Cayton's Weekly
Saturday, November 13, 1920
Seattle, Washington
Page text (machine-generated)
Cayton's Weekly
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PRICE FIVE CENTS
CAYTON'S WEEKLY
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
WHAT DOES IT MEAN
Not because Tennessee, Missouri, and Oklahoma went Republican have we reached the conclusion that the Solid South has seen the beginning of its end, and the wholesale slaughter of colored men, women and children for minor criminal and political offenses will be frowned down upon but because the women of the land have been enfranchised and they will insist on the fundamental principles of the Constitution, "all men are born equal and with certain inalienable rights among them life, liberty and the pursuits of happiness." Woman's first offense at the ballot box gave Woodrow Wilson the presidency of the United States "because he kept us out of war," but he did not keep us out of war, and the woman vote punished the Democratic party for it and not only punished it for not doing so but humiliated it by throwing three of the southern states into the Republican tidal wave. The white women of the South in our opinion are going to say to Ku-Kluxism, thus far and no further. They are going to say to the white men, who hang colored women up by their heels and then dsiembowl them, and perform other fiendish acts of barbarity, do it at your peril of losing control of the South. They are going to say to the disfranchisers of colored voters, too long have we suffered the same humiliation at your tyrannical hands and now that our chains have been broken we will not stand for even colored persons being likewise politically bound.
Then again keeping the South politcally solid may be of comparatively little trouble for the white man of that section, for at the rate the black men are leaving it for other climes even the shot gun will not have to be used to keep it so and the other sections of the country will be so solidly Republican that the South will cut but little ice in the affairs of the government. We are not too sure but that the coming Congress will reduce the representation in Congress from the South and thereby destroy every vestige of the former all powerful greatness of the South and so promote it be.
EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS
Armistice day in Seattle was quite cold, but in no wise stormy.
Thomas S. Lippy has done most excellent work on the port commission of Seattle and he should be re-elected.
Whoever thinks to get something for nothing may get the something, but will soon discover it is nothing.
Rumor has it that Hiram Johnson of California is preparing to rule or ruin the Republican party, but he will do neither.
Here is to hoping that the Hon. E. H. Guie will be the next Speaker of the house of representatives of the Washington legislature.
Governor Hart is on a short vacation in Idaho, resting from his pre-election labors.
but he is coming back and then he will be our meet. Down in Texas, where President-elect Harding is resting from his pre-election labors, even the tarpons have taken compassion and let him catch them without any effort on his part, yea they even catch themselves for the distinguished guest.
THE PASSING THRONG
As comes the report to me John H. Ryan, who ran for a seat in the legislature on the Farmer-Labor ticket, has been elected and he will be the only anti-Republican member of the next legislature. In the issue hereof of September 25th I had the following to say concerning Mr. Ryan's candidacy:
I am told John H. Ryan of Tacoma has been nominated for the legislature in the district in which he resides and regardless of whom is running against him, and regardless of the ticket on which he is running, I truly hope he will be elected. Since 1900 he has attended every session of the Washington legislature and issued a manual of that body, which has made him thoroughly conversant with the working of a legislature, and I think he would make a very useful member. If Mr. Ryan should be elected he would not be the first near white colored man that had sat as a member of a Washington legislature for John Bush of Thurston County was a member of the first state legislature and technically speaking I think he was a bit nearer the colored man than is Ryan, but Bush tried to hide his colored man identity while Ryan boasts of his. If nominated it was on the Farmer-Labor party, as he has been an advocate of the Triple Alliance propaganda since its birth, but for aye that Ryan is a clever old scout and as said above would make a useful member if elected.
I said then, I hoped that Mr. Ryan would be elected and now that it seems that he is elected I am delighted. I have been told that Mr. Ryan's woman Republican opponent plead with the voters of the district to vote for her on the grounds that, "my chief opponent is a Negro, and you certainly will not support a Negro in preference to a white woman," but the voters of that distrite are largely Swedes and it seems that the Misses had said something not very commendable about Swedes and they chose between two evils. Singular is it not that the only success registered by the Farmer-Labor party was in the person of a colored man and in a district where there are not over one hundred colored voters and yet Mr. Ryan got in the neighborhood of 3000 votes. If stranger things than this have happened then the writer hereof has never met it.
* * *
I do not feel called upon to comment upon the state and county returns from the late election in view of the fact that every candidate was overwhelmingly elected. I refuse to say, I told you so, but I will say I advised you to vote her straight and that you certainly did. In the closing days of the county campaign some one sponsored a dirty piece of politics against Claude C. Ramsay, which more or less annoyed his friends, but it evidently fell of its own weight, and Mr. Ramsay held his party strength. Owing to Mr. Ramsay having not made any great effort to push his candidacy in either the primary or the general election the vote he got is exceedingly flattering.
The only peepin the F. & L. party got in the state of Washington was a member of the legislature in Tacoma in the person of John H. Ryan. The F. & L. party did well. The question is, have the leaders of the Farmer-Labor party retreated and burned their Bridges behind them? They must have as no Bridges have been seen since the retreat.
Vol. 5, No. 20
ELECTION AFTERMATHS
As goes Maine so goes the country.
No, Mississippi did not go Republican, but, believe me, it had the feeling.
Seven million majority is such a large majority that it might be construed as being unanimous.
Congress, it seems, will continue Republican despite the fact Cox said it had been a curse to the country.
Even Cuba, she of much revolution fame, likewise went Republican, November 2nd. It was just Republican day.
"Wilson should resign," so says William Jennnigs Bryan. Right you are and Gen. Democracy should do likewise.
Hart in doubt—pre-election talk. Hart leads the ticket after election talk. You can not always sometimes tell.
Perhaps W. W. will go down in history as a great man, but we do know he went down in public disgrace at the late election.
The "land slide" to the contrary notwithstanding, the Democrats still have the legal right to order another Thanksgiving day.
If the Union Record believed what it said prior to the election the editor thereof would show his good sense by leaving the state.
Instead of being a candidate against Harding Jimmie Cox seems to have been arrayed against Debs with the field against Harding.
Six colored persons having been shot to death in Florida on election day assured that state to the Democrats by an increased majority.
An Oklahoma woman has been elected to Congress making the second woman to hold a seat in that august assembly. The women too are "risin."
With the exceptions of Tennessee and Missouri the South is still solid, which will do that section of our country in the way of growth little or no good.
But ten states went Democratic at the late election and had not shot guns been so plentiful in the hands of the Democrats none would have done so.
Among those who have not been heard from since the "general land slide," is one Franklin D. Roosevelt, he of Washington City separate lavatory fame.
The farmers and the laborers in the late campaign failed to labor together to any great extent, but at that they overshadowed the Democrats especially in the West.
Its an old adage that says, "who laughs last laughs best," and William Jennings Bryan is laughing now, the other fellow having laughed last July at San Francisco.
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Seattle’s port commission election in De-
eember next will be called upon to give one
“Col.’? Lamping a drubbing like unto the
one he recently got in the primary election.
Republicanism will be sufficiently strong
in the coming Congress to cut down the
representation from the South in propor-
tion to the votes she cast and we hope it
will do so.
During the campaign Senator Harding
was accused of being a Mulatto. Now the
question is, if a half a Negro could run as
fast as did Senator Harding, what the hell
would a whole Negro have done?
In view of the fact that a port commis-
sion eleetion will be held in December next
Bob Bridges has one more opportunity to
keep uot of the gulf of Innoeuous Desue-
tude, it of much Grover Cleveland fame.
It never takes any great amount of
physical effort to kick a man when you
think him down and thats the only time
some persons ever make an effort to kick
the one he or she has a grudge against.
. Harding spoke in Oklahoma, Missouri,
Tennessee and Kentucky and all of those
states except Kentucky went Republican
and even Kentucky is still in doubt. The
question is, was it not a campaign mistake
not to have sent Harding to even Missis-
sippi?
Ilis district having become hopelessly Re-
publican Champ Clark, who went to defeat
in the late battle of ballots, has decided
to permanently withdraw from polities, but
before he goes, he will doubtless look wist-
fully at the White House and after sighing
deeply ejaculate, Damn Woodrow Wilson!
Even President Wilson seems to be com-
ing round to the idea that he is not so
great as he has been pictured, and as a re-
sult he will take the old way and transmit
his next message to Congress. It requires
some awfully hard drubbing to convince
some people that there are two sides to all
questions.
IIell bent for lection went the land, when
all the Democrats were canned. They hol-
lered loud and hollered long, but what
they said was like a song, and sung to
men completely deaf like winter trees with-
so when election day came round, the
voters said we hate your sound, and Four-
teen Points was sent to hell, and there they
will forever dwell. Dear W. W. fare you
well and ere you go ring Jimmy Cox’s
bell that he may follow fast your flivver on
which you’re skidding up Salt River. To
rule the world you vainly tried, but when you
failed you sorely eried, and dropped your
mantel on Jim Cox and thought yourself
a sly old fox, but Uncle Sam saw through
your plot. and snugly jammed you in a pot
and rolled you down the steep hill road
among your southern Democratic horde.
But shake old man before you go because
your hell will be in snow and Jimmy Cox
will finally tire of trying to build for you
a fire.
THE HORIZON
Industry
(From the Crisis)
The highest paid colored city employee
at Cleveland, Ohio, is Dr. J. T. Sykes who
receives $3,300 per year as District Physi-
cian; there are inspectors in the garbage
department, bookkeepers, weight masters,
bathhouse superintendents, street foremen
and 27 men on the police force at salaries
of $2,000 per year; 30 men and women
foremen and clerks at $1,500 per year; and
200 garbage cart drivers at $5.50 per day.
The Ideal Progressive Laundry Corpora-
tion has been chartered as a $100,000 col-
ored enterprise at Pittsburgh, Pa., to do a
general laundry, cleaning and pressing busi-
ness. The promoters are C. E. Thomas,
president; Mark King, secretary; and Dr.
J. F. Jackson, treasurer.
Bob Lindsey, a Negro, has realized on
$15,000 worth of cotton at Gadsden, Ala.
4\t Superior, Wis., Mrs. Hallie R. Salters,
colored, is manager of the Western Union
Telegraph office; she was previously a tele-
phone operator at Minneapolis. Mr. Goins,
a Negro at St. Paul, is an operator in the
Postal Telegraph Cable Office.
The Wage Earners’ Savings Bank at
Savannah, Ga., has resources of $1,036,000.
Harry M. Legg, a Negro, formerly of
Birmnigham, Ala., is operating a wholesale
and retail grocery business at Seattle,
Wash., valued at $65,000. He employs 27
clerks, with W. H. Banks, also formerly
of Birmingham, as manager.
_ Hinton D. Alexander, a colored mail car-
rier at Chattanooga, Tenn., has been re-
tired after 38 years’ service.
_ The Parris Import and Export Corpora-
tion, capitalized at $200,000, has been es-
tablished at Newport News, Va., by Negroes
for the import of tropical products princi-
pally from Africa and the export of Ameri-
can products. Mr. 0. Z. Parris is presi-
dent of the company.
Fitzherbert Howell, a colored real estate
dealer, recently sold at $25,000 each, eight
five-story houses in West 135th Street, New
York City, to colored buyers.
Two hundred colored clerks were ap-
pointed recently in the Bureau of the
Census at Washington. The salary is $960
per year plus $240 bonus.
The Trift Commercial Company has been
organized at Washington, D. C., to conduct
a chain grocery business. Negroes in the
District of Columbia spend $18,250,000 an-
nually, or $50,000 per day, for groceries,
ete.
R. W. Westbury, a colored cotton dealer
at Columbia, S. C., has profits of $100 per
day; J. C. Sawyer has an income from cot-
ton averaging $40,000 per year.
At the Webster Witter Farm, Beeville,
Tex., a colored woman 60 years of age,
Noumann by name, picks 430 pounds of cot-
ton daily, or one-third of a bale. At the
rate of $1.50 per hundred pounds, her wage
is $6.50 per day.
Albermarle Bank has been opened by Ne-
vroes at Elizabeth City, N. C., with a paid
in capital of $25,000. Dr. E. L. Boffler is
president.
Dr. Leonidas Crogman of Atlanta, Ga.,
has sailed for Brazil, with other colored
men from the South, for the purpose of
establishing business relations with South
America.
Ten Negro businesses with headquarters
in Atlanta are incorporated under the laws
ef Georgia, with capital stock and assets
of at least $100,000 each; with smaller cor-
porations operating out of Atlanta, the
total capitalization is nearly $3,000,000.
The Delsarte Film Corporation, capital-
ized at $100,000, has been organized by Ne-
groes in New York, with F. Harrison Hough,
president; John S. Brown, Jr., secretary-
treasurer; and Clarence E. Muse, director-
general. Among the players are Inez
Clough, Susie Sutton-Brown and Spahr
Dickey. A party of 12 players will sail
during September for Haiti. In the fall
“Toussaint L’Ouverture, the Abraham Lin-
coln of Haiti’’, will be released, featuring
Clarence E. Muse.
J. William Galewood, for 10 years em-
ployed as a colored general clerk in the
office of City Comptroller E. S. Morrow
at Pittsburgh, Pa., has been promoted to
Pay Counter Clerk.
Pan Alarm,’’ a refrigerator contrivance
so operated as to ring when water in a
drip-pan has reached a certain height.
Education
A new graded school is being built for
colored children at Atchison, Kan. It will
cost $150,000 and include a swimming pool
and a gymnasium.
At Knoxville, Tenn., the scholastic popu-
lation is 30,068, of whom 26,284 can read
and write and 3784 are illiterates; of 5824
Negroes 4,756 can read and write, while
658 are illiterates.
The United States Inter-departmental
Board of Social Hygiene has approved the
Howard University budget of $12,440 for
social hygiene work; the university will
earry $3,900 of this budget.
The Hospital and Health Board of Kan-
sas City, Mo., has established a free inten-
sive training school in pathology and bac-
teriology for colored doctors at the Gen-
eral Hospital. The Colored Division of this
hospital has 300 beds, 8 internes, 40 nurses
and a staff of 43 physicians.
In New York City there were 600 colored
teachers attending summer school. The
South had the largest representation, with
Atlanta in the lead.
George W. Gore, Jr., a graduate of the
colored Pearl High School, Nashville, Tenn.,
is one of ten members of the freshman class
of 500 at De Pauw University to win an
Edward Rector Scholarship for excelling in
scholarship during his first year. He is the
first Negro to receive a scholarship at De
Pauw.
J. Henry Alston, A. B., Lincoln Univer-
sity °17, and A. M. Clark University ’20,
has been appointed Instructor of Psychol-
ogy at Morehouse College, Atlanta, Ga. Mr.
Alston was formerly professor of mathemat-
ies at Walden University and principal of
the high school department of Paine Col-
lege.
Lincoln University at Chester, Pa., has
been promoted from Class 2 to Class 1
among Negro colleges.
Professor J. E. K. Aggrey of Livingstone
College, North Carolina, is on a year’s
leave of absence for the study of education-
al missions in Africa, under the Phelps-
Stokes Fund Commission.
By authority of the State Department
of Publie Instruction, Cheyney Training
School for Teachers at Cheyney, Pa., opens
as a standardized State Normal School.
The school was founded in 1937 and has as
its principal Leslie Pinckney Hill, A. B.,
A. M., of Harvard University.
Fraternities
Colored Knights of Pythias of Indiana
have held their annual session at Marion.
The 1921 session will meet at Indianapolis.
E. G. Tidrington of Evansville was elected
Grand Chancellor for the sixteenth con-
secutive time.
Five hundred delegates were in attend-
ance at the annual meeting of the Grand
Lodge of Negro Odd Fellows of Salisbury,
N. C._ Endowment policies have been in-
creased from $200 to $300; the organization
has a balance of $40,000.
King Solomon Chapter of Royal Arch
Masons has been organized at Sewickley,
Pa. F. Quincy Adams was elected Most
Excellent High Priest.
Mosiac Templars of America has cele-
brated 37 years’ achievement. During 1919
the income was $661,499, insurance in force,
$30,250,200; its assets are $690,353, with
$125,000 invested in Liberty Bonds; liabili-
ties $125.7@5. Tt hae 18 etate orand Indoag
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plus of $49,062. B. H. Grimes is Supreme
Worthy Shepherd.
American Woodmen, of which the Honor-
able C. M. White of Denver, Colo., is Su-
preme Commander, reports the writing of
over $60,000,000 of insurance; it has a fund
of $500,000 to care for matured poli-
cies.
Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias of Geor-
gia reports a balance of $208,031, with
total assets of $409,041. Last year $11,634
applications for membership were made.
The Past Grand Chancellor is J. J. Bolen
of Savannah.
The Church
The Rev. Henry Allen Boyd of Nashville,
Tenn., has returned from Tokyo, Japan,
where he was a Negro delegate to the
World’s Sunday School Convention.
Mildred Barrett, formerly a teacher of
Gay Street School, West Chester, Pa., has
been received into the Order of the Oblate
Sisters of Providence at Baltimore. She
is the first colored girl from this section
to enter a Catholic convent.
SNAUIVEGL WING sds NO
The pre-natal clinic opened under the
supervision of the Maternity Center Asso-
ciation in the offices of the New York
Urban League has already a daily average
of 10 patients. In addition to the daily
clinic, Harlem physicians conduct a special
weekly clinic for the Center. The New
York Urban League also sponsors a nursing
center in its office, directed by Henry Street
Settlement. The Visiting Nurse from this
center visits at least 10 sick persons each
day.
Nineteen out of 24 applicants for social
service fellowships with the National Urban
League passed their examinations; the suc-
cessful candidates are Isabel F. Burns and
Edwin J. Morgan to the New York School
for Social Work, and Lillian S. Proetor and
John M. Wiseman to the Chicago School of
Civics and Philanthropy. The fellowships
are for $400 each.
The Alter Light Company of Chicago,
which is using colored girls furnished
through the League, threatens to test the
validity of a clause found in its lease for-
bidding the use of colored help, if the mat-
ter is further pressed by the leaser.
Rand MeNally & Company, printers and
publishers of maps, at the instigation of
the Chicago Urban League, have taken on
40 colored girls in one of their offices with
a colored woman in charge. The number
of girls to be employed will reach 200.
Harvey B. Atkins, Industrial Secretary
of the Cleveland organization, reports that
colored girls are becoming expert operators
of power machines at increasingly large
wages. The Liberty Garment Company em-
ploys 75 such operators; the Manual Prod-
uets Company employs more than 50.
The Annual Conference of Urban League
executive will be held in Newark, N. J.,
October 20-23. Reports from local fields
indicate thta it will be the largest annual
conference yet held by the League. Louis
J. Dublin, Chief Statistician of the Metro-
politan Life Insurance Company, will dis-
cuss life insurance and the reduction of
mortality as brought about by the Metro-
politan. Other speakers of national import
will discuss the various phases of industry,
including health and housing and special
training both in industry and social ser-
vice. The Association of Negro Industrial
Welfare Workers will hold its annual meet-
ing at this time in conjunction with the Na-
tional Urban League.
Taking advantage of the meeting of the
National Medical Association in Atlanta, the
Atlanta Urban League secured permission
from 8 industrial plants employing colored
workers to have health talks given at the
noon hour by the visiting physicians. They
were enthusiastically received by the mixed
Social Progress
Dr. A. C. Browne of Chicago, who served
with the 366th Field Hospital (92nd Di-
vision), he returned to France. He will
apply for French citizenship and practice
at Cean (Calvidas) with a French dentist.
Dr. Cobb, formerly of the 36 th Infantry
(92nd Division), upon his own request was
discharged in France to engage in dentistry
at St. Die (Vosges).
In a Civil Service examination at Phila-
delphia for Assistant Teacher, Bureau of
Recreation, Clarence J. Grinnell, colored,
made an average of 90 per cent and was
placed second on the list.
Columbus Avenue Playground at Boston,
Mass., has been renamed William E. Carter
Playground in memory of a colored veteran
of the World War.
A thousand dollar contribution of needle-
work by women of Africa, the West Indies
and North and South America was exhibited
at the Quadrennial Mite Missionary meet-
ing held at Jacksonville, Fla.
John R. Shillady, formerly secretary of
the National Association for the Advance-
ment of Colored People, has been appointed
Executive Director of the National Con-
sumers’ League in New York City. The
latter organization has become recognized
as the national authority on the shorter
work day, minimum wage, and other legis-
lation affecting women and girl workers.
Dr. F. S. Belcher, colored, has been ap-
pointed city physician at Savannah, Ga.
Patrolman Richard H. Anderson, a Ne-
ero, has passed the examination for Police
Sergeant at Philadelphia, Pa., with an aver-
age of 38 points above that of other appli-
cants. He is connected with the 19th Dis-
trict. In Philadelphia there are 300 colored
policemen.
Negroes of Charleston, S. C., have com-
pleted the payment of $6000 for a building
site for a Y. M. C. A. Mr. G. D. Brock.
a graduate of Morehouse College, is in
charge
Adelaide Childs, colored, has been ap-
pointed policewoman at Washington, D. C.
She is 25 years of age.
To oppose the migration of Negroes, at
Canton, Miss., the following sign is stretched
across the main streets: “Come White and
Colored People and Let’s Get Together’’!
The State Board of Control at Charles-
ton, W. Va., has appropriated $150,000 for
the erection, of ‘‘Old Long Farm’’, a hos-
pital for insane Negroes.
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
The following locations of colored regi-
ments have been given: 9th Cavalry—34
officers, 1,523 enlisted men—Camp_Stot-
senbery; 10th Cavalry—40 officers, 900 en-
listed men—Fort Huachuea, Ariz.; 24th In-
fantry—52 officers, 1,283 enlisted men—
Camp Furlong, Columbus, N. M.; 25th In-
fantry—42 officers, 2,103 enlisted men—
Camp Stephen D. Little, Nogales, Ariz.
John R. Holmes, a Negro at Youngstown,
Ohio, has been appointed meter reader in
the City Water Department. He was one
of the highest two among 14 applicants.
In Chatham County, Ga., there are 43,981
Negroes who pay taxes on 5000 acres of land
valued at $2,118,732.
At Philadelphia, a Bureau of Social Ser-
vice to be organized, in connection with the
Department of Public Welfare, of which
Mr. R. R. Wright, Jr., has been appointed
Secretary by Mayor Moore.
Negro officials in the Police Department
are a Lieutenant of Police at Chicago; a
Police Sergeant at Atlantic City and Bos-
ton; and a Detective Sergeant at Wash-
ington.
Mrs. Beatrice Moore, colored, has been
appointed an Assistant Postmistress at
Philadelphia.
At a horse show at Fort Meyer, Va., Ser-
geant Augustus G. Lindsay of the Army
‘War College Detachment, won first place
over 21 white competitors in the jumping
contest. He was awarded a silver loving
eup by General Holbrooke.
The colored branch of the Y. M. C. A.
in Chicago is conducting 4 glee clubs, 3
efficiency clubs and a baseball league with
9 teams among workers in 11 industrial
plants. The organization employs 10 secre-
taries, 3 of whom give their entire time
to industrial work. Mr. George R. Arthur
is executive secretary.
At the Olympie athletic meet, Sol Butler
pulled a tendon in the broad jump and was
forced to retire; R. E. Johnson, running in
third position, was stricken with cramps in
the fifteenth lap of the 10,000 meter run
and was forced to leave the track; II. F. V.
Edwards, England’s colored sprinter, fin-
ished third in the. short dashes, running
200 meters in 21 4/5 seconds.
The late Dr. J. H. Shepperd was the
first Negro to practise medicine at Peoria,
Tl, where he built a luerative practice
among both colored and white people. Ile
served as chief sanitary officer at Camp
Sam Houston and received special mention
from the Surgeon General for sanitary effi-
ciency. He had the rank of Captain in the
8th Illinois Regiment of which he had been
a member for 15 years.
Dr. Shepperd was born in Lynchburg, Va.,
February 22, 1865. He studied at Howard
University and received his medical degree
from Meharry College in 1899.
PURELY PERSONAL
The Kelly Miller Club composed of stu-
dents of the University of Washington, of
which Miss Mabel Byrd is president and
Miss Madge R. (Cayton is secretary, gave a
Halloween party last Saturday evening at
the home of the secretary to which each
member had the privilege of inviting a
friend. Those present were: Miss Mabel
Byrd, Miss Madge R. Cayton, Miss Hattie
Merritt, Miss Blanche Allen, Miss Francis
Webb, Misses Ida and Emily Brown, Miss
Dorris Grose, Miss Sarah Green, Miss Gwen-
dolyn Roston, Miss Mary Burnett, Mr. John
Prim, Mr. Ted Spearman, Mr. Spaulding, Mr.
Carle Abels, Mr. Hamilton Green, Mr. Lo-
renza Graham, Dr. A. Robinson, Mr. Je-
rome Reed, Mr. Carle Norris, Mr. Claude
Norris, Mr. Rufus Williams, Mr. Eldridge
Garret.
After having a pleasant vacation in
Los Angeles the Rev. W. D. Carter returned
to the city last Saturday and occupied his
pulpit last Sunday. He and his members
The Laun
303 T
Twenty-five two
steam heated and n
No. 11 or Yesler
Apartment
The Lau
The Laurel Apartments 303 Twenty-Second South
Twenty-five two and three room apartments, steam heated and nicely furnished. Take No.9, No.11 or Yesler Way cars to Twenty-Second Apartments ready to occupy
303 Twenty-Second South
are making a united effort this week to raise funds for their church.
A very sociable entertainment was given by Miss Vivian Donnegan, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Dannegan at their home, 1214 Washington Street, last Halloween. Little school friends, twelve in number, were her guests. Those present were: Masters James and Wayne Adams, David Hartsfield, James Dubois, Misses Anita Hartsfield, Evelyn Bundy, Margaret Adams, Clarabel Dubois, Julia May Herron, Rose Akerstone, Elstabelle Collins, Petronell Stringer. All the children appeared in costumes as the various spirits of Hallowe'en. The decorations were in accord with the season, black cats, witches and pumpkins predominating. The center piece of the luncheon table being a large Jack Horner pie, twelve satin streamers leading to the places of the little guests. The pie being opened by the streamers being pulled and favors won by each child. Miss Vivian Donnegan pulled the first streamer opening the pie. The table was blessed by Mrs. Hartsfield. Various games were played prizes being won by Master James Adams and Miss Julia May Herron. Music and dancing were enjoyed by all and the little tots departed after having spent an enjoyable afternoon.
Rev. and Mrs. D. A. Graham will celebrate their silver wedding anniversary Friday, November 19th, to which invitations have been extended to friends.
The club house for boys in connection with the Mt. Zion Baptist Church will be formally opened one day next week, or within the very near future. A billiard table has recently been purchased for the club, which will be installed early next week.
Rev. W. D. Carter attended to business in Ellensburg last Thursday, returning to Seattle the same evening.
Rev. H. Allen Boyd delivered a splendid lecture at the Mt. Zion Baptist Church last Friday evening, as he was returning from Japan, whither he went to attend the International Sunday School convention, which was held at Tokio.
Mr. Clarence R. Anderson argued his Pantages damage case in the supreme court one day last week.
While in Olympia last Wednesday the Rev. W. D. Carter met a number of the judges of the Supreme Court and greatly enjoyed an exchange of ideas with them.
These cold evenings should suggest to you a steam heated apartment, and if so, then the Laurel Apartments, with apartments comfortably furnished, are at your service, 303 22nd Ave. South.
The Colored Branch of the Y. W. C. A. with Mrs. W D. Carter, official secretary, has moved to its new quarters which it recently purchased, and a grand opening will be staged in the very near future. Mr. Gustave B. Aldrich of Tacoma attended to legal business in Seattle one day the past week.
The Seattle Branch of the N. A. A. C. P. held its annual election last Monday evening with the following results: president, O. M. Winston; vice-president, W. H. Wilson; secretary, Mrs. Sol. Hall; treasurer, R. S. Brown; executive committee, Mrs L. A. Graves, Lieutenant J. A. Roston, Mrs. A. Colman.
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STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, Circulation, Etc., Required by the Act of Congress of August 24, 1912, of Cayton's Weekly, published weekly at Seattle, Wash., for October 1, 1920.
State of Washington. County of King—ss.
Before me, a notary public, in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared Horace Roscoe Cayton, who, having been duly sworn, according to law, deposes and says that he is the editor of Cayton's Weekly, and that the following is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management (and if a daily paper, the circulation), etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above capton, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form, to-wit:
1. That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are: Publisher, editor, managing editor, business manager, Horace Roscoe Cayton, Seattle, Wash.
2. That the owners are: Horace Roscoe Cayton, Seattle, Wash.
3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: None.
4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the owners, stockholders, and security holders, if any, contain not only the list of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books of the company but also, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other judiciary relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom such trustee is acting, is given; also that the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant's full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, or other securities than as so stated by him.
5. That the average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date shown above is 500.
HORACE ROSCOE CAYTON.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 30th day of September, 1920.
CHARLES M. SILVER,
Notary Public in and for the State of Washington,
(My Commission expires November 4, 1923).
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tments
m apartments,
Take No. 9,
Twenty-Second
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Beacon 1910