41 IV SOCIAL PROBLEMS OF RECENT IMMIGRATION Difficulty of Special Studies Many persons who have spoken and written of late years in favor of restriction of immigration, have laid great stress upon the evils to society arising from im migration. They have claimed that disease, pauperism, crime and vice have been greatly increased through the incoming of the immigrants. Perhaps no other phase of the question has aroused so keen feeling, and yet perhaps on no other phase of the question has there been so little accurate information. It is doubtful whether the increased number of convictions for crime are found because more crimes are committed, or because our courts and the police are more active. It is probable that we hear more of vice and immorality in these late days, not because they are on the increase, but because people’s con sciences have become more sensitive, and in conse quence greater efforts are made to suppress them. It is certain that the injurious effect of most con tagious diseases has been very greatly lessened, and yet it is probable that we hear more regarding con tagious diseases now than ever before because we have become more watchful. The data regarding contagious diseases, pauperism, and crime, in connection with the immigrants, are extremely meager and unsatisfactory; but the Immi gration Commission made the best use possible of