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AMERICAN SLAVERY

... AMERICAN SLAVERY. . meeting has been recently held at dreadful condition, both in law and practice, o l in the United States. 11 will be rcmem- threaders of The Daily News, that at the -.1 meeting the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery SetT held at Freemasons' ...

SLAVERY.—INTERESTING INVESTIGATION

... who had claimed their freedom, Let net the advocates of slavery hope from'this fact to shelter their system from'tbe odieim which it deserves; fur be it re- wemlsered, that in Bermnda slavery exists in a fornl comparn- tively mild, and that even in this ...

HIGH COURT OF ADMIRALTY, Nov. 6

... a mouhif'ied slavery shiotld be perotitted lit England, which, would he followed iii the Coilonies, he expressly says (takting it for gzranted that tile modified slavery inl Etgignd would not at nil1 tulfeci the conl- lihtion of slavery in thle Colonies) ...

LONDON, TUESDAY, JULY 28

... British against abolitionism. The working man cannot afford so much anti-slavery rapture, when it reaches him in this form, Chief Justices and Ex- Chancellors. We fear the hatred of slavery is by such means abated amongst the people. A continued tax of two ...

COURT OF KING'S BENCH, JAN. 19

... put in jeopardy, without a complete indemnity against the possible consequences resulting from the abolition of slavery. The crime of slavery, however, was the crime of the nation, and every individual of the nation ought to contribute his efforts to put ...

INSOLENCE OF THE POLICE

... traust in~te people tyrannical laws, and to reduce this countjiy, Whiffilv vainly bosts of its free iiuti to t ndfiat.bect slavery. . S ure .it ,is,qhliiost time for .the . people to have some power in the m~amiemfnt of their ouiu *ir*, tbey ot~ht, 'in ...

BOSTON, May 1

... resistance to the extension of slavery, which rather ominous. By the strict letter the constitution, congress has no right to interfere with the internal affairs of any state. It remains fir a new state to prohibit or tolerate slavery, as may please ; but the ...

THE NAVIGATION LAWS

... Commons by Lord Palmerston, when he objected to Mr. Ctsrlwell being on tile slavery committee [hear, hear]. Lord Palmerstonn said that the town of Liverpool having au interest in slavery, Mr. Cardwell would not beso free to exercise his own judgment as other ...

POLICE

... LORD MASYOR thought that the age of the child was too tender, and that a ten years' apprenticeship was too long a course of slavery to doom any human being to. Alderman COWAN held the same opinion, and questioned the boy as to his fancy for the business ...

THE HANGMAN AND THE JUDGE; OR, A LETTER FROM JACK KETCH TO MR. JUSTICE ALDERSON, REVISED BY THE ORDINARY OF ..

... wife of hiI bosom, the children she might have borne to him, his father, if he had one; and be would have to lead a life of slavery, degradation, and misery, in a foreign land, where he would bave no one to solace him, and where he would he severely puuished: ...

The unexpected intelligence was received at I'aris on Saturday night, by telegraph, of the complete submission ..

... capture. An animated debate took place in the Chamber of Deputies on Saturday on the subject of the abolition of colonial slavery. Petitions in favour of its immediate and unconditional abolition without compensation to the slave-proprietors, bearing 11 ...