[By the Golden Gate by Joseph Carey]@TWC D-Link book
By the Golden Gate

CHAPTER X
11/27

Did it not go forth into the Gentile world on its glorious mission, and did it not convert many nations in the first ages?
Has it lost its potency to-day?
No! It is as powerful as ever to win men from their idols and their evil lives.
The question of Chinese immigration is a large one.

It has its social and its political aspects.

It is found all along the Pacific coast that Chinamen make good and faithful servants.

The outcry against them as competing with white laborers and artisans is more the result of political agitation for political purposes than good judgment.

Where they have been displaced on farms, in mills, in warehouses, in domestic life, white men and women have not been found to take their places and do the work which they can do so well.


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