Mr. Gallatin said, if the bill was proceeded with, he would prepare an amendment in favor of those classes of persons he had mentioned.

The bill was accordingly proceeded with; and coming to the fifth section, where it is provided, that if an alien shall continue to reside here, and shall refuse or neglect to make a report of his residence, and receive a certificate thereof, he shall forfeit two dollars, and shall be liable to be arrested as a suspected person

Mr. Gallatin moved to strike out the words printed in italic. It was sufficient, he said, that such a person should pay a fine. It was a new thing to punish a man by imprisonment, not for delinquency, but because he was suspected. A conduct of this kind had been highly condemned in another country, and he hoped it would not be adopted here.

Mr. Sewall said, it was the intention of the committee to show the nature of the offence of omitting to make the proper report; to show that such omission would lay the citizens under the suspicion of not acting openly and candidly.

Mr. Sitgreaves remarked, that if his colleague's objection only went to the words "suspected person," his motion went too far.

The question was put and negatived—37 to 36.

Mr. Gallatin then proposed an amendment to the following effect:

"Provided that any alien who was resident within the limits, and under the jurisdiction of the United States, before the 29th of January, 1795, and any alien who shall have made a declaration of his intention of becoming a citizen of the United States, in conformity to the provisions of an act establishing a uniform rule of naturalization, passed on that day, may be admitted to become citizens of the United States, according to the provisions of that act."

Mr. Craik was disposed to go much further than is proposed in this bill in restricting aliens from becoming citizens of this country. He should have no objection to say, that no foreigner coming into this country after this time, shall ever become a citizen; but he believed if this law was to have a retrospective operation on all those foreigners now residing within the United States, who have neglected to become citizens, it would be very unjust. There was a large class of persons, he said, in the country from which he came, who are not naturalized under any law, and many others who had been naturalized under the State law; about the legality of which, as had been stated, there is much doubt, though in Maryland and Virginia foreigners are still naturalized by the States, notwithstanding the law of the United States.

In deciding upon this question, Mr. C. said, it would not be proper to take into consideration emigrants from any particular country. Many of the persons he alluded to, are Germans, and well entitled to every privilege that can be given them, and whose neglect to become citizens was probably owing to their ignorance of our language and laws. He should, therefore, be in favor of this amendment, especially as far as it respects those aliens who were in this country before the year 1795.