II. _Illiteracy Among the Northern and Southern Italians._
(1) Its bearing on their desirability as immigrants.
Brandenburg: Imported Americans, IV, XII, XX.
Hall: Immigration, 54-58, 80-83.
(2) Its relation to the probable effect of a reading
test for admission.
Lord, et al: The Italian in America, VIII, XI.
Hall: Immigration, 262-280.
(3) Its bearing on their accessibility to the gospel.
McLanahan: Our People of Foreign Speech, 69-74.
Wood: Americans in Process, IX.
III. _Location of Italians After Their Arrival and Length of Their
Stay._
Brandenburg: Imported Americans, II, XIX, XXII.
Lord, et al: The Italian in America, VI, VII, IX.
IV. _The Italians in New York City and State._
Benefits and dangers arising from their presence,
and efforts made to help them.
Riis: How the Other Half Lives, V, XXIV.
University Settlement Studies, Vol. I, Numbers
3 and 4, issue January, 1906.
Reports of the Society for Italian Immigrants, 17
Pearl Street, New York City.
_Yesterday the Slav was a pauper immigrant; to-day he is what the
English, Welsh, Irish, and German miner was a quarter of a century
ago--on the way to becoming an American citizen.
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