Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 253, Hammond, Lake County, 14 April 1921 — Page 10
injrr Ton
TI.IK TIMES
Thursday, April 14. 1021.
AUTO SHOW ATTENDANCE BREAKS RECORD
With the entry of th third n.frM at the Calumet Auto association p!m-, the attendance was considerably ovit either of the two night pncfilm. conc'iUsivf, wh nthe door receipt." v "ri chwh-1:! up. With three more nifrhts and with wfll j!versir1 rr.(craras for fch niKht. there is no dwibt out that the enthusiasm and rxpfftnUons will continue to t ho end. which ! Saturday nls-ht. when a Mardl GtN feature will be Ftaev-,1 a a tittltii; final1. Geo r (re Sik'.kis, one of F.ast r'bivaro" leading bujine.? m?n took his selection last rvwiim; in the ch -ire "f a five passenser H .iprr.i !! io Se.-Jnn.
with 5cr(t fr'aho, renresr n I i ni; the Kast Chicago Auto SaU-s company. The j
ileal was closed at tlio show. j. M Fudfre. reprf sen! .r.tc the verian-i-Fu4ge cf wailf disposit Urn 'if a new
molel to be delivered when the oar i la taken from the dipping room! ; tho .show. 1M Bohling- made the I second ?ale at n er'.y h.;ir iast ntag. taftfring- sold a five p.-s. nri-r ' PudKe to John .;erjra.-s. of 601 H4th treel, Kast Chicago. l,ouls Ralint I reprrsentln the Kicar sold a hamMome moJl to louis Kicet .f 4025 1 v v tret. during: the i venir.. Th Ra'l - i H-ljCi'-k took t remendou.s'. y well !n the! nto iicciHourii'." ?ali' of ti.e even'.iiK J
d :fpo. i t to n in alii :,. j of Inst
t i:i.-re euiit-r than ev ' !
to Jeprn a'.! about parts of the vari- ! ou. ntachir.es. The entertainment arid!
There notioeabl iioecfery 1 :k s l(n:1
'venmx sej:o--u iicr, f.a
lancing tipi!e.l ; ,.ur.g reojle. An models will be plae erriiriK. Sa'urday ?ivrn over to the 1,
inversion ! ntire new 1 '. r e h i I:
e r n ' o n and 'iiri
a : : r noon w ! i on
Jv-oi.ts !
anil special eit 1 -rfa: n men t pro o.-d - - j tht-m under direct ion of th ir ex".-u-' : t ve.. This invitation suf ;ic s for them' all to be present. I It ',!s predicted In?! pvcn:n,- that ! :.ere would be a wholesale cbarlrir o j F..rds before the Jjna! niilit of the'
I 4
show and to which IZ. . Ujnneli
mot optimletio !n regard to the cur-' rent, rumor. With trie hundreds of! spectators and revelers there has bee-, ' h srreafest ,.rd..-r and decorum main- j 'a'.ned and the bmld-.na; proper has i'fn placed under the protection f-f , the American Secret Service, with offires in East Chleago, and a ih-t in-j f.U'Jtion. placing a most complete pa-: ''l system with n and virh-'vif th"'
buildir.K. with creditable ma;nt nan The p'iblic is lnvit-'d again thl ev xi. nr.
WHEN NEW PRESIDENT READ FIRST MESSAGE TO CONGRESS
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Arro-w points to President Hardin g.
Tiiis photo wa? taken at two rr.inutv-P before or.o on the afternoon of Tuesday, April 13. Presi
dent Harding had just risen to deliver his tirst message to congress. Vice President Coolidge
(left) and Speaker Giliott are seated directly behind the president.
HERE'S WHAT A CLOD SAYS
(INTERNATIONAL HFWS SRIVICE1 'PA It IS, April 13. It wasn't very ga.1lant. but it's what Maurice Motivet, world famed dancer, said when Informed today by the International News Sen, ice that he is named a a corespondent in .f. Stanley Joyce's euit for divorce from "IVgijy" Hopklna: 'When I pick a jrlrl, I'll pick a prettier one than V"KKy." Moreover, Maurice, who is tli dt-vorct-d husband of Florence Walton, his foriniT dancing partner, flatly denies all a-llegations by Joyce. II? paid: "T danced with V'ggy In Iindon and T'eauville, but I never met her otit.'ide the ball room. In fact, once In TeauvH'o. i intervened in fanor of
Joyce when Peggy Insisted on da.nc.in with a man whom Joyce disliked. Really I can't understand why he should na.nn? me in his divorce suit."
Leading FruiU. The eight leading fruits consumed In New York city during the course of one year would fin 50XX) frefsht cars. This would make a train 270 miles Ions.
DE LUXE THEATRE Special for the children, Friday, "Forbidden Fruit" and "Little Red Riding Hood." Saturday, Dorothy Gish in "Little Miss Rebellion," and "Forbidden Fruit," afternoon only.
CATARRH DISFIGURES CLEAR IT UP Mouth breathing and bad brra'n canned by catarrh have an lnjur:u effect, not only on (joud health, l.ut good lookn as well. Clear up catarrhal Indications immediately with tostimulating odor of northern pins contained in Mayr's Pine Needle r.aliu. This Ideal preparation cleanses ti nasal passages of the excessive mucous and promote norma! breathinc Mayr's I'ine Needle Balm In likt-wi-e effective in clearing up quickly cl in the head, nose and throat. l'itrial by writing George II. Mayr. ; 1 W. Austin Ave., Chicago. Soil two nlzes. ?. and 6" tub's, ,y tijw iner.s Pharmacy and dru;rcijs cve: where. Adv.
! I.ar.s! n g
Fund ay n n .1 day. H
GARY COP WILL NABMM AGAIN
Nashville Pen Inmate Wont Get Much Fresh Air When j He Gets Out When J. C. I.unsing pfeps out of th j Ksshville penitentiary of Naphvil. Tenn ho will breathe the air of a
Tf r.n
; p i v e n
I vlct. d
a -nv
- a f .v irln-.i'.c? onlv. 'i :'n a ja:! ntciice in- reolased on that ,irrftp-l in M rnpliis.
a j-
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:v r-. y , r.i r s : i n - in t h e t 1 1 .s.-nt rice a
n a
an c x - and was ir.K con-
on that t ' l e. i r"; ? fi'.i V
h a r g e . re : ire Kn Mr.
I'any'.i l:r:e. in the neilih I rnmed c ' ) tii. ft, I.unsiru
The ('.III"? -.cere w 1 1 h .rhood of $1. :-'". after commit in g the fled to Memphis. Tcnn..
h-r c;aim
Siliiftm. over a :
a nd a -s li;i.i i -
s. at t. . i n 1 u re.i.
Whiting park j
where 1 g,.t in'o rm-re tr.,tit!e. lie Will he brought back t lary Sunday or Monday to face a charge of grand 1 arce n v.
! v-i'.l be
V s in .-.n-; :o v, her
:Ti'.
! ,n r: :n g.
.rid Ka
part of t I m n i r g ft
i vi ! If pcriif.-nt iry ii" Ht; ..f..;pr oT !! law v it'n .tradtt t..n paw . Tt at'...t I.un- !-. :t. ha', k t t la ry ntcd on a charge of understood, in ini6 1 f :;i!.s of m " n'. ('' ich! car on the i-T-
It.Lt 1 ' a y t ',-,; t -
'"I WHITING BOARD
HOLDS MEETING
w'umN';. in' of ptibi.e W'.iks it'-r a.'ccpter! th' the wat'T i n'.s c mm j n :t a : i - n
2.. Apr:! 1 board at t.-teir regular iti'etcon: ra-'t for changing !n the Whiting park. A was a No sent to M r.
t otir.
Mary
will
t I : f o ; -z ' l h cry that ?
to tio icr
effect la i in.
1 ett
tt nt the eity Mrs. fonroy iT'.rtned the h t s.jit for
Musician Out of Tune 'ijfts pressure m my stomach souietitites ciistre-sed mc .s.. tht't I could n t. tiiink. I played out of tune ;iru! twlclost my p'.iition. No medicine helped T.ie and 1 Icc.tme d is!iea.rt e ncd- An- . t h.rr Ij i u.'-;ei a n advised to try Mnvr's W. u- d c if j 1 rtemedy, and I urn now nj..yir.g tiie host of health." It i a si'nple. hatio'o'ss prepntaliya 1 hat r.-mnves t..-e i.itarriin! mucus from the Intestinal tr;t.ct and a',las ihc iiula-n-tn;tt iuri " 'ic.i; causey p rac t i ;i 1 1 y all fit.-.mt.fh. I i vi' r and intestinal aslmeri's, incltidtng a.tpeiidici! fine d.ise w i i ! conv:n - or money refunded. Su'uTti. t's fiut rtna'"y iiroi d t u -u-; :s everywhet e. , d .
Consumers Wholesale Grocers GUARANTEED PRODUaS SELLING DIRECT TO YOU Store No. 16-OnIy One in Hammond Hammond Ind. Tel. 531 540 Hohman St ALL ORDERS OVER $5.00 DELIVERED NO CHARGE
CRISCO SPECIAL UNEEDA BISCUITS P.nr. 10 ,b$- $uar witl a 3"lb- 4 pkg$' 3 rounds ooc chase of our famous 25 C SOAPS COFFEE o c r. L c OlIR niARANTFF EXTRA FANCY RED CHERRIES P. & ., Feb Naptha, Star OUR GUARANTEE 10 bars If this is not the best flavor Q and aroma you ever tasted, O C we .w i 1 1 cheerfully refund AMERICAN BEAUTY GINGER tancy California iunsweet your money. 5 pounds L OR LEMON PRUNES 3 pounds 5 pounds SNAPS 5 Pounds 49c 9 5 C $1-55 35c Bbl.
FANCY 5 STRING
BROOMS 63c
ftZrifts PORK and BEANS, 3 Cans 29c
JAM 39c, 3 can, $1.15
LARGE QUART JAR
STRAWBERRY AND RASPBERRY
FRESH LOT MIXED
COOKIES, 3 lbs. 65c BAKED IN OUR OWN OVENS
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TRUCK CVVFO AO OPEPTED P"1 IKiD'JSTCOUS IMMIiiRAMTS.
By FRANCIS H. S1SSON, ligation was oc-umnff rno.'t rapi'-V. Vice President Guaranty Trust tuh a f !. t."riit"tl Kingdom. CerCcmpany of New York. J many nI S' ar.diftavi.'t. And tliT? Vj HAT America iifls In at-j is jr'"5 reason i ht-il.M-o r b n r imniitiicWiiit: tbe problfm of j ration to the I'tiiiod States will J irnmlgrntifdi, which Is i decrease as thp preset t economic one of tiff mot vital nf sfibilizafion ft I'.uropo proceeds. nU our national fircldnis, Is pot : Already, in fact, thorp arc pt!more technical refT'iint ions, rot t ho ! dn-e of tr.i. There is also lc:?
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r-xfensiun of hnrdships, pot tiie erection of barriers bas-eil on temporary expedients, but a racial inventory and a formulation of policies, with such general powers ns will enable the government to meet any situation p.? it arises. We need above all a policy of assimilation which will cover the reception, distribntion, and adjustment of immigrants after arrival so we ran really ascertain if we have assimilated the Immigrants who have entered with a view to determining how many we may wisely admit. I have no sympathy vttth the hysterical fear that the country Is to
InooMhe now than in the past for many foreigners to s.-cU hero an a-; him from religions persecution and political oppression. As a result of the colossal sacrifice of life
during the war Kun.pe. as a whole,
ITALIAN LABORERS PAVING A NEW COvTR-f HIGHWAY- we NEED SUCH LA0CR TO CATCH Ova DELAYED CONf-TRlXTION 0K ist EVERT LINE .
products for her Industry. Already tiie experiment has been tried on a small scale. Seeral thousand Italians were sent into France on an ag reenter; t between the Italian and French governments that for eery man sent to France so many tens
sorely needs its man-power and j of coal would be delivered yearly
rocon; rut tion that lie
vears of
abend. The Swedes, Finns and German? have already ope;n-d lstrge .irons of land at h'-me for colonization purposes, ft p. (I ti'.e military laws of
Poland. Czechoslovakia and Greece
continue to need it during the to Italy. P.ut the scheme will :n-
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cnioe an H.ironipr. i 'sihoiiii miian colonies which will retain all their national features and ii"t become assimilated iti the new countries. The Italian Socialists quite rightly express the belief that such legislation would close the United
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Ellis island, gatexwxv through wm km amebica is receiving ns MUCH NCEOEO RECRUITS IN THE LABOR FIELD.
deny passports to i.Il of military I State to Italian emigrants, oecauso age while'Kitmai ia threatens loss ! the United States will not accept
he flooded by Immigrants or that it of citizenship to all of its nationals 1 about to ho invaded by hordes of ' who emigrate to toe United States, radicals who would destroy our in- There is agitation in O.eehoslovaftitutilons and by the victims of dis- i k'a to maUe Iiniios-s'hio the activity ease who would undermine our ; of agents who s.-ek to cause mass health. Surely such citreir.ps a re i emigration, while a law- has just
easily subject to regulation. I-et ns. consider that there pre transportation facilities for the arrival of only ono million immigrants year, and arrivals since the nrtniHfire do not hear out the prophecy of any tidal wave of immigration. The total net gain In population by immigration Through the Port of Jsw York In 1920 was about L'CG,000, or about fifty jer cent of the yearly average for the five-year period preceding the war. Statistics show that during the last thirty years the dwindling of Immigration has been chiefly from the countries where economic stahi-
t"('n enacted there prohibiting men twenty two years of age to pass over the boundaries. Germany has established a I .-par' metif of Irmnlcratiori e.nl Fmiaration to undertake ti e task of bringing her colonists back to the Fatlii'Thind. Great Jiritain Is seeking to direct emigration to her own dominions. Spain, Feigium and Greece are adopting simiirtr policies. Italy faces a dearth of raw materials, while she has an abundance of man power. She hopes to distrihuie this furplws in the labor markets of the world in sr.ch a wny as to guarantee her coal and raw
immigrants tinder such conditions. The United States could not have been as fully developed and as powerful as it is today If it had not drawn so liberally upon th--populations of Europe. We must, in fact, acknowledge our great economic debt to Immigrant workmen who today mine thn e-quart'Ts of our output of iron and coal, constitute the majority of the laborers in cur lumber camps, are used almost exclusively to lay otir railroad tracks and build our mads and to keep them in repair. Because of the shortage of such workers, in fact, the building of houses in this country is seriously handicapped. Immigrants also bake one-half of our bread, refine one-half of our sugar, prepare four-fifths of all our leather, make fifty per cent of our gloves, shoes and silks and ninety-
five per cent of nil our clotrdng as well as constitute sixty per rent of all the employees of our packing houses. It is nuite possible, in fact, that unless Immigrant labor Is obtainable in the proper quantity and quality when needed some American industries may have to set up factories In countries where labor is availab'e on a basis that will permit such industries to compete with those of rival nations, for certain of our industries are almost wholly dependent upon immigrant, labor, as it is impossible for them to obtain an adequate supply of native-born laborers at any price. Furthermore, this country the richest of all in natural resources is under-developed and underbuilt. Hundreds of years will elapse before we will begin to exhaust our resources. Reviewing our resources many years ago. Lord Macauley estimated that not until our population hnd reached the figure of "",000 per square mile would we strike the danger zone of sufii-
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TPACMINC Ne'AA.V WATUALtIE(
FOoeiSNtSTO VOTf -5ILCCTKTN. .
A.D AS3IMtLATOM,h40T MCICSON. ThC SClUTlON OFCXjB IMMI6BATON
PACBLEM . other conntrles in seeing that the rtgrbt kind of immigrants come. There axe four Immigration bills pending In Congress, including the Johnson, or House Bill: the Dillingham and Sterling Bills in the Senate and the Senate Committee Bill. The first of these namely, the Johnson Bill would prohibit Immigration for one yesr. The Dillingham Bill provides for the limit
ing of Immigrant annually to fire
per cent of the number of persons of their nationality resident In the United States, nationality to be determined "by country of political allegiance." But there is ambiguity in this proposed law. If nationality is determined by the country of allegiance foreign born citizens owing their allegiance to the United
States would not be Included.
The Senate Committee Bill would
likewise limit the number of aliens of any nationality who may hereafter be admitted to the United States in any fiscal year to five per cent of the number of such nationality resident In the United States, nationality in this case, however, to be determined by the country of birth. Under the provisions of this bill the approximate number of aliens who would be admissible an
nually from northwestern Europe would be 337.000; frorn the remainder of Europe 25.'.0O0 would bo admissible, while about SO.tW) would be admissible from the rest of the world. The Sterling Bill considers Immigration not from the single aspect of exclusion or restriction, but
It would seem equally obvious ; from other vital aspects as well. It that under such treaties it would j would lodge the general control of
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rleney. Today onr popnlatlon averages ;!5 to the square mile. But it is patent that we have progressed to the. point where the unregulated flow of immigration is no longer needed or desired. More scientific handling of immigration is demanded now for the most successful future economic development of this and other countries. There can be no doubt about the advisability of negotiating immigration and labor treaties with foreign governments to take the place of the present inefficient and inadequate methods of control through consular service and passports so as to insure the admittance of only those immigrants desired and selected according to standards.
be possible to arrive at definite understandings with each country involved on the quantity and quality of immigrants wanted here, to provide proper machinery for the regulntion of arrivals and to insure souie co-operation on the Dart of
I
immigration in an immigration Board, of which the chairman would be the Secretary of Iibor. After the neeepsary negoti
ations with foreign governments ! this Board, through Us agents abroad, would investigate all lm-.
pending Immigration and would lnqaire into the motives inducing Immigration of particular persona or peoples. The Board would report on the amount of unemployment and the kind of Immigration dsired. It would analyze the number of aliens admitted annually c cording fn the ethnic group the number of those naturalized each year and the number of American children born of foreign parents. Finally, the Board would prepem booklets in English and foreign lar. guages on the rights and duties of, aliens and distribute them arnongj immigrants. These provisions, of course, would permit a much closee investigation into the character of all immigrants who come he;,- and would provide a method of distribution.' It would put the burden of proof as to admissibility at the source of Immigration. Rut legislation alone can never effect the desired assimilation of immigrants. The solution of the assimilation problem lies largely ia the economic co-operation with Immigrants of our various business interests. Tbre should be adequate legtsla-' tion to supervise Immigrant hanks'
i doing an interstate business f
safeguard Immigrant, deposits an eliminste competition from Irresponsible sources. The rational and State bants should establish foreign departments, in charge of trnsted persons speaking te Important foreign language of tha community and with facilities fa meet the personal needs of immigrants during their pro. ess of adjustment. There should be systematic publicity campaigns organized to reach Immigrant wage-earn
ers, with special emphasis placed on the protection afforded to thesa wage-earners by American banks. There should he adequate legislation to provide for the registration of farm-land offered for sale, to prohibit misleading advertisements and fraudulent interstate transactions. There should be co-operative arrangements with industries that wou'd help to Introduce the immigrant, who Is usually shay of American banking Institutions. This could involve the paying of bonuses through banks, the developing of credit for housing and similar realty investments. There should be developed co-operation between orr banks and the forty or more large foreign trade organizations doing business in this country Bnd having considerable commercial ror,trt-x with immigrant races. There should be established In the Treasury 1"Vpartment a Bureau of Export Savings to have general supervision over the transmission of money abroad in sums of $100 or less And there should be stringent laws to prevent profiteering through foreign exchange and the sale of worthless European currencies. T leave to others who are better qualified than I the discussion r,f the many other important phases of this viial aii'i complicate,; sub-jee
