Fiery Cross, Volume 4, Number 11, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1925 — Page 3

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.January 30, 1925 THE FIERY CROSS PAGE TV

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UlEluutAl u U lid LI VI j

EFFORT TO RUSH j IN UNDESIRABLE JEWS FROM ALL! SOUTH EUROPE Bills Before Congress Dangerously Threaten Immigration Act Passed to Protect America for Americans.

BACKERS TRY APPEAL TO COUNTRY'S SYMPATHY Jokers Concealed in Each Would Open Wide Flood Gates Wife, Children or Parents May Come In.

ACCUSED LAWMAKER

Vpc'CMl l Tin' IvoinifiM i Washington, .Ian. 26. The; ilt iHon of the American peo-i P! vhich was so overwhelm-; i expressed at the last sesof Conpress. to keep icrica for Americans and bar out the worst and least assimilable aliens, is beinjr dani lotiMy I hrcalencil h attacks from rpri'si ill ;iln es of alienism in ihe present ' 'mil; r'M. Alre.icly two measures li t ln-cn ini i wl 1 1 " 1 1 1 Kcp. Nathan l. I vi lma n. el New York, and have Cm iniilalili' support from the same inwrrsiM w hit-ii ipposrcl any protection for A inrriraiiisTu. which if passed will prjw i li-aUv nullify tin' new Inimlf-'ra

"it'ii ri a'tH opt n tic- iImoi wide to iint'iM million nt tin' cry kml of inin.iyranlH who arc must clitlirnll lo m.ik" itiln American" Moth nii'iisiiics aim to pi'i-init hordes of aliens to inmo mio i ln t ' n it m 1 Stairs in addition t ilio nnotas which 'impress fixed. They do not say so. of course, lut each tuis a little jnkiT tlint will accomplish nisi that. Tlo bills both make an anpi'al for support on the ground of srn I inicnt ; thf-y s'Tiii to In- intended

1 1 ii I 1 v to prevent liardship to a few alien,... I'.ui .'irttiiilly t li".v throw n down the '.us uhirh have hi'fn so carefully limit, and throw them down to one particular class of people who were nil-si carefully excluded uii(hr Hip iipu law tin' i;iiassin,ilahlc .I-v of I'ol.iiid. tlalioia and Southeastern liu1 op" t'PlllTH llv. The first loll would pf-i i ii it to enter in addition to the ipiotas - 'an itnmiKiai.i who is the wife, the hushand, ihe child the parent, the In-other, or

FRANCE FIGHTS VATICAN ON ITS CHURCH POLICY

j Government Declares , All I State Affairs Are Entirely i Separate.

Punish Officials Who Defy Liquor Law Urges Wheeler

Washington, Jan. 26. Condemna-o ' of the public officials w ho violate the I whelmins majority of the people in

prhoibition law s was the suDject or an i this Nation favor national prohibition address by "Wayne B. Wheeler. They will insist on loyalty to the Con

i ROMANS ARE PROTESTING

Vf OPVAtOMr CktNtQIMl, WAtHINOTOSI

Nathan D. Perlman Republican, of New York, who lias introduced two bills ainiinu to amend

Immigration Art passed at the last session of Congress. If these bills are passed they will permit entrance of a million undesirable immigrants. His tenure of office is endangered by the startling charges of George RosUen, a confessed conductor of a "ballot fixing school." KosUen alleges he used his "magic ring" to change enough ballots to cheat and throw the election to I'erliuaii.

Parading Through Country Singing Anthems Have Many Street Brawls. ; r

Paris, Jan. 26. Separation of church and state is one of the biggest problems in France. The government of M. Herriot is now called upon

to face this issue during the present session of the Chamber of Deputies. The Radical Socialist party, in its electoral campaign culminating in the victory at the polls on May 11. last year, made the complete separation of church and state one of itS main planks. Four hours of debate in the Cham

ber of Deputies a few days ago did

not suffice to end the discussion on the ingestion of breaking relations with the Vatican. The history of France's relations with the Vatican was gone over, but M. Herriot insisted that

He declared in part: "The example of drinking liquor legally possessed is bad. but that is a matter for the individual. A public officer or private citizen violates the law by making, purchasing or transporting beverage intoxicants, and is In an indefensible

position. Every public official who takes an oath of office to support the Constitution encourages other law violators when he purchases liquor of a bootlegger or makes it in violation of the Constitution. A judge who gets his liquor illegally and then sentences

bootleggers for violating the same law .encourages anarchy instead of law and order. "There is an increasing public demand that Federal and State officers obey the laws, which, by their oath, they are sworn to enforce. The over-

ROMANS MUST LEAVE PARTIES

SAYS CARDINAL

English Prelate Calls Hand of Labor Body and Says It Shall Do This.

DUTY ALWAYS

stitution and obedience to the laws on the part of public officials.

"Erroneous press reports indicate I that the Stalker bill to increase penal-1 ties under the national prohibition act carried a mandatory jail sentence for ;

first offense possession of liquor. This is incorrect. The proposed bill pro- i CHURCH vides only for a money fine of from

S100 to $500 for first offense of trans-j portation or possession; s.30 to si.tjoo Members Indignant and Great

or imprisonment iqr seconu oiien&et and for third offense, a money fine and j imprisonment. i

"The penalty for transportation for commercial purposes to stop rum-run- j

ners should be at least a money hna or

Controversy Is Raging What Is Said.

imprisonment for .the first offense

The proposed penalties are less drastic than those found in many of the State laws."

Would Drive Alien . Bootlegger From U. S.

"there is an enormous difference between former times and now: the pope then was a temporal sovereign." He said further: "Nowadays. Americans easily bring by far the greater contribution and France's interest at

tained by organizations of aliens in j lwmc nas oeoiineM. this country, to provide fraudulent Holding .Meetings.

(evidence of relationship. The immi- I Catholic meetings are now- beintr

gration authorities know they are be- j neUi in proost all over K,.nnc(, against ing imposed on. and that America is j the government s religious policv. being imposed onbiit they c annot i Roman Catholics find themselves slin-

special to The Kourier.1 Chicago, Jan. 26. Efforts by Arthur Burrage Farwell of the Chicago Law and Order league to have "Mike de Pike" Heitler. one of the first of Chicago's major bootleggers deported have been disclosed. Farwell-has charged that Heitler not a citizen and shuold be deported for bootlegging. The latest immigration law sanctions deportation after a prison term for violation of the prohibition laws, such as Heitler recently served.

Second Joker.

The sri ond .joker is worse el. Practically all immigration thes'e days is brought over by the assistani-e of aliens who are already here, and usually by the aid of organizations which have as their purpose the bringing

in of as many aliens as they can get. It is an organized invasion, it is farseeing and clever, and long before the immigration at was passed t h' managers of these associations laid careful pl'ins to beat the law. They 1 newit was coming, so instead of helping whol" families to immigrate as I hev

had been doing, they pj, ked only one member from each family, and concentrated their efforts on rushing these single n: lobars in under the quotas. Now they are all ready to v.o. There are hundreds of thousands of these

the sister, of a citizen of the 1 'nit ed ! single members of large families alStales, or of an alien residing in thelreadv here: all of them can dec lare

nit

f

States anil who has declared

liention m a manner provided

l.lw tic he, -nine a citizen of the

i"d States, or of an alien residing

the Fritted States who prior to

illy 1. I'l.'t. was lawfully admitted to l'nited Stales and who has denied his intention in the manner covided hi law to become a citizen f the Fritted State"." ir Immiuraiit .May limit' In.

Thai doen t .--coiiul s i e H what ii i oca i is a nt who T : i a na i: ec I i it lasl .lulv t (or win

but

in since, mil ncct been in hi ing in his or he i

' oiisidering the size ' i i: i : class c f ,1 e -

. cleacll

Any irnnii git here hehas sneaked aught at ill. whole fa i nil v!

if t he families of this l, leans that

for citizenship, and then if this bill passes - can demand that -treir whole families be brought in. in addition to the quotas. They have a good argu

ment, too. They can say that ii would be cruel to separate families, thai those who are here have a duty tec take care of their relatives, and so forth. Si they must be allowed to come in - millions of them. That is one way of beating the cleti,;tnc1 of Americans that the alien Hood be cheeked.

ping in that count rrr- They have re

sorted to parades and processions dur-1 ing which they chant anthems, while I the Communists also parade, singing' the Internationale and other songs. The two factions came to fisticuffs.

M. Herriot's decision to withdraw the French ambassador prompted a letter from the six French cardinals, in which they called attention to the deep emotion caused Icy the ministerial declaration. "If a religious war" is declared against the church, the church will face ii with regret but not without resistance," the. cardinals write.

Stirring I'p Romans. The suppression of the embassy at the Vatican and the suppression of the credits for the Vatican embassy is stirring I toman Catholics in France in fighting action and they are up in arms over it. They want lo control fbji world and are having their troubles in France while they are trying to get possession of America.

WOULD PREVENT U. S. DETAILING

OUTOBSERVERS

About JO, 000 Europeans are now in Cuba "awaiting the opportunity to slip over" to the United States, it was declared in testimony by AY. AY. Husband, Commissioner of Immigration, to the House Appropriations Committee. Foreigners going to .Mexico for this purpose, however: are relatively few. Mr. Husband added, because of the reluctance of the Mexican Government in permitting them to enter its terri

tory and because of the limited transportation facilities between Kurope and Mexico. A greater number of the aliens try

Washington. Jan. 26.-The House ft through the northern border than , . . . , through the southern border, Mr. Huslast week rejected an amendment to band because o thp nearncss ot

the State Department appropriation big towns to the border.

bill, ottered oy iiepresenrauve connally, Democrat, Texas, which would have prevented expenditure of State Department emergency funds for "unofficial observers" in Kurope. Col. James A. Logan. American observer with the reparations commission, Mr. Connally said, "is carrying the sovereignty of the Cnited States around in his pocket." It was a reflection on the ambassadors at London and Paris, he added, to have Col. Logan the chief negotiator of the American delegation at the recent Paris conference on Dawes plan annuities.

London, Eng., Jan. 19.

Cardinal Bourne, prelate of :

Great Britain, and personal appointee of the pope and his mouthpiece in the British

Isles, says, referring to mera-i

j bers of a political paily who ; j are Roman Catholics, "The j moment might come if their purty I were ever to adopt principles openly I and definitely contrary to the prin- ! ciples of the Roman Catholic church.

when ii might be their duty to leave their party." This is the climax to a controversv

Lmgers in Cuba Awaiting 1 which is rending the Labor party of . I the Empire. It has been brought I heir Chance. ; about by the pronunciamento of the pope against Socialism. The point in

dispute v.-as not so much the political

tuestion involved as to what extent

TWENTY THOUSAND ALIENS EAGER TO

SNEAK INTO U.S. i Whole Army of Foreign-Born I

j HUMBLES SPAIN JJQ I TO I

-' hmjf h 01 1 Ui imW is vi

JgS .andlllk V Many Mo j IRfe Care for. ' 5 li8KCirttSt - -x-v AND ACRO,

j t ftsvr a i . "m

I , Unions Acting

' able Number

waicswaasKEjk: .asii'- uarge v-uies. :. VNMW49a-iOUWMB.JkJfc : I

i

1

Abdel Krim "President of the Riff Republic,"

whose fierce fighting Moors have forced Spain to quit, after being one of the causes that made Primo de

Rivera "dictator" of Roman Catholic Spain.

CHINA RESENTING

ENTRY OF ESKIMOS INTO MANCHURIA

Papists Had No Part in Framing

Constitution of the United States For They Oppose Free Government

' -ic Ii tin u;.i f ui ;i lix'-cl ;ihc n l:i the 1'niteil Smtes i :m bring m about eight or ten .mi-' ' Then. :,re .,bo.. five, million in h . ilcns in A iiic-i n-.i . Thi-c means licit the bars wouM be clown to forty c: :,f-Uy more 'millions tccsiiles: the nil" -. There wmiM rut be That can c c.me of c ourse, hl;i millions i..i."i;U"en v.oiild.

The it- are t,i jokes m this situa- ! the joker, t.i'ii. which make this not onlv pus-I era 1 week

S. A. P. in the Buckeye American says:

"Not a single papist took part in the making of our Con-

The u.or bin wind, v. 'miii ac,-o,-; t it ti f t United States. phsh more of the same provides Thati J( .... . .

ao -papist. Geneves m tne separation 01 cnurcn ana state, free press, free speech, popular sovereignty and religious j liberty; consequently no Roman Catholic has even put his i hand to the building of a state founded upon manhood suffrage and the freedom of individual conscience. Before

ja Catholic c c.ul.l do this, he would' i have to be fais" to the basic law oP

In the first six months of the pres

ent fiscal years 4.34T aliens were deported for violation of the immigration law-, as compared to 6.049 for the whole of the preceding year. Of the 1.000.000 seamen who landed last year he estimated about 20,000 were immigrants who chose that way of evading the law. PORTORICANS

i SOON READY TO ! GOVERN ISLAND j Executive Says Wonderful j Advance Has Been Made

By All Natives.

Washington, Jan. 2

legal immigrants are m

ing unduly the proporti

unemployed men in this cj

try. Reports from rndus

centers show this and 1

leaders are urging more si

uous enforcement of the!

migration laws. They intimate!

irom 100,000 to 300,000 illegal

grants come in each year and! many of these become bottle

i. ne latter iigure is prooably too in the opinion of Immigration mis8ioner Husband, who says thi border patrol inaugurated Jnlr

has decreased illegal entries u'n

day they are fewer than at anjff

wuntn the past few years.

"We do know, however." Mr.

band said, "that during the laJ

cat year 34,uoo toreign seamef

serted their ships on arriving at

ican ports. Of that number, 6,1

8.000 probably reshipped. That

leave from 26,000 to 28.000 bootle

migrants who gained jentrance bi

channel alone. These illegal!

trants are practically aU of the men type.

"We are picking these fellow all tVlo tlma and HATnrt1n9 tliMn

suLcna.icc. of course tne number Whlch Vi

.Diplomatic action on the part ot port jg much smaller than the

the United States has been requested ber coming in, for it is quits U

Wrangle Island Subject of Mild Protest.

Opposition to the entry of 12 American Eskimos recently taken from Wrangell Island and landed at Harbin, Manchuria, has been made by the Chinese authorities. Opposition, it is stated, will be removed if they can prove that they have means of

membership in a political party which officially professes Socialism is compatible with continuance in the Roman Catholic church.

o Council's Dic-tum. j Landing of 12 at Harbin from

tine correspondent, claiming to oe a Roman Catholic, repeats Daniel O'Connell's dictum:

"We take our religion from Rome pnd our politics from home." Another even says: "The reason His Holiness objects to Socialism is that it is a rival." A third who is apparently a nonRoman Catholic- referring to I,abor's support for state grants to Roman Catholic schools, and for the repeal

of the anti-Roman Catholic laws, asks: "Are we not to reciive a similar courtesy from Roman Catholics, when we ask for humane marriage law-s and scientific information for non-Roman Catholic men ;ind women." Cardinal Rules.

It was at this juncture that the Cardinal came in. Me divides British Socialism into two categories and tells the-members of the Romish church what they can do. One. he finds, confined to such objects as "social reform,progress or betterment" which

he characterizes as "all very excellent things." The other he indicates as

including such matters as "class hatred" which is "condemned by the Roman Catholic church." Roman Catholics may belong to the Labor party, therefore, so long, but no long.cx than, the first, as opposed to the second policy prevails. It is here that he tells Romanists that as between party and church, they must give up party.

Pastor Assists In Law Enforcement at Norfolk

by Delegate Sutherland to return the Eskimos to American territory and to provide for their sustenance. The State Department, however, has so far taken the attitude that there has been no evidence that the Eskimos had attempted to colonize Wrangell Island or that thev had been forcefully removed to Siberia, and there

fore no official action on the part ol

this Government was called for. Notified of the condition of the Eskimos, the American Red Cross sent $100 to the American consul

at Harbin for their relief.

to apprehend them. We gen

hnd them In the large cities.

long ago, we picked ud 160 a)

time in the vicinity of Wilkes 1

Pa. A few weeks ago, -we pick!

80 more in the same general s

borhood. Caught In Cities.

"These we took to Phlladelph

deportation. Just the other da

picked up seven Arabs in Ce Ohio. These men had deserted I

consul I amp ai iNonoiK. va. we uai

T . 31 hem back, of oour

OLD CURIOSITY SHOP MENACED BY FIRE

v1. ero prop lf'Jl. shall. permitted s as non the- liinni

"all aliens whose passport: erly visaed prior to .Inly I if otherwise admissible. 1 to enter the Cuited Sta quota immigrants under

gration A'-: of llcl. riaimeil Hel'ure. The argument for that lull is that it is merely being fair to people, who had planned to come America before the Immigration AC was passed: merely giving them the chance they are entitled 'o. Hut again t hero r-

I'he law was passed sev

hef cere .J uly I : t here was

ill!'- but probable The first is the i plenty of time to hustle up a lot of nt which is well known to c-vcrynne I passports and t-'1'1 them vised be'.,ic miliar with immigration, that the! that date; r-piiUs from abroad leave oiiiinonest fraud on the Immigration no doubt, that the organizations uhic h

i vice is for some incoming alien lo i. ss as Ihe relative of some alien al'ally here, when they are nothing of kind. Sorn' frauds of this kind o detected, but only a very small mcric an m i nor; : a ion officers cantell l. looking at the new alien c I her he or she Is a relative of the iri:-T arrlal or- not. The only way hi c out would be by an investigate!! t the alien's home, and there is i" ihinerv to d'i that. (in the hand there is machinery main-

are assisting immigration did just that thing. There is no telling how mam such Mi'i'len passports wre prepared, but there were a lo" Some estimates run as high a ! v. o million--: Must of them are said to have been among tin- Southeastern Jews, who are one of the parlic ular c lassos the Immigration Act was .especially framed to ke'-p out. Moroo-.or, there are very

his church. "The fundamental law of the Ko man hierarchy was made at Trent, in Italy, in the .sixteenth century, and has never been materially altered. The Council of Trent, which framed this Catholic code, began its sittings 'in lad: and. after various interruptions, finally completed its labors and

adjourned in 15Cu. "The popes had manipulated the Council sit, every session and it did ini more than register the papal will; licence, its decrees were promptly acl copied and formally decreed to be the i canon, fixed, and permanent law of j the Roman Catholic church. (ode Knforced. : "This" papal code was rigidly' enforced in Italy, clown to the year 1S70, ! when the Italian patriots threw off

Norfolk, Vs.. .Inn. Raids in alii

i parts or t'or.smouth by members of Washington. .Ian. lmo Itico. !hc ,poii,r," 'fPartment . assisted by , . ,., , , lli II. 1'. Jones, pastor of the Port marching steadily up the pathway of i vnrfo,k rtantist Chnreh

last week and are still in progress. The raids resulted in the arrest of 21

gra-.e charges mat agencies are at i the intolerable yoke of rotten priest-

work in forged

Curope whic h will provide

cssport at very small cost

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rule. "The laws of this Romish church were also enforced in I'rn.nce, doVn to almost the beginning of our revolutionary war." when the Jesuits be

came so utterly cietosianio mar xney Acrr driven Hut . and the literary men of Frame began their bold agitation against dune's crushing. stifling, hateful domination. 'As an illustration of Rome's way when she can have her way: in 1761 the priests: murdered a French youth. fur no otTcec- c rime than that he was

! accused of having behaved irrev

erently to the image of the A'irgin Mary, which Catholics then worshiped as an idol, just as they do now. Young Do la I'.arre was not only murdered for this alleged lack of veneration for the Catlmlic idol, but he was murdered

with every extreme of ferocity. His

tongue was torn out by the roots, and he was fiendishly tortured, before the flames were allowed to burn him to death. While Americans Thought. "This was in. 17t'-l. when Thomas Jefferson. Ceorge Washington, Richard Henry I.ee. Patrick Henry. James Otis and John Adams were beginning to be deeply concerned for our American liberties. "Previounly. the popes had compelled the King olTranc'e to revoke the edict of Nantes, which allowed the

Protestants to hold services, (religious) in private, in certain named places. This edict of partial toleration, granted by Henry of Navarre, was cancelled by his bigoted descen

dant. I.oir:-! XIV, and I ranee was

plunged into the horrors of Catholic persecution. "The king, egged on by his Jesuit confessor, the infamous Ietelller. sent

brutal Catholic soldiers to live In the

houses of the Protestants, to harry them with insults and outrages, to break up their religous services, to seize upon t4ie most courageous men and send them to the slaveships, where they suffered torments which make one's blood run cold to this day. "Under Catholic rule In France, at that time no Hugenot (Protestant) had fewer civil rights In Catholic

France than the freed negroes had

In America, previous to the war be

tween the states not nearly so many,

because the freed negro could have his own religious services, could send his cihldren to school, and could practice

any crsft. trade or profession. " -' uryland Asks Tolerance.

cirf r.cr,.mh.r c warn In th IfHh

century, at the very time that the Catholics in .Maryland were meekly

claiming toleration, and pretending that their foreign church was no j longer the church of the bloody persecutions. The Catholics in Maryland needed toleration; hence they begged for it and got It: but in France they didn't need it. and the Protestants who did, pleaded for it in vain. "That's Rome's way. At the very time when the Protestant charter of Rord Baltimore granted toleration to the Catholic minority, the Catholic majority was turning South America,

Central America. Mexico, Cuba. Spain. Portugal. Austria, Bohemia. Hungary and Ital into Dead Seas, religiously, by ruthless persecution. "The fathers of the identical Cath

olics who fled to Maryland, and i sought safety from retaliation, under the Baltimore charter, had been atrociously active in the horrible religious murders committed by Bloody Mary. "So late as 179S the papists of Ireland organized and partially executed a wide-spread conspiracy for the

slaughter of Protestants; and the number of men. women and children who were butchered, under Rome's infernal law, was nearly as great as the victims of the papist massacre of St. Bartholemew. "Think of it! Protestant massacres deliberately planned by Catholic priests in Ireland, in 1798, when John Adams was president, and George Washington was still alive. Permitting All This. "Vet the American missionaries of

this foreign church, whose funda

mental law calls for the blood of Protestants, Jews and Masons Jiave captured the moving picture shows, and are teaching the people through this effective agency, that the Catholic priests protected little heretic children during the massacre of St. Bartholemew, and used all their influence to check the political butchery which the king had started. "Approximately seven million people, daily, see the Orientalized and papalized pictures that Protestants are paying annually the sum of $759,000,000 to these un-American forces, that they may carry on this propaganda business. Such pictures

as "The Hunchback of Notre Dame," the "White Sister," "Under the Red

Robe." "Long Live the King, etd are examples of propaganda sent out by the papacy for the purpose of

breaking down our real American resistance to papal intrigue and wick

edness.

"Another savage thrust at what Is

really American and Protestant in this country, are such plays as

"Rain," and "Simon Called Peter," now being played in New York and other cities. In which Protestant min

isters are protrayed in such odious roles as rapists. Is it not about time

for those Masons, ministers and others

who, a la Alfonso, are kissing the pope's toe by condoning and approving what Rome is doing In America to do a little thinking? They are simply feeding the beast that is working and waiting to strike a little harder. "When such people both unjustly and short-sightedly denounce the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and members of other patriotic societies, they are aiding our greatest enemy, and wronging America's best and most loyal citizens." . - .-

the years from illiteraev to that

point in national educat ion where selfgovernment will be forthcoming, may achieve her aim in that respect by 1932. in the opinion of Governor Hotace M. Towner of the island. In an interview. Governor Towner

expressed himself as distinctly favorable to self-government of Potro Rico. He pointed to many reason why this status is merited. The development of

the natives, who are i per cent white, as a peotite"; Hie enormous strides in education since the island has been an American possession and the lack of serious opposition to self-

government on the part of Americans generally, all point toward successful attainment of the desired goal. Buff andWhit WilTBe Colors for Inaugural

men coal .i-c-o wiiu violating tne Jayman ait. attempting to bribe an officer, and attempting to buy "protection" from the police. All arrests were made on warrants obtained by one of the officers in the raiding party and many of the warrants show the name of Rev. II. V. Jones :is witness.

'Special to The Kourier,1 London, Jan. 26. A quaint little house in central London known to thousands of American visitors as

the reputed original of Dickens'.

'Old Curiosity Shop" was endangered by fire recently. The house is untenanted and workmen are repairing it. Apparently they left a fire burning and rubbish on the floor became ignited. Smoke poured through the windows, but it was seen so promptly that fire-

j men were able to quench the flames

before much damage was done.

The shortest wav to do a lot oflworKing. uenerairT""we get

Klan tasks is to do them one at a-ff three at a time, occasionally time. i Sometimes they are detected ai. c ported when they make applkf

i or citizensnip papers, ior tne

provides that they must enter 1

in the first place. i "All told, we have deported than 4.500 bootleg immigrants

July 1 last far more than the avj

for a full twelve months." One hundred thousand extra

men a year to provide Jobs 1

times of ordinary business aq

or of industrial depression, say

leaders, Is. a factor of such vl

that it could easily depress "w So delicately balanced are wage

Detween supply ana aemana laextra 100,000 could upset the bat

in many industries. That number instance, if applied wholly to the

ing trdes, would create a surpl, labor the country over instead -o

shortage that existed almost '-a.

where last year. ((

Labor Unions Act. Labor unions, aware ot this ace, have turned active aides t

immigration officials. Hundred cases are reported annually tq

Immigration Bureau by the

unions of various communities, t

resent the intrusion of these il

and bootleg immigrants and fear!

they will create . surplus of that will bring down wages.- r

The attenUon of the. washli

Buff and blue, the color of the uni

forms in -which Washington's Conti

nental army marched to the winning)

of the Nation, will be the color scheme for the National Capital March 4, when President Cnolidgc is inaugurated. In making this announcement, the committee on street decorations and illumination stressed the impor

tance of merchants, who will dis- j tribute the bunting and flags, making sure that nothing shall be sold but fast, scrvicable colors, suitable for outdoor use. In connection with the dressing of the city for the big fete, the committee also urged that public and private institutions, as well as homes, that display the national emblem on Inauguration Day fly the colors from a mast and not attempt to tie the flag clown. o Michigan. Court Delays j Alleged Radical's Trial

St. Joseph. Mich., Jan. 111!. Resumption of the trials of alleged radicals, arrested more than three years

ago in a raid on a Communist convention at Bridgeman. will be further de-

Mayed as a result of the action of the

United States Supreme court in granting an appeal to Charles K. Rutherberg. convicted of violating the State o.nti-sydicalism law-.

THE SECRET OF THE KLAN An eminent authority says: "There is nothing in the whole range of Human Activities and Emotions that determines so much our SOCIAL BEHAVIOR AS RELIGION," and "THAT ONE'S RELIGIOUS MOTIVES ARE GENERALLY SECRET." There can be no greater justification for the Secrecy of the Klan than this. This religious fervor is today referred to as "Prejudices" by those influences which hate the Klan. Really, as a matter of fact (and it is no Klan secret), it is a Klansman's belief in the merits of and his preference for his own TRIBE, RACE. NATION, and RELIGION. To those who KNOW, it is a revelation that LIFTS THEM UP AND ONWARD ! The Truth to Any Honest Seeker

1

ASKS CONGRESS TO REMIT ROME'S TAXES Bureau of The Kourier, 215 Ct St. X. AV Washington. Washington, Jan. 26. The Ways and Means committee of the House of Representatives has refused several times this session to consider any measures whatever bearing on the tariff. The refusals have come about because there have been so many requests from Roman Catholic churches in different parts of

the country, but especially from New England states, to remit the

duty on a carillon of bells to be imported for . those churches. The Roman Catholics object to paying the American tariff on such shipments. Right now Senator Butler, of Massachusetts has introduced a bill for the Church of Notre Dame de Lourdes, at Fall River, Mass. This is in addition to several other bills ot similar character, for other Roman 'Catholleehwcehes Jn his Htnte. ' - r c.n -J i. :

NON SILBA SED ANTHAR REAL MEN whose oaths are inviolate are needed.

authorities was drawn to the su by recent surveys in some todt districts, which showed som! surprising results. The num

available workers intspse was definitely known; w wuh rent demand. Notwithstandil fact that demand and suppl'

just about the same, there ire

a considerable excess or ' ulo

consequent unemployment.

Serious Situation. '

If such is the situation- in a

districts, officials are wondering: 1 it is elsewhere. The present I

ure of unemployment aa . i seems somewhat too large wher

present scale of Industrial . c is taken into consideration.' 1

try is steadily increasing in Vo and there should be relatively f

unemployment at this time, x Ing to past surveys ot labor and demand. -;- Nevertheless there is ' considc. unemployment throughout the cov today, reports to the Labor IV ment disclose mors, it is bell than is warranted by out prsse; dustrial activity. . - ; . v DISTRICT U. S. WORK! STILL OVER OLD QUI Washington, Jan. great reductions have been zns the number ot government m in the District of Columbia sin'

11, 198, when there wer 117,',

sons employed ds tne gov here, the redactions have not the figure down to near the total, as of June 10, 11, w were but 89,442 persons er federal agencies in Washlnr Is shown in the latest tigpublic by the civil serv slon, giving ths nombfployes in Washington By In the well-knowtf scL perience. It is Important to American course of study.

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