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Show Information lir Immigrants. Edward Kterott llalo thinks there Is one book that would do as much good a.t Ten the publication cf congrraeincn'e speeches or the reports ofthoBmithtonUn Inttltutlon. He remarks In his notes In The Cosmopolitan that this book wonl 1 bo. In his estimation, a rolnme that told our hundreds of thousands of annual lm-mtgrsnU lm-mtgrsnU where they wanted to go, A'eummary of each tuto an I territory, terri-tory, describing briefly Its characteristics of climate, reductions, manufactures, socltly, etc, would be ot Inestimable benefit to tho foreigner landiog opon our shores. Such b. s could be circulated at our seaports, alto in Europe. Doing prepared pre-pared under goremment auspiora, there would not ho anywhere an ax to grind, and tbo Immigrant could chooeo beforehe left his natlro shores tho part of our broad domain that suited him besL It seams as though the stats gorern-menta gorern-menta might well Uks this mtttcr lu hand, especially the ttatee wanting Immigration. Im-migration. They coul 1 collect tho information in-formation better than tin general for-ernment for-ernment could. Hut there la no doubt that reliable guldiai to Immigrants of the kind indicated, pnbllihed In tin Tartoul languages, would help both thettatot and the foteigners. Much suffering lauprrisra and inunlty would be aroldod, and each ttsto could draw to Itself Just tho cltluns needed. The stales thcmsclres might unito and publish pub-lish such a Tolnmo. |