INFLUENCE OF ECONOMIC CONDITIONS 165 citizens of that country were hurrying home to answer the call to the colors for the Balkan Wars. There are, however, differences in degree of fluctuation. The decline in emigration in the prosperous years 1909 and 1910, from the high point reached in the depression year 1908, is most marked CHART 37 FructuaTioONs IN NUMBER OF EMIGRANTS FROM THE UNITED STATES TO SELECTED EUROPEAN COUNTRIES: 1908-1924. Ratio Scale ; 500,000 250000 100,000 50,000 25,000 10,000 | 5,000 i 2.500 y= foes] 1510-1078 i. 0 [ iG20T554 I I WT TF Years Ending June 30 *The annual statistics of emigration for the several countries are given in the Annual Report of the Commissioner General of Immigration, 1924, pp. 119-121, U. S. Bureau of Immigration. For list of countries classified as “old” and “new” sources, respectively, see footnotes to Table 4. for the countries of southern and eastern Europe. (See the right hand section of Chart 37). The movement to Scandinavia in 1909 and 1910 is more akin, however, to that of Italy, Austria-Hungary, and Russia than it is to the relatively small decline in Germany and the United Kingdom. Of the several emigration movements re- presented in Chart 37, the least susceptibility to employment conditions in the United States is evidenced by the emigration to Germany.