Imigrants in industries (in twenty-five parts)U.S. Government Printing Office, 1911 |
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Página 4
... fact , everyone has given the Commission every assistance in its efforts to secure the information desired . The Commission is placed under special obligation to four Japanese students who at different times have served it as ...
... fact , everyone has given the Commission every assistance in its efforts to secure the information desired . The Commission is placed under special obligation to four Japanese students who at different times have served it as ...
Página 9
... fact that in 1901 some 60 per cent of those gainfully occupied were engaged in agricultural pursuits . Most of the farms are exceedingly small and are cultivated most intensively . The ma- jority of the farmers are tenants of at least a ...
... fact that in 1901 some 60 per cent of those gainfully occupied were engaged in agricultural pursuits . Most of the farms are exceedingly small and are cultivated most intensively . The ma- jority of the farmers are tenants of at least a ...
Página 12
... fact , in most occupations outside of various city trades , have worked under " bosses " or contractors who serve as employment agents for one or a few employers . This has been the most characteristic thing in connection with Japanese ...
... fact , in most occupations outside of various city trades , have worked under " bosses " or contractors who serve as employment agents for one or a few employers . This has been the most characteristic thing in connection with Japanese ...
Página 28
... fact that the Jap- anese who have sent for their wives have usually sent $ 200 , $ 300 , or $ 400 to cover the expenses of the trip . The cost is too great except for those who have met with considerable success . More important ...
... fact that the Jap- anese who have sent for their wives have usually sent $ 200 , $ 300 , or $ 400 to cover the expenses of the trip . The cost is too great except for those who have met with considerable success . More important ...
Página 32
... fact in connection with the economic position they occupy a fact commented on later . Finally , the tables show that a comparatively small percentage of the number had been in this country as long as ten years , which is explained by the ...
... fact in connection with the economic position they occupy a fact commented on later . Finally , the tables show that a comparatively small percentage of the number had been in this country as long as ten years , which is explained by the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
50 cents abroad agents agricultural amount anese Angeles Asiatic Exclusion League average barber shops board and lodging branches of business business conducted California canneries capital chiefly Chinese cleaning and pressing cobblers Commission competition conducted by Japanese contractors districts domestic earnings East Indians employees engaged in business farm laborers farmers Female foreign-born Japanese French laundries groups Hawaii Hawaiian Islands incomes industry investigated Japa Japan Japanese business Japanese establishments Japanese in city Japanese laborers Japanese laundries Japanese meals Japanese restaurants Japanese shops large number larger less located lodging houses Los Angeles majority married month native nese number of establishments number of Japanese Number reporting occupations organized paid pool rooms proprietors races receive board restaurants serving American Sacramento San Francisco Seattle serving American meals speak English surplus Table tailor total number trade union United wage-earners wages white patrons white persons
Pasajes populares
Página 14 - That whenever the President shall be satisfied that passports issued by any foreign Government to its citizens or subjects to go to any country other than the United States, or to any insular possession of the United States...
Página 327 - It was clearly recognized in regard to emigration from India to Canada that the native of India is not a person suited to this country, that, accustomed as many of them are to the conditions of a tropical climate, and possessing manners and customs so unlike those of our own people, their inability to readily adapt themselves to surroundings entirely different could not do other than entail an amount of privation and suffering which render a discontinuance of such immigration most desirable in the...
Página 14 - Government shall issue passports to continental United States only to such of its subjects as are nonlaborers, or are laborers who, in coming to the continent, seek to resume a formerly acquired domicile, to join a parent, wife, or children residing there, or to assume active control of an already possessed interest in a farming enterprise in this country, so that the three classes of laborers entitled to receive passports have come to be designated "former residents," "parents, wives, or children...
Página 217 - Education is determined in its efforts to effect the establishment of separate schools for Chinese and Japanese pupils, not only for the purpose of relieving the congestion at present prevailing in our schools, but also for the higher end that our children should not be placed in any position where their youthful impressions may be affected by association with pupils of the Mongolian race.
Página 4 - Japanese or Korean laborers, skilled and unskilled, who have received passports to go to Mexico, Canada or Hawaii, and come therefrom, be refused permission to enter the continental territory of the United States.
Página 323 - States were classed as immigrant aliens; departing aliens whose permanent residence has been in the United States who intend to reside permanently abroad were clashed as emigrant aliens; all alien residents of the United States making a temporary trip abroad and all aliens residing abroad making a temporary trip to the United State?
Página 14 - Japan, contemplating that the Japanese Government shall issue passports to continental United States only to such of its subjects as are nonlaborers or are laborers who, in coming to the continent, seek to resume a formerly acquired domicile, to join a parent, wife, or children residing...