STATUS OF IMMIGRANTS IN INDUSTRIES 149
ting forces of the principal branches of manufacturing
and mining were as follows: more than one-half of
the iron and steel workers, employees of oil refineries,
slaughtering and meat-packing establishments, furni
ture factories, leather tanneries and finishing estab
lishments and woolen and worsted goods and cotton-
mill operatives; about two-fifths of the glass workers;
one-third of the silk-mill operatives, glove-factory em
ployees and cigar and tobacco makers; seven-tenths
of men and women garment makers; more than one-
fourth of the boot and shoe factory operatives; four-
fifths of the wage-earners in sugar refineries.
The native-born white Americans, or native-born
whites of native father, are employed most extensive
ly in the manufacture of cigars and tobacco, collars
and cuffs, glass, gloves, and shoes. Only a small pro
portion, ranging from one-tenth to one-fifth of the
wage-earners in the other leading branches of in
dustry in the country, are native white Americans.
The native negroes have their largest numbers of
wage-earners in cigar and tobacco manufacturing,
bituminous coal mining, construction work, and iron-
ore mining of the Southern States; considerable pro
portions are also engaged in the slaughtering and
meat-packing industry. The wage-earners of the sec
ond generation, or of native birth of foreign father,
have about the same racial distribution according to
industries as the native-born whites of native father.
French-Canadians are principally employed in the
manufacture of cotton goods, woolen and worsted
goods, in copper mining and smelting, and in the
manufacture of shoes and collars and cuffs. The
Croatians are found in the largest proportions in rail
road and other construction work, copper mining and