| Alfred Maurice Low - 1911 - 616 lapas
...hardest tasks, the most degraded labor paid at starvation wages and held in contempt by the " native." " The American shrank from the industrial competition...unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labor with these new elements of the population; he was even more unwilling to bring sons and daughters... | |
| Albert Benedict Wolfe - 1916 - 828 lapas
...principle of population ? But there was, besides, an economic reason for check to the native increase. The American shrank from the industrial competition...unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labor with these new elements of the population ; he was even more unwilling to bring sons and... | |
| 1917 - 888 lapas
...native population more and more withheld their own increase." The reason for this situation was that " the American shrank from the industrial competition...daughters into the world to enter into that competition." In order that there might be no doubt about his facts, Walker reen forced them with figures. Elkanah... | |
| Benjamin Alexander Heydrick - 1924 - 254 lapas
...competition thus thrust upon him. He was unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labor with these new elements of the population ; he was...daughters into the world to enter into that competition. For the first time in our history the people of the free States became divided into classes. Those... | |
| Benjamin Alexander Heydrick - 1924 - 264 lapas
...principle of population? But there was, besides, an economic reason for a check to the native increase. The American shrank from the industrial competition...unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labor with these new elements of the population ; he was even more unwilling to bring sons and... | |
| Charles Calvin Scott - 1924 - 526 lapas
...General Walker, we quote from his work, '' Discussions on Immigration and Statistics,'' pages 422-425: "The American shrank from the industrial competition...unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labor with these new elements of the population; he was even more unwilling to bring sons and daughters... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Immigration and Naturalization - 1989 - 322 lapas
...before his death, in dealing with the effect of foreign immigration upon the native birth rate, wrote: The American shrank from the industrial competition...unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labor with these new elements of population (from southeast Europe and western Asia); he was even... | |
| Canada. Parliament. House of Commons - 1921 - 1194 lapas
...proportions, amounted not to a reinforcement of our population, but a replacement of native by foreigm stock. The American shrank from the industrial competition...unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labour with these new elements of population ; he was even more unwilling to bring sons and daughters... | |
| 1904 - 1144 lapas
...the less intelligent and less progressive foreigners. In his "Discussions in Economics,"1 he wrote: The American shrank from the industrial competition...unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labor with these new elements of population; he was even more unwilling to bring sons and daughters... | |
| 1904 - 1002 lapas
...him. He was unwilling himself to engage in the lowest kind of day labor with these new elements of population; he was even more unwilling to bring sons...daughters into the world to enter into that competition. . . . The great fact protrudes through all the subsequent history of our population that the more rapidly... | |
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