of
Ability to speak English, among foreign-born employees all races, male and female, 407-410. Afghans, 236. Agencies of Protection, Distribution and Assimilation, 244; Distribu- tion, 244; Immigrant Homes and Aid Societies, 246-250; Number of workers and persons assisted, 248; cooperation of the govern ment, 249; details of work, 250; Immigrant homes, 251-253; influ- ence of immigrant churches, 253; toward segregation, 253; resi- dence, toward permanency of, 255; work of natíve churches and religious organization among im- migrants, 256; work of other or- ganizations, 257-260; State Bu- reaus, 260; activities of the rail- roads, 261; Bureau of Informa- tion of the Federal Government, 261-263.
Aid Societies, Immigrant homes and, 246; work of, 246.
Agricultural Colonies, immigrant,
83-87.
Agricultural Communities, Hebrew,
87.
Agricultural laborers, seasonal, 92; cranberry pickers, 92; beet-sugar, 93.
Amendments to Public Act No. 96,
proposed, 349. American civilization.
Principles
upon which based, 5. American institutions,
characteris-
tics of immigrants which affect, 23-39.
American ports, 44. American standards and institutions, 259. Americanization, 258; causes oppos- ing, 293; causes favorable to, 293- 294. Americans, displacement of, 206; in China or Japan, 201; native, 52; at Windber, 71.
Anarchist, penalty for assisting, 399. Anti-Chinese feeling, 218. Appendices, Key to, 347; A, 349- 369; B, 370-404; C, 405-484. Arkansas, 67, 83, 90. Armenians, 33, 73, 193, 272. Arnold. Pa., 72.
Arthur, President, 305, 316. Asia, 64.
Asiatics, 213, 242-243. Assimilation, 32, 37, 75, 80, 197, y 198, 200, 208-209, 213-214, 234, 240, 287, 291.
Assimilation and Progress, 264-294; process of assimilation slow, 264; benefits from ideas of immigrants, 264; exclusion, 265; changes in bodily form, 266-269; shape of skull, 266; increase in stature, 268; industrial progress and ef- ficiency, 269; naturalization, 271; percentage of recent immigrants naturalized and holding first pa- pers, 272; investments, 273; prop- erty holdings in Windber, 276; assessment value of property owned, in Steelton, 277: owner- ship of homes, 279; families own- ing homes, 280-281; school attend- ance and progress, 282-290; ability to speak English, 290-293; sum- mary conclusions, 293-294. Associated Charities, 48. Association with other nations, 202. Australia, 200.
Austria-Hungary, 20, 24-25, 49, 54, 56-57, 107, 278.
Austrians, 80, 204, 272. Austrians and citizenship, 271. Austro-Hungarian races, 101. Azores, the, 91.
Commissioner-General of Immigra- tion, 33, 36, 301, 309, 322-323, 355, 358-359, 361-362, 370, 372, 376, 384, 389-391, 393, 396-398, 435, 465. Communities, California, 210; manu- facturing and mining, 67-95; im- migrant, significance of, 75. Company-house system, 279. Conclusions, general, 196. Congestion, in industrial localities, all races with 20 or more house- holds reporting, 421-426; in large cities, 427-431.
Congress, laws passed by, 64. Congress, the Thirty-fourth, 299; Thirty-fifth, Thirty-sixth, Thirty- seventh, and Thirty-eighth, 300; Fifty-ninth, 310. Conkling, Senator, 305.
Emigration, assisted, 22; European, 28.
Employees, political condition of foreign-born male, all races, 405- 406; who speak English, male, 407; female, 408; total, 409-410; visits abroad, 419; occupations abroad (male), 420; race distribu- tion of, 436-439, earnings of male, 440-446; of female, 447-450; week- ly earnings of male, according to race, 451-452; of female, 453; of male under 18, 454; of female 18 or over, 455; daily, of male, 456-457; of female, 458-460. Employment, unsatisfactory condi- tions of, 188.
England, 24, 49, 56; and Wales, 24, 49.
English, the, 33, 45, 51, 59, 70, 72, 77, 136, 167, 204, 272. English-Canadian, married life and
birth-rate, 61.
English language, acquisition of, 35, 82, 99, 102, 170, 183, 190, 192, 208, 240, 290-293, teaching of, 259; to speak, 375; ability to speak, 290- 293; different races of immigrants compared, 291. Englishmen, coal miners, at Wind- ber, 71.
Europe, 10; diseased sailors from.
41; southern and eastern, 45, 182. Europe, back to, 262. Europe, illiteracy in, 32; inclination to return to, 34; northwestern, 140; money back to, 245. Europe, inclination to return to, 34,
38; northern, 193; back to, 262. Europe to America, 10; wages in southern, 12; influence upon emi- gration, 22.
European countries, effect of immi- gration upon, 14; remittances to, 107; governments, attitude of, 15; immigrants, 31, 33-34. Europeans and Mexicans, 204. Europeans, North, 204-205; reason for employment of southern and eastern. 140; wages of, 207; south- ern and eastern, 182, 186, 193-196, 205-206, 208. Europeans, wages, 12; south and east, 206-209.
European workmen, displacement of Americans by, 206. Exclusion, 237; laws, Chinese, 370.
Families, Hebrew, 82.
Family income, annual, 157; sources of, 157-159; old and new immi- gration compared, 160; of indus- trial workers by nativity and race, 461; sources of, 462-463; old and new immigration compared with respect to, 464. Farm laborers, 86-87.
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