today -100: July 31, 1925: Putting industry on its feet
Intervention by British Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin may have postponed an imminent coal strike, with the 13% wage reductions the owners are trying to impose (or longer hours for the same wages, they’d be happy with that too) also being postponed, pending a 9-month government inquiry into coal industry efficiency and shit (the inquiry will side with the owners over wages and hours and seems to have been a delaying action so the owners could prepare for a fight). Baldwin, we are told, “labored so manfully that... he was forced to content himself with a hurried midday snack instead of a leisurely lunch”. Baldwin says (not quoted by the NYT), “All the workers in this country have got to take reductions in wages to help put industry on its feet.”
In Taizhou, Zhejiang province, China, the top general is asked to do a rain ceremony involving a kowtow to a frog. He says he’ll do it later at the temple, the crowd refuses to leave until he does it, a riot ensues in which the poor frog is trampled, and soldiers fire into the crowd, killing 8.
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100 years ago today
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Today -100: July 30, 1925: Of quacks and evolution
Sigmund Freud will head an international psychoanalytical foundation, aimed in part at stopping “the practice of psychoanalysis by quacks.” Insert your own joke here.
The lower house of the Georgia Legislature rejects a measure to ban the teaching of evolution in public schools.
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100 years ago today
Tuesday, July 29, 2025
Today -100: July 29, 1925: Simple folk
Sub-Hed of the Day -100:
William Jennings Bryan’s body on display in Dayton, land of the simple folk.
The text of his undelivered closing speech from the Monkey Trial is released.
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100 years ago today
Monday, July 28, 2025
Today -100: July 28, 1925: Of widows and dried-up friendly sources
Isabelle La Follette, widow of Fightin’ Bob, declines to stand for his vacant Senate seat. Fightin’ Bob Jr. probably will run.
The Italian Foreign Office asks the US ambassador to facilitate the expulsion from Italy of Chicago Tribune reporter George Seldes for writing bad things about Mussolini, including that he was involved in the murder of Giacomo Matteotti. This will be the second country to deport him, after Russia. The Trib protests that censorship of its correspondents will result in it having to get its Italian news from the opposition, “the friendly sources being all dried up.”
According to his 1987 memoirs Witness to a Century, the train taking Seldes to France (involuntarily) was stopped at the border and a Blackshirt squad entered to beat him up/kill him. He found a compartment with some British admirals who confronted the Blackshirts and saved him.
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100 years ago today
Sunday, July 27, 2025
Today -100: July 27, 1925: Commoner as dirt
William Jennings Bryan, 65, dies in his sleep in Dayton, napping after church. He’s been making soooo many speeches since the end of the trial, in the hot Tennessee sun. In fact, he was scheduled to finally deliver the closing speech that he was precluded from giving during the trial. Bryan was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1896, 1900 and 1908, losing to McKinley twice and Taft once, his share of the popular vote declining with each election. He was secretary of state under Wilson and more recently promoted real estate in Florida.
Clarence Darrow expresses sorrow, saying he’d supported Bryan for president – twice.
H. L. Mencken, writing about William Jennings Bryan in The Baltimore Evening Sun: “His one yearning was to keep his yokels heated up – to lead his forlorn mob against the foe. That foe, alas, refused to be alarmed. It insisted upon seeing the battle as a comedy.”
German nationalists will put on Aryan plays, whatever that means, with Aryan actors.
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100 years ago today
Saturday, July 26, 2025
Today -100: July 26, 1925: Of ethnic cleansings, geniuses in the air, and... there are odors in New York?
Poland will force out the 15,000 ethnic Germans who voted for German citizenship in the plebiscite in Upper Silesia in 1921 (no secret ballot, I guess), with 20,000 more to come. Germany retaliates against Poles living in Germany who voted for Poland (10,000). Warsaw bans German-language plays. (Update: it’s not actually based on voting in the plebiscite; it’s Germans who retained their German nationality after the plebiscite).
Albert Einstein takes his first plane ride.
Headline of the Day -100:
Rude.
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100 years ago today
Friday, July 25, 2025
Today -100: July 25, 1925: Make good?
Count Antonio Cippico, an Italian Fascist senator and Italian delegate to the League of Nations, lectures at the Institute of Politics, defending the “cruel necessity” of war. I mean, a nation might need to do war to “remedy the defects of its geographical, political or economic situation in the world or to make good its own civilization as opposed to the inferior civilization of other people.”
William Jennings Bryan writes a letter to the NYT saying Clarence Darrow’s accusation that he is an ignoramus unfairly took advantage of the fact that he doesn’t know shit about shit.
The California Board of Education disappoints Fundamentalists by accepting biology textbooks that include the e-word.
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100 years ago today
Thursday, July 24, 2025
Today -100: July 24, 1925: Of dead PMs
Earlier this month, Russia executed Prince Nikolai Golitsyn, 75, the last prime minister before the February Revolution, for alleged monarchist counter-revolutionary activity.
Golitsyn will be “rehabilitated” in 2004.
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100 years ago today
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Today -100: July 23, 1925: This comedy cannot last longer
New York City Mayor John Hylan vehemently rejects the offer from fellow Democrats of a state Supreme Court seat in exchange for ending his re-election campaign, adding that he hasn’t actually received that offer from anyone with the power to get him on the court.
The appropriation bill for Washington D.C. includes a provision against paying the salary of any school superintendent who permits a teacher (who can’t be paid either) “who teaches disrespect for the Holy Bible,” which slipped through unnoticed. So Bureau of Internal Revenue employee Loren Wittner (not acting in his official capacity) files a petition under that provision because, you guessed it, evolution is being taught. One of the 11 counts of anti-Biblical teaching he cites (and it took me longer than I care to admit to realize this is a joke; I’m not sure whether the NYT has realized it) is that blood is required to keep human beings alive. Another is that rainbows are caused by natural reflection and refraction of light, instead of God reminding us of The Flood. Also, DC schools are teaching that the Earth isn’t flat and the law of gravity, which conflicts with the story of Elijah ascending to Heaven.
Italian anti-Fascist deputy Giovanni Amendola, who defined the concept of totalitarianism, was attacked by Blackshirts a few days ago, beaten with clubs. Fascist Party Secretary General Roberto Farinacci says he can’t “conscientiously deplore” the violence, saying “It is time anti-Fascists should know that this comedy cannot last longer. We cannot continue to tolerate provocations whereof we are the victims.” (Farinacci would later lose a hand fishing with a hand grenade, as you do. And he’ll be executed by partisans in 1945, which he probably conscientiously deplored.) Fascist newspaper Il Popolo d’Italia asks, if Fascismo is no longer supported by the majority of the Italian people, as Amendola has claimed, why did no one defend him from the attack? Anyway, although this article suggests he’s not too seriously injured, he will never recover and will die in April.
Race rioting in Pittsburgh, broken up by the police. The article doesn’t say how it started.
Will Hays is now telling motion picture companies what plays they can’t turn into movies, including Sidney Howard’s “They Knew What They Wanted,” which won this year’s Pulitzer Prize.
Headline of the Day -100:
William Jennings Bryan, who has opinions, says the best name for a girl is Mary and the best name for a boy is Paul.
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100 years ago today
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