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Show trr I co-'rts. .?":-.''." ''. ca.ifil tr.e ' ' "i ' f i J l ' t-ction maki: r J. . J : .. , 8 n i "-' :.' . -1, n in r n i r ( i ' h ,r.d e '(ft I i ' i . . f Ui.-nro- ti0. -ih.J c t:.e r t 0. rf J by 1..T. ii, i ; 1 1 . - t ftr.A out I e or o. 'ected to i re 1 t y a vote of t) to . .' 2. r. Cairtell of Kansas 1(1 in a t t against tne nectioti empowering lo afnts of tne bureau of inirr jrcuion iii-naturalization iii-naturalization to examine' Into the meih-oda meih-oda employed In t aturaliznuon proceedings proceed-ings by the court, on the f round that It m clothing a bureau chief with too much power and that It wouij be humil-. latins to a Jurie or oir!i of a court to have aome cler Invent ,i ate him. The amendment striking out eection four of the bill prevailed, 60 to &9. The bul w under -consideration when the House adjourned... ad-journed... . . ill AA ,A . J. u Ui i::.3C:::cnS;::c;i ' WASHINGTON, May li.-Ar.r the passage of the naval appropriatltU bill the House went Into committee of the whole to consider the so-called naturalisation natur-alisation bill, which has been continuing Order for two months. "Naturalization Is a farce In this country." coun-try." said Mr. Hepburn of Iowa. In fifty years, he said, be had known but one refusal re-fusal on the part of a. Judge to naturalise an alien. "It -la a notorious fact,' remarked re-marked Mr. Hepburn, "that courts admit men aa a matter of courts. They are generally advised that the applicant la not competent for naturalisation, but making- cltUens goes on without hindrance hind-rance Tha naturalUatlon law U looked; upon as a joke." - . . , . He believed that naturalisation should be looked upon as a boon, and that If sacrifices sac-rifices must be made In getting to courta of competent Jurisdiction for purposes of naturalisation that the object attained was worth - taa aacrWoe. Mr. ; Hepburn was ot the opinion that frauds In the issuance is-suance of naturalisation papers were per-' per-' fetrate In Fate courts ttot In Fed- |