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1839.- June 14. The National Council of the western Cherokees, write from Jakuttokud to John Ross & George Lowry, Chiefs of the eastern Cherokees.-They have taken up their propositions of June 13 and duly considered them. They say the eastern Chiefs say they wish to unite the people. The western National Council believe the two peopl to be already united. The western chiefs having met their brother emigrants & made them welcome to the Country, they are thereby made partakers of all its existing laws and are in every respect the same as they themselves. Since being thus taken by the hand, the people have come to the Chiefs & expressed great satisfaction with their reception. This the western Council considers sufficient to justify a belief that the people are very well satisfied; and hence they ( the western Council) find fault with further agitation of the question of union, which they say only pro tracts debate, and unnecessarily, because the Union has already been fully & satisfactorily accomplished