Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1931 — Page 7
TOTE 11,1931-
U. S.JOBS ARE BEING ‘SOPPED UP' BY CANADA American Go-Getters ’Have Nothing on Dominion’s ‘Native Sons.’ Th! I* the fourth of a eerie* of article* describing how the Hawley-Smoot tariff hill Is driving C. S. Industries into Canada. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor TORONTO, June 11.—High up in t suit of offices in the skyscraping concourse building here, overlooking the scurrying harbor and Lake Ontario, is the busiest spot in Canada. It is the headquarters of the industrial commission, whose job it is to look after American factories seeking a location on this side of the border—the strangest and most significant migration in the business history of the United States. On the wall is a map of the Great Lakss-St. Lawrence river region, with part of the Deminion showing above and part of the United States showing below the international boundary. Map Studded With Pins The map is studded with varicolored pins. There is a whole forest of them—red-headed pins, saf-fron-headed pins and pins ■with ■white, green, blue and violet heads —jostling each other for room. It reminded me of other pin-stud-ded maps I had seen, in division headquarters in France, marking gains and losses of the great armies that confronted each other over there, maneuvering for advantage in another great war. “It’s an interesting map you have there,” I remarked to the young, very much alert manager, Hubert B. Keenleyside. “What are the pins for?” Represent U. S. Industries “Those pins,” he said, "represent American industries. “The red-headed ones,” he explained, “represent industries which have definitely accepted sites for branch plants in the Toronto area. The yellow ones are industries that are on the point of doing so. The green pins are good prospects and the white ones have written asking for information with a view’ to locating here or hereabouts. “The blue-headed .pins are major propositions. The violet ones are of lesser importance. But we welcome the smallest along with the biggest, for every enterprise that comes to us helps. For, you know,” he added with a smile, “the little ones employing only few workers at first, have a way‘of becoming big ones providing many jobs and consuming large quantities of Canadian raw materials.” They Have “Go Getters” American industry, its $5,003,000,000 export business crippled by the tariff war precipitated by the Hawley-Smoot broadside, is being forced to seek more favorable bases ; from which to operate. And Canada, quick to see the opportunity presented by the American blunder, is leaving no legitimate move unmade to land as many of these Industries as possibl.e No chamber of commerce gogetters anywhere in the United States ever .showed more ingenuity in gcifig out after these “prospects” than Canada is showing as cities and provinces compete for them, from Halifax to Victoria. “If your super-tariff is raising foreign barriers against your products,” says Canada, in effect, ’’just come over here.” Shaping His Own Policy “Not only do w r e offer you a rich Canadian market and referential tariff rates with most of the members of the British empire, but the benefit of our specia ltrade relations with more than a score of other countries as wel.” Cheap water transportation down the St. Lawrence to European markets and a shorter haul across the Pacific to the far east, soon destined to become an insatiable consumer of western-made products, and advertised widely here along with cheap power and a plentiful supply of labor. Premier Bennett quite plainly regards tariff boosting as a game at which two can play as well as one. Seizing upon Washington’s tradeexclusion policy on the one hand, and America’s exploitation of the Canadian market on the other, as evidences of an impending economic annexation of the Dominion by the United States,, he is haping his own policy accordingly. America Comes Last Canada now has four rates —a sort of sliding scale—on goods entering her territory: British preferential, most-favored nation, intermediate, and general, which last applies to us. This is translated to mean Canada first, empire second, friendly trading powers third and America last. . Liberal Canadians are somewhat skeptical of the Bennett policy. They say he is courting the same danger that now menaces American foreign trade.
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( \m -s. I. •■■■' jj T&U BY BEN STERN Focusing of public opinion upon the haphazard manner in which bills are rushed through on the final day of the legislative session has resulted from the many errors discovered in the unpublished, new acts. Among mistakes noted are improper passage of House Bill 6, flaws in the congressional reapportionment act, and a confusing amendment to the primary law, permitting a candidate to withdraw thirty days before the primary, while another section of the act permits candidates to file declarations up to twenty days before the primary. a tt tt Error also was discovered in the act directing townships to advertise for bids for school bus service beginning July 1, 1931, for a threeyear period and in 1935 for a fouryear period, thus leaving 1934 without any school bus service. The boxing commission bill provided for three-minute wrestling rounds. Another bill seeking to amend an existing law to permit municipal waterworks to issue revenue bonds for extensions and betterments was found to have amended the wrong act. This catalog of errors could be continued indefinitely and it is directly attributable to the rush with which bills are ground out in the last few days of the session. Such action occurs despite the prohibitory injunction in Section 14 of Article 5 of the state Constitution which expressly declares, “No bill shall be presented to the Governor, within two days next previous to the final adjournment of the general assembly.” tt tt tt Disgusted with this last minute jam and the slipshod manner in which legislation is enacted, members of both houses are suggesting the 1933 legislature adopt several rules to prevent a repetition of what occurred this year. One such rule would prohibit the third reading of bills on the last day of the session and reserve it for conference committee reports, careful examination for errors and correction of mistakes and adjournment with knowledge that all loopholes have been closed. Importance of such rule can not be overestimated and it is to result in the safeguarding of the public interests, if observed. But of course, with the types of legislators with which the state has been blessed, such care is farthest from consideration. AGED WOMAN IS DEAD Mrs. Sophia Busch, 97, Resident of City for Nearly 76 Years. Funeral services for Mrs. Sophia Busch, 97, of 3105 West Washington street, who was a resident of Indianapolis seventy-one years, will be held at the residence at 2 Friday afternoon. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. • Mrs. Busch died Wednesday at her home. She came to Indianapolis in 1854 from her birthplace, Wurttenberg, Germany. Survivors are two daughters, Miss Sophia Busch and Mrs. Percy Trost and two sons, William and Joseph Busch, all of Indianapolis. Here’s A Redhot With Big Wais Safe Way To Get Rid the Same Time Gain Mental Activity—Fee NEW YORK MAN TELLS CONCISE STORY Yes, Gentlemen: Writes W. R. Daniels of Richmond Hill—“I have finished my second bottle of Kruscren Salts and have obtained the following results:” 1—“I have removed 3 inches from the belt line. 2—“ Get up in the morning feeling 100 per cent. 3—“ l am 25% more active. 4—“ My mind is clearer. s—“My wind has has improved 25%. # 6—“ All skin eruptions have disappeared. 7—“ My face and lips have color. B—“ When Igo to bed lam motionless—sleep like a brick. 9—“ Am 46 years old and feel 20 years younger.” Millions of men the world over are taking the little -daily dose of Kruschen because they know that it keeps them everlastingly feeling fit and active —life really becomes a glorious adventure—well worth living. Don’t confuse Kruschen with the ordinary salts that are made for just one purpose (to act on the bowels), and don’t take them with the idea that they possess reducing qualities in themselves.
HOPE IS SEEN FOR CURING OF ‘ATHLETE FOOT Ringworm Organism May Be Conquered by New Type of Vaccine. Ey Science Service PHILADELPHIA, June 11.—Possibility that a cure may be found for the widespread condition known popularly as athlete’s foot was inI dicated In studies reported by Dr. Marion B. Sulzberger and Dr. Fred Wise of New York City at the meeting here today of the American Medical Association. Athlete’s foot, or ringworm of the foot, is due to infection with the ringworm organism, which is a fungus. Both the number and : severity of cases are increasing to an alarming extent. Besides the original condition of the foot, secondary skin eruptions j may develop. These secondary erup- : tions are believed to be caused by j a special sensitiveness to the ring- j worm organism which is distributed | through the blood stream. May Be Similar to Hay Fever The secondary eruptions are called dermatophytids, while the primary foci of infection are known medically as dermatophyt ses. The dermatophytids, curiouslj enough, do not contain the actual organisms causing the trouble. Other organs besides the skin can become sensitive. Sulzberger believes this sensitiveness to fungi may be the cause of otherwise inexplicable cases of hay fever and asthma. Sulzberger and Wise attempted to desensitize a number of patients by injections of trichophytin, a vaccine made from the fungus that causes the disease, the trichophyton. Os eighteen patients treated, fifteen were either wholly or partially desensitized and ten seemed benefited by the treatment, showing either freedom from the trouble for a relatively long time, marked improvement or apparent cure. General use of the method is not justified from the results in this small number of cases, but the study gives rise to the hope that this annoying condition may be controlled. Sensitive to Other Substances At the same session, four cases in which persons who had ringworm in their feet or elsewhere and developed sensitiveness to other substances as a result of the sensitive condition of their skin were described by Dr. Cleveland White and Dr. Samuel J. Taub of Chicago. Cottonseed oil, buckwheat, oatmeal and silk were found to be the offending substances respectively in each of four young women who consulted these physicians for skin eruptions. Three of them eliminated the offending foods from their diet and the fourth stopped wearing silk, whereupon they all recovered. ' A strange feature of the cases was that none of the patients had had any such disturbance before ’they acquired the ringworm infection. From this fact, the physicians concluded that in some people who have fungus infections the skin is so altered that it becomes sensitive to certain foods or external irritants. 700 Teachers Graduate Os 700 students to be graduated from Indiana State Teachers’ college at Terre Haute, Friday morning, twelve are from Marion county, officials of the normal school said today. Tip For Men tlines—Fat Men of Surplus Fat and At In Vigor, Energy and [ Younger. Keep everlastingly before you the fact that Kruschen contains the six salts that your body should possess j if you are to be gloriously alive— | healthy. How would you like to get your | weight down to normal and at the J same time develop that urge for ac- | tivity that makes work a pleasure I and also gain in ambition and keen- ; ness of mind? Get on the scales today and see how much you weigh—then get an 85 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts which will last you for 4 weeks. Take one-half teaspoonful in a glass of hot water every morning— cut down on sweets for a while—take the exercise which Kruschen will induce—persist in this method every morning of your life and wher. you have finished the contents of this first bottle weigh yourself again. Now you can laugh at the people who pay hundreds of dollars to lose a few pounds of fat —now you will know the pleasant way to lose unsightly fat and you’ll also know that the 6 mineral salts of' Kruschen (Salts that your blood, nerves and glands should have to function properlyWhave presented you with glorious health. After that you’ll want to walk around , j and say to your friends,—“One 85 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts Is worth one hundred dollars of any fat person’s money.” Leading druggists all over the world sell Kruschen Salts—you can always get it at Book’s Dependable Drug Stores, who sell, dozens of packages every week. Try one bottle with the understand--1 ing that if not joyfully satisfied—money back.—Advertisement.
TEE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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