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CIIEBOKEE PHOeiVIX AND INDIANS’ADVOCA TEX
fees
them upon the basis ot truth All
‘that I said was, that ‘ the gentlemen
«l the Committee and Council will
jhave to answer for their conduct in a
coning day,” alluding to the day of
Judgment, and the bar of their Cod.
It is also reported that I expressed,
sometime afterwards, a satisfaction
mpon the romemberance that there
was a prospect of the time not being
far distant, when I could reap revenge
under the enactments of the State of
Georgia,—but this statement is as
Unfounded and as false as the oilier.
It is well calculated, if true, to in-
ju ■ & blast my character. I will not
s y that my acts were altogether
bl .moless on the occasion, but this
much I can and do say, that were the
motive by which I was influenced as
well known to my counuryraen as it is
Jo my Maker, they would not censure
in as much as some do. But every tree
will be known by its fruit, and I rest
perfectly satisfied under the convic
tion that at some day or other, my
countrymen will be convinced that
jny attachment toiny country is dura
ble.
WILLIAM ROGERS.
Resolved by the National Commitlcq
and Council In General Council Con
vened, That from and after the pass
ing of this act any citizen or citizens
of this* Nation who shall bind the ms
'selves by enrolment or otherwise a-
emigrants to Arkansas or for the pur
pose of removing out of the jurisdic
tional limits of the Nation, he, she or
they onroling or otherwise bindidg
themselves shall forfeit thereby all
the rights and privileges he she or
they may have previously thereto,
claimed or enjoyed as citizens of this
Natio 1, and shail be viewd in the same
light as others not entitled to citizen
ship, and treated accordingly.
Sec. 2.!. Be il further resolved,
that if any person or persons citizens
of this Nation shall sell or disposed of
his, her or their improvements to any
persoi or persons so enroletl or other
wise bound as above mentioned he,
she or they shall be viewed as having
disposed ofliisj her or their improve
ments to a citizen of the United
States, and shall be ineligible to hold
any office of honor, profit or trust in
this nation, and upon cpnviction there
of before any of ihe circuit courts of
the severalDistriats,bcjfined in a sum
wot less than one thousand dollars nor
exceeding two thousand dollars and
punished with one hundred lashes.
Sec. 3d. lie il further Resolved, in
order to prevent any person or persons
from screening,him her or themselves
from the penalties above prescribed
by pretending to have sold or disposed
of his, her or their improvements to a
lawful citizen and not an emigrant,
all citizens of this Nation who may
hereafter buy, sell or dispose of in
any manner their improvements to
each other, be, and they are hereby
required, the disposer as well as the
purchase?' of sutli improvements to
make affidavit, to be filed in the clerks
office of the District, before any of
the District Judges or clerks of the
several courts, that he, she or they
did not dispose or transfer, purchase
or obtain said improvement, for the
purpose of having it valued by U.
S. Commissioners or agents, or were
•not acting as agents of emigrants in
making such purchase or transferred
5m case any person or persons who
shall fail to comply with this require-
n&nt, such person or persons shall
upbn conviction before r.wy of the cir
cuit' courts in this'Nation, pay a fine
of not less than onA dollaruor excee
ding two Hundred dollaWfor every
offence so committed.
Be it further Resolved, that any citi
zen or citizens of this nation who shall
dispose of or transfer his, her or their
improvements without complying
with the requisition of the third sec
tion of this act, and the person or
persons to whom the sale or transfer
of such improvements may he made,
■should thereafter by enrolment or
otherwise become as emigrant or emi
grants, & shall get said improvement
or imy r wements valued by Agents of
the Gen. Government within thirty
days after such purchase or transfer
shall have been made, or at any time
whilst the disposer continues to remain
in possession of the same, then in that
case the person.or persons who may
havte so disposed of or transfered the
improvement or improvements as
aforesaid,-shall be subject to the same
penalty prescribed in the 2d. section
of this iu‘t, for disposing of improve
ments to emigrants.
I e it further hesoheu, that any junto
or prisons whosoever who have bonne
themselves by enrolment or otherwise
as emigrants under the treaty of May
1828,with the Arkansas Cherokees,or
who have had, or. intend to have their
improvements valued by the agents of
the Gen. Government, and do not re
move out of the jurisdictional limits of
this nation within fifteen days after the
passage of this act, they shall he
viewed and treated as intruders in the
same manner as those who may be
come emigrants hereafter.
Sec. 5th. Be it further Resolved,
that the Principal chief of the Nation
he. & he is hereby authorised, by and
with the advice of the executive coun
sellors, to order the apprehension of
any intruders within the limits ol
this nation to be delivered over to the
agent of the United States for the
Cherokees to be prosecuted under the
intercourse laws of the United States,
or to expel “or to punish them of not as
they nlertse.’’
New Echola Oct. 31, 1829.
LEWIS ROSS, Pres t N Com.
GOING SNAKE, Speaker.
W\I. S. COODYs Clk. N. Com.
JNO RIDGE Clerk N Court.
Approved—JNO ROSS.
' GEiYL.
of the whole, jiroeeeded to investi
gate the case, and c*iisumcd the
whole of’the fore noon—12 o’clock
the Council adjourned. |The Coun
cil in Committee of the Iwhole con
vened at 2 o’clock. Many documents
against and in favar of me prisoner
were read and interpretedj and at a
late hour, it was decided'that Mrs.
Pettit had a sufficient provocation to
leave Mr. Pettit s house, and that
James Peulit he compelled to pay
Elizabeth Pettit $500, and give tip
his place or plantation to her and
child.
" SUMMARY.
COMMITTEE.
Monday Oct. 1829.
The Committee met at 9 o'clock.
The Resolution on the Subject of
improvements was taken up. After
various amendments, and considerable
discussion, it was passed.
The resolution submitted by the
Council making death the penalty for
disposing or selling in treaty lands be
longing to the Cherokee nation, with
out ; uthority from the General Coun
oil. was taken up. The Committee
proposed a substitute, to which the
Council agreed.
Tuesday Oct. 27.
On motion of Joseph Vann, a reso
lution was adopted, extending further
indulgence to those citizens of the
nation who are indebted to the Treas
ury. for monies borrowed.
John Martin, Treasurer of the
Cherokee nation, made report on the
state of the funds.
A letter was addressed to the
Treasurer, informing him that the
claim of William H. Standefer and
Ephraim Uixon, against the Chero
kee Nation for goods lost was reject
ed by the Committee and Council.
- Wednesday Oct. 28.
James C. Martin presented a mem
orial, praying that a warrant be is
sued, directed to the marshal of the
nation, to bring the body of James
Pettit on the charge of bigamy and
mistreatment of Elizabeth Pettit his
Cherokee wife, A warrant was
therefore issued, & James Pettit was
arraigned before the Committee and
Council in Committee of the whole.
After examining various papers, pro.
and Con. the Committee and
Council fined said James Pettit.
$500, and declared his plantation for
feited agreeably to law, for the bene
fit of Elizabeth Pettit.
Fnday Oct 30.
A resolution was passed, respect
ing the law of 25th October, 1824.
on the subject oflettingout the Fed-
ervl road to the lowest bidder to be
kept in repair; and authorizing the
Treasurer to let out the said road on
the first of December, in eight
shares.
COUNCIL.
The Council ntet agreeably to ad
journment.
George Hicks; Chisholm and Co.
petitioned for a grant to establish a
ferry at the junction of the Oostan-
nalilee and Confisnuga rivers, or at a
suitable point above on the Ooslan
nalilec. The petition was grant
ed.
A bill froin the Committee, extend
ing further privilege to the citizens
indebted to the nation, for monies bor
rowed, was received, read anil jiass-
ed.
Wednesday Oct. 23.
On motion of Mr. Parris of Hick
ory log District, a Bill on slander was
taken up for consideration, which,
after some discussion, was laid on the
table.
James Pettit, a white man, being ta
ken by the Marshal of the nation, was
brought for trial on n charge of biga
my and mistreatment of his wife L-
lizabeth Pettit, a Cherokee —and
the Committee having come down,
the Legislative Council in Committee
January next, $3,049,542 94 of the o
jier cent, stock of March 3, 1815,
will be paid to the legal holders there
of at the Treasury, or at the Loan
Office where the same may be cred
ited. No transfer of the certificates
to he paid will be allowed after the
1st of December next.
We understand, says the Richmond
Compiler, that the four volumes of
Mr. Jefferson’s Works, have passed
the press—and that they are only
waiting the engraved portrait and the
facsimile of the original Declaration
of American Independence .to be bound
up with them, before they are distri
buted among the subscribers. 'Those
engravings are executing in Philadel
phia—and the work may now be ex
pected to issue in a few days.
The Now York Inquirer says there
is a machine in operation in that city
which makes daily 25,000 bricks,
being in operation 12 hours in each
day. .
Locusts.—A French traveller tells
us, that the Arabs of Upper Egypt
and the Red Sea make a sort of bread
of locusts, they dry them and grind
them to powder, then mix the pow
der with water and make small round
cakes; vvlii. h serve for bread when
that necessary article is scarce. So
that the account of St. John eating
locusts in the wilderness, can only be
sneered at by fireside travellers.
‘•'■Statute of Limitation.' 1 '’—Accotd-
ing to a law in the State of New
York, those concerned in the abduc
tion and murder of William Morgan,
who escape the Grand Juries until
(lie lllli iiist. being just three years
from that event, can never be indict
ed hereafter.
A Pigeon lot loose in London,
reached Maos! rich), on the Cent incut,
in six hours and a quarter, and in spite
of a continued heavy rain, which fell
during the whole time. The pigeon
must have travelled, assuming that it
took a strait line, at the rate of 45
mdes an hour.
The seventh tritji to elect a repre
sentative to Congress 'from the fifth
district in Vermont, has resulted in no
choice.
Tlie New York American statc-s,
that within a lew years, nearly a
million of capital lias been sunk in
steamboat speculation on the Hud
son.
The Rev. Philip Lindsley, Presid
ent of the University at Nashville,
-Tenn. lias been unanimously elected
President of Dickinson College, to
till the vacancy occasioned by the
resignation of Dr. Neil, and it is be
lieved be will accept the appoint
ment .
Dr. Joseph Mecklii//-v>ub-Agent at
the Colony of Liberia, has been ap
pointed by the Board of Managers of
the Society, Colonial Agent, to fill the
vacancy occasioned by r the death of
the lamented Dr. Randali.
At the late term of the Supreme
Court at Springfield, Mass. Dr. W.
S. Low ring, was fined five hundred
dollars for violating the sepulchre of
the dead.
Tile President of the United States
has received the person sent to (his
country as Charge des Affaires, by
his majesty Don Miguel, the reign
ing king of Portugal.
A writer in the Boston Daily , Ad
vertiser says, four millions of pounds
of butter are consumed in Boston ev
ery year; and one-half ot it is a slow
poison.
Several of the papers, in speaking
of the Siamese bpys, call the co-part
nership an “uunalural connexion ”
At a recent term of the supreme
court of Connecticut, held in Litch
field, Mr. James Dagget presiding,
an action was brought by the daughter
of Samuel Griswold, of Winchester,
Conn, against her father, for beating
and otherwise maltreating her—and
after a full investigation of the case
the jury brought in a verdict against
him of fifteen hundred dollars.
Geographical Society of Paris, has
offered a medal, worth 2400 francs
for the best accounts of American an
tiquities.
The Secretary of the Treasury has
given notice that, un the first day of
D J5P DOGO-GcS y.
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n
>T
s-t
LL lx- sold to the highest bidder oft
the 1st day of December next, at
ihe late residence of James Pettit neai;..
Conasauga, between sixty and seventy a! 3 *
cres of
c$Jnixr
as il stands .n the field, and from six to sev^
en hundred busli-ls of Corn in the crib, and’
twenty five stacks of
VZt • '-'-ft Tet t > '
ALSO, <vn the 2 1 of Drtceinber, at the
house of Edward Adair, st \ 'nteer. head of
CAT ! I.L, and one likely negro tnarr,
named
nil levied on ar.tlre property of James Pef» v
l‘t T to satisfy a judgment obtained against
tai l Pettit in favor of Elizabeth Pettit.--
The above propel ty will be sold unless >et
deemed.
JOSEPH LYNCH, Manhal.
Nov. 4, 1820. so ids.
INFORM.! TlON IVJNi E D.
fsHHE Subscriber li ving at the Head ol’
-R- Coosa, Cherokee Nation, vv,.J;es to
know where a certain young man now re
sides by the name of
H. GIBES,
by occupation a Printer, who a few months
smee came from JNlcMinn county, East
I ennessee, and got employment in the of
fice ol the Cherokee Phoenix, at New E~
ehota for a slioit time; he was discontinued
fiomthat office in the latter p.art ofi the
summer, and has remained hi the. n-.gh-
liorhooii ol Oouliillogee, near that place*
Until a lew weeks ago, when he stai ’4
worn that place in company with a .gent Io
nian who was going to Macon, Geo.g .T.
l am informed by that gentleman, that said
Gibbs went on to Macon with him and
left him at that place about the 24 h or
25th A ugust ami started for Millefigevdle
Georgia, to seek employment during the
sitting of the Legislature. If he should be
at that place or any part of the Srw . (
should take it as a lav or if some fiiend (to
Honesty and fair dealings) would let me
know by triad; as said Gibbs has go;., off
and has neglected to pay bis book atv urtt
with me;—the account lie owes me .s not
much—but information respecting him
would no doubt benefit some of lus other
creditors—Mr. Gibbs is rather inclined to
low built, about five feet three or loui in
ches high, dark hair, tolerably free spoken
and has a blemish in one of hi* E .es,
which prevents him from seeing much ut
ol it. It his bcconie too common these
hard times for those Broad-cloth-coai ; ■ u-
tlenion, if I may style them such, to o r. e
accounts in stores & move to a not lie'
lion. They .deserve the notice of pui.be
prints as much as high-way robber;;, as
they are always on the lookout and r v.dy
ty practice fraud on the public at laiue;
and they cannot be considered otheim.se
than Swindlers.
GEO. M. LAVENDER.
October Z9lh, 1829. 29—tf.
. li ■E'EI.KS
R emaining in the Post office
New Echota, Oct. 1, 18S9.
Walter S. Adair, Esqr; Andrew Agney-
JesepK Crutchfield; John Davis; Rev.
Francis Eler,2; Lydia Giayson: Elijah
Hicks, Esqr. George Larnpn; Richard
Rush, 5.
S. A. WORCESTER, P. M.
Oct, 21, 1829 y 28 9
OF THE CHFFOKEE NATION
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