Farmer, the southern and eastern European, 80-83.
Farm-hands and canning-factory operatives in U. S., 93-95. Farmers, Japanese, and others, 81; Hebrew, 88; Polish and Bohemi ans, 89; other races, 90; Japan- ese, in the East, 91; Italian and others, 83-85.
Fecundity, 7, 58, 61. Federal Commission, 81. Federal Government, control by, 304; Bureau of Information of the, 261-263.
Fillmore, Millard, 299. Florida, 68. Foreign-born, industrial period of residence in the United workers, States, 477-479; male employees of all races, political condition of, 405-406; persons in United States and in specified States, by country of birth, 482; population. distribu- tion of, by States and years, 466- 471; by country of birth, 472-473; distribution of increase, by dec ades, 474-476.
Foreign exchange, 108. Filipinos, 227.
Finland, remittances to, 107. Finnish, 33, 272, 281, 291-292. Finns, the, 93, 138, 204, 209, 273, 286.
First papers, 271-273. France, 24, 49. Fredonia, N. Y., 87. French, the, 33, 63, 136, 272. French-Belgians, 72. French-Canadian, 272, 281, 291. French-Canadians, 50, 61, 136, 289; number of children, 60-61; Eng- lish-speaking, 291.
Fresno, Cal., 229.
Galatia, 87. Galicia, 21.
Gary, Ind., 71-72. Geneva, N. Y., 86.
Geological Survey, U. S., 190. German-Russians, 210.
German-Swiss, Colonies of, 81.
Germans, 33, 57,70, 77-78, 125, 167, 272, 281, 284-286. Germans, the, 51, 77, 119, 204. Germany, 24, 49, 56. Government,
United States, 242;
British, 242. Governments of China and Japan, 201.
Granite City, Ill., 72, 166. Great Britain, 281; races from, 145; old immigration from, 161; em- ployees from, 193, 196. Great Cities, living conditions and congestion in, 115-128.
Greece, 21, 24, 107. Greek, 272, 282. Greek Catholic, 114.
Greeks, 33, 73, 98, 101, 106, 113, 120, 122, 124, 170, 172, 206, 220, 227, 282.
Green County, Swiss settlements in,
79.
Guam, 372, 375, 382.
Haverhill, Mass., 69. Hawaii, 205, 319, 321, 372, 374, 382. Head Tax, discriminating, 341. Heads of families, annual earnings, 156.
Hebrew families, 82; farmers, 88; farmers, near Vineland, 88, 89; colony of, 88; immigrants, 259; students, 290; East European, 267. Hebrews, the, 26, 31, 33, 36, 45-46, 50, 63, 81, 87-88, 98, 106, 118, 126, 141, 182, 272-273, 281-283; German, 286. Herzegovinian, 33. Hindus, 198-201, 212, 236, 239-240, 326.
Hirsch Fund, Baron de, 87-88. Holyoke, Mass., 69. Home: sanitation, 125.
Homes, ownership of, 279; families owning, 280; race percentage of, 281.
per
Hospital investigation, 44; hospital service, U. S. Marine, 307. Households (industrial localities), percentages of, 421-422; average number of persons per apartment, etc., 423-424; number and cent. keeping boarders or lodgers, 425-426; (in cities) number of persons per room, 427-428; per sleeping-room, 429; average adults per room and sleeping-room, 430- 431; number and per cent. keeping boarders or lodgers, 433. Households, types of immigrant, 133-134.
Housing and living conditions in the West, 170-172.
Howell, Benjamin F., 4. Hungarians, 121, 267.
Hungary, 21, 49; and Bohemia, 49. "Hungary Hollow," 73.
Husbands, foreign-born, 434.
Idaho, 231.
Illinois, 69, 71, 79, 166. Illiteracy of the various races; in Europe, 32.
Illiterates, number and per cent. of, 33-34.
Immigrant Banks, in New York City, 102; unsoundness of, 109; at- tempts at regulation. 111; and bankers, 96, 104, 112. Immigrant Colonies, extent of, 67;
types of, 68-73; the significance of, 75-76; agricultural, 83-87. Immigrant employees, length of residence, 139, 168; in agriculture, 77, 80, 95.
Immigrant labor supply, the float- ing, 162-181; methods of securing work, 162; labor agencies, 163- 165; the padrone system, 166; ra- cial classification of railroad and other construction laborers, 167; period of residence of immigrant workmen in the U. S., 168; earn- ings, 169; characteristics of, 170; housing and living conditions in the West, 170-172; the commissary in southern camps, 175-176; de- tention practises, 177; southern employers' preferences for labor, 178; the Middle States, 180. Immigrant inspection on vessels,
382; powers of inspectors, 387. Immigrant Institutions, 96-114; un- regulated Immigrant Banks, 96-97; the term immigrant bank a mis- nomer, 97; races as bankers, 98; origin of immigrant banks, 99-100; hindrance to immigrant patron- age for American banks, 101; ownership and organization, 102; banking functions-deposits, 103- 105; aggregate and average of deposits, 106; money exchange- transmission abroad, 106; remit- tances abroad, 107-108; unsound- ness of immigrant banks, 109; at- tempts at regulation, 111; coffee- houses, 113; newspapers, churches and schools, 113. Immigrant population, segregation of, 73.
Immigrant, protection of the, 330; tractability inef- of the, 186; ficiency of, 186; employment of, 187; effect of the recent, upon standards of living, 190. Immigrants, Characteristics of, 23- 39; physical condition, 26; alien seamen, 27; sex and family life. 28; age of, 29; occupations of, 30-31, 140; ability to speak Eng- lish, 39; diseased, 43; medical in- spection, 46; the mentally defect- ive, 47; racial or national ten- dencies, 48; paupers, 48; number and ratio of insane, 49; birth-rate women bearing no among, 58; children, 59; average number of children, 60; tendencies exhibited by recent, 132.
"Immigrants in Agriculture," 81; in
industries, the status of, 135-161. Immigrants on the Pacific Coast, European and Mexican, 198-214; assimilation, 198-203; race preju- dice, 198; total debarred, 435; unskilled, 207.
Immigration, a summary of, 465. Immigration Act, 2, 8, 44. Immigration and Naturalization, Se- lect Committee on, 306; Bureau of, 400.
Immigration Bureau, 236. Immigration, causes of, 10-22; mo- tive, economic, 11; wages and standards of living, 12;military service, 13; attitude of European governments, 15; immediate in- ducement of, 19; assisted emigra- tion, 22. Immigration Commission, establish- ment of, to study problem, 3; na- ture of its work, 4; its member- ship, 4; letters shown, 21; data obtained by, 36, 40; from reports of, 41, 44, 48, 53, 58, 61, 65, 96, 98, 109, 113, 116, 132, 135; industrial investigation of, 197, 212-213, 215, 237, 242, 250, 267, 270, 272, 282, 292, 311, 312-313, 340-341, 343, 370, 405.
Immigration, Commissioner-General of, 31, 33.
Immigration, Commissioners of, 397; history of, 483.
Immigration Law, first Federal, 43; of 1882, 305; investigations of 1893, 308; law of 1907, 310; ex- cluded classes, 310-313; literacy test, 311.
Immigration laws and treaties, Chi- nese, 314-319. Immigration, old and new, 25, 28- 29; Oriental, 332. Immigration Problem, Statement of the, 1.
Immigration, social effects of, 64- 65; has produced unsatisfactory conditions of employment, 188. Immigration, subjects treated in de- termining effects of, upon Ameri- can standards, 6; upon American institutions, 7-23; upon industrial conditions, 8; causes of, 10; pri- marily economic, 11; wages and standards, 12; military service, 13; effect of upon European coun tries, 14; attitude of European governments toward, 15; effect upon the U. S. of the immigrant's return to Europe, 19; countries of origin and character of the early and late, 24-25; European to the U. S., 28; social problems of re- cent, 40.
Independence, La., 85. India, 1.
Indiana, 71-72. Indians, the, 93.
Industrial Commission, 308. Industrial communities, 75-76. Industrial Conditions, 8.
Industrial localities, congestion in, 421-426.
changed
Industrial organization,
form of, 187. Industrial progress, 270.
Industrial workers, male, 143; fe- male, 144.
Industrial Workers, racial classifica- tion of, 135-139; reason for em- ployment of southern and eastern Europeans, 140; weekly and daily earnings, 141-146; weekly earn- ings of male employees, 147-148; of female employees, 149; daily earnings of male employees, 150; of female employees, 152; annual earnings, 153-155; of male heads of families, 156; annual family income, 157; sources of family income, 157. Industries, the status of immigrants in, 135-161.
colony, 83; race, as property holders, 278.
Italians, 36, 45, 51, 57, 70, 205, 208, 220, 227, 230, 232, 243, 272-273, 275, 283; and citizenship, 271; as property owners, 277; and homes, 281-282; general farming, 87. Italians, in agriculture in towns of New York, 86-87.
Italians, South, 51; crime, 54; as- sault, 57; birth-rate, 61, 122; de- posits, 106; living, 176; construc- tion work, 178; unskilled, 207; naturalized, 272-273; speaking English, 291-292.
Italians, the North and South, 33, 83-87; the South, 51, 67, 70, 72, 81, 94, 118, 120, 136, 138, 168, 170-171, 175, 275.
Italy, 20, 24, 25, 49, 85-86, 107.
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Japanese, the, 198-201, 204-205, 212- 214, 225-235, 238, 239-241. Japanese, the, in Texas and Florida, 92; on the Pacific Coast, 235; pic- ture brides, 222; in agriculture, 228-232; domestic service and merchandizing, 233; societies and guilds, 234.
Jenks, Jeremiah W., 4. Jewish race, 278.
as property holders, Jews, the, as property owners, 277. Johnstown, Pa., 69-70.
Kahn, Representative, 319-320. Kansas, 71, 79, 88, 166, 204. Kansas City, 163, 283, 289. Kensington, Pa., 72. Key West, 68. Knobview, Ark., 84.
"Know Nothing" Movement, 42. "Know Nothings," 298-300.
Labor supply, the floating immi- grant, 162-181; methods of secur- ing work, 162; labor agencies, 163; the padrone system, 166; racial classification, 167; earnings, 169. Labor, what is the true demand
for, 18; agencies, 163; southern employers' preferences for, 178; demand for, 240. Laborers, unskilled, 237. Land Borders, inspection on, 324. Late immigration, countries of ori- gin and character of, 24. Latimer, Asbury C., 4. Law, difficulty of administration, 52. Laws, efficiency of, 44. Legislation, 41, 42, 43. Legislation and Administration, 295- 325; "Native American" and "Know Nothing" Movements, 295- 300; State legislation abandoned, 300-302; State control declared unconstitutional, 302-304; control by the Federal Government, 304- 313; for suppression of the White Slave traffic, 313-314; Chinese im- migration laws and treaties, 314- 319; Chinese Exclusion Laws, 319- 320; relative to Japanese laborers, 321; administration of the law, 322-325; discussion of proposed, 334.
Legislation, history of, 295; prin- ciples of, 328.
Lincoln, President, 42, 300. Literacy test, 340, Lithuanians, 33, 50, 73, 81, 98, 117- 118, 121, 124, 130, 136, 138, 168, 272, 273, 276, 281-282, 284-285, 291.
Littauer amendment, 312.
Living Conditions and Congestion, 115-134; in great cities, 115-128; congestion of population a serious evil, 115; methods of investiga- tion, 116; length of residence in the U. S. a factor, 117; over- crowding in rooms, 119; in sleep- ing-rooms, 119; boarders and lodgers, 121; rent, 121-122; home ownership, 123; occupations, 124; care of home: sanitation, 124; water supply, 125; incomes, 126; causes of congested districts, 127; industrial cities and towns, 128- 134; the boarding-boss system, 129; overcrowding, 130; conges- tion in sleeping rooms, 131; ten- dencies exhibited by recent immi- grants, 132; types of immigrant households,, 133. Location of wives, reported by race of husband, 433. Lodge, Henry Cabot, 4. Los Angeles, 212-213, 289. Louisiana, 83-84, 88, 304. Lowell, James Russell, 9. Lowell, Mass., 69. Lynn, Mass., 69. Lyons, N. Y., 87.
Massachusetts, 53, 297-298, 303. Massachusetts Agricultural College,
81.
"May Law" of Russia, 88. McClellan County, Texas, 89. McLauren, Anselm J., 4. Mediterranean, 268.
Meriden, Conn., 69. Mexican, 272.
Mexicans, 207, 211, 212-214, 228, 240, 291.
Mexico, 322, 324; Republic of, 372, 374, 396. Michigan, 274; copper mining, 71; Hebrews in, 88; banks in, 96. Middle States, conditions of labor in, 180.
Military service, 13.
Mill owners, Southern, 68. Milwaukee, 116, 118, 123. Mining territory, copper and iron ore, 274.
Minneapolis, 59.
Minnesota, 59-60, 96, 138, 274. Mississippi River, east of, 81. Mississippi Valley, 68, 86.
Missouri, 67, 72, 79, 166. Mitchell, Senator, 319-320. Mohammedans, 236. Money abroad, transmission of, 106; by immigrant bankers, 108. Montana, 166. Montenegrin, 33, 291. Montenegro, 24. Moravian, 33, 272. Moravians, 126, 281, 284. Morgantown, W. Va., 69.
Naples, Bank of, 107. "Native American" movements, 42, 295-297.
Nativism a national question, 296. Nativist candidate for Congress, 296; nativist societies, 296. Naturalization, 270; papers of, 82; laws of, 286. Neapolitans, 267.
Negroes, 46, 85, 137, 179, 285; fathers, native-born, 283. Neill, Charles P., 4. i Netherlands, the 24, 49. Newark, N. J., 69. New Bedford, Mass., 69. New Britain, Conn., 69.
New England, 69; textile centers,
276.
New Hampshire, 69, 289. New Jersey, 69, 88, 180. New Mexico, 206, 225.
New Orleans, 67-68, 283, 289. New York City, 45, 122, 128, 163, 166, 301.
New York City, immigrant banks
in, 102; investigations, 116, 121. New York, model banking law, 112;
rental average, 122; port of, 248. 297, 324; State of, 43, 86, 180. Night Court, New York City, 62. North American Civic League, 258-
259.
North American Continent, 382. North Carolina, 83.
North Central States, 79.
North European countries, 25. North Europeans, 207.
North Italians, 81.
Northwest, movements to the, 166. Norway, 24, 49.
Norwegians, 50, 59, 61, 78-79, 273, 286.
Occupations abroad of foreign-born male employees, 420. Offenses, gainful, 54. Ohio, 59-61, 71, 79.
Ohio River, department east of, 162. Oklahoma, 67, 71.
Oneida, N. Y., canning at, 86. "Order of the Star-Spangled Ban- ner," 298.
Oregon, 88, 216, 219, 225, 240. Orient, the, 135-136, 203.
Oriental countries, remittances to, 107.
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