Wallace R. Farrington Newspaperman ( Part three)

"The story of 39 years in Hawaii, and the contributions of W.R. Farrington as editor, publisher and citizen"  By Riley H. Allen Editor of The Star-Bulletin., (Reprinted from the Twenty-fifth Anniversary edition of The Honolulu Star-Bulletin, July 1, 1937.)

 

Wallace R. Farrington
Newspaperman
by Riley H. Allen
Editor of The Star-Bulletin

 

continuation...

 

     He could show a swift thunderclap of tempel when things went wrong.  But his outbursts, always short, were occasioned by small rather than large things.  If anything went seriously wrong he took it quietly, but got into motion at once to right it.  Little errors of judgment or performance ruffled his temper.  But he was quickly over them.  He said what was on his mind in vivid language, frequently, and was on to something else.  He "got it off his chest" and rarely referred to it again.
     His biggest moments were, I truly believe, his quietest.  Certainly one of them was when The Evening Bulletin, which he had "lifted by its boot straps" for nearly 12 years--12 years of constant struggle and solicitude and often with just enough cash to meet next payday--joined forces with The Hawaiian Star.
     This merger, which combined the two evening papers into one assured newspaper enterprise, was a signal recognition, in the most practical terms, of his position in the Hawaii business field.
     A part of those responsibilities, he realized, was to his new associates, and he worked with them as energetically, as--speaking in a purely competitive sense--he had previously worked in newspaper rivalry.
     He took what was in reality a personal triumph with entire quiet.  he remarked,  "This is just another step for us. We now have a bigger job cut out for us than ever before," and turned to his responsibilities as general business manager.

     And a second occasion I recall vividly--when, in Washington, President Warren G. Harding appointed him governor of Hawaii.

     That night, with a few intimates, he dined at a Washington hotel.  He was the quietest, the least excited, apparently the least elated, of those present.
     To him appointment as governor was just another step, the beginning of a bigger job, and he turned instantly and with no lost motion to his new official responsibilities.
 
Pages from Past Crowd Into Memory
     Incidents crowd into memory as I write this...His early newspaper campaigning for better public schools and the stable teacher salary system...His buoyant leadership in the Honolulu Ad Club, which quickly became the noisiest, liveliest and , in many respects, the most effective civic organization of his day...His march at the head of the Boys' Garden Army in a World war parade.  There were no insignia on his shoulder or medals on his chest--but he and the lusty youths who strode with him carried hoes, rakes, shovels--and smiles...
     His keen interest in the establishment of public playgrounds and those early efforts to get and hold beach areas for public use...His emphasis on business organization and operation of public offices---though he never believed simply in berating, criticizing and brow beating public officials...His loyalty to his own staff members when they occasionally were unjustly attacked or criticized by some stuffed shirt or pompous public official...I recall that he once swore out a warrant for assault and battery against a certain officer who had lost his temper and laid hands on a reporter--and the officer was arrested and would have suffered the keen mortification of facing trail in police court if he hadn't apologized...
     While ready instantly to defend his staff members from injustice, he was keenly alive to the importance of being right!  He had scant patience with inaccuracy or with sloppy newspaper reporting.  If he felt that a staff member was wrong, he would say so, and insist that the paper make immediate and suitable correction.  But he intensely disliked newspaper corrections.  "Don't make the mistake in the first place--then you won't need to apologize."
 
Combined Calm Judgment With Quick Decisions
     Mr. Farrington combined quick reactions with deliberation of judgment.  He reached decisions with apparent quickness, but actually they were based on long founded convictions and his store of experience.
     He was patient with men and impatient with mistakes.  Often He said, "Every man is entitled to make a mistake on a given matter once.  If he does it twice, he has not been thinking.  If he does it three times, he's a fool!" Yet around the office, staff members used to comment, as they noted his endless patience with some slow and ineffective employe,  "The Old Man can hang onto a lemon longer than anybody else in town."
     Once this remark was repeated to him.  He looked up from his desk, that familiar red flush mounting his cheeks as it did easily when he was stirred to momentary irritation, then he relaxed, laughed, "Yes, sometimes you have to hang on and squeeze a lemon pretty hard if you're going to get any lemonade!"
 
Back to the Paper After the Governorship
     It was early summer in Washington...He had just been appointed governor, in 1921.  To a friend who was one of a small dinner party the night of his appointment he said, "Well, it's a high honor and an opportunity....But I'm coming back to the paper when it's over."
     He served the territory and his country with full devotion and rare effectiveness for eight years.  In 1929 he resigned, refusing the possibility of appointment for a third term, to return to his chosen field.  He brought to it all his early enthusiasm and interest, plus the remarkable equipment of official knowledge and experience he had gained in those eight years as chief executive of the territory.
     He was in the full time of life and usefulness when illness struck him down, and for nearly a year he was unable to go to his office.
     In that year, though continuously under the physician's care and with constant admonition against physical exertion, there flowered some of his finest work.
     Constructive criticism to his staff--on business, on editorial, on production matters....Some of the best writing he had ever done, some of his ablest editorials....Suggestions and ideas of immediate practical value....A clarity of vision which enabled him to look far into the future of this territory and its people...
     When he died, October 6, 1933, he left an imperishable record.  He had "lifted a newspaper by its bootstraps," founded it solidly in principle as well as in material substance.  He had steered an infant printing business to large size.  He had taken an active and loyal citizen's part in his community.  He had been governor of the territory for eight years, and innumerable improvements in public service, together with enhanced recognition of the territory of Hawaii, testified to his notable administration.
     It is natural then that on this 25th anniversary of The Star-Bulletin's founding we who were associated with him in the founding, and later, should fell that he is commemorating the occasion with us 

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  • ALOHA Kakou, e Hawaii,
    No native Hawaiian as defined in the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act and the State of Hawaii Admission Act should be Homeless. What is so Foolish about this mana'o? The Department of Hawaiian Homes have the Land Base to open to native Hawaiians who are homeless. This will never happen as long as those native Hawaiians who live on Hawaiian Home Lands do not Demand of their Leaders of Hawaiian Homes to open their Land Base for native Hawaiians who are homeless.
    Take good look at the Hawaiian Homes Commission Book Report and look at how many of the Land Base of the Department of Hawaiian Homes are leased out for Only $1.00. I got Arrested a few times over this issue with the Department of Hawaiian Homes in the past.
    The Waimanalo Beach Park is Hawaiian Home Land base that is Leased out for Only $1.00 per year to the City of Honolulu. Please explain to me, why the Department of Hawaiian Homes can not set aside Hawaiian Home Lands for native Hawaiians who are Homeless? Why does some native Hawaiians Traitors expect the State of Hawaii and other governmental entities to "Better the Conditions" of native Hawaiians?
    Why does native Hawaiian Traitors continue to use the problems of their people as a Weapon? When I have never seen these native Hawaiian Traitors defending the rights of their people at the Legislature? I have seen more non native Hawaiians stand up for the rights of native Hawaiians more then these native Hawaiian Traitors.
    Native Hawaiian Traitors who are filled with Hate.
    Hate for America, it's military, Haoles and me.
    Long Live The Hawaiian Kingdom, o Pomai
  • I hope that those of you who take the time to read will understand the meaning of Farrington and Prince Kuhio and how that whole era intertwined into what Waianae is today. Farrington Hwy runs through Waianae like a serpent and it has many crawlers lurking through our quality of life. Enforcing their cruelty and smashing people in their hungry greed and doing what ever serpents do.

    But don't take too much mind to what I am saying draw your own comparative and see how it has a devastating effect on ones life and go to task taking care of your family, friends, and community. I cannot stop the fools from attacking women and children--especially those of us that live on DHHL lands. Since that period, a year after the overthrow of our Queen Liliu, Farrington and his partners have been using main stream media and their governing epics as well as their judicial systems to hurt aboriginal women and children. DHHL is a Natalist program. It mutilate and torture aboriginal Hawaiian children. Prince Kuhio 'Covenant' today are the neglecting entity just as they were in the early 1900s. So, neglect and hurt are what impact daily on human lives in Waianae.

    The homeless at guardrail are looking down a gun barrel as we speak and I am very concern because most of them are native Hawaiians. The 'Covernant' is Prince Kuhio and his Home Rule gang of thieves that celebrate their hunt at Hawaiian Civic Club gatherings. That's how I see it which nulls all the Akaka for and against talk.

    I agree that you should disagree, where I don't disagree that you not take care of your family. And that one becomes a victim of the Akaka conditioning of the imperialist colonizers just as the native Hawaiians did all along the Farrignton Hwy way for decades. Take Care
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