Manufacturing communities, 70-79. McClellan County, 94. Massachusetts, 105, 117, 279, 322,
327.
Meriden, Conn., 72.
Mesaba range, the, 73. Mexicans, the, 65, 214; their increase in number, 221; the number of, 227; occupations of, 227; wages of, 227; characteristics of, 228-230. Mexico, inspection on the borders of, 354-355, 425, 441. Michigan, 105, 294. Military service, 14.
Milwaukee, Wis., 128, 131, 133, 136, 304, 313.
Mining communities, 70-79. Minneapolis, Minn., 61, 62, 67. Minnesota, 105, 294. Missionaries, at Ellis Island, 265. Money, the amount on arrival, 195- 196, 423; the amount sent abroad,' 105.
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Occupation abroad of immigrants, 493-501.
Occupations of immigrants, 31, 32, 153, 312.
Offenses of personal violence, 55. Ohio, 105, 117.
Oneida, N. Y., 89.
Order of the Star Spangled Banner, 322.
Oregon, 233, 235, 238, 241, 256. Oriental immigration, 231, 363, 369-
370, 413; social and political ob- jections to, 258-260. Oriental people, the, prejudice against, 215-216.
Orientals, advantages of contact with the educated, 219. Overcrowding, 131-133, 141-143 (see also Congestion).
New York City, 128, 131, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 140, 176, 179, 265, 277, 288, 303, 304, 313, 320, 355. New York City Magistrate Courts, records of, 54.
New York City Night Court, records of, 64.
New York Court of General Ses- sion, records of, 54.
New York State, 105, 117, 193, 279. Non-immigrant aliens, data regard- ing, 558-559.
North American Civic League, the work of, 276.
Norwegians, the, 52, 61, 63, 82, 308.
Pacific coast, immigrants to the, 214-230.
Pacific Islands, the, 42.
Padrone system, the, 97, 179-180. Panic, effect of on deposits, 115. Panna Marya, Texas, 92.
Parochial schools, 77, 120-121, 271,
311-314.
Passaic, N. J., 72.
"Passenger Cases," the, 328.
Passports, 22, 415.
Paterson, N. J., 72, 213.
Pauperism, 41.
Paupers, 43, 49, 357, 360-361. Penal institutions, records of, 54. Pennsylvania, 193, 222, 294, 295. Percy, Le Roy, 3. Periodicals, in foreign tongues, 34. Permanency of residence, 273. Philadelphia, 128, 131, 136, 137, 323. Physical condition of immigrants, 28. Pittsburgh, Pa., 72, 176, 179. Polish, 48, 52, 56, 61, 62, 63, 73, 75, 83, 92-93, 96, 97, 98, 109, 126, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 138, 144, 148, 151, 181, 287, 302, 307, 308, 315, 316.
Political condition of foreign-born male employees, the, 475-476. Political dangers of unrestricted im- migration, the, 213. Political persecution, 10.
Population of the Pacific coast, the, 220.
Population of the United States, lit- eracy of the, 488-490.
Portage county, 92. Porto Rico, 130.
Portuguese, the, 83, 95, 151, 220, 221, 226, 236, 259, 304, 307, 315, 316.
Press of immigrants, 118-119. Priests, the influence of, 272. Procurers, debarred, 65, 416. Property-holding, 294-299; in Wind- ber, 296; in Steelton, 297. Prostitutes, debarred, 65, 416; methods of entry and exploitation, 66, 400 (see also White slave traffic).
Protection of immigrants, the, 261, 362.
Providence, R. L., 72.
Public affairs, interest in, 290-293. Public charges, 392-394.
Race distribution of industrial work- ers, the, 518-519.
Race prejudice, 214-216. Racial Displacements, 205-207, 222- 223.
Racial tendencies, 49. Radom, Ill., 93. Railroads, laborers, racial classifica- tion of, 180-181.
Railroads, the activities of, 280. Railway companies, the, 21. Read, the ability to (see Literacy). Refugees, religious and political, 365-366, 414.
Religious persecution, 10, 11. Religious work, opportunity for, 79. Remedies, 357-376; few new laws
needed, 357-358; industrial condi- tions demand restriction, 358-359; recommendation of the immigra tion commission, 359-365; discus- sion of proposed legislation, 365- 376.
Rent, as a factor in congestion, 134- 135; in its relation to standards of living, 143-144. Residence, period of in the U. S., 497-499.
Restriction, the imperative need of,
211, 358-359; methods of, 364; movement for, 332; principles of, 363-364; for a fixt number, 340- 343, 374-375 (see Appendix B, Sid- ney L. Gulick's plan), 464-466; retardation in schools, 307-311. Returned immigrant, 16, 20, 36-40. Residence, length of, 181-182. Rochester, N. Y., 72. Roman Catholics, 320; opposition to, 322.
Roosevelt, Theodore, his views re- garding immigration, 14. Rossford, O., 72. Roumanians, the, 56, 76, 142, 144, 151, 181, 183, 185, 302, 315. Rural communities, per cent. of peo- ple in, 536.
Russia, attitude toward emigration, 15; ticket agents in, 22. Russians, conviction of for larceny, 56; in agriculture, 82, 142, 151, 181, 183, 224, 302, 315. Ruthenians, the, 143, 144, 315.
Saint Louis, Mo., 176. Saint Paul, Minn., 176. Saloons, 126.
San Francisco, 232, 235, 283, 313. Sanitation, 136-137. Scandinavians, the, 271. School attendance and progress, 302-314; scope of, 302-303; data regarding public schools, 303; in New Orleans, Kansas City, Duluth, Chelsea, Boston, New York and Chicago, 303; races in, compared, 304; retardation in, 307-311; parochial schools, 311; higher edu cational institutions, 311-312; teachers, 312-314; statistics of, 587. Schools, assimilafive force of, 304 313.
Scottish, the, 48, 61, 63, 148, 270, 287, 293, 295, 307, 313. Scotch-Irish, the, 11. Seamen, aliens, 360, 445-448. Seasonal laborers, 95-99; races of, 96, 97; wages and hours among, 97, 98; housing conditions of, 98; standards of living among, 98; in the West, 224-225. Segregation of immigrants, the, 76- 77, 270-272.
Servians, the, 73, 76, 138, 142, 144, 295, 302, 315, 316. Settlements, work of, 277. Sex, the, of immigrants, 29, 30. Sicily, the returned immigrant in, 20. Sicilians, the, 86, 87, 98, 287, 288. Skull, shape of the, 286-287. Sleeping-rooms, congestion in, 143. Slovaks, the, 38, 73, 75, 76, 83, 94,
126, 130, 132, 133, 144, 148, 151, 181, 189, 225, 287, 295, 302, 307. Slovaktown, Ark., 94. Slovenians, the, 38, 132, 133, 134, 135, 137, 143, 224, 225, 295, 298, 302.
com-
Stature of the immigrant, the, 289. Steamship agents, 106, 107; panies, 21, 45, 417-427. Steelton, Pa., number of immigrant business establishments in, 125; property-holding in, 297.
Steerage, the, 361. Steubenville, O., 72.
Stock raising, 82.
Strike breakers, immigrants as, 222. Sunnyside, Ark., 86. Supreme Court of New York State, records of, 54.
Swedish, the, 48, 82, 132, 133, 135, 136, 138, 148, 292, 293, 304, 308. Swiss, the, in agriculture, 82. Syphilis, 48.
Syrians, the, 38, 52, 73, 96, 98, 130, 133, 137, 138, 302, 315, 316.
605
United States Geological Survey, the, bulletin of, 202. Unrestricted immigration, the, effect of, 211-213.
Urban communities, per cent. of peo- ple in, 584.
Utah, 241, 242. Utica, N. Y., 72.
Visits abroad of foreign-born male employees, 492.
Wage-earners' views of immigra tion, 2.
Wages, 12; in the West, 222-223; effect of competition of Orientals on, 257-258; how immigration has checked increase in, 207-208; those of seasonal farm laborers, 97-98 (see also Earnings). Washington, 221, 222, 223, 233, 235, 238, 241, 247, 256. Water supply, the, 137. Webb law, the, 472-474.
Welsh, the, 73, 75, 148, 293, 307, 308.
West Virginia, 294. Wilmington, Del., 72. Windber, Pa., 74;
immigrant churches in, 120; property-holding in, 296.
Wheeler, William R., 3. White slave traffic, the, 64-68, 361; administration of law regarding, 67; economic causes of, 64; legis- lation as to, 67, 337-338, 416-417, 434, 437, 467-471, 514-515; races engaged in, 66; results of, 66. Whiting, Ind., 75.
Wives, location of, 514-515. Working conditions, among seasonal laborers, 193.
Wyoming, 235, 241.
Young Men's Christian Association, work of, 274-276. Youngstown, Ohio, 72.
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