Article clipped from Seattle Caytons Weekly

HE’S A MANWho labors under the delusion that a great majority of the colored folk of this country are devoid of real manhood and will take any kind of treatment that an overprejudiced white person may hand out to them, if by so doing they can hold on to a more or less lucrative job, has a think coming. When the Seattle butchers went out on a strike quite a few colored men and women were given employment at the slaughter houses and especially at Frye Co. For a few days all went well as a marriage bell, but at the first pay day the colored women say the white women were paid from $2 to $3 apiece more than the colored women. Xo, the colored women made no holler or demonstration, but none of them showed up for work the next Monday. The colored men took to the work like ducks to water and their adaptability was highly complimented by the management. The men were paid so much per day, with board and lodging, and black and
Newspaper Details

Seattle Caytons Weekly

Seattle, Washington, US

Sat, Mar 02, 1918

Page 1

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Gonzaga U.

WA, USA 19 May 2020

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