Modern Immigration: A View of the Situation in Immigrant Receiving CountriesJ.B. Lippincott, 1925 - 393 pages |
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Page 4
... enter into the result.1 If our population , without immigration , would have been as great or possibly even greater than now , then we have pursued numerical increase by a wholly unnecessary method which has resulted in a vast racial ...
... enter into the result.1 If our population , without immigration , would have been as great or possibly even greater than now , then we have pursued numerical increase by a wholly unnecessary method which has resulted in a vast racial ...
Page 7
... entered Egypt and traveled up the valley of the Nile came , almost unquestionably , from the east , and were part of those radiations from the central focus of humanity , India . It is possible that the first men who entered the valley ...
... entered Egypt and traveled up the valley of the Nile came , almost unquestionably , from the east , and were part of those radiations from the central focus of humanity , India . It is possible that the first men who entered the valley ...
Page 22
... entered actual construction in competition with other labor and underbidding it , trouble began . In the year 1882 there were 39,000 arrivals , making a total of 130,000 already in the country . The number is decreasing owing to a ...
... entered actual construction in competition with other labor and underbidding it , trouble began . In the year 1882 there were 39,000 arrivals , making a total of 130,000 already in the country . The number is decreasing owing to a ...
Page 26
... brides " feed the flames of discontent on the Pacific Coast since they came to marry Japanese men already here , later bearing many children who in the past entered into United States citizenship although no 26 MODERN IMMIGRATION.
... brides " feed the flames of discontent on the Pacific Coast since they came to marry Japanese men already here , later bearing many children who in the past entered into United States citizenship although no 26 MODERN IMMIGRATION.
Page 27
... entered into United States citizenship although no more assimilable than their parents . HINDUS Another group of Asiatics includes the Hindu who shares popular hatred with the Japanese , and for many of the same reasons . The State ...
... entered into United States citizenship although no more assimilable than their parents . HINDUS Another group of Asiatics includes the Hindu who shares popular hatred with the Japanese , and for many of the same reasons . The State ...
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Common terms and phrases
addition admission admitted agent alien amended American appear application approved arrival assist Australia authorized become born bringing British brought Bureau Canada cause certificate charge citizen citizenship classes clerk Columbia Commissioner court customs deemed Department determination District duty effect enforcement enter entitled established examination excluded expense Favorable February fiscal five force foreign further Government granted groups hereby hundred immi immigration visé importation imprisonment intention issued Italy June jurisdiction land March master means ment months native naturalization necessary nineteen officer otherwise owner paid period permit person petition population port possession practically prescribed present prior problems Provided quota race reason receive regard regulations relating Representatives residence Rule Secretary of Labor settlers South Stat subdivision term territory thereof tion transportation United vessel