Rising Sun Times, Volume 4, Number 177, Rising Sun, Ohio County, 8 April 1837 — Page 1
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II Y ALEX. I" LEX. RISIIVC S1LY, INDIAXA, SAIOtDAY, APRIL. 8, 1837. VOiOIE 8V.--,0. 177.
BY AUTHORITY. Laws of the United States Passed at the second SesMtm of the Twenty-fourth Congress.
PcRLK.No. 10. AX ACT making appropriations for the naval service, for the year one thousand eight hundred and thirtv-scvcii.
lie it enacted by thc Semite and House
of Representatives of the United States of
America in i on;ress assembled. I hat the
following sums lie appropriated for the naval service, for the year one thousand eight hundred and ihirtv-sevcn, in addition to
the unexpended balances of former appropriations, to wit : For the pay of commissioned, warrant, and ncttv officers, and of seamen, two nht-
lion four hundred and liftv-four thousand
six hundred and eighty-six dollars; To enable the President, provided he should deem it necessary to oiler a bounty for the purpose of promoting the enlistment of seamen, seventy-two thousand dollars; For pav of superintendents, naval con
structors, and all the civil establishments
at the several yards, sixty-nine thousand
four hundred and seventy dollars; For provisions, seven hundred and sixty
two thousand eight hundred and sixtv-live
dollars;
For repairs of vessels in ordinary, and the renairs and wear and tear of vessels in
commission, one million two hundred and
fifty thousand dollars; For medicines and surgical instruments hospital stores, and other expenses on account of the sick, thirty-nine thousand do! lars; For improvements anil necessary re
pairs ot the navy vara at f'oiisnioutn, .cv
Hanmshiro. forty-seven thousand seven
hundred dollars ; For improvement and necessary repairs of the navy yard at Charlestown, Massachusetts, one hundred and twenty-four thousand dollars; For improvement and nccesssry repairs of the navy yard at Brooklyn, New York, sixty-two thousand five hundred dollars; For improvement and necessary repairs of the navy yard at rhiladelphla, Pennsylvania, thirty-lour thousand eight hundred and sixty dollars; For improv eniont and necessary repairs of the navy yard at Washington, fifty-two thousand eight hundred and lifty dollars; For improvement and necessary repairs of the navy yard at Gosport. irginia. one hundred and forty thousand live hundred dollars; For improvement and necessary repairs of the navy yard near Pensacola, seventyeight thousand dollars; For ordnance and ordnance stores, seventy-two thousand dollars; For defraying the expenses that may accrue for the tol lowing purposes, to wit: for the freight and transportation of materials and stoics of every description; for wharfage and dockage; storage and rent; traveling expenses of officers and transportation of seamen; house rent for pursers when attached to yards and stations where no
house is provided; for funeral expenses ; for commissions, clerk hire, otlice rent,
stationery, and fuel to navy agents, for
premiums and incidental expenses ot re
cruiting; lor apprehending deserters; lor compensation to judge advocates; for per diem allowance to persons attending courts martial and courts of inopnry : lor printing and stationery of cveiy description, and for working l lie lithographic press, and fur books, maps, charts, mathematical and nautical instruments, chronometers, models, and drawings; for the purchase and repair of lire engines and machinery, and lor the repair of steam engines: for the purchase
and maintenance of oxen and horses, and
for carts, umber wheels, and workmen
tools of everv description: for postage ot
letters on public service: for pilotage and
towinr ships of war; for cabin furniture ol
vessels in commission; taxes and assess
ments on nuhlie r.ronert : lor assistance
i ii - ... rendered to vessels in distress; tor men
tal labor at navy yards, not applicable to anv other appropriation : for coal and other
full, and lor candles and oil; for repairs ot
magazines or powder houses; for preparing
moulds fur ships to he built, and tor no oilier purpose w hatever, three hundred an. thirty-seven thousand six hundred dollars
For contingent expenses for objects not
herein bctorc enumerated, three thousa dollars;
For pay of the officers, non-commission-
cd olhcers, musicians, and privates, am . .1. . IV . .
subsistence 01 me "uiccrs ot the marine
corps, one hundred and sixty-three thou sand and nineteen dollars and sixty cents For the provisions of the, nononunis
sinned otlicers, musicians and privates scr
Vinson shore, servants and washerwomen
thirty-three thousand tour hundred and
twentv-iight dollars and eighty cents;
For clothing, thirty-eight thousand six
hundred and fifty-live dollars;
For fuel, fourteen thousand five hundre
and eighty-nine dollars;
For keening the present barracks in rc
pair until new ones can be erected, and for
the repairs of barracks at head-quarters and Portsmouth, New Hampshire, ten
thousand dollars;
For the transpoi tation of officers, non
commissioned officers, musicians, and pri
vates, and expenses ot recruiting, ten thousand dollars ;
For medicines, hospital stores, surgical
instruments, and pay of matron, four thousand one hundred and ihirtv-nine dollars
?nd twenty-nine cents;
l or contingent expenses ot said corps, freight, ferriage, toll, wharfage, and cart
age, per diem allowance for attending
courts ot inquiry, compensation to judge advocates, house rent where there are no public quarters assigned, incidental labor in the quartermasters department, expenses of burying deceased persons belonging to the marine corps, printing, stationery, forage, postage on public letters, expenses in pursuing deserters, candles and oil for til? different stations, straw for the men, barrack furniture, bed sacks, spades, axes, shovels, picks, and carpenter's tools, seventeen thousand nine hundred and seventyseven dollars and ninety-three cents; For military stores, pay of armorers, keeping arms in repair, drums, fifes, lings, accoutrements, and ordnance stores, two thousand dollars;
E or launching and securing the ship of
(he line Pennsylvania, one hundred thousand dollars; For building and equipping two sloops of war, from frames already provided under former appropriation?, two hundred and eighty thousand dollars; And also six vessels of war, if not less than ten, nor more than eighteen guns, four hundred thousand dollars, in addition to any materials on hand; For erecting and turnishing a new hospital building, and for a dwelling for an assistant surgeon; for the repairs ot the pre
sent building, and for ail expenses upon
their dependencies near Pensacola, forty-
seven thousand live hundred dollars;
For erecting a sea-wall to protect the
shore, lor enclosing the hospital grounds
for completing the basement of south wing.
for repairing damages sustained from arc-
cent gaie, and for all other expenses upon
the dependencies ot the hospital near .Nor folk, eighteen thousand dollars;
! or graduat ing and enclosing the grounds bout the naval asvlum, near Philadelphia,
and for all other expenses upon the build
ing and its dependencies, ten thousand tour hundicd and sixty dollars;
lowards an extension of the hospital building near Brooklyn, New York, for
enclosing the grounds, and for all other
expenses upon its dependencies, sixty-six thousand dollars; For the completion of the present hospital building near Boston, and for all expenses upon its dependencies, one thousand three hundred and fifty dollars; For the repair of the enclosure, and for the sea-wall of the magazine upon Ellis's island, in the harbor of Xew York, one thousand two hundred and lift v dollars;
For the completion of the enclosure of
the magazine near Boston, the w harf and other dependencies, two thousand seven hundred and titty dollars; For the purchase of that portion of land, belonging to the town of Portsmouth, Yirginir., enclosed by the walls of the navy yard at (iosport, four thousand seven hundred and seventy-nine dollars; For defraying additional expenses that may be incurred in making an examination and survey of the harbors of Beaufort and Wilmington, in North Carolina, with a view to determine the respective facilities and advantages for the establishment of a navy yard, fifteen hundred dollars; For the survey of May riv er, from Tv-
bce bar to the Hunting island, fifteen huu-
Ired dollars lor the same object;
For payment to Thomas J. Harris of his
roporticn of the sum of two thousand dol-
irs, appropriated by Congress, for the
apturc ot a piratical lelucca in eighteen undred and twenty-three, twenty-nine
ooars aii'l sixteen cents:
I'odclrav the expense of examining the
hoals ot Geonre's Bank, for the niirnoso
1 determining upon the practicability of reeting a light-house noon the same, (in
ud ot the general appropriations for the
navy.) five thousand dollars.
Skction 2. And be it further enacted.
Phut the following sums, being the uncx-
ciKleil balances ot tormer appropriations
which have been carried to the account of
I he surplus fund, lie. and the snmn urn
hereby rc-approprialcd, to be paid out of
uiy money unappropriated m the Trcasu
rv, iz:
For carrying into ellect the acts for the
suppression of the slave trade, includin
their support in the United States and for a term not exceeding six months after their
irrival in Africa, of all persons removed
from the United Slates under the said acts.
leven thousand four hundred and thirteen
dollars and liftv-seven cents;
For payment of prize money to the ofh
tively due, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated. Sectiox 4. And be it further enacted, That the sum appropriated at the last session for the erection of a brick enclosure of the navy yard at Pensacola, shall be erected to suit the present plan of the yard, and in such manner as the navy commissioners shall direct.
Si.ctiox 5. And be it further enacted, That under the laws providing for the grad
ual improvement of the navy, the President he authorized to cause articles of a durable
cha racier to be purchased for the arma
ment and equipment, as well as tor the building of vessels.
JAMES K. POLK, Speaker of the House of Representatives. W. R. KING, President of the Senate pro tempore. ArrnovED. March 3d, 1S37. ANDREW JACKSON.
For the Kickapoosj six thousand five I provided for by the ninth section of the act
hundred dollars
For the Kaskaskias and Peorias, three thousand dollars; For the Kaskaskias, Peorias, Weas, and Piankeshaws, nine hundred and forty dol
lars;
of June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and
thirty-four, two hundred and forty dollars;
For agricultural assistance for the Sacs
and Foxes, in addition! to the amount here
tofore allowed, and to which they arc entitled by an equitable construction of. the
miess
Public No. 20. AN ACT making appropriations for the
current expenses of the Indian Department, and for fulfilling treaty stipulations with the various Indian tribes, for the j car eighteen hundred and thirty -seven. Be it enacted by ihc Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the following sums be, and they are hereby, appropriated, for the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven, for the
purpose of paying the current expenses of
the Indian Department, and ot fulfilling treaty stipulations with the various Indian tribe?, to be paid out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated; that is to say; For the pay of the superintendent of Indian afiairs at St. Louis, and the several Indian agents, as provided bv the act of
June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and thirty-four, twelve thousand dollars; For the pay of sub-agents, authorized by the same act, ten thousand dollars; For the pay of interpreters, as authorized by the same act, eight thousand seven
For the Piankeshaws, thirteen hundred treaties of the fourth of August, eighteen
dollars; hundred and thirty; seven hundred and for-
For the W'ens, three thousand dollars; ty dollars;
rsr the Delawarcs, ten thousand two For the purpose of supplying a deheicn-
hundrcd and forty dollars: cv in the sum applicable to the payment cf
For the Shawnees, six thousand nine annuities for eighteen hundred and thirly-
hundred and forty dollars; pix? caused by the retention, as coinmis-
ror the Shawnees and Delawares, five sions on disbursement, bv Lieutenant N.
hundred dollars; J. Eaton, United States army, of this a-
ior the Shawnees and Senccas of Lew- mount, two thousand seven hundred and
istown, one thousand nine hundred and for- eighty-nine dollars: Provided ahrays, ty dollars; That this appropriation shall not be so con-
ror the Senecas of Lcwistown, two struedas to give any sanction to anv ois-
thousand five hundred and forty dollars: bursing officer in retaining commissions
For the Choctaws, fifty-four thousand on anv sum ofmoncvpaid bv him in pur-
eight hundred and twenty dollars; suance of treaty stipulation; but, on the
For the Chickasaws, six thousand dol- contrary, it is still considered the duty of
ars; the proper olhcers to use all legal means to
For ihc Creeks, forty-seven thousand compel the payment of said sum of two
eight hundred and sixty dollars; thousand seven hundred and eighty-nine
For the Quapaws, four thousand five dollars, retained by Lieutenant N. J. Ea-
hundred and forty dollars; ton;
ror the ! londa Indians, nine thousand lor payment of balance due Andrew S.
six hundred and ten dollars; Hughes and Jonathan L. Bean, in compli-
r or the Pawnees, twelve thousand do!- a nee with an arrangement made with them,
lars; February fourteenth, eighteen hundred
For the Cherokees, west, six thousand and thirtv-two, bv the Superintendent of
nine hundred and sixty dollars; Indian Affairs at St. Louis, in pursuance
1'or the Ottewas and Cluppewas, sixty to instructions from the War Department
thousand eight hundred and thirty dollars; sixteen hundred dollars;
r or the Caddoes, ten thousand dollars ; yor ihc payment to Charles Rodgers the For transportation and incidental ex- appraised value of a distillery built bv him
penscs, twenty-nine thousand five hundred lror to the act of eighteen" hundred and
dollars; thirl v-four. and afterwards destroyed bv
For removal and subsistence of the order of the Indian ao-onts. and for which
Creeks, and purchase of articles according he was promised indemnity, the sum ofsixto the treaty of the twenty-fourth March, tccn hundred and ninety-two dollars; eighteen hundred and thirty-two, for the For the purpose of paving the expenses
ubsistencc of the families of the warriors
in the service of the United States, and for the expenses attending the sales of Creek reservations, and investigating the frauds
committed on these Indians, and the can
; scs of their hostility, seven hundred and
one thousand six hundred and seventy dollars ;
For the removal and subsistence of the
Scniinoles, one hundred and forty thousand
dollars
For the removal and subsistence of the
Ottawas of the Maumee, thirteen thousand
dollars ;
For the removal and subsistence of the
hundred dollars;
For presents to Indians, authorized by the same act, five thousand dollars; For the purchase of provisions for Indians, at the distribution of annuities, while on visits of business with the superintendents and agents, and when assembled on public business, eleven thousand eight hundred dollars:
For the necessary buildings required at j Pottow atamics of Indiana, and for locating
the several agencies, and repairs thereof, reservations ami lneiucniai expenses, mi
two thousand dollars ;
For postage, rents, stationery, fuel for offices, and other contingencies of the Indian Department, seven thousand dollars; For the salary of one clerk in the office of the Governor of Wisconsin Tctritory, who is ex officio supcrintendant of Indian aflairs, eight hundred dollars; For the salary of one clerk in the office of the acting superintendent of the Western Territory, one thousand dollars. For the Six Nations of New York, four thousand five hundred dollars; For the Senccas of New York, six thousand dollars; For the Ottawas, four thousand three hundred dollars; For the Wyandots, six thousand eight hundred and forty dollars; For the Wvandots. Munsccs, and Dela
wares, one thousand dollars; For the Christian Indians, four hundred dollars; For the Miamics, thirty thousand one hundred and ten dollars; For the Eel rivers, one thousand one hundred dollars; For the Pottawatamies, twenty thousand eight hundred dollars; For the Pottawatamies of Huron, four hundred dollars; For the Potawatamicsof the Prairie, sixteen thousand dollars; For the Pottawatamies of the Wabash,
twenty thousand dollars; For the Pottaw atamies of Indiana, seventeen thousand dollars; For the Chippewas, Ottawas, and Pottawatamies, thirty-four thousand two hundred and ninety dollars; For the Winnebagoes, thirty-seven thousand seven hundred and eighty-five dollars ; For the Mcnomonies, thirteen thousand nine hundred and twenty dollars; For the Chippewas, six thousand seven hundred and forty dollars; For the Chippewas, Mcnomonies, Winnebagoes and New York Indians, fifteen hundred dollars; For the Sioux of Mississippi, three thou
sand six hundred and torty dollars;
For the Yancton and Santio bands of
Siouy, four thousand three hundred and
torty dollars;
For the Ouiahas, three thousand nine
hundred and torty dollars;
ror the Sacs ot Missouri, one thousand
der the treaty with the Pottawatamies of
St. Joseph, of the twentieth September.
eighteen hundred and twenty-eight, nine
ty thousand live hundred dollars;
For the removal and subsistence of the
Chippewas, Ottawas, and Pottawatamies, under the treaty of tw enty-sixth Septem
ber, eighteen hundred and thirty-three.
and for locating reservations, and inciden
tal expenses under the treaty with the same, of the twenty-ninth July, eighteen
hundred and twenty-nine, one hundred
and thirty-two thousand dollars;
ror locating reservations, and incidental
of two Fox chiefs and their attendants, in coming to the citv cf Washington, en ne
cessary business, and returning tr. their na
tion, the sum ot filteen hundred dollars;
For the purpose of enabling the Secre
tary of War to pay a suhscripti n made m eighteen hundred and thirty, for the Indi
an department of lifty copies of (he Histo
ry ol the Indian Iribes ot North America,
with biographical sketches, to be composed
of, say, twenty numbers each, the sum of
three thousand d inars;
For the purpose of fulfilling the stipula
tion in the twentieth article of the treaty
w ith the Choctaws of the tw enty-seventh
September, eighteen hundred and thirty, providing for the education of torty Choc taw youths, in addition to the sum hereto
fore provided, the sum of two thousand dol-
ars;
For holding treaties with the various
tribes of Indians cast of the Mississippi,
iver, for the cession of lands he'd by them
respectively, and tor their removal west of Mississippi river, ten thousand dollars:
ror the purpose of delraymg the expen
ses of Lleazer Yv idioms, incoming from Green Bay, and returning home, on busi
ness relative to the Oneida Indians, the
um of five hundred dollars;
For carrying into effect the treaty with
ted the seat of Government on b
during the present winter, one thousand
dollars; For defraying the expenses of a treaty with the Wyandot Indians of Upper Sandusky, in the Slate of Ohio, one thousand dollars; For holding treaties with the various tribes east of the Mississippi river, for the cession of lands held by them respectively, and lor their removal w est of said river; and, with the Sioux for the cession of their country lying east of the .same river, and lor defraying the expenses of a more particular examination of the vacant lands west of the Mississippi, with a view to ascertain, w hether i l.e sufficient t- accomodate the tribes remaining east of said river, seventeen thousand dollars; Sittiox 'J. And be it further enacted, That the sum of five thousand dollars be, and the same is hereby appropriated, out
ol any money in the Irensury not otherwise appropriated, to enable the President of the United Sta-tes by suitable agon's to inquire what depredations were committed by the Seminole and Creek Indians on the proper!)' .f the ciii.cns of Florida, Georgia and Alabama, immediately betbrc the commencemint of actual hostilities on the part of said respective tribes of Indians; what amount of depredations w ere committed during the pendency of said hostilities, what portion of the Creek tribe were engaged in such hostilities, and w hat depre
dations nave keen commuted by a remnant of said tribe supposed to be friendly and a part of whom were actually employed against the Seniinoles, since the removal of the main body of them v. est of the Mississippi, and that the President report the information so acquired to Congress at its next session; Provided, Nothing hereinbefore contained, shall be so construed, as to subject the United States to pav for depredation not provided for. by ihc act of Apiil ninth, eighteen hundred and sixteen, and the acts amendatory th' icto, nor bv acts regulating the intercourse between the Indian tribes an 1 the Unite.' States. Si:t tiox- 'i. And be if furhi r enacted, That the President may, and is hereby authorized, to appoint, by, and with the consent of the Senate, three additional Indian agents, cue for the (reek, one for the Cherokee tribe of Indians, and one tor the tribes 'ii the upper Missouri, who shall execute ihc same duties, possess the same powers, and receive the same pay and emoluments as those now authorized by law. execute,
possess, and receive: and that the salaries ot'said agents be paid out of any money iu the Treasury not otherw ise appropriated. ArHiovi:i. March I?d, IS17.
expenses under the treaty with the Win- Mcnomonies of the third September
nebagocs of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty -nine, one thousand
dollars
For carrying into effect the ticaty w ith
the Sioux and other tribes of the fifteenth
of July, eighteen hundred and thirty, solar
as it relates to the Sioux half-breeds, com
pensation to a blacksmith under the act ol
the thirtieth, June, eighteen hundred and
twenty dollar
thou
sanu
For the Ouiahas, Iowav's, Ottocs, and i
lancton and mantle oioux, under ine tenin i ,. ,...; nlbct the (rente w i-b
article of the treaty of the fifteenth of July, thc lowavs- (1f710 CvC11,Centh September, eighteen hundred and thirty, m relation to - , ,j,irt-six. sjxlv-livo
thousand five hundred and ninety dollars;
For carrying info effect the treaties with
the Sacs and Foxes of the seventeenth, twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth Septem
ber, eighteen hundred and thirty-six, one hundred and thirty-eight thousand two hundred and forty dollars;
For carrvin"' into etl'ect the treaty with
nau-nrccds ot these tribes, one
lollars;
f or the various expenses growing out of
the location and sale of Choctaw reserva
tions, and perfecting titles to thc same, and
for additional compensation to blacksmiths,
as provided lor by thc ninth section ot the
act of June thirty, eighteen hundred and
thirty-tour, eight thousand eight hundred the Ottocs and Missourias of tin: fifteenth
six hundred and forty dollars:
cers and crew of thc late private armed For the Sacs, three thousand dollars; brig General Armstrong, and the legal rc- For the Foxes, three thousand dollars;
ror the low ays, live thousand one hundred and forty dollars; For the Sacs ami Foxes, twenty-three thousand nine hundred and twenty dollars;
ror the Sacs, Foxes, and low ays, three
.1 . - -
picsenlativcsof such as may be dead, two
thousand dollars. Section 3. And be it further enacted, That the Secretary of thc Treasury be, and he is hereby authorized to distiibutc the residue of the prize money herctolorc deposited ill thc Treasury belonging to thc crews of the men of war Bon Homme Richard and Alliance, commanded by CapI tin Jolm Paul Jones, in the revolutionary war, among the several persons entitled thereto and to pay them the sums respec-
thousand dollars:
ror the Ottocs and Missourias, five
thousand six hundred and forty dollars:
For the Kauzas, six thousand and forty
dollars;
For the Osages, eleven thousand and
torty dollars ;
i. i ii i.i. . l
eighteen hundred and imriv-six, iwo Hun
dred and eighty-eight thousand live hundred and forty dollars;
For carrvini' into ellect the treaties with
the Pottawatamies of the tilth of August, twentieth, twenty-second, and twenty-third September, eighteen hundred and thirtysix, and eleventh February, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, seventy-three thou
sand four hundred and twenty-three del-
iYui.ic No 21. AN ACT to change the tides ol' certain officers in (lie navv. Jic it enacted by the Senate onl House of Representatives of the I 'nhed States of
Amenea m Conrrcss asxeiiddcd, 1 hat from and after the1 passage of this act, all "masters commandant"1 in the navy shall he taken to bo and shall he called ;i commanders1" and ail "sailingmasters" shall be, taken to be and shall be called "masters:' but such change of title shall not impair, or in anyway affect, the rank, pay, or pri ileges. of anv master commandant or sailingmu! o.-r now in the service; and should they icceive new commissions or
warrants, ihev shall
trom iho date A I'i'KOVKI)
: toeu- presei
h:V. In:
li ely take rank
immissions.
arc
Ihi. Smi.uuiaVs vri-ii,. Dr. Sheridan, the celebrated friend ef Dean Swift, had a custom ef bringing his scholars to prayers
iu the school room at
day. I he hoys voutlv at pre. v ei":
certain hour every
were one day very tieexeeof one, who arose
uid sixty dollars
For carrying into effect the fifth and
sixth sections of the treaty with the Osages
ol June second, eighteen hundred and
twenty-five, relative to the reservations
or hall-bieeds and tor schools, two thou
sand dollars;
For carrying into ettect the sixth article
of thc treaty w ith thc Kanzas of the third
of June, eighteen hundred and t w enty-f ive,
iu relation to reservations for half-breeds,
live hundred dollars;
For carrying into effect thc supplemen
tary article ot the treaty with the 1 Ma-
October, eighteen hundred and thirty-six,
three thousand dollars ;
For carrying into oiled the treaty with
the Omahas of the fifteenth October, eighteen hundred and thirty-six, two thousand four hundred and seventy dollars;
For carrying into effect (he treaties with
the Sioux of the tenth Seplemoer, iit(centh October and thirtieth ol November, eighteen hundred and thirtv-six ,one thou
sand nine hundred and fifty dollar; For pay of four additional sub-agents, three thousand dollars; For defraying the expenses of a more
wares of the third of December, eighteen particular examination of the vacant lu-
hundrcd and eighteen, in relation to rescr- ilian country, south-w est of the Missouri
vations for schools, five hundred dollars; river, with a view to ascertain its adaption.
ror the erection of a horse-null, as slip- in quality and extent, to the accummojii-
ulatcd in the fifth article of the treaty w ith of the tribes yet to be removed, three thou-
tlie Ottocs and Missourias of the twenty- sand dollars; first of September, eighteen hundred and For holding treaties with the Sioux In-
tuirty-lhree m addition to a tormer appro- dians to extinguish their title to that part prialion, nine hundred dollars; of their lands lying east of the Mississippi
r or additional compensation to black- river, five thousand dollars;
smiths for the Cherokees, as provided for For expenses of a deputation ol the New
i the ninth section ot Ihe act ot Junethir- xork Indians to visit the country west ot tieth, eighteen hundred and thirty-four, the Mississippi with a view to the soloofiiur hundred and eighty dollars; tion of a permanent residence, eight thouFor additional compensation to a black- sand dollars; smith for the Mcnomonies, as provided for For thc expenses of a deputation of the by the ninth section of (he act of June thir- Chippewas of Suganaw for the same obticth, eighteen hundred and thirty-four, one ject, tw o thousand dollars; lmndred and twenty dollars; For defraying thc expenses of Hendrick, For additional compensation to black- a Stoekbridge Indian, and of two loway smiths for thc Senccas and Shawnees, as chiefs, and their attendants, who have visi-
.-!.. !
was so pro'
w hip them all, if fit not pointed out to I
Kit
from seeing a rat descending trom the bell rope in Ihe room. The poor hoy could hold in no longer, and burst into an immediate fit. of laughter, which set the others agoing, w hen ho pointed cot the cause. Sheridan
i i ....i.i
ii' i ri' re- m '"iu
Ol'iilC I m. h
atelv done. I h" poor pup instantly hoisted, and his
bare to the rod; when the wdly master tob! him if he said any thin
the oee :. ion.
c!
lare
:il euipnt. was
i w as immediit' m 'mils was .oMcriors laid
school-
hie on
boy as the iTeetest would forgive, 'fin
very little hesitation, w ilii the follow in';' .h. There vr.is a rat. f
1 r 'i ' nllv
mice I rem! .a.idi
.1,
!0 i oi : 'lie
:--ui; d his
toleraoii the ion, he ;it with master
( 'ame d v, n
Sheridan instead ol nionev.
tie
r want
to
o t.
iairs. ra vers.
in
a w hiopui
peed the rod. and ;ave him a piece of
ot.v:m:ss. 1 ;!ene
try, the bane of bo.ls of naughtiness, the
pline, an 1 tin" hi
; is the badge of genand mind, the nurse -top-mother of disci-
eithor ot a
inischiet
one of Ihe seven deadly sins, the cushion upon which Ihe devil chicily reposes, and a great cause not only of melancholy, but of many other diseases; for (he mind is naturally active, ami if it be not occupied about some honest business, it rushes
into mischief or sinks into
liil, i 1 1 w!:i iieholv.
Burton.
Fax vr ics. -No character in human society is more dam-orous than that ot the fanatic; because, if attended with weak ju.lc-ment. be is exposed to the suggestions ofoThers; if supported b mere discernment hois entirely governed by his own illusions, w hich sanctify his most selfish views and paFsion?. Jtavid llur.c.
