The ‘Tacific Skandinaven” from Vol. XVII, No. 14. “The American Scandinavian” from Vol. V, No. 2. A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF PROGRESS AND GOOD CITIZENSHIP Portland, Oregon, Thursday, May 27,1920 Volume I. Number 5. LET NO PEOPLE ENTER THIS COUNTRY WHO CANNOT BE ASSIMILATED 'JpHE PRINCIPLE, or policy, or lack of it, the condition which brought the Negro race to this country was a high crime against Democracy for which the nation has paid the penalty in blood, in tears and in treasure immeasurable, and it is not yet all paid. The principle, or policy, or lack of it, the condition which permits Jap­ anese, Hindus and other non-assimilable races to enter this country at this time, is equally criminal, and leads as directly to disaster as did the importation of Negroes for slave labor. The Japanese who who does not agitate, or threaten or destroy directly, is more dan­ gerous than the plotting Bolshevist, the shrieking Socialist, the clamouring Communist or the raving disciple of I. W. W.-ism. It is as certain as night succeeds day that if this nation is to en­ dure as a Democracy, as planned by its founders and maintained to this time, only such peoples can be permitted to enter and become a component part as can be assimilated, socially as well as politically, and which will emerge from the process of amalgamation as Am­ ericans with the stamina to maintain and the spirit to pass on to succeeding generations the principles which we have adopted, as a nation and as a people, as being humanity’s best interpretation of freedom and liberty. This is a time for taking observations and fixing the true course along which we shall advance toward the hope of the ages and it lies not hand in hand with the Mongol race of Dai Nipon. THREE DOLLARS YEARLY TEN CENTS THE COPY