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[46] Twelfth Census, _Supplementary a.n.a.lysis_, p. 27.
[47] _Review of Reviews_, 33:491 (1906).
[48] King and Okey, pp. 316-318.
[49] Balch, _Charities_, May, 1906, p. 179.
[50] Marshall, "Principles of Economics," p. 248.
[51] "Jewish Encyclopedia," 2:532.
[52] Balch, _Charities_, May, 1906, p. 180.
[53] P. 380.
[54] "Industrial Commission," 15:442.
[55] Commissioner-General, 1906, p. 85.
[56] Coman, "History of Contract Labor," etc., p. 47.
[57] Reports on Hawaii; Commissioner-General of Immigration. See Index.
[58] Report of the Royal Commission on Alien Immigration, 1903. Cd.
1741.
[59] Semple, "American History," etc., p. 332.
[60] Rowe, Chapter V.
[61] Census of the Philippine Islands.
[62] Lalor's "Cyclopedia of Political Economy, Political Science, and United States History," article on "Chinese Immigration."
[63] Industrial Commission, 19:679.
[64] Computed from Table VIII, p. 28 _et seq._, Report of Commissioner-General of Immigration, 1906. "Commercial" includes agents, bankers, hotel-keepers, manufacturers, merchants, and dealers, and other miscellaneous. "Unskilled" includes draymen, hackmen, and teamsters, farm laborers, farmers, fishermen, laborers, and servants.
[65] Two hundred and eighty-five thousand four hundred and sixty immigrants set down as "no occupation," including mainly women and children, are omitted from this computation.
[66] Less than one-tenth of one per cent.
[67] Industrial Commission, Vol. XV, see index, "Prepaid Tickets," p.
818.
[68] United States Revised Statutes, 1901, Section 1999, Act of July 28, 1868.
[69] Fleming, pp. 692, 693.
[70] "If I were asked what one factor makes most for the amicable relations between the races in the Delta, I should say, without hesitation, the absence of a white laboring cla.s.s, particularly of field laborers."--Stone, "The Negro in the Yazoo-Mississippi Delta," p. 241.
"There is comparatively little crime in the Black Belt and in the White Belt. It is in the counties where the races meet on something like numerical equality and in economic compet.i.tion that the maximum of crime is charged against negroes."--_Atlanta University Publications_, No. 9, p. 48.
[71] In 1905, after losing a strike in New York, the General Executive Board of the United Garment Workers of America, consisting with one exception of Russian Jews, adopted the following resolutions:--
Resolved, That the unprecedented movement of the very poor in America from Europe in the last three years has resulted in wholly changing the previous social, political, and economic aspects of the immigration question. The enormous accessions to the ranks of our competing wage-workers, being to a great extent unemployed, or only partly employed at uncertain wages, are lowering the standard of living among the ma.s.ses of the working people of this country, without giving promise to uplift the great body of immigrants themselves. The overstocking of the labor market has become a menace to many trade-unions, especially those of the lesser skilled workers. Little or no benefit can possibly accrue to an increasing proportion of the great numbers yet coming; they are unfitted to battle intelligently for their rights in this republic, to whose present burdens they but add others still greater. The fate of the majority of the foreign wage-workers now here has served to demonstrate on the largest possible scale that immigration is no solution of the world-wide problem of poverty.
Resolved, That we call on American trade unionists to oppose emphatically the proposed scheme of government distribution of immigrants, since it would be an obvious means of directly and cheaply furnis.h.i.+ng strike breakers to the combined capitalists now seeking destruction of the trade-unions.
Resolved, That we condemn all forms of a.s.sisted immigration, through charitable agencies or otherwise.
Resolved, That we warn the poor of the earth against coming to America with false hopes; it is our duty to inform them that the economic situation in this country is changing with the same rapidity as the methods of industry and commerce.
Resolved, That with respect to immigration we call on the government of the United States for a righteous relief of the wage-workers now in America. We desire that Congress should either (1) suspend immigration totally for a term of years; or (2) put into force such an illiteracy test as will exclude the ignorant, and also impose such a head tax as will compel immigrants to pay their full footing here and be sufficient to send back all those who within a stated period should become public dependants.
[72] Smith, "Emigration and Immigration," pp. 238-263.
[73] Act of March 3, 1903, Sec. 2.
[74] New York Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1898, p. 1155.
[75] Twelfth Census, "Occupations," p. clx.x.xvii.
[76] Report on Hawaii, _Bulletin_ No. 47, pp. 780-783.
[77] Report on Hawaii, _Bulletin_ No. 66, pp. 441-447.
[78] Jewish Agricultural and Industrial Aid Society, _Annual Reports_.
[79] Clyatt _v._ U.S., 97 U.S., 207 (1903); Peonage Cases, 123 Fed. 671.
[80] New York _Herald_, June 24, 1903.
[81] _The Nation_, 83:379 (1906); Durand, Herbert, "Peonage in America,"
_Cosmopolitan_, 39:423 (1905).
[82] Rosenberg, _American Federationist_, October, 1903, p. 1026.
[83] Jenks, "Certain Economic Questions," etc., p. 157.
[84] Coman, and "Reports on Hawaii."
[85] Jenks, pp. 47, 54, 55, 158.
[86] United States Philippine Commission, 1902, Part I, p. 22.
[87] Rosenberg, p. 1021.
[88] Philippine Commission, 1902, index, "The Labor Situation."