Cayton's Weekly
Saturday, February 28, 1920
Seattle, Washington
Page text (machine-generated)
Cayton's Weekly
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PRICE FIVE CENTS
CAYTON'S WEEKLY
Published every Saturday at Seattle, Washington,
U. S. A.
Subscription $2 per year in advance.
HORACE ROSCOE CAYTON..Editor and Publisher
Entred as second class matter, August 18, 1916, at
the post office at Seattle, Wash., under the Act of
March 3rd, 1916.
TELEPHONE: BEACON 3579
Office 317 22nd Ave. South
CONSIDER THYSELF
There is no doubt but that the colored citizens of this country suffer a great deal from what may be termed the sins of commission on the part of the white citizens, but it is an undeniable fact that many of their troubles are due to their own sins of omission. For an example, whatever is is, so far as they are concerned, and they accept such goods as the gods provide and complain if a sufficiency is not provided. In other words, unless some one gives them jobs they wont have jobs. To illustrate, it is variously estimated that there are upwards of 5,000 colored persons in Seattle. It is also variously estimated that there are upwards of or about 8,000 Japanese in and about Seattle. Now this, after all, is the colored man's home and he is thoroughly conversant with the customs of this country and those of them who have gone into business have been patronized to a greater extent by white citizens than by the colored citizens themselves, and yet there is but one commercial establishment of any business proportions and but three others of a more or less diminutive proportion in all Seattle. These 5,000 persons buy goods, chattels and various household necessities each year that run into the millions of dollars, and yet but a small proportion is sold by colored persons. They complain from time to time because the stores and counting houses do not give their boys and girls employment, and, be it remembered, none of them are employed in the business houses, and yet they seem to put forward no effort to create places for themselves. With but one exception not a single colored man has moved to the suburbs of the city with the view of producing for sale No, he waits for the other fellow to create a job and then send for him to fill the same.
Twenty years ago, as the writer now remembers, there were not to exceed a half dozen commercial establishments in Seattle under the supervision of or owned outright by Japanese, but at present there are six banks and perhaps 500 different kinds of commercial establishments owned and operated by Japanese. They control the vegetable markets of the city, and, as has been previously said in these columns, if the 8,000 or more Japanese now living in Seattle should suddenly sail for another country, temporarily Seattle would actually go hungry and the labor market would be all shot to pieces, which is to say, the Japanese are necessary to the continued prosperity of the Northwest. While many of their number have sought and accepted positions and jobs, still others were industriously working to make jobs for themselves and have succeeded beyond expectations. Show us one young colored man in Seattle under the age of twenty that is studying or working with any definite purpose
in view and we will show you a human wonder. They go to school to avoid work in the day and form plans for the evening's entertainment. This is a world of work, and whoever fails to do his or her duty is not only a drone, but a drawback to its onward march. There will always be unfriendly relations between races and classes of the human family when one race or class makes no effort to protect itself, but falls back upon that false philosophy, "the world owes me a living and has me to pay." The fact of the matter is all manner of man owes the world for being permitted to feast and fatten on it and unless the debt is paid the debtor wil be the sufferer
ELECT CALDWELLISM
The ego of Hugh M. Caldwell to the contrary notwithstanding yet we are still of the opinion that, his election means greater benefits for the City of Seattle than that of Duncan. If you love your city less and Duncan more vote for him for mayor, but if you love your city more and Caldwel less, then vote for Caldwell. Seattle is in no position to experiment in the shape of mayors, which it will do if it elects Duncan next Tuesday. Per se Duncan is a most likeable fellow and we believe would live up to all of his promises and believing that fully explains why, from a commercial standpoint, its to the city's best interest that Caldwell, despite his top heavy ego, be elected in preference to Duncan.
YOUR AUTO LICENSE
Your auto license, Mister Man, is now the thing for you to can, if you desire the streets to star, in your imposing auto car. Your time expires on March the first, so don't forget to tap your purse; to pay the license for your heap or greater trouble will you reap. I tried it once and got the gaft and felt as though it was a graft, but Brinker said, "it is the law," and so I quickly came to taw. It wasn't the law that made me sad but parting from my extra sead. So to avoid the double deal, play safe to day and skin your reel. This law was made to give you ease while riding by the great fir trees, and while I think the grafters get the lion's share of the license tet, for building roads for county boards, which makes them look like Henry Fords, yet after all it means a lot, to have good roads on which to trot. So, Mister Man, your license pay, although it takes a lot of hay. It means that you can rise and shine, and go a shouting down the line, on Sundays and on Mondays too, when you have nothing else to do. Of course, you'll never miss the gold, when you're told you're twice as old, but the comfort which you will get will save you from a grouchy fret, and cause your life to reach the bend where centenarians await the end. I recommend, your license pay, and live a year within a day, without the fear of what you hear about the cop, who is so near.
Archaeologists contend that drawings of human beings and animals in ancient caves in France prove that man was right-handed as long ago as the stone age.
Cayton's Weekly telephone Beacon 3579.
VOL. IV., No. 37
EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS.
The governor of New Jersey is continuing to make of himself a non compos mentis.
That felow who stole his two little girls came dangerously close to concealing them.
A unification of the three great branches of colored Methodism seems almost assured.
There seems to be little or no doubt but that recent Michigan rebellion was a mere matter of moonshine.
The railroads may be returned to the corporation hogs, but 'believe me' there will be things doing before they are.
Of course Hoover will never be President, but he got a front page feature and that's a big thing, at least for his vanity bump.
Moses HH. Jones of Dayton, Ohio, is dead and left an estate of $35,000. He was an attorney at law.
The Lincoln bank of Chicago recently experienced a three days run, but weathered the storm.
Changing Mt. Rainier to Mt. Washington is more or less patriotic but the change proposer had better steer clear of Mt. Tacoma.
Don't get alarmed about your car, as it wont get you very far, from your original starting place, where first you found your lucky ace.
Fish stories are not necessarily "fishy," nor "fishy" stories not necessarily fish stories, but who tells either one of them looks foolish while telling one.
Caldwell doubtless does not need any of Fitzgerald's votes and yet there is nothing gained by speaking indifferently about them.
These are times when, what it requires to keep soul and body united, costs more than the body can possibly produce, hence Old Suicide is reaping a harvest
Seventeen Democrats were elected aldermen of Chicago the other day in a nonpartisan election, but the balance of the twenty-six were elected without designation.
According to a recent report Irish potatoes are to be the chief crop of King county the present year which sounds good to the spud lover
All preachers are not deceivers nor are all deceivers preachers, but there are more deceivers among prachers than true believers think best for the cause the preachers represent.
He or she, who always wants something said about them in the papers, feels morally certain that the papers will not say what's true about them, lest the paper be expunged from the mails.
It seems to be the concensus of opinion that Ealy's escape from the gallows is due much more to the ability of his lawyers than to the belief of the jury that he is innocent.
R. W. Thompson, a Washington City newspaper corespondent, is dead. He had furnished "stuff" for weekly papers published by colored men for the past thirty years.
That’s A. Lou Cohen on the phone, and wants your vote, to
help him ‘‘tote’’ his Morris chair, to the council stair, which
he wil climb, on record time, to take his seat, to not retreat,
until he gets, the city debts, in better shape, than here of late,
they seem to be. Lou is a man, who never ran, before this time,
for office chime, of any kind, but has a mind, to things im-
prove, that’s in a groove, in our Seattle, where the battle, be-
tween the classes, quite harasses, those who love, the God above,
and wish to do, unto you, as would you, have others do, unto
you and the crew. Lou stands for right, with all his might,
and never swerves, from those he serves. Your vote he needs,
to win the deeds, for the three-year place in the council space,
so when you reach the place to preach, political pride, on
which to ride, to Harmony Hall, vote for Cohen and you won’t
be alone.
For City Councilman
Three Year Term
bai : eye ant ea Van ert
ot ae OTe Cp Pee a Clee ie ia oie Ron ee Nadie ene
Getting an education without an objee-
tive point in life amounts to one and the
same thing as flying off on a tangent
through space, yet hoping to land some-
where
As the daily newspaper reporter hears it,
an educated colored person talks plantation
jargon just as perfectly as the cottonfield
Negro. who does not know B from bull’s
foot.
Kight dollars, good and true, is exactly
what is due, for my work each day, rubbing
your influenza hay. DT’m a full-fledged
black cross nurse, but have an empty red
cross purse, and you this pocketbook must
fill, or you bet your life, you get no pill.
Roscoe Simmons has been elected president
of the Lincoln League, which is now a Re-
publican adjunct. I. F. Norris, the erst-
while Seattle Democrat. is one of the faith-
ful.
Wilberforce University, which began its
existence February 24th will — celebrate
founder’s day with a great gathering and
the raising of $50,000 for the benefit of
the school.
Flying from Seattle to San Diego in
twelve hours would mean that a wronged
wife could leave Seattle and get to San
Diego before her husband could return
from his joy ride with the blue eved blond.
Robert Church and Roseoe Simmons, it
is said. have been slated by Will Hays to
distribute the loaves and fishes to the col-
ored faithful after the next U. S. presiden-
tial inauguration.
Hiram Johnson has a letter from the late
Theodore Roosevelt, which hands over, sign-
ed, scaled and delivered, his, Roosevelt’s,
political mantle. It seems to be genuine,
but must have been delayed in transit. Hlow-
ever, what more could be expected from
Burleson’s poor mail. service.
INDIVIDUALITIES
S. F. Argonaut
Queen Mary of England tied up and ad-
dressed nearly all her Christmas presents to
her personal friends, and herself unpacked
those which came from them. The queen
thinks that she gives pleasure, and certainly
gets it, from this little expression of senti-
ment.
Arrested and thrown in jail forty-one times
in Kansas, knocked down twice, egged four
times and arrested and acquitted three times
on insanity charges is the record of Myra
McHenry, former partner of Carrie Nation,
who is turning her guns loose on the I. W. W.
of Kansas.
Mayor W. C. Bustin of Bermondsey in
England will not accept any invitations to
functions during his year of office, and de-
clines to be invested with the robe and
chain of office. A compositor by trade, Mr.
Bustin continues his occupation. He has been
granted £300 for out-of-pocket expenses and
for loss of remunerative time while acting
as mayor.
Miss Marguerite Cody, the first woman
journalist in the press gallery of the British
ITouse of Commons, has many athletic ree-
ords to her credit. She swims, boxes, rows,
plays hoekey and tennis, practices ju-jitsu,
and enjoys flying. Five years ago she swam
across Belfast Lough, a distance of six and
a half miles, only one man having previously
accomplished the same feat.
Mlle. Marie Prodhom, who has been ap-
pointed director of the Bank of Geneva and
will sign the notes and scrip issued by that
bank, is only twenty-eight years of age. She
proved herself an excellent financier during
theh war, and is the first woman in Europe
to hold such an important position. There
are now two judges, nine barristers, three en-
gineers, and a number of university profes-
sors of the fair sex in Switzerland.
According to ‘‘Tay Pay,’’ Lloyd George
always had people to work for him, a de-
voted brother as well as a devoted uncle and
a good partner, and, anyhow, however poor
he was, George could never be got to put
anything in front of his political activities
and ambitions. Nothing could be untruer
than to think that Lloyd George cares for
money; he has never cared for anything but
polities. ‘‘Give me a thousand a year,’’ he
said to ‘‘Tay Pay’’ some years ago, ‘‘and I
have all the money I want.’’
E. C. Drury, the new premier of Ontario,
is said to read blue books as some men do
detective stories; his only form of dissipa-
tion. He has no use for forms and cere-
monies. He believes in all people—except
protectionists and is a ‘‘crank on the tariff.”
While rather given to imparting confidences
to friends and neighbors, he is regarded by
some of them as a ‘‘follow-my-words-but-
not-my-ways man’’—alluding to his fondness
for making good speeches. He is an omni-
vorous reader with a reteneive menory.
Herbert Hoover’s father was a blacksmith.
Mrs. Hoover was a Quaker preacher and
traveled to neighboring towns and country
churches to preache. She is spoken of as a
woman of much character, energetic and in-
dustrious, and, naturally, frugal. Herbert
Hoover, from whom was derived the very
“‘Hooverize,’’ didn’t lack early training in
that line. Young Hoover went the barefooted
way of the other village boys, did the chores,
went to school, and led the customary life
of the ordinary healthy American country
boy.
The owls and bats have nothing on Rupert
Hughes. He is one of these midnight oil
authors who does his best work between cur-
few and sunrise. He says he is not method-
ical, but that he writes when he feels like
it, and as long as his story flows smoothly
the work does not particularly cause ‘‘brain
fag.’’ When the plot and characters won’t
come, the work becomes exhausting. He does
not play golf, but occasionally whirls a pair
of dumb-bells, and for exercise and pleasure
depends almost entirely on walks about his
farm.
When Charles Russell, the Montana cowboy
artist, was sent to St. Louis to study art he
was there all of five days. On the third day
his instructor said to him, ‘‘I want you to
do some anantomy today I shall have you
draw the human hand.’’ And Charles said
to him, ‘‘Damn it, don’t I know the human
hand? I’ve been drawing it for years.”’
“‘But,’’ the instructor said, ‘‘if you are go-
ing to study art, you must do as I say.’
Russell said, ‘‘I don’t think that I have to
study. I know what I can do. You can’t
help me. I am going back to the plains.”
Tsuri Aoki, the Japanese picture star, who
has been commissioned to adapt and modern-
ize the works of a number of great British
and American dramatists to the requirements
of the native Japanese theatres, is a niece of
Mme. Sadda Yacco, who was the first woman
in Japan to be permitted to appear on -the
stage, women’s roles during all the thousands
of years previous having been assumed by
men players. Miss Aoki’s uncle was Kawa-
kima, reformer of the Japanese theatre. She
came to this country with these relatives in
eaerly girlhood and was educated in the
Sisters’ School of Colorado Springs and at
Stanford University. Because of her thor-
ough knowledge of both Japanese’ and Eng-
lish, and of the dramatic traditions of both
countries, she was selected to make the trans-
lations of the English and American classics.
BYE AND BYE.
FEM eet amen | nee eee
Time may seem long and Justice slow,
And Wrong seem to prevail,
But God hath spoken, and His words
Are true, and will not fail.
Fair Justice, robed in ermine pure,
Will some day rule the world,
And Wrong, though deep intrenched and
old
Shall from his throne be hurled.
What though if Justice has been slow?
_ And we have waited long
To see the Everlasting Right
Triumphant o’er the Wrong?
Remember, that a thousand years
With God are but a day,
Though men may wtiher as the grass,
Yet He abides alway.
Hope on, nor be discouraged when
The darkness hides the light;
Know this: that He who rules the earth
Is Champion of the Right.
And from the dust of centuries
Where she has bleeding lain,
In His own time He’ll lift her up
And send her forth again.
“‘But how did you get her to beleive such
an outrageous -lie?’’ ‘‘I told it to her in
strict confidence.’’—Blighty.
i SA ONT Rees AS, 3 RS
PEM ee ie eh ee nA fs Re Ly oe pene wee:
THE PASSING THRONG
Caldwell's recent metings, to which, it is
said, he retorted, ‘‘you bet I am not. My
grandfather had more Negro slaves than
there are Negro voters in Seattle and I know
exactly how to handle those fellows.”’ If
Hugh M. Caldwell actually used such lan-
guage then he is by no means the dignified
gentleman that I had given him eredit of
being, yea, if true, I am of the opinion
that he is a veritable damphool The own-
ing of human slaves on the part of his or
any other person’s grandfather is nothing
to boast of and had his grandfather re-
ceived his just deserts he would have been
hanged for his human brutality and if Hugh
Caldwell has any of the blood of his grand-
father then his political life should be
erushed out by the silent vote of the grand-
sons and daughters of the men, who shot
the hell out of the red-handed, slave-holding
murderers of the South I trust, however,
that Major Caldwell made no such remark,
but Percy F Norris says he was present at
the meeting and héard the conflab.
**_ * &
If not actuated by the suggestion of
Cayton’s Weekly then acting upon their
own initiative a quartet of colored men,
more or less conspicuous in the affairs of
Seattle met a few nights ago and deter-
mined on forming a strong committee to
make sume effort to counteract what seems
to be a growing anti-colored man sentiment
in this city at present. As I understand
it, this committee, if perfected, will ask
conferences with the controling spirits of
this city with a view of getting a man’s
chance for the colored citizens within the
corporate limits of the municipality. With-
out discussing any points that may come
before this committee, I have no hesitancy
in declaring it to be a long step in the
right direction
* * &
When D. White, a negro, was stricken with
influenza he left his sole possessions in the
care of a friend of but brief acquaintance.
They consisted of his clothes, a bright hued
silk shirt included, which were taken off his
person when he was disrobed and put to bed
in the special ward at the city hospital.
That was two weeks ago. White has been
convalescent for the last few days, but his
erstwhile friend, whom: he knows only as
Johnnie, has failed to put in an appeaerance
with the clothing.
Saturday White learned, he says, that
Johnnie had pawned his clothes and spent
the proceeds entertaining White’s lady
friend. So White has asked that the police
find Johnnie and then recover his clothing.
“Man, just gimme a pair o’ pants an’ a
razah and there’s goin’ to be a fun’l,’’ said
White in telling his woes to the police. ‘‘An’
this yere Johnnie ain’t going to smell no
flowers, neither.’’
The above news item is taken from the local
columns of the Post-Intelligencer for the
purpose of convincing you and each of you
the low and despicable things great metro-
politan papers will stoop to in order to hu-
miliate the colored man in the eyes of the
world. I took the trouble to inquire at the
hospital about the above patient and the
nurse said, ‘‘the man is fairly well educated
and uses splendid English and not a word
of the article appearing in the P.-L was said
by that man.’’ The colored man is good
and true to every institution of this country
and yet the metropolitan press of the country
never loses an opportunity to humiliate the
colored man and do so as it does no other
class in this country. What a perfectly beau-
tiful reward for faithfulness.
"oe #
Arthur Brisbane, chief editorial writer of
the Hearst papers, has become the world’s
trouble you might have seen a fine sample of
race prejudice and the usual results. On
48th street, just crossing 5th avenue, a placid
individual was steering two horses and a
wagon over mountains of snow. Westward
came in calm desert majesty two camels,
led toward the stage where they were to per-
form in the evening. The camels did not
notice the horses, but the horses did notice
the camels. They reared up, pawing the air,
swung themselves violently to the right onto
piles of snow as-high as their backs. They
fell down, rolled over, broke the harness, cut
their knees, frightened the driver, broke the
wagon. The camels walked calmly on. They
had no race prejudice. The next time those
two horses meet two other camels they will
do the same thing over again, for horses
do not learn after they are a year old. Many
men are like horses, and in the long run their
race prejudice has about the same effect. It
hurts them, not those whom they imagine
they are despising, while they are really
making fools of themselves.’’
* +. *
The above excerpt came under my observa-
tion one day this week and I am reproducing
it as an extenuating hope that the great
metropolitan press of this country under
the influence of such master minds as Bris-
bane will yet be convinced of the error of
its way and see its way clear to accord the
black man the same rights as it does the
white man. But, however much inclined
great editorial writers seem to lean to fair
play for the colored man, yet they exercise
little or no influence with the news writers
on the daily papers. And it is the old, old
story, the colored man’s greatest enemy is
the ‘‘po’’ whtie trash’’ of the land. The
publishers of the Post-Intelligence> of this
city and the editor-in-chief are both men of
high ideals and favor equal rights and equal
justice to all men, and yet the reporters on
the paper take delight in humiliating the
colored man whenever and wherever they
can. Persons of the ‘‘po’ white trash’’ class
however wealthy and influential they may
subsequently become, never rise above their
natal environments. However strange this
may be, it is nevertheless true.
Miss India Gordon, a Franklin High
School pupil died of influenza last Satur-
day and was buried last Tuesday She was
the idol of a father, mother and brother,
all of whom mourn without comfort, her
untimely death Delegations from both the
Broadway and the Franklin High Schools
attended the funeral,
eo #
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Gayton are ser-
iously considering the advisability of sell-
ing their city property and permanently
moving to their acreage across Lake Wash-
ington
* *
Mr. T. P. Curry, formerly an expressman
of Seattle, but now a resident of Kittitas
county, did business in Seattle last Tues
day, returning home the same evening.
Congress spends most of its time nowa-
days in the discussion of Bolshevism, al-
though without noticeable effect on the Bol-
shevist flood that is submerging eastern and
southern Europe. Any topic whatsoever be-
comes elevant and timely if it can be shown
or asserted to have a bearing upon Bolshe-
vism .If Bolshevism were only soluble in
oratory it would have disappeared long ago.
Take, for example, the question of illiter-
acy. It was something of a shock to be told
by Senator Phipps on January 19th that
““ the percentage of illiterates in the army
during the war has been carefully figured out
by the adjutant-general, whose records show
that 24.9 per cent. were either totally or
relatively illiterate, the test being whether
the soldier could read a newspaper or write
a simple letter. Statistics compiled by the
Secretary of the Interioir prove conclusively
that there are over 8,500,000 people in this
country over ten years of age who can
neither read, write, nor speak our language.’’
Senator Phipps had a friend who went
abroad as captain of an infantry company
and who informed him that three months be-
fore sailing his troop included men who spoke
fifteen different languages, and that he was
compelled to employ eight interpreters. We
may readily sympathize with a company com-
mander whose orders in battle must be in-
terpreted by eight linguists.
Now this is a very interesting and a very
important educational problem, and all the
more so when we realize that there is a very
considerable number of American-born citi-
zens who can neither read nor write Eng-
lish and some who can not even speak it.
But Senator Phipps was not content to pre-
sent it to the Senate as an educational prob-
lem. Presumably he felt that it needed a
little spice to make it palatable to the
senatorial taste. And so we find him plung-
ing headlong into the subject of Bolshevism.
It is the ignorant and the foreign-born peo-
ple,-the people who can not understand our
language, he says, who fall prey to the
Bolshevist. Educate them, and they will be
Bolshevist no more. Wean them from anar-
chism with the First Reader. Enfice them
from radicalism with language lessons. And
incidentally spend some $35,000,000 in the
doing of it, create a new government de-
partment, and add some thousands of teach-
ers, inspectors, and examiners to a system
already intricate and cumbrous. It was a
project well caleulated to tempt the sena-
torial mind by its vitas of law-miking and
patronage.
Bui there were some senators, although
very few, who doubted alike the accuracy of
the diagnosis and the efficacy of the remedy.
Senator Harrison pointed out that illiteracy
did not necessarily point in the direction of
Bolshevism nor education in the direction of
political sanity. He himself knew very many
fine Americans whose reading and writing
left much to be desired, while at the same
time he was painfully aware that ‘‘some of
the most dangerous scoundrels to American
institutions in America today are highly
educated.’? Andrew Jackson left school
when he was thirteen years of age, Henry
Clay when he was ‘‘quite young,’’ and Dan-
iel Webster when he was still of tender age.
It would be a beautiful sight, said Senator
Harrison, to herd together all the Mississippi
negroes who could not read or write and
chase them into the schoolhouse, but he had
his doubts as to the results. It would be a
beautiful sight to see the eight millions of
illiterates throughout the country rounded
up, corralled, and stockaded. But would it
really stop Bolshevism? Would those eight
million people become better Americans be-
cause the educational whip had been laid on
their backs? Would they be more loyal
Americans because henceforth they could
read the Nation and theh New Republic?
And what would you do in case these people
refused to become Americanized by sheer
strength, so to speak? No penalty had been
mentioned in the bill. The penalty was to
he left to the states, and ‘‘some state may
provide a death penalty for the offense.’’
Senator Frelinghuysen of New Jersey was
similarly minded to Senator Harrison. He
read a letter from one of the great educa-
J, W. EDMUNDS, OPH, D., Gisstise 22:
_W. A |. U., tometrist and
ye Specialist. Personal attention given in Bye ex-
aminations for Glasses. Fifteen years in Seattle.
Balcony. Fraser-Paterson Co sited
ROBERT B. HESKETH
Your upport Solicited
For Re-Election as
COUNCILMAN
(Three Year Term)
Service—Satisfaction
igs Co-Operation
. (Paid Advertisement)
———
ATLAS POOL HALL
Under New Management
Wishes You a
Happy New Year
FELIX CRANE, Manager
1212 Main Street Seattle