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by representatives of the several Slav nationalities. SMITH, R. M., _Emigration and Immigration_. New York, 1890. "Assimilation of Nationalities in the United States," _Political Science Quarterly_, Vol. IX, pp. 426-444, 650-670 (1894). STEWART, ETHELBERT, "Influence of Trade Unions on Immigrants," Bureau of Labor, _Bulletin_ No. 56. STONE, A. H., "The Negro in the Yazoo-Mississippi Delta," _American Economic Association_, 3d Series, Vol. III, pp. 235-278 (1901). "The Mulatto Factor in the Race Problem," _Atlantic Monthly_, May, 1903. "A Plantation Experiment," _Quarterly Journal Economics_, 19:270 (1905). "The Italian Cotton Grower: The Negro's Problem," _South Atlantic Quarterly_, 4:45 (1905). SUFFRAGE, SUPPRESSION OF THE. Report of the Committee on Political Reform of the Union League Club. New York, 1903. THOMAS, W. H., _The American Negro_, 1901. TILLINGHAST, JOSEPH A., "The Negro in Africa and America," _American Economic Association_, 3d Series, Vol. III, No. 2 (1902). VAN VORST, MRS. JOHN AND MARIE, _The Woman who Toils_. New York, 1903. Contains introduction by President Roosevelt. WALKER, FRANCIS A., _Discussions in Economics and Statistics_, 2 vols., 1897. WARD, ROBERT DE C., "Sane Methods of Regulating Immigration," _Review of Reviews_, March, 1906. WARNE, FRANK JULIAN, _The Slav Invasion and the Mine Workers_, 1904. WASHINGTON, BOOKER T., _The Future of the American Negro_, 1900. _Up from Slavery_, 1901. WATSON, ELKANAH, _Men and Times of the Revolution_. Edited by his son, Winslow C. Watson, 2d edition. New York, 1861. WELFARE WORK, CONFERENCE ON, National Civic Federation. New York, 1904. WHELPLEY, JAMES D., _The Problem of the Immigrant_, 1905. Emigration laws of European countries and immigration laws of British Colonies and the United States. WOODS, R. A., _The City Wilderness_, 1898. _Americans in Process_, 1902. RACES AND IMMIGRANTS IN AMERICA CHAPTER I RACE AND DEMOCRACY "All men are created equal." So wrote Thomas Jefferson, and so agreed with him the delegates from the American colonies. But we must not press them too closely nor insist on the literal interpretation of their words. They were not publishing a scientific treatise on human nature nor describing the physical, intellectual, and moral qualities of different races and different individuals, but they were bent upon a practical object in politics. They desired to sustain before the
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