Cherokee phoenix, and Indians' advocate. (New Echota [Ga.]) 1829-1834, October 28, 1829, Image 3

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CTt^nOKBU PTIOBftS AXD INDIAXS’ADVOCATE. seae M to ejta<ot>i ! tiia l ieaiurer’ii <■<!,>>>»’*. o > tho slate oi’iiin funds, and unke a re port to l lie House. Tiie bill adopted by the Council, flanking provision for suspending tlie circuit Judge, when connected with either of the parties, by affinity or consanguinity; and providing for the election of any necessary substitutes, when const ilulional object ions are made to any or all the Judges of the Supreme court, was read. After donsiderable discussion, the bill was ,ejeC,ed - Friday Oc'. 23. The Treasurer submitted a claim, on the nation, of one thousand dollars, in favor of William H. Standefcr and Ephraim Hixon, for goods lost in the year 1818. It was rejected on the ground, that one of the partners, Thomas Wilson, was a citizen of the iiation, and the said Standeler and Hixon were not acting under licence from the United States, or from the Cherokee nation. Tiie resolution submitted by the Council authorizing the editor of the Cuerokee Phoenix to translate all the laws of the nation, which are not Iranslated, into the Cherokee lan guage, and to have tho same publish ed in a pamphlet form, was read and agreed to unanimously. The select Committee to whom was referred so much of the Principal Chief s message as relate to ami- grants disposing their improvements to citizens of the United Stales, and the citizens selling to emigrants with •a view of speculation, reported a hill, which was read, and, on motion o! Mr. Baldridge, laid on the table until tomorrow. Mr Gunter m%cd to alter tho pay .of the members of the General Coun cil, so as to make the pay of tho mem bers of the Committee and Council equal. The motion was rejected For the motion.—Baldridge, Bolen, .Downing, Gunter, & Joseph Vann—5. Against the motion,—Daniel, Fore man, Griffin, Hamilton, M’Daniel, Taylor, Tirapson, and Sanders,—8. COUNCIL. Tuesday, Oct. 20 A bill providing for the publication, ixia pamphlet form, a series of essays on ‘The present crisis of the Ameri can Indians,” was received from the Committee, and agreed to by the liouse. The resolution of the Committee requiring tho Clerks of the several courts to he bound under the sanction of an oath &e. was received and a- -greed to. ^ Wednesday, Oct. 31. On motion of J. R, Daniel ol Hickory log District, a bill, making provision for suspending the circuit Judge, when connected to either of the parties by affinity or consanguinity, and the evidence which would have been given, if no such objection had been made, to be allowed to appear before the supreme Court, and providing for the election of any ne cessary substitutes when constitution al objections are made to any or all the Judges of the Supreme Court, was read. After a tedious discussion, it was, on motion of Mr. Reece of Chickamauga, laid on the table for further consideration. On motion of the Bark of Chatooga, the house resumed the consideration of the last bill laid on the table. The bill, after somo discussion, was adopt ed. A resolution, providing for any va cancy that might occui, by the re moval, death, resignation or inability of tiie Principal Chief, was received from the Committee,and was adopted without a dissenting vote. Thursday, Oct- 22. A hill, appointing Edward Graves Jo take tho journals of the Legislative Council and cause the same to he pub lished in the Cherokee language, was passed, and agreed to by Commit tee. . . A bill making regulation* for issuing permits to citizens of this nation, to bring into the country citizens of the Uited States, was received &. read. The house agreed to the bill. Friday', Oct. 23. The House commenced agreeably to adjournment. ■ A resolution was adopted, appoint ing the editor of the Cherokee Phoe nix to publish in the Cherokee lan guage, in a pamphlet form, the laws of this nation translated by Messrs. Brown and Lowrey, and to translate all the laws not translated up to the UpsL acta ef the setsiojt. Feather Greenwood On motion Chickamauga The Committee having coine down, enc legislative Council in Committee of the whole, proceeded to the elec tion of a District Judge of Hightow er. Wah-la-nc-,l , Feather, and Greenwood were nominated. First lu . it. Second ballot. Wah-la-ne-dah 20 25 O 0 11 15 Saturday Oct. 24th. of Choonn.igkee of o District, an old law, making death the penalty for selling any lands in treaty, without the au thority of the nation,was committed to writing. The hill was adopted. Womankiller, of H.ckory Log District, who is probably more than eighty years ol age, rose and spoke substant ally as fol lows in relerence to the hilit My Children, Permit mo to call you so as I am ail old man, and has lived a longtime, watching the well being of this Nation. I love your lives, and wish our people to increase on the land of our fathers. The bill be fore you is to punish wick.’d men, who may arise to cede away our country contrary to the consent of tho Council. It is a good law—it vvill not kill the innocent but the guilty. I feel the importance of the subject, and mn glad the la w has been suggested- My companions, men of renown, in Coun cil, who now sleep in the dust, spoke the same language, and I now stand on the verge of the grave to bear wit ness to their love of country. My sun of existence is fast approaching to iis sitting, and my aged bones will soon be laid under ground, and I wish them laid in the bosom of this earth we have received from our fathers who had it from the Great Being n- bove. When I shall sleep in forget fulness, I hope my hones will not he deserted by you. 1 do not speak this in tear of any of you,as the evidence of your attachment tothe country is prov ed by the bill now before your consid eration, l am indeed told,that the Gov ernment of ihe U Slates will spoil iheir treaties with us and sink our National Council under their feet.— It may be so, but it shall nol he with our consent, or by the misconduct of our people. We hold them by the golden chain of friendship, made when our friendship was worth a price, and if they ad the tyrant and kill us for our lands, we shall, in a state of unof fending innocence, sleep with the thousands of our departed people. My feeble limbs will not allow me to stand longer. I can say no more, hut. before 1 sit, allow me to tell you that I am in favor of the bill. Monday, Oct 26. A petition of Samuel Gunter, A. Campbell and G W Gunter, pray ing for the privilege of cutting out a mad from M. M’Intosh s, across the Raccoon mountain at Choctaw Kill er’s,& on to the Tennessee river, with a right to establish a ferry near where Thos. Hanison took a reservation, was received, read and agreed to. A hill from the committee, making Arkansas emigrants as soon as they enroll, not citizens of the nation, and providing means for preventing citi zens to sell their improvements 1o emigrants with penalties and author izing the Principal Chief and the Executive Council to issue orders to arrest any intruders they think pro per, to he delivered to the United States’ Agent for prosecution, was rend and laid on the table. The bill, on motion, was taken up for consideration, read a second time and adopted. The bill passed by the Council on Saturday, concerning the selling of lands, in treaty, without the consent or authority of the nation was return ed by the Commit tee with adinent- ments—The Council agreed to the amendments. A brandy decanter, capable of con taining 31 gallous, has been manufac tured at the Glass House in Boston. The editor of the Canadian Free man, having been Imprisoned ten months and twelve days, for a libel on the Attorney General of Upper Can ada, has come out, according to his account, richer, in Letter health, and twenty-eight pounds heavier, than when he went in The Treaty between Hayti and France has been finally ratified, con taining a full acknowledgment of the independence of Hayti, and establish ing commercial intercourse between the two conntries on the basis of pot* feet reciprocity. tt tkj (sab shz.i e-aT 20, 1820. 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City AD 0»p<itxa-* bhEA-UT O’W'O- V- • WGi bStO-t-uy 0 3 8Al*V 4 C-A Gotyz WP- A TAA *AP^.** AJiSP AD DbO-ttr’ D4Z8 AD DbO-£r» C GACTW 4 WI’A TS *SAP^R Eh KTA TAA ai-AWO* ihSSP^otyii 0 S 8- T>A-f* T8TPAA PRT duty AD AAT* 0»h- ^■G-* AD Qotf» Aya®<ltI,AJtf D<f *bAE -I- ©oCoiPotJ, tjw spk? Xdsya©oi,i.A^T ew 4 G<»y AA by. ADotyh G«V .IZX’FAy ?»W©1T \yA»^RA* JT.d'O-T’ *h»PAtZh- Ao4 0 S W0- IPKt A8WOTA.I* Goty D<T G- flp eerAwr D4ip Devo-xsty*. NDTIOS. T O all n’lnm it may concern, that, the undotsigned having bern appointed Administrators on the estate ofSiior Boots deceased, we hereby notify all persons in debted tothe estate to come forward and make payment, and all persons having claims against the estate to present them for payra nt w thin twelve months, at the expiration of winch time they will be de barred navment, on the claims, if ar.v .there be, as the law directs. THOS. WOODARD, JOHN RIDGE, Administrators. Oct. 28th, 1820. 2f) 0. O -\TTTZOKT. I FOREWARN all persons from trading for three notes of hand, given hv me to Robert Vann, sometime in the month of March last, each for two him red dollars, first due n 1S30, s«cond in 1S3J, an I the third in 1832, as I do not intend to pay the.-., unless compelled hv law. JOHN CAMPBELL. Oct. 28,1929. 29 3 IXFOR.MA TlOX WJ1XTE !)7 nnilE Subscriber 1’ving at th" Head of A Coosa, Ch-roxee Nat.on, wishes to know where a certain young man now re sides by the name of JOHN H. CtlBBS, by occupation a Printer, who a few months since came from McMinn county, Ea ' rennessee, and got employment in the of fice of the Cherokee Phoenix, at New E- chota for a short time; he was discontinued f om that office in the latter part of tha summer, and has remained in the neigh borhood of Qoukillogee, near that plac 4 , until a few weeks ago, when he started from that place in conmnn w lh a gentle man who was going to Macon, Georgia, l am informed by that, gentleman, that said Gihhs went on to Macon with him and 'efl him at that, place, about the 24th or 25th August and started for Milledgetille Georgia, to seek employment during the sitting ol the Legislature. If he should be at that place or any part of the Slate, I should take it as a favor if some friend (to Honesty and fair dealing*) would let me know bv mad; as said Gibbs has gone oil’ and has neglected to pav his hook account with me,—(.!) C account he owes me is nol much—but information respecting him would no doubt benefit some of his other creditors—Mr. Gibbs is rather inclined to low built, about live feet three or four in ches high, dark hair, tolerably free spoken and has a blemish in one of his Eves, which prevents him from seeing much out ni it. . It has becom"' too common these hard times for those Broad-cloth-cnat gen tlemen, if I may style them such, to make accounts in stores St move to another sec tion. They deserve the notice of public nrints as much as high-way robbers, as they are always on tli" lookout and ready tv practice fraud on the public, at large, and thc'^cannot he considered otherwise than Swindlers. > oro. m. Lavender. October 28th, 1829. 29.—If. PROSPECTUS OF THE BIBLICAL IXQVIPER. T HE undersigned propose to publish a work under the above title, which will bo principally devoted to the interpre tation of the Bible. They do not mean by this, that the pieces which the work shall contain, will all be merely exegeticnl.— Whatever may contrit ute directly to fur nish the Biblical student with the means of exegesis, it will he a leading design of the proposed work to exhibit. It is well known to every one who has any considerable acquaintance with Sa cred Literature, that there is extant a great nnmber of essa;. s, critical, philologi cal, hermeneutical, geographical, chronu logical, historical, etc. in respect to the Scriptures, which lie dispersed in numer ous volumes and tracts, published at dif ferent periods, and by many different au thors. Collections of these essays, more or less extensive, have not unfrequently been made and published on the continent of Europe. But most of thpse comprise a great deal which is now superfluous, inas much as it has been superseded by the la bours of recent critics, who have been more thoroughly versed in Sacred Literature. The republication, therefore, of any col lection of essays such as are now s^ioken of, which was made souip time since, pro bably would not meet with sufficifcht en couragement, at the present time, to re munerate the expense. Nor would it ef fect all the good which is desirable. There are, however,’ in most ofthe cri tical collections to which a reference has now been made, some pieces that well merit a repubHcation, and which would be very useful to every student ofthe Bi ble. If these could be selected, and em bodied in a convenient work of a moderate bodied in a convenient work of a moderate price, they would furnish an im|*ortant aji- E aratus for sacred study, & save the tron- le and expense of procuring a great num ber of volumes, not a lew ol w h - h a. e noj only costly, Dut exceedingly difficult to be obtained. One object of the Biblical Inquirer, is;. the publication of such a selection. Bui this is riot the only one. It is designer^, that every number shall contain one or more original pieces; and these wdl usuah- ly be ou topics connected with the inters pretation of the Scriptures, or els" cohsist of direct explanations of the Scriptures, themselves. Experiment has often shown, that the mere republication of pieces, how ever striking or useful they may in them selves he, wiil not create sufficient interest in the public mind, to sustain such an un dertaking. Original matter, theiefore, will be a prominent object, in respect to every number ofthe proposed work. The nclil o Bibl ical investigation is boundless; and there never can he a want of interesting matter lor - publication.— Whether the editors of the present work will'ne able to supply, in any way, that which will interest and satisfy the Biblical students of our country, remains to bfe proved by experiment. They can only promise to spare no efforts in their power, in or ! ev t o accomplish (his object. w- Wherc Selections are repuhl’. hed, it o originals are German, French, Greek, Le brew, Syriac, or Arabic, they will h® nnr- formly translates. Such pieces also as are written in Latin, which is full of rnodf in idiom, and is difficult to he icad, unless by the more experienced philologist, will be translated. But where the Latin is rosy, the original itself will occasionally be | ub . lishcd; unless it should appear from ex pe» pertinent that the B.blicai students of our country would prefer another tnctb'vl ef publication. But where the editors select any [ ;tce whatever, it is not their intention merely to. republish it, whether translated or not.— Most pieces published abroad, need some adaptation to om own country and tlr- pres ent times. Some pieces, very valuable in mo t respects, contain sentiments, now ;■ nd then, which need correction, or expia lo tion, oi additional support. It is iiit' nued, that they shall he always adapted to Ameri can readers, by additions of such a nature as shall he needed; which, however, wilt he carefully distinguished from the oiigm^ als. . . ... It may he proper to add, that altiiougijj the work is designed principally ft r the. use of such as devote some portion of tin ir studies to the critical investigation ofthe Scriptures, it is not intended that if should be exclusively devoted to th s pur pose. Occasional essays of a Do f inal nature, and also on subjects pertaining to Ecclesiastical History and Sacred Uheto-. lie, vvill be inserted, in order to give va riety and interest to the whole. The work is not designed to be of au ephemeral character. The editors aim at' comprising in it, what will he useful at any future period as well as the pr-sent. Of course, they do not wish the public.to un derstand, that the Biblical Inquirer is toy- take the form of a Review. Reviews o* books will lie a subordinat object with them and vvill he attended to more in the way of brief critical notices, than any other/ When the principles of books become mailers of rficussion, then, a re. ew of them may be deemed expedient or nccetj* sarv. At the c’osc of every number, will be added a list of any new. and interesting- works on criticism or theology,'publish,ri in Europe or elswherc, with a briel drsig* nation of their character, when it is known, in order that cvcrv Biblical stu 'out may become acquainted -with what is doing, among critics and theologians, with res, pcct to the interests of sacred learn ing. •Every essay vvill have the name of the writer or translator affixed to it. In this way, the public will know on whom t ( o fix the responsibility of any erroneous senti* merits or adventurous opinions. The editors do not intend to he responsible for the correctness of all that is published; and they expressly reserve to themselv as the liberty of adding notes or comments On any sentiment or affirmation, whi-h they may think to be erroneous, or not well supports ed. It is obvious, that the kind .of printing which such a work will demand, must be far moreexpensive St troublesome than as ordinary English page. It vvillbe impossible, therefore, with anv rational prospect ofev- ®n a very mod rate remuneration, to make the work as cheap as a mere English work of til® same extent might he afforded. Tiie fale of of the work, even if it should sue** cenl well, cannot be expected, at th- must, to be more than very limited. It is no^ propose 1 as a matter of gain, but as a help tothe student of the Bible, which may bq. ofsotne utility in promoting the important objects which he has in view. M. STUART. C.E. STOWE. Andover, Theol. Sem. Aug. 18, ld-lO.* CONDITIONS. 2. The work vvill be published quartef-" lv, each number to contain, on an average-; about 25d pages. 2. For convenience’sake, the form will, be in duodecimo, like that of the most pop ular critical works on the continent of Eu# rope. 3. The price to subscribers willl be one dollar for each number, payable always when the same is delivered. 4. The publication will commence, as soon as a sufficient number of subscribers^ is procured to afford a prospect of remiv* neratingthe expenses, tCPCommunications respecting this work may he addressed (jiostar® paid) to Fdaoo and Gould, Andover, Ms. IfiAWS ' OF THF CHEROKEE NATI01# Ftftt SALE U Lit By