Cayton's Weekly

Saturday, July 31, 1920

Seattle, Washington

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Cayton's Weekly 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, Vash., under the Act of March 3rd, 1916. TELEPHONE: BEACON 3579 Office 317 22nd Ave. South A GODLY MAN There are brave men and then there are brave men, and in the latter class is to be found the name of Rev. R. P. Schuler, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Paris, Texas, and he has won the right to so exalted a position by denouncing the red-handed murderers, who burned two colored men at the stake in that city some weeks ago. The Rev. Schuler, like the burners, is a white man, but in the South it is almost as fatal for a white man to stand up for the rights of a black man as it is for a black man himself to do so. At the time of the affair he made every effort to turn the mob from its disdardly work before the burnings and has since condemned their actions in words too plain to allow for miscomprehension. He has even circulated a printed statement carrying his views anent the lynchings, demanding that the perpetrators be dealt with according to law and begging members of both races to be calm and to remain cool under these trying circumstances. He draws attention to the fact that occurrences of this sort will never be stopped as long as the officers of the law fail to resist mob attempts, even to the point of laying down their lives in the pursuance of their duty; he states that this country needs the kind of officers and the type of citizenship that will see to it in the future that no prisoners shall be taken from the jail and the protection of the courts to the faggot pile until the officers and many good citizens have with their lives paid the price of the defence of law and justice. "The above statement I make in the face of the advice that has come to me from many friends that such a policy is and will be at present unsafe for me," says Rev Shuler. "I am informed that my life has been numerously threatened if I should make such a statement. I am told that the mob used my name repeatedly in such a manner as to very much concern my friends. I can truthfully say that the attitude of this mob toward me does not in the least concern me. Better men than myself have died when far less was at stake. I am only concerned in doing my God-appointed duty in this situation. Therefore, without apology or plea for quarter. I unhesitatingly condemn the burning of these men in our city as an act of lawlessness, which if carried to its legitimate ends, would destroy our government and damn our civilization. And in making this statement I ask for neither the protection of my friends nor the mercy of my enemies." Even in Duluth no minister of the gospel is on record as condemning the mob with such vehemence as has that southern preacher. Its a long step in the right direction and we trust others will follow in his wake. THAT JAP INVESTIGATION There is no doubt in our mind but that a million Japanese would be a God send to SEATTLE. WASHINGTON. SATURDAY, July 31, 1920 the Pacific Coast of the United States, but if the coming of that or any other number will create friction between the two governments, then for the sake of peace it is best that not one, let alone a million, do not come. On the other hand, those that are already here should be Americanized and the ones refusing to ascribe to the doctrines of this country should be deported. In our opinion the Japanese differ in no respect from any other human being and that, too, irrespective of his or her color or complexion. Often when a certain class of persons is in the majority in a community or country they conceive among themselves that persons differing from them at least in color, are of a lower type of humanity than themselves, but they overlook the teachings of that great Book of books to the effect that of one flesh and one blood God created all men. The United States is the great melting pot of the European, Asiatic and the African human overflow, and if it plans on peace at home it had at the same time better plan on the asssimiliation of the whole heterogenius mess of humanity in this country. Arguments upon top of arguments have been advanced against the white people of this country absorbing the black people and yea even laws have been passed prohibiting such, but there are over six million colored people in the United States with a heavy percentage of white blood in their veins, showing very conclusively that the prohibitive miscengination law has not done much prohibiting. What we want to get out of this discourse is hold fast to all you have, whatever they may be, but put up the emigration gates. In order for the women to attain nationwide suffrage this year in time to likewise vote either Connecticut, Tennessee or North Carolina must ratify the amendment, and here's to hoping all of them will do so. From the amount of hollering the penitentiary guards have been making about the escape of eight convicts they must feel that no more are coming. D onot be alarmed Brer Roe, the Seattle Spirit is not yet dead nor has it forgotten you. If British Columbia continues to permit her citizens to send booze to the United States as they have been doing, her friendship for this country will be seriously questioned, at least by law abiding citizens. There is but ilittle doubt of the fact that bootlegging in Seattle will soon be a thing of the past if Judge Rudkin continues to impose ten dollar fines on the law breakers, as they cannot stand many such doses as that. Evidently this is not the age of brains as a ball player can insure his arm for $10,000, and a dancing girl can insure her feet for $15,000, and yet the biggest and best brain in the country could not insure such a brain for thirty cents. According to the Associated Press dispatch Jack Johnson's white wife arrived in Chicago, but it had nothing to say about his black wife, his yellow wife, his red wife or his brown wife, all of whom he doubtless deserted when he decided to return to the United States. It occurs to us that the white man and not the Japanese is responsible for the Japs operating 338 hotels and apartment houses in Seattle, and at that the Japanese got the worst of the deal. Vol. 5. No. 6 EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS Please answer good and true, If Cox is wet, what are you? It begins to look as if young Hubbard has the big interests on the hip. That was a long drawn out convention at Yakima and as yet it did not seem to draw out anything. In olden times Bacus was the God of wine, but these Sahara days he is just a God without a constituency. Apparently the Japanese will not assimilate with the white man of this country, but be it remembered it is no fault of the Japanese. Doubtless Babe Ruth learned to run home when he felt like having a fresh drink of mother's milk and the habit is still with him. The Elks are to be congratulated for having a Miller last Tuesday evening that ground out the dollars by the barrels for them. Villa may want to give up, but he does not seem to have any intention of doing so until the man with the money first does do so. That proposed thirty per cent cut in ladies dresses if carried out would almost make them as high up and as low down as possible. Having learned how hard pressed the editor hereof is for ready cash, Pegdall has doubtless come to Seattle to do a bit of missionary work. Instead of wanting to be governor of this state Elbert F. Blaine is devoting his entire time trying to make the state wet, but with water instead of booze. Men may hold the record for gold digging, but any woman with a pretty face can double discount him and give him cards and spades before they begin the race. "Home again from a foreign shore," sings Jack Johnson, and it seems to fill his soul with joy to be home again. May he live long and have more sense. Since Harding at his own wish will only be a one termer, why not Albert Johnson as his successor, if he will but save us from the impending Yellow Peril. Democracy is to invade the West this fall. Republicanism did something similar some four years ago and it was sorry it did it and history may again repeat itself. When a fourteen year old girl goes out for an all night outing with a twenty-seven year old man, it certainly looks bad and a term in the penitentiary should be drawn by the man. If George B. Lamping is a Republican then we must either be a Democrat or a damphool, for politically speaking we know we are not the kind of a Republican that Lamping is. If airplanes are able to travel 200 miles an hour, leaving New York City at 9 o'clock and arriving in San Francisco for noon lunch, spending three hours in the Quake City and yet being back in New York in time for 6 o'clock dinner, will all be in the pales of possibility. ```markdown ``` THE PASSING THRONG Even the American Colored man, after listening to Kelly Miller talk on the hope of the Negro of this country, feels that there is still something for which to live and fight. Almost a thousand Colored citizens turned out to hear him lecture last Tuesday evening and I feel absolutely safe in saying that not one of them went away disappointed and not only not disappointed, but went away feeling that there is a better day ahead. In Seattle Prof. Miller always draws a full house and, occupying a commanding position in the gallery, I watched with intense interest that large concourse of depressed humanity drink down his every word and utterance and also observed the hopeful light that came to their faces as he took his audience, step by step to a higher and better life. Kelly Miller is not only a lecturer, but he is a philosopher and not only a philosopher, but an inspired genius and the good he does on such lecture tours is incalculable. He lectured under the auspices of the local order of Elks and the organization is not only to be congratulated but to be heartily thanked for opening its series of public functions with one of such high ideals. Quite a few readers of Cayton's Weekly have incidentally complimented the editor hereof for his criticism of a Tacoma daily, all of which is highly appreciated, but complimenting me does not amount to a tinkers dam, aside from momentarily swelling of my head, and I suggest that the Colored citizens damn the daily paper. Such things are repeatedly handed to them and are never resented until newspapers have reached the conclusion that such things can be done with impunity. Had the citizens of Tacoma, resented that insult in a way that would have made the owners of that paper set up and take notice, it would not have done so again, and the other papers would have hesitated before venturing on such treacherous human quick sands. I am told that a number of the readers of Cayton's Weekly sent the Tacoma paper a marked copy, but no one of them, so far as I have heard, has written to the paper protesting against such reportorial brutality, nor not one appeared at the editorial rooms of the paper and registered his or her protest. So long as such insults are taken without resentment just so long will they be handed out. * * * If any Colored person in the state has in any way thought favorably of the gubernatorial candidacy of George B. Lamping, permit me to say to you and as one who knows, that you could not make a worse blunder than to even speak knidly of it, to say nothing of supporting it. If you have any doubts about what I had to say about his treatment of J. E. Hawkins and his reasons for not giving Ida Hill a place in his office then I invite you to question Lamping on the subject and I do not doubt but that he will tell you, "that's my idea." I would rather see the Colored voters never get any political recognition than to be jimcrowed in order to get it, and, believe me, that's exactly what will happen if Lamping is ever governor of the Evergreen state. There are four other candidates for the governorship on the Republican ticket, none of whom have gone on record as has Lamping concerning the Colored man, and surely the most fastidious Colored voter can make a selection out of that quartet and thereby give Lamping the go by. * * * According to a statement made by W. H. Wilson, the presiding officer at the Kelly Miller meeting last Tuesday evening, the local Elks are preparing to cause to be erected a Fraternity Hall in Seattle, five stories high and at a cost of $100,000, the plans for which have already been drawn by the architect. According to a statement made by B. F. Tutt, the lot on which the building is to be erected has already been purchased, but its location as yet is not public property. Now all of this sounds good and Cayton's Weekly again heartily congratulates the local Elks for what they are ac- complishing. In his address Prof. Miller told his audience that unless the Colored citizens of this community got together they would never succeed and he said to the Elks, if you want my advice of how to get cheap building material, put your heads together, and in that there is more truth than poetry. * * * Thus far, one Colored man has filed for a Republican nomination in the person of Dr. Charles F. Maxwell, who is seeking the nomination for representative to the legislature from the Forty-third legislative district, and I want to congratulate him for having done so and even at this early stage of the game tender to him the support of Cayton's Weekly. Knowing him as well as I do, I am of the opinion that he has more than an even break for the nomination. I feel safe in saying that he will get the Colored vote of the district and it seems to me that he should get the Italian vote of the district and those two forces should put him over the top. Two years ago I filed for the same nomination, and despite my unpopularity, I only ran a few votes behind one of the nominees and I am certain I would have been nominated had I have received the Colored vote. Dr. Maxwell is a very able man and would play his part in the legislative halls good and true. Were there a few more governors of the temperment of Gov. Bickett of North Carolina, who recently ordered the state guards at Graham, N. C., to fire on a mob bent on lynching three colored men and fire to kill, which verily was done, the mania to mob would be less acute. According to government statistics there are 150,000 Japanese on the Pacific Coast, extending as far inland as Denver, Colorado, 90,000 men and women and 60,000 children, and lest that number of Japanese completely subjugate the entire country all America has its ear to the ground. Even mother is ignorant of the whereabouts of Grover Bergdoll, the millionaire draft dodger, but we have our suspicions that the Democratic campaign committee may get in touch with him when the presidential campaign gets in action. Who thinks the colored man of this country is not fast following in the footsteps of his white brother failed to see the account of two colored men over in Nebraska lining up twenty white men, who a few hours previous had cashed their pay checks, and took all of their available cash. "Jest tell um, we's risin'" If young Hubbard really has the invention that he seems to think he has, and in that belief others are beginning to think as does he, then it will completely revolutionize our present day motive power and unless handled with care it will bankrupt many persons now in affluent circumstances. In view of the fact that it will make and break many it is our belief that the United States Government should become the owners of the secret even though it is forced to pay Hubbard ten million dollars for it. RACE GLEANINGS Indianapolis Freeman The population of the state of Georgia is approximately, white 1,700,000; colored 1, 300,000—colored people constituting approximately 44 per cent of the whole population. The legislature of New Jersey has appropriated for the Bordentown Industrial School, the sum of $317,000, available for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1920. This is the largest appropriation in the history of the school. Negro extension work in 15 Southern states, involving the services of at least 220 Negro agents (163 men and 57 women) and costing about $300,000 annually, will be extended and developed more rapidly than it has been. The movement of law enforcement is spreading throughout the South. The unorganized majority sentiment against mob violence is being unified, organized and made effective. The Doublas Life Insurance Co., of America, was incorporated under the laws of the state of Missouri, Wednesday, June 7th. Colored Americans will be largely represented on the program of the World's Sunday School Convention to be held in Tokio, Japan, which opens October 5th. In New York $913,500 was appropriated by the General Education Board during the past week for Negro schools. Plans are being formulated for the special executive meeting of the members of the National Negro Press Association to be held at an early date in New York. The Sunday School forces of Little Rock have communicated to the Sunday School Congress, Headquarters of Nashville, Tenn., their desire to entertain the 1921 session of the Sunday School Congress As usual, a number of prominent white churchmen ministers and laymen, have in the last few weeks spoken before large audiences of their own people in behalf of Negroes in the South. North Carolina's State Department of Education and of Health, have issued a little pamphlet for the use of Negro citizens which is worth the attention of anyone interested in Southern welfare. The attention of all colored veterans of the World War is called to the new conditions under which lapsed or canceled War Risk Insurance (Term) Insurance may be reinstated. Black Man's Land is primarily Africa South of the Sahara Desert. Here dewll the bulk of all the 150,000,000 black men on earth. In the Western Hemisphere there are some 25,000,000 of more or less mixed blood, brought thither in modern times as slaves by the white conquerors of the New World. Still, whatever may be the destiny of these transplanted black folk, the black man's chief significance, from the world aspect, must remain bound up with the Negro population in the African homeland. The cruix of the African problem resolves itself into the question, whether the white man, through consolidated racial holds North and South, will be able to perpetuate his present political control over the continental mass. The Arab and the Europeans are rivals for the mastership of the Black Africa. It remains to be seen whether the Arab, allying himself with the blacks, can oust his white rival. That some such move will be attempted, in view of the brown world's renaissance in general and the extraordinary activity of the Arab peoples in particular, seems a foregone conclusion. It is Northeast Africa which is the real nucleus of Arabism. Here Arabism and Islam rule unchecked. Concerning Islam's steady progress in Black Africa, there can be no shadow of a doubt, and in so far as he is Islamized, the Negroe's warlike propensities will be inflamed. Mrs. Joe Moss, who died early in the present week was buried last Thursday evening. --- POLITICAL POT PIE It was Joel F. Warren, as chief of the police of Seattle, who placed Giles Graves on the police force and, after he had done duty for a time, Warren expresssed the desire for more men just like Graves. No other chief of the police of Seattle ever expressed the desire to have Colored men on the police force and in that respect Warren leads all the rest. While chief of the police, as was told you in last Saturday's issue, Warren was instrumental in having over one hundred overseas veterans placed on the police force and now it transpires he did more to have [Picture of a man with a mustache and a suit and tie]. JOEL F. WARREN Candidate for Sheriff Colered men on the police force than any one else, and if the friends of both the overseas soldiers and the Colored men on the force appreciate a kindness they will rally to Warren's support in his fight for the nomination of sheriff. "In my opinion," said P. Frazier, "Chief Warren will get all of the votes of the Colored citizens of Seattle, not because he is making any promises for the future to them, but for what he did for them when he was chief of the police." Warren has had the experience and if nominated and elected he will make good. There will be a sharp contest for the Republican nomination of auditor for King county, but in my opinion A. Lincoln Smith has the big end of the fight. It is generally conceded that the affairs of the auditor's office are in a more or less deplorable condition just now and need a man at the head [Name] A. LINCOLN SMITH Candidate for County Auditor of the office that is thoroughly conversant with that class of work, to unravel the tangled web, and it seems that Smith is more fitted to do so than any one else seeking the nomination. "I will put my resignation in the hands of the commissioners the day before I take charge of the office with the understanding that if the office has not been thoroughly and practically revised to the satisfaction of any competent set of exports within six months after I assume the duties thereof, then said resignation to take force and effect." "I see," he continued, "much is being said about assessing court house employees by the various officials a certain per cent. of their salaries for campaign purposes. Now if I am nominated and elected no such practices will be allowed. I will neither permit or accept such contributions." Mr. Smith has been at the head of the accountant department of the county commissioners' office for quite a few years and has the reputation of being the most efficient man that has ever held the position. His candidacy is being backed by men of experience and likewise men of affairs and as said above, he seems to have the lead on the other aspirants for the nomination. Thus far no one has filed against either Claude C. Ramsay or Thomas Dobson for commissioners, and there seems to be no excuse for doing so. King county never had two more efficient commissioners than they and for once the voters should let well enough alone. The editor hereof felt that Mr. Ramsay would be of much commercial use to the Northwest in general and Seattle in particular were he nominated and elected a representative in Congress from this district, but he felt that he would in a way be betraying a political trust to leave the work he had begun as county commissioner P. A. CLAUD C. RAMSAY Candidate for Commissioner before it was finished and so he refused to consider the offers of loyal friends to work for his nomination for representative in Congress until he had finished his second term as commissioner. Mr. Dobson is deserving of every consideration the voters of the third commissioner's district are giving him, for since he has been commissioner he has worked untiringly in the interest of the tax payers and if there be one man in the district that is against him it is because that man could not use Dobson to fleece the tax payers. For the first time in the history of the county, the commissioners are united and work without friction for the best interest of the tax payers. Cayton's Weekly READABLE RELIABLE REPUBLICAN Will Help You If You Will Help It JOHN A. STRINGER'S PLATFORM 1. I am standing on the platforms of the Republican Party, national and State. 2. I demand the calling of a state constitutional convention to revise the antiquated and inadequate present constitution. 3. Consolidate state offices. Form a cabinet of department heads. Consolidate city and county governments. 4. Cut down the cost of administration and taxes. Adopt the budget system and keep out of debt. 5. Short ballot. Election once in two years. Adequate pay to Legislators. 6. Establish presidential preference primaries. 7. Establish an old age pension system, requiring employers to contribute a necessary percentage of their pay roll to a fund for that purpose, thereby in time, removing the necessity of poor houses for old folks. John A. STRINGER Candidate for Governor 8. Establish a state old folks' home, pending maturity of the above outlined old age pension system. 9. Establish a state child welfare board. The state should be the guardian of every child without proper parental care. 10. Highest rate of pay to teachers and careful selection as to their pure Americanism, sound sense and practical political views. 11. The Farmers Loan plan should be adopted. Loan money to farmers at 512% : repay at rate of $68,80 per $1,000 per year for thirty years. 12. I am against the Carlyon Road Bill, because taxes on automobiles with road levy yield five millions of dollars a year for road building. It is impossible to spend more legitimately. Eleven milions in interest should be saved. No cement company should be granted a monopoly. 13. I am for a 24-foot road, paved from Seattle to Aberdeen and Seattle to South Bend; Seattle and Tacoma to Vancouver, Washington, and from Vancouver to Spokane, making an all-winter road via the Columbia River. And I am for good roads throughout the state. 14. Create a fund to loan soldiers at $ 5 \frac{1}{2} \% $ , to buy homes, farms if qualified and small business if experienced: repay in thirty annual installments. 15. Extend irrigation in Eastern Washington. Turn waters of Snake and Columbia Rivers onto the land. 16. The state should buy all good logged-off land, clear it, manufacture its own powder and sell to bona-fide citizens who have resided in this state over two years, on thirty annual payments, with interest at $ 5 \frac{1}{2} \% $ . 17. We now have strikes, then arbitration. We should have arbitration first. Establish a court of arbitration for settlement of labor troubles, members to be chosen from labor, employers and supreme court judges. 18. No penalty against a laborer who refuses to work for any one person or corporation. 19. Aliens are invited guests and should be prohibited from interfering with the conduct of our domestic affairs in any way—by speech, pamphlet, newspaper or through a labor union. 20. Immigrants should have their finger prints taken and be registered when enter- ```markdown ``` ing this country, a record kept of their activities and furnished to the court when application for citizenship is made. 21. The time has come when the immigration of Asiatics should cease. 22. No alien should hold land except under a lease limited to one year, and should not be permitted to hold stock in any land corporation. 23. State hospitals connected with the insane asylums should provide medical treatment for drug addicts. They should be made self-supporting. The jail is no place for such mentally diseased persons, but it is the place for those who sell the drugs. 24. Hospitals for the insane can and should partially pay for their maintenance. Two-thirds of the inmates can do some work, and should, as some useful occupation will soothe their minds and tend to final cure. The inmates should be segregated according to their mental and physical conditions. 25. The penitentiary and reformatory can and should be made self-sustaining. Prisoners should be taught a useful occupation, and credited with a rate of pay accumulating into a sum sufficient to maintain them from time of release until established as honest and useful citizens. 26. Eight hour day for guards in the penitentiary, reformatory and asylums not twelve, as at present. 27. As there are a great many women and children in the institutions of this state, a woman should be a member of the Board of Control. 28. Veterans should have a fair share of state employment, but based on strict merit in all cases. 29. The U. S. Constitution guarantees speedy trial. Let the bench and bar unite to reduce delays and costs. Accused men are either innocent or guilty and they need no time to plead. The court requires no more than thirty days to decide the question. Cases have been known where accused men have been kept in jail one, two and even three years before their cases were decided. Nine of the twelve jurymen should be enough to return a verdict. Jurymen should not be asked if they read newspapers, and should not be disqualified because they have knowledge of the case and have an impression. Witnesses should not be brow-beaten by lawyers, and they should not be committed to jail to await the trial; their evidence should be taken before the accused and his counsel and read to the jury at the trial if they cannot be present. The Supreme Court is overworked; another department of four judges should be created and criminal cases heard at once, as now with extraordinary writs. Judges should be permitted to comment on the evidence in submitting the case to a jury. 30. The war is over, and with it the menace of the red flag, the bloody shirt, the Bolsheviki and the Soviet. Let us forget the past and work for the future, certain that it will be greater than our past and our ideals more perfectly realized and more firmly established. EFFICIENCY CLUB AGAIN The above organization, long since noted for its well arranged social hops, will give its first Shirt Waist ball Tuesday evening, August 10th, at the Leschi pavilion, to which the general public is cordially invited to be present and participate in the real fun making that has been arranged for the occasion. FOR SALE a seven room house, partly furnished and ready to occupy. It is close to town and will pay for itself by letting rooms. The house can be had on easy terms with a reasonable payment down. The owner, on account of poor health, is compelled to move to another climate. This is a real snap and a splendid bargain. You can get immediate possession. See Mr. Cayton, 312 22nd South, Beacon 3579. Look this up today. PURELY PERSONAL Mr. David A. Graham, Jr., is taking a brief business course with the veiw of accompanying his uncle, Bishop Jones, to Africa as his private secretary and book keeper, but Dave is not figuring on returning to this country to live. Mr. Ralph Jones spent his vacation in Portland and reports a most pleasant stay in the Rose City. Misses Ida and Emily Brown have returned from Portland. Mrs. Frank A. Stokes of Spokane died at the home of her son last Sunday, whither she had come to visit for a short time. She was the beloved wife of Mr. Frank A. Stokes of Spokane. Hers had been a life of usefulness and her sudden demise was to those who knew her very regretable. Her remains were taken to Spokane for interment. FUSS AND FUN AT FORTUNA Next Wednesday under the auspices of the Seattle Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, an all Seattle picnic and outing will be held at Fortuna Park. You and each of you are invited to bring you well filled baskets, and likewise your relatives and friends and enjoy an all day vacation. Arrangements have been made for those who like to dance to do so to their heart's content. There will be games and sports of all kinds. The boat fare and admission to the grounds will be seventy-five cents and the S. S. Dawn will leave Leschi Park as follows: 6:30 a.m.; 7:30 a.m.; 8 a.m.; 9 a.m.; 11:15 a.m.; 1:30 p.m.; 2:30 p.m.; 4:00 p.m.; 5:30 p.m.; 6:30 p.m.; 8:00 p.m.; 10:30 p.m.; 11:45 p.m. The last boat from the park is at 12:00 p.m., which gives ample time to catch the last car to all parts of the city. HOLD ANNUAL ELECTION The Sojurner Truth Club will elect new officers Tuesday evening, August 3rd. All members are requested to be present at 8:15. 1422 23rd Ave. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF Washington in and for King County. In the Matter of the Estate of Robert M. McMann, Deceased—N., 27794. Notice to Creditors. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, Mabel Akers, has been appointed executrix of the estate of said deceased, and has qualified as such executrix, and all creditors of the deceased and all persons having claims against the deceased are required to serve the same on the said executrix or her attorneys, Sullivan & Christian, 1507 National Realty building, Tacoma, Washington, and file with the Clerk of the above Court, together with the proof of such service within six months after the date of the first publication of this notice, to-wit: within six months after the 31st day of July, 1920. MABEL AKERS. Executrix of the Estate of Robert M. McMann, Deceased. SULLIVAN & CHRISTIAN, Attorneys for Executrix, 1507 National Realty Bldg., Tacoma, Wash. July 31-August 28, 1920 ALHAMBRA CASH GROCERY Distributor of Mme. C. J. Walker's Hair and Skin preparations. Mail, postal and express orders promptly filled. 1201-3 Jackson St., Seattle, Wash. MBS. L. T. GREEN 1101 Washington St., Seattle, Wash. Phone Main 4573. Hair Culture and Scalp Specialist. Will call at your home if desired. Graduate of Oxford College, St. Louis. 1000 1000 Thousands of Barrels of Refreshing, Exhilerating, Intoxicating Music Poured Out Nightly at the 1238 Main Street By the Best SYNCOPATED ORCHESTRA on the Coast DON'T MISS IT ENTERTAINER'S CABARET GILLIE RICHARDSON RUSSELL WALTON --- CAYTON'S WEEKLY (Office 303 22nd Ave. South) Regular, Reliable, Republican, Readable Wants 500 New Subscribers This is a Sample of what it sends out Every Week No Friends to Reward or Enemies to Punish A Publication of Ideas Rather Than Personalities Read for Yourself and Be Convinced A. D. SMITH — B. BIRD Proprietors Phone Beacon 113 B & B PANATARIAN Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing Ladies Work a Specialty We Call for and Deliver TRY JIMMIE THE SHINE KING Shine Parlor for Ladies and Gents 1218 Jackson Street You Are Welcome GREAT NORTHERN POOL AND BILLIARD HALL Cigars, Tobacco and Soft Drinks. BOYD & WILLIAMS, Props. 1032 Jackson St. SANDERS & COMPANY LOANS NEGOTIATED 1003-1004 L. C. Smith Building Office Hours From 8:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. Seattle, Wash. Elliott 4662 Phone East 179 Calls Made Promptly Day or Night LEWIS & BLACKWELL FUNERAL DIRECTORS and EMBALMERS H. Alfred Lewis, Funeral Director 1215 East Marion St., Seattle ATLAS POOL HALL Under New Management Wishes You a Happy New Year FELIX CRANE, Manager 1212 Main Street Seattle FURNISHED ROOMS FURNISHED ROOMS 317 22nd Ave. So. Rooms large and commodious, on car line, but walking distance. MRS. S. R. CAYTON 317 22nd Ave. So.