i 
- 
i 
4a, ME ae 2 
vated in tropical and —. exotic sae — five years, was reported 
on the 26th day of April fig ” sae and committed to a Commit- 
tee of the Whole House to-morrow ;” that 4 as that period had not arrived 
the city of Campeachy a supplementary memorial, to solicit that said bill 
might become a law, with snch modifications as the wisdom and justice of 
that Congress should suggest ; and that, as said supplementary memorial 
was irl apparently, ever Fpredented, your rmeatorinibay has come to this city 
of Washington, with the hope of attracting the by 8 oe of Congress to 
HENRY panned 
Wasuineron, D. C., Retitonber 8, 1837. 
te 
Pietracd of a letter to General Jey — the Secretary of War, dated 
uly 25 
a Iti is trne that the Seminoles dwell i in an inhospitable and deadly cli- 
mate, and occupy inaccessible swamps and morasse s, Which are not sus- 
ceptible of cultivation or improvement by the whites ”— Globe, March 
1838. 
Raipict of a letter "deat General Jesup to the Secretary of War, dated 
t Jupiter, February 11, 1838. 
* nae Sect ded opinion is that, unless immediate emigration be abandoned 
he war will continue for years to come, and at constantly accumulating 
se. Is it not, then, well worthy the serious consideration of an en- 
ned Government, w whether, even if the wilderness we are traversing 
lighten 
could be in by the white man, (ones is not the fact,) the ubject we 
are contending for org be worth the cost? I certainly do not think it 
oy indeed, Ido n echexier the aihtty south of Chickasa-hateh — 
orth the medicines we shall expend in driving the Indians from it””— a 
: Globe, March 16, 1838. 
