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[89] "The Italian Cotton Grower," p. 45.
[90] Where two years are given, the first is for Immigration and the second for Imports.
[91] Twelfth Census, Vol. I, p. clxxvi.
[92] See _Federation_, June 1902, p. 40.
[93] Twelfth Census, Vol. I, pp. 878-881.
[94] New York _Sun_, Nov. 29, 1903.
[95] Semple, 312.
[96] Prisoners having one parent foreign are apportioned in the ratio of native and foreign parentage.
[97] Includes native-born, parentage unknown.
[98] Offenders having one parent foreign are apportioned in the ratio of native and foreign parentage.
[99] Kate Holladay Claghorn, "The Tenement House Problem," Vol. II, p.
79.
[100] John B. McMaster, "The Riotous Career of the Knownothings,"
_Forum_, July, 1894, p. 524.
[101] Cutler, "Lynch Law"; Bishop, "Lynching," _International Quarterly_, September, 1903.
[102] Bureau of the Census, Special Reports, "Paupers in Almshouses, 1904," "Benevolent Inst.i.tutions, 1904," "Insane and Feeble-minded in Hospitals and Inst.i.tutions, 1904."
[103] Munsterberg, "American Traits," p. 225 ff.
[104] Eaton, "The Civil Service in Great Britain," p. 160 ff.
[105] Muirhead, "The Land of Contrasts," p. 274.
[106] See description of the Belgium system by the author, _Review of Reviews_, May, 1900; also, "Representation of Interests," _Independent_, June, 1900; "Proportional Representation."
[107] Commons, "Proportional Representation," Appendix. Publications of the Federation for Majority Rule, Was.h.i.+ngton, D.C.
[108] Hunt, Gaillard, "Federal Control of Naturalization," _World's Work_, 11:7095 (1906).
[109] "Report to the President on Naturalization."
[110] "Naturalization Laws and Regulations of October, 1906," published by the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization.
[111] Twelfth Census, Vol. I, p. 929.
[112] Twelfth Census, "Abstract," p. 18.
[113] Twelfth Census, "Abstract," p. 19.
[114] Twelfth Census, Vol. I, p. ccxvii.
[115] Phillips, J. B., "Educational Qualifications of Voters,"
_University of Colorado Studies_, Vol. III, No. 2 (1906).
[116] Caffey, Francis G., "Suffrage Limitations at the South,"
_Political Science Quarterly_, 20:53 (1905). Report on Political Reform, Union League Club, New York, 1903.
[117] Williams _v._ Mississippi, 170 U.S., 213; Giles _v._ Harris, 189 U.S., 475; Giles _v._ Teasley, 193 U.S., 146.
[118] This does not apply to the "understanding" clause in Mississippi, which is permanent.
[119] Twelfth Census, Vol. I, pp. ccxiii, ccxv.
[120] Twelfth Census, Vol. I, pp. cciv, ccv.
[121] See "Reports on Hawaii."
[122] Kuczynski, "Einwanderungspolitik," p. 35.
[123] _Forum_, 11:634-743 (1891). Reprinted in "Discussions," etc., pp.
417-426.
[124] Professor Smith, for the year 1888, estimated the colonial element at 29,000,000 and the immigrant element at 26,000,000, applying to the immigrants the average rate of increase from births. "Emigration and Immigration," pp. 60-61.
[125] Watson, p. 522.
[126] Van Vorst, "The Woman Who Toils," p. viii.
[127] Computed from the Twelfth Census, Vol. II, p. lx.x.xvii, ff.
[128] Computed from the Twelfth Census, Vol. II, p. 312.
[129] Kuczynski concludes from his study of Ma.s.sachusetts statistics that "the native population cannot hold its own. It seems to be dying out." Could he have separated the two elements of the native population, he would have found that the immigrant element is dying out faster than the older native element. "The Fecundity of the Native and Foreign Born Population in Ma.s.sachusetts," p. 186.
[130] Twelfth Census, "Statistical Atlas," plate 98.
[131] "Fecundity," etc., p. 157.
[132] Ross, "Causes of Race Superiority."
[133] See Du Bois, "The Souls of Black Folk."
[134] Report on Hawaii, _Bulletin_ No. 47, p. 715.
[135] "Religions of Primitive People," p. 15.