[61] While the Magyars (or Hungarians) are not Slavs, they have lived in close contact with them, and for convenience may be classed in the Slavic division; and the same thing is true of the Roumanian and Russian Jews. All these peoples come from Russia, Austria-Hungary, or the Balkan States, and represent similar customs and ideas, although they differ materially in character, as we shall see.

[62] Samuel McLanahan, Our People of Foreign Speech, 34 ff.

[63] F. J. Warne, The Slav Invasion, chap. VI.

[64] Miss Kate H. Claghorn, in Charities, for December, 1904.

[65] Charities, for December, 1904.

[66] Samuel McLanahan, Our People of Foreign Speech, 45.

[67] Louis H. Pick, in Charities, for December, 1904.

[68] Miss Emily Balch, "The Slavs at Home," in Charities and Commons.

[69] Lee Frankel, in The Russian Jew in the United States, 63.

[70] Julius H. Greenstone, in The Russian Jew in the United States, 158.