cdc.gov |
Rambling observations on books, history, movies, transit, obsolete technology, baseball, and anything else that crosses my mind.
Friday, May 31, 2024
COVID-19, Vaccine, Masks, Church, Baseball and School -- May 31, 2024
Thursday, May 30, 2024
Trump Found Guilty -- May 30, 2024
Twelfth 500-Mile Speedway Grind -- May 30, 2024
Indianapolis Times, 31-May-1924 |
Indianapolis Times, 30-May-1924 |
Wednesday, May 29, 2024
Bix Beiderbecke -- The Wolverine Orchestra -- May 29, 2024
Tuesday, May 28, 2024
Black Cat Magazine May, 1899 -- May 28, 2024
Monday, May 27, 2024
Memorial Day 2024 -- May 27, 2024
"As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter the words, but to live by them." -- John F. Kennedy
I took this photo on 14-December-2007 at the National Cemetery in the Presidio.
Sunday, May 26, 2024
Coolidge Makes Exclusion Act American Law -- May 26, 2024
Seattle Star, 26-May-1924 |
100 years ago today, on 26-May-1924, President Calvin Coolidge reluctantly signed an immigration law that imposed quotas on other countries and exclusion on Japan. Please excuse the racism.
The Star and others on the west coast who know the danger of Japanese encroachment and who for years have been fighting the growing peril rejoice in the fact that Mr. Coolidge, with his Eastern viewpoint, at last has seen the light.
The president, 'tis true, announced that if the Jap exclusion bill stood alone he would veto it, but that he was forced to sign it because of the need for the remainder of the immigration bill.
That alleviated the pain considerably to the friends of the Japs, with whom Coolidge had been playing. But the fact remains that Jap exclusion was by far the most vital factor in the immigration bill.
The president signed the bill. He knew what he was signing.
And he knew why he was signing it.
WASHINGTON, May 26. -- President Coolidge issued a statement today explaining his action in signing the immigration bill, saying that, however much he regretted the Japanese exclusion clause, "I must consider the bill as a whole and the imperative need of the country for legislation of a general character.
"In signing this bill, which in its main features I heartily approve, I regret the impossibility of severing from it the exclusion provision, which, in the light of existing law, affected especially the Japanese.
"If the exclusion provision stood alone I should disapprove of it without hesitation. * * * But the bill is a comprehensive measure dealing with the whole subject of immigration and setting up the necessary administrative machinery. The quota act of 1921 will terminate June 30, next. It is of great importance that a comprehensive measure should take its place and that the arrangements for its administration should be provided at once in order to avoid hardship and confusion."
Mr. Coolidge took congress to task for insisting on the form of the exclusion provision over his objections, declaring this method of securing it is "unnecessary and deplorable at this time."
To have permitted the government to have negotiated for exclusion by treaty, he said, "would not have derogated from the authority of congress to deal with the question in any exigency requiring its action."
The bill thus becomes law.
In addition to the Japanese exclusion clause, the provisions of the measure include:
Quotas of all countries are fixed at 2 per cent, based on the foreign population in this country, according to the 1890 census.
After July 1, 1925, immigration will be limited to 150,000, each country getting a quota in this figure, according to the national origins of the foreign population in the United States as shown by the 1920 census.
To prevent congestion and other difficulties at American ports, consulate officers abroad may not issue visas to more than 10 per cent of a country's quota in any month.
Allen seamen on vessels touching at American ports may not land, except for medical treatment.
JAPAN PROTESTS
EXCLUSION ACT
Wives and children of American citizens and citizens of Canada and all western hemisphere republics are exempted from the quota provisions.
Japan, thru her envoy here, Ambassador Hanihara, first protested last winter against the measure acted upon today by the president. Hanihara sent a communication to Secretary of State Hughes protesting against the bill, then pending in congress. This never was made public, however.
Later, Hughes sent a letter to congress giving the state department’s views on different phrases of the bill, The letter codtained strong objections to the Japanese exclusion provision, but Hughes' protest was ignored by congress.
When the bill came up for action in congress, the Japanese ambassador sent his famous note warning that enactment of the proposed law would resuit in "grave consequences" to the relations between the United States and Japan.
Hughes was somewhat shocked at this statement in Hanihara's note, but upon analysis he concluded that it contained no real threat to the United States. He sent the note to congress, because he believed it highly valuable in that Hanihara set forth the terms of the secret gentlemen’s agreement under which Japanese immigration virtually has been excluded for years and announced his government’s willingness to revise this agreement in accordance with the desires of the United States.
HANIHARA NOTE
IS SENSATION
The note had anything but a beneficial effect, however, causing a sensation. Several senators announced that altho they had intended to support the administration's opposition to the bill, they would vote for the measure because of Hanihara's warning. This development resulted in the passage of the bill by the senate, the measure already having been adopted in the house.
When the bill went to conference, President Coolidge exerted pressure in private negotiations with congressional leaders to have the exclusion clause modified. He proposed that the effective date for exclusion be postponed until March 1, 1926, and that a provision be inserted to the effect that the exclusion clause would not apply to nationals of those countries with which the United States negotiated treaties covering immigration.
The plan was to provide enough time for Sccretary Hughes to negotiate a treaty with Japan carrying the principle of exclusion and based on the gentlemen's agreement. This would have been a concession for Japan as the position of that country in trying to avold a law on immigration was to prevent the stigma of legislative exclusion. A treaty would have had about the same effect, but in a more gracious manner.
EXCLUSION MADE
EFFECTIVE JULY 1
The conferees first rejected President Coolidge's compromise proposal and announced that exclusion would be fixed for July 1. At the last minute, however, the conferces, upon the insistence of the president, agreed upon a postponement to March 1, 1925, and reported this to congress.
This was beaten in the house, however, and the conference report was again revised to make exclusion effective July l.
Signature of the bill, after this protracted fight, puts Mr. Coolidge in the position of surrendering to the will of congress in the matter. He is expected, however, to make his views plain In the statement accompanying his action, which will be lssued later today.
"The Japanesse exclusion provision, which has been the storm center of the present measure, states:
"No allen ineligible to citizenship shall be adinitted to the United States * * *"
The effect of this provision is to bar, by law, all Japanese coolie immigration, The clause does not specifically mention Japanese, but the intent of congress is directed against the Japanese, as other Asiatics already are excluded by law.
Restricting immigration of Asiatics thru the Seattle port will not mean less work for immigration service operatives, according. to Luther Weedin, inspector here, Monday. It will mean more work, he belleves.
"Of course, there will be fewer Japanese coming thru out station," he explained, "and possibly a less number of Chinese, but, on the other hand, there will be many Orlentals to be held here until they can give proof of parents and families in the United States. We also expect many arrest cases, where individuals wiil be picked up and held for deportation.
"As a matter of fact," he added, "we don't know yet just where we are or what changes in personnel or arrangements will be made after July 1, when the bill goes into effect. There are certain apparent conflicts to arise out of the new law as compared with the former regulations, and we must wait for an interpretation by our department heads before making future plans."
Weedin added that no changes were being contemplated here for the present, and he could give no approximate changes in quotas thru the Seattle immigration station, except that he believed business would be I greater.
Miller Freeman, editor Pacific Fisherman, said: "The signing of the immigration bill marks the culmination of a long fight and defines definitely a policy, proper on the part of this country. The charges that it discriminates against the Japanese are untrue, in what the law affects approximately one-half of the population of the world -- all Orientals.
"I would sound a further note of warning to Japanese now in this country to see that the law is obeyed and that they be not led astray by past propaganda of their press and other sources. They cannot use the United States to build a colony or become a racial factor in this country.
"Now I would like to see the federal goyernment prosecute the Mitsui company on charges of taking millions of dollars out of the treasury during the war.
Thanks are due The Star as the only daily paper in Seattle which consistently pushed the matter and allowed "freedom of speech" in its columns, by which all the facts were known. It has been the policy of The Star to allow as frank and open discussion of the problem. Thus the facts of aggression were brought out clearly, instead of suppressing them, as the opposition has done. Without the aid of The Star our task would have been much greater."
City Councilman Phil Tindall, commenting on the signing of the immigration bill, said:
"President Coolidge should be commended for signing the exclusion act. He was under tremendous pressure to veto the act.
"I belleve he came to learn that it would be fatal to start negotiations for a treaty. Japan had a number of questions, such as land fownership, citizenship, etc., that she wished to bring out by treaty.
"American business interests that sought to develop China and Manchurla, and the churches, which would sacrifice the Pacific coast to give thelr missionaries a few converts, opposed the exclusion act."
Saturday, May 25, 2024
Friday, May 24, 2024
Duke Ellington 50 Years -- May 24, 2024
listal.com |
Thursday, May 23, 2024
Granddaddy Studebaker on Half Million Mile Hike -- May 23, 2024
Wednesday, May 22, 2024
Giant US Navy Dirigible "Shenandoah" -- May 22, 2024
Tuesday, May 21, 2024
David Sanborn, RIP -- May 21, 2024
Alto sax player David Sanborn his died. He played in a great variety of genres.
Young Americans (2016 Remaster)
James Taylor - How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You) (Blossom Music Festival, July 18, 1979)
David Sanborn & Linda Ronstadt / The water is wide
Monday, May 20, 2024
Coulter -- The 4000-Ton Iron Ship Ditton -- May 20, 2024
San Francisco Call, 19-February-1895 |
William A Coulter did many maritime drawings for the San Francisco Call. Click on the image for a larger view.
The 4000-ton British ship Ditton, Captain Stapp, which recently arrived from Newcastle, N. S. W., with a cargo of coal, is a ship that can't carry canvas. In nautical language this usually means a vessel that is cranky -- not in the sense now used -- and prone to turn turtle, topple over from being too lofty, too clumsily sparred or too heavily sailed.
But the Ditton is not built that way. Her slender yards and masts are in perfect proportion to her graceful body, and her bolt upon bolt of white cloth fit her with tailor-made symmetry.
Yet she can't carry her canvas, because it blows away from her upon the slightest breezy provocation. Every ship, like every other thing feminine, possesses peculiarities caught in her design and to which she adheres with the persistency of the sex.
The Ditton loses her sails. Never a spar goes out of her, no matter how hard the winds blow, but she has sown canvas all over the globe. Sometimes it would be a lofty royal swelling among the clouds that would rip from the bolt-ropes and go sailing away like a white gull to leeward. Then, again, it would be a topsail that would leave its mate, or a lower sail which would jump clear of the ponderous tacks and sheets, carry away the yardarm lashings and fly thunderously over the sea, leaving the gale to hum gleefully through the space it once occupied. And the light canvased staysails, they, seldom remained long enough on the vessel to get well stretched. A puff and then the stay would be bare.
Another fatality that seems to follow this fine and lucky ship, notwithstanding, is that she invariably has rainy trips. Her crew says she literally draws water, and a continuous winter has rained down on her broad decks since the day she slipped into the sea. In her last voyage of seventy-two days, she pulled the clouds along with her and received their downpour for sixty-one dreary wet days and nights. When the sails weren't going off her the showers, were coming on, and sometimes both conditions were prevailing, each in its own separate and peculiar way.
"I've been in her since she was pushed into the water at Melford Haven three years ago." said the old bo's'n, "and we've never had an accident, and never missed a rain; never lost a handspike, and never missed leaving a sail behind us when the breeze stiffened up. It's fate and nothing can keep the canvas on them sticks up there. But she can go. We just set the course, brace the yards, get up new sails ready for bending, and let her go."
The Ditton is 311 feet in length, 42 feet broad and 26 feet deep. She is a valuable and successful ship for her owners despite her strange rain-drawing and sail-losing characteristics. Captain Stapp, her commander, is an old-time seaman, thoroughly acquainted with, his calling, having been a ship-captain for thirty-five years.
Sunday, May 19, 2024
"I'll Say She Is" Is Energetic, Expensive Hodge-Podge -- May 19, 2024
New York Daily News, 19-May-1924 |
Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 16-November-1924 |
by Arthur Pollock |
The Marx Brothers, the customary four, brash funny fellows, are the featured players in a elaborately dressed-up burlesque show that came to the Casino Theater in Manhattan last night. Perhaps it isn't fair to brand "I'll Say She Is" burlesque show, since it has long been difficult to tell the difference between a burlesque show and a revue anyhow. But the moment the curtain rises and a group of chorus ladies dash on and let loose their voices and their legs "I'll Say She Is" defines itself. these girls have the burlesque air and the burlesque manner and, they have had, evidently, burlesque tutoring. They are noisy and lively. Thereafter the Marx Brothers let it be known that there is a girl in the cast who wants a thrill. The scenes that follow are designed to give it to her. Regular burlesque stuff! The difference is that the scenery and costumes cost a great deal of money and the girls are beautiful. "I'll Say She Is" offers some of the best legs of the season. It is a boisterous show, full of heavily emphasized humor and lots of it. It ought to provide fun for Manhattan audiences all summer. Of the four Marx Brothers three made hits last night. Julius offered, among other things a loud burlesque of Napolean and his reactions to the philanderings of Josephine, which kept the audience happy for a good half hour. In the same burlesque, Leonard Marx exhibited skill and certain comic gifts at the piano and Arthur Marx did stunts with a harp. Arthur is the funniest of the brothers, a clever pantomimist, deft and economical with his effects, a fine recruit for the variety stage. There is a variety of color and song in the show, most of it aimless, all of it loud in one way or another but all of it, also vigorous and healthy. There was a Chinatown scene, of course, in which Cecile D'Andrea and Harry Walters dance a "Chinese Apache Dance." This proved striking and it is just possible that it will strike the police as indecent. Miss D'Andrea is a pretty girl, hardly indecent, even when her clothes begin to fall. It might be mentioned that the book and lyrics are by Will B. Johnstone, though he appears to have written only what the Marx brothers could not think of for themselves, and his writing is dull. Tom Johnstone wrote the music, much of it, that is, as is not borrowed from the works of more famous and meritorious composers. No one of the songs sounded last night as if it was destined to be a hit. "I'll Say She Is" is energetic, expensive hodge-podge. |
Brooklyn Standard-Union, 20-May-1924 |
Saturday, May 18, 2024
Albert Bierstadt -- Sunset: California -- May 18, 2024
Friday, May 17, 2024
Army Flyers Land in Japan -- May 17, 2024
Weekly Kansas City Star, 21-May-1924 |
100 years ago this month, teams from several countries were trying to make the first aerial circumnavigation of the earth. The US Army, with the close cooperation of the Navy, made it. On 17-May-1924, the Americans landed in Tokyo (then often spelled "Tokio." The Prince Regent later became the Emperor Hirohito.
By the Associated Press,
KASUMIGAURA. Japan. May 22. -- This was a notable day for the American Army aviators who are circling the globe by air. Within fifteen hours they drove down out of the bleak, windy north Pacific region, where storms and fogs have hampered their progress for days, into a temperate clime, where they probably can make up some of the lost time. They made the first landing American airmen have made in Japan, and they did two days' tasks in one.
Taking off from the icy waters of Hitokappu Bay. off Yetorofu Island, in the Kuriles, at 3 a.m., the aviators swooped down over Kushiro, on the Island of Hokkaido, four hours and fifty minutes later, circled once over the American destroyer John D. Ford, on duty there in case the flyers needed aid, and went on without landing to Minato, at the northern end of the Island of Hondo, on which Tokio is located. They landed at Minato, 354 miles from Hitokappu Bay, at 10:40 a.m.
At 12:30 p.m. they took the air again for the 350-mile hop to Kasumigaura, where they arrived at 5:40 p.m.
Originally it had been planned that the jump from Yetorofu Island to the main island of Japan and the further hop to Kasumigaura should occupy successive days, but yesterday Lieut. Lowell H. Smith, commanding the flight, advised American naval officers on the Ford that the aviators would try to do both today.
On the way here the Americans gave the population of Kushiro, already thrilled by the visit of the Ford, the first foreign warcraft ever to enter that fishing town's harbor, their first sight of an American airplane and, to most of them, the first view of any aircraft whatever.
Crowds numbering thousands lined the hills above the town and gathered in open spaces to watch the planes pass over and, the watchers hoped, to land, for yesterday officials of the town were told the Americans might pause there for fuel. There was disappointment when the aircraft, after circling over the destroyer, went on to Minato. The mayor had declared the landing of the planes would be regarded as the greatest honor ever accorded the town.
Crowds also were gathered at Minato. The beach was gay with thousands of school children, who waved flags and shouted. The Americans were sighted thirty seconds before they landed, flying down the bay in perfect formation. They fell into line, circled once above the buoys placed for their moornings, and settled onto the water as gracefully as birds.
There was no ceremony at Minato, all the time the flyers spent there being taken up with refueling the aircraft and putting fresh supplies of water and oil aboard. The flyers had lunch and a brief rest and then went on.
At Sendai, about half way between Kasumigaura and Minato, a group of Japanese planes met the Americans and escorted them southward.
Word was flashed here from the radio station at Tomioka that the flyers had passed over that point at 4:10 p.m. and virtually the entire unoccupied personnel of the naval aviation base, which will be the flyers’ headquarters for the next few days, sought vantage points to watch their arrival. They had made 704 miles in twelve hours and fifty minutes’ flying time.
Present expectation is that the Americans will not continue their flight until Sunday or later. They are to be received by the prince regent in a special audience on the occasion of a visit he is making to the aviation base, and their planes are to be gone over by the finest corps of mechanics the navy has been able to assemble from among its air force.
KUSHIRO. Island of Hokkaido, Japan, May 22. -- The American destroyer, John D. Ford, here on duty with the American round-the-world flight, was given a stirring greeting by the people of this fishing center and the surrounding country today. The warmest hospitality has been extended to her officers and crew.
Thousands of citizens visited the ship yesterday and today. Last night the officers were guests at a banquet given by the townspeople, at which cordial expressions or good will were exchanged.
The mayor of the town declared that no war vessel ever had visited the port before.
Five thousand one hundred and fifteen miles had been covered by the three world cruiser Army airplanes, from the starting point, Santa Monica, Calif., when they landed in Kashiwabara Bay. Kuriles Islands, Japan, on the afternoon of May 17. or about one-fifth of the proposed circumnavigation of the globe by air. The total flying time for this distance was seventy-three hours and twenty minutes, making an average speed of about seventy miles an hour. Most of this distance the ships were equipped with double pontoons, which slowed them down.
The log of the flight as it is kept on the official books at Air Service headquarters here gives a terse account of the journey. The machines hopped off from Santa Monica March 17, covering the first 350 miles to Sacramento, Calif., in 4 hours and 30 minutes; the next 375 miles to Eugene, Oreg. In 6 hours and 5 minutes: the next jump to Vancouver Barracks, Wash., 110 miles, ln 1 hour and 5 minutes, and the hop to Seattle, l30 miles, in 2 hours and 38 minutes.
At Seattle pontoons were installed instead of wheels for the trip across the Pacific, the change adding thousands of pounds to the weight of the four ships, resulting in a marked reduction in average flying speed.
Prince Rupert, B. C,, 650 miles from Seattle, the first foreign soil stop, was reached April 6 in a flying time of 8 hours and 10 minutes. The flagship Seattle suffered her first accident In landing at Prince Rupert smashing wing struts and wings. Repairs were made locally in four days and the jump to Sitka, Alaska, followed, with 300 mites covered in 4 hours and 55 minutes.
Weather delays began at Sitka, and it was three days before thee planes reached Seward, a distance of 610 miles, covered in 7 hours and 40 minutes. The jump to Chignik followed for the three leading planes, the Seattle being forced down on this flight. The distance to Chignit was 450 miles, and the flying time 6 hours and 22 minutes.
The three leading planes were off four days later for Dutch Harbor, 400 miles away, and reached it in 7 hours and 10 minutes’ flying time, to await the arrival of the flight commander, Maj. Martin, in the Seattle. It was while attempting this flight that Maj. Martin's plane crashed into a mountainside and no word was heard of him for ten days, when he reported from Port Moller.
On May 3 the three remaining planes swept westward again to complete the crossing of the Pacific and landed at Nazan. Atka Islands, a distance of 350 miles, covered in a flying time of 4 hours and 15 minutes. The 530-mile jump to the Attu Islands followed, after weather delays, being covered in 8 hours and 50 minutes.
Weather again delayed the flyers until May 15, when they took off for Kashiwabara Bay, only to be forced down by a storm, landing offshore at Komandorski Island, for the night and continuing their journey next day for a distance of 860 miles from the Atka Islands, covered in 11 hours and 30 minutes.
SHANGHAI, May 22 -- Lieut. Doisy, the French flyer, whose plane was wrecked in landing here a few days ago. made a trial flight in the plane proffered by the Chekiang government yesterday, and announced that he would resume his flight to Tokio either Sunday or Monday, stopping first at Nanking.
By Radio to The Star aud Chicago Daily News Copyright, 1924.
PARIS, May 22 -- Lieut. Pelletier Doisy's mishap in China inspires other French flyers to take up the task of defending France's glory in the air. Three new long-distance flights have been planned.
Capt. Dugnaux wants to hop from Paris to Madagascar via airplane, and Capt. Gurier from Paris to Algiers and back in the course of one day.
Col, Villemin wants to go from Paris to an unannounced destination, but it is said to be far. far away.
With the biggest air fleet in the world. France feels she should show other nations what she can do. Despite the scant publicity given to it abroad. Delay's flight is regarded here as an exploit overshadowing in importance, at least up to the present, that of Lieut. Smith, Majs. Martin and McLaren, or any other around-the-world flyer.
SHANGHAI, May 22. -- Bad weather today prevented A. Stuart MacLaren, British aviator, who is flying around the world, from hopping off from Akyab, Burma, for Rangoon as he had planned, a Reuters dispatch from Calcutta says.
Thursday, May 16, 2024
Wednesday, May 15, 2024
Time Magazine -- Senator William Borah -- May 15, 2024
Tuesday, May 14, 2024
NuGrape -- Young America With But a Single Thought -- May 14, 2024
Monday, May 13, 2024
Sunday, May 12, 2024
Refresh Yourself Says the Hostess -- May 12, 2024
Saturday, May 11, 2024
Fleet Walker Dies -- May 11, 2024
Louisville Courier-Journal, 17-May-1924 |
Friday, May 10, 2024
Fred Astaire 125 -- May 10, 2024
listal.com |
Fred Astaire was born 125 years ago today, on 10-May-1899. I'm not a major fan of musicals, but I love watching Fred Astaire and his various partners, including Cyd Charisse, Rita Hayworth, Eleanor Powell, a hatrack and especially Ginger Rogers.
listal.com |
listal.com |
listal.com |
listal.com |
listal.com |
I wanted to be this cool and elegant, but I could never manage it.
Thursday, May 9, 2024
Jazz Hounds Whose Sets Will Reach That Far... -- May 9, 2024
Wednesday, May 8, 2024
Chris and his Joyland Jazz Hounds -- May 8, 2024
Tuesday, May 7, 2024
Negro Moves Into Good Neighborhood; Is Nearly Lynched -- May 7, 2024
Daily Worker, 15-May-1924 |
OAKLAND, Cal., May 14. — It is alright for a Negro to live in West Oakland -— in fact most of the Pullman porters on the transcontinental lines have their homes here. But when a Negro tries to buy a home in the fashionable Piedmont district of Oakland, that is another story. Sidney Bearing, a wealthy colored man, attempted to bring up his family away from slum influences, and had to a mob of 500 white neighbors who threatened to lynch him. Rescued by the police, Bearing agreed to sell the house he had bought.
Monday, May 6, 2024
Comic Book -- Our Army at War -- May 6, 2024
Sunday, May 5, 2024
Happy Cinco de Mayo, 2024 -- May 5, 2024
Happy Cinco de Mayo everyone. General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín led the Mexican army which defeated the French invaders at the Battle of Puebla in 1862.
"The national arms have been covered with glory" General Zaragoza wrote in a letter to President Benito Juárez. Some people credit this defeat with preventing French interference in the US Civil War.
Saturday, May 4, 2024
Pulp -- Railroad Stories -- May 4, 2024
Friday, May 3, 2024
Toonerville Trolley -- That Nervy Woodpecker -- May 3, 2024
Perth Amboy Evening News, 27-May-1924 |
I love Fontaine Fox's The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains. The skipper is upset that a woodpecker has made a home on the trolley but can't do anything about it. I remember when much of the equipment stored outdoors at the Nevada State Railroad Museum was riddled with holes made by woodpeckers.
Victoria Daily Times, 02-May-1924 |
John T McCutcheon was a cartoonist who was famous for a series of childhood-themed cartoons set in the town of Bird Center. George Fitch wrote a series of magazine stories about "Good Old Siwash College."
Fontaine Fox, whose cartoons will appear in The Victoria Times hereafter, wanted to be a writer, and had no gift for drawing, according to his telling.
Out of high school Fox went to work with high journalistic ideals which survived the better part of a week. He was given what was known In the Louisville Herald city room as the "West End run." That is, he made his headquarters in the reporters' room at City Hall, called on a few undertakers, justices of the peace, and politicians, and waited for telephone calls from the city editor.
In practice he spent his time shooting craps with the opposition reporters. He learned, moreover, that scoops or beats were bad form. At 5 p. m. the reporters divided up their gleanings, each returning to his ffice with the same grist. This left small opportunity for independent effort by an ambitious cub.
Someone told him that a colony of men and women were conducting themselves scandalously on an island in the Ohio River just below the city. Islands being out of bounds, Fox didn't share his tip. Instead he hired a farmer to row him to the island.
On landing Fox said to the farmer: "You better wait for me here. I'm with the Herald, and I'll be going back as soon as I get this story.
"Oh, you are, are you?" exclaimed a male member of the colony, and hit Fox with force and accuracy on the point of the jaw. This blow knocked Fox 51 per cent of the distance from literature to art.
Fox told the city editor, who told everyone. A political reporter named Peters, with a robust sense of humor had Fox assigned to accompany him to the Churchill Downs racetrack. In the paddock Peters pointed out a large, hook-nosed person and said: "Get a good sketch of him, my boy."
The hook-nosed man was Ed. Corrigan, master of Hawthorne, a notorious camera smasher and sketch artist caner. Fox got in range and began sketching under the impression that Corrigan would be flattered.
"As a boy I had sketched as most boys do," he will tell you, "but I had no real gift for drawing and no thought of caricature. Instead, I had a very real desire to write, forced myself later on to a stiff course of reading as a preparation, and worked much harder at it than I ever did at drawing.
"I attracted enough notice after several years to get an offer from the Chicago Post. John T. McCutcheon was in his zenith then, and had begun the revolution of the newspaper cartoon by introducing boy life and other homely topics. To try to follow McCutcheon on boys was thought nothing less than heresy. But McCutcheon's boys were of the village and the farm. I had been brought up on the outskirts of Louisville in a different environment. McCutcheon's boys played on forty-acre fields, mine on vacant lots.
"In Chicago I began to evolve some stock characters, such as 'Thomas Edison Jr.,' 'Sissie' and 'Grandma the Demon Chaperone,' but I wanted new, more and better ones.
Victoria Daily Times, 02-May-1924 |
"The Toonerville Trolley was one of these, and my most successful. It has been done in the movies, will be put into vaudeville next season and has been made into a toy.
"My wife says that I am the original of the Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang.
"The Powerful Katrinka' is a combination of two cooks we had and a 'Dear Old Siwash' story of George Fitch's. One of these cooks, Sally, was a powerful Negress. She saved me more than once from Micky and his gang. The other was as stupid as Sally was strong. While I was trying to put them together, I read Fitch's story of Ole Oleson, the giant Siwash fullback who while at the bottom of a heap of players suddenly had an idea. Why not simply get up the next time and carry both teams and the ball down the field for a goal? Which he did. That suggested making my strong woman a Scandinavian.
Cartoonists are supposed to work by inspiration. I do not, nor any I have known. We get our background from our own lives. In my case the particular idea almost invariably is the result of the impact of two dissociated ideas, produced after much thought and experiment. I first noticed the trick in the stories of O. Henry, who, like a cartoonist, first thought out his climax, then worked back.
Brooklyn Times-Union, 25-May-1924 |
Thursday, May 2, 2024
Krazy Kat -- Kittle? -- May 2, 2024
Wednesday, May 1, 2024
May, 2024 Version of the Cable Car Home Page -- May 1, 2024
Baltimore Sun, 08-June-1891 |
I just put the May 2024 version of my Cable Car Home Page on the server:
It includes some new items:
- Picture of the Month: In this want ad item, a gentleman wants to sell "his handsome Kentucky-Bred Family and Road HORSE." The ad emphasizes that the horse is "not afraid of cable cars, steam or road objects." (source: want ad, Baltimore Sun, 08-June-1891.)
- On the Cable Car Lines in the District of Columbia and Baltimore page: A ten year update about the Baltimore Traction Company including contemporary newspaper items. Cable traction did not arrive in Baltimore until 1891, after all other US cities except Tacoma.
- Added News item about low ridership on the cable cars.
Ten years ago this month (May, 2014):
- Picture of the Month: Baltimore Traction Company Car 8. (source: Street Railways: Their Construction, Operation and Maintenance by CB Fairchild).
- On the Cable Car Lines in the District of Columbia and Baltimore page: The Baltimore Traction Company. Cable traction did not arrive in Baltimore until 1891, after all other US cities except Tacoma.
- On the Who page: Added a profile from the Street Railway Journal about JCH Stut, who worked on most of the San Francisco lines
- Added News item about California Street Cable Railroad car 11 up for auction
Twenty years ago this month (May, 2004):
- Picture of the Month: People protest the end of the O'Farrell/Jones/Hyde line
- Added newspaper articles about the decision to abandon most of the former Cal Cable system, the last days of the O'Farrell/Jones/Hyde line, the cutback of the California Street mainline, and Proposition E. Added a new essay by Walter Rice about Gellett Burgesss' poem "The Ballad of the Hyde Street Grip", with a recorded reading by Craig Hulsebos of KEAR radio. Also updated the Cal Cable page.
- Is It "Mahoney" or "Mahony?", a new essay by Walter Rice
- Migrated some more items from the Cable Car Museum site:
- San Francisco Cable Car Chronology by Walter Rice
- SAN FRANCISCO: that was THE CITY that was by Val Golding
- Thanks to Val Golding and Walter Rice for allowing me to be the new host of this material
In January 2024 I started on a long overdue process of cleaning things up on my site. I started with the development pages. Actually, I guess I started last year with making the thumbnails 200 pixels instead of 100.
Coming in June, 2024: On the Cable Car Lines in the District of Columbia and Baltimore page: A ten year update about the The Baltimore Traction Company. Cable traction did not arrive in Baltimore until 1891, after all other US cities except Tacoma
125 Years Ago This Month (May, 1899): May 21 - Oakland Cable Railway (Oakland, California) converted
25 Years Ago This Month (May, 1999): May 01 - The Funiculaire du Vieux Québec, which had been closed since a fatal accident in 1996, reopened
The Cable Car Home Page now has a Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/CableCarHomePage/
The Cable Car Home Page also has an Instagram page:
https://www.instagram.com/cable_car_guy/
Joe Thompson
The Cable Car Home Page (updated 01-May-2024)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/
San Francisco Bay Ferryboats (updated 31-March-2024)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/ferry/
Park Trains and Tourist Trains (updated 29-February-2024)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/ptrain/
The Pneumatic Rolling-Sphere Carrier Delusion (updated spasmodically)
http://cablecarguy.blogspot.com
The Big V Riot Squad (updated obsessively)
http://bigvriotsquad.blogspot.com/