[90] Compare S. 4792, July 2, 1918, and S. 5001, October 21, 1918, Senate bills, Sixty-fifth Congress, Second Session.

[91] The Secretary’s letter is given in full in the Annual Report of the Commissioner of Naturalization for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1918—though it bears a date more than two months later than that of the report itself.

[92] Sixty-sixth Congress, First Session, H. R. 6176; Calendar No. 43 (Senate), Report No. 52, June 23, 1919.—Calendar Day, June 26, p. 179.

[93] H. R. 9949 (Committee print); Sixty-sixth Congress, First Session, October 15, 1919.

[94] Report of Commissioner of Naturalization, 1917, p. 27.

[95] Report of the Commissioner of Naturalization, 1918–19, pp. 30-31.

[96] That was the year (1918–19) of the emergency appropriation of $400,000, referred to heretofore in this chapter, p. 181, for dealing with persons technically alien enemies, but nevertheless individually loyal, which was used for the establishment of a new and hoped-to-be-permanent division in the Bureau, under a “Director of Citizenship.”

[97] See F. V. Thompson, Schooling of the Immigrant.

[98] Chap. viii, p. 225 et seq.

[99] Report of Commissioner-General of Immigration, 1919, p. 24.