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Daily News (London)

If the West Indians are wise, they will be quiet; and keep their pretended friends quiet, if they can. Their

... residents, and of the blacks themselves. Sambo wants no protection for sugar. It only protects him backwards on the path to slavery. The owners of West Indian estates, who will not take the trouble of looking after them, must share the fate of like-minded ...

IRELAD

... it Is a lament- able one. Why not make all this impossible W What is the real remedy:i Emancipate the tenant wholly from slavery, give him a good eopybold tenure, let him have t secoaity for his holding, and certainty for his industrial cepitel, and at ...

THE POLICE COURTS

... they t 'eecded in establishing their indpedep nce After *'tg what the South had already done masl suffered frost love of slavery, Mr. Noei said 'Ai'Ahenever rlid ?? give up of their own ~e'5 will the Prerogatives upon Which their wealth, enjoy. teait ...

FRAUDS ON CARDINAL LAVIGERIE

... rtroad ba'o been recoiviug letters signe| withl rasme of Cardinal Lavigeri, azid Foli- citing coznribrtions for the Anti-Slavery wLeae. These letters, tf-oih they bore the seal of bis Eivinonce, snd e ?? swarmed with Lstin auotationq, met with I ut a ...

It is impossible to have a stronger example of how extremely mild and infantine is Whig opposition on questions of

... of the States; that it is capable of as varied and as valuable products; that it is essentially, and must long be, a pro-slavery country; that it is naturally our antagonist in principle •, and that we are labouring to make it still more and exclusively ...

THE POLICE COURTS

... thme shop.-Mr. Earls, onl behalf ?? SeIX of tbs hey, commenlted an this asea hideous fern of tur ir- serfdom and 'white slavery, a boy lb yesars of age muat ,Ir. having to wvork 92 hours a week, witheut any ti~oa wit hso for recreation except when out ...

THE POLICE COURTS

... habit of unreflecting and drun ken men to ltreat their wives as if they were slaves; and indeed he knew Fof no slavery equal to the slavery endured by the wife of a 3brutal and drunken husband. For the protection of women Iso unhappily placed, he felt ...

The Strange Paternity Case

... serve, It is in all probability this ' man's farewell to a life of freedora. Ie goes a into what a Judgc once described as slavery for the rest of his natural termn. He was 1; tried for but one series of threatening h lettes; if he had been tried, and ...

THE CASE OF THE FUGITIVE ANDERSON

... the oharge of murdering one Seneca P. Digges, in the 1 state of Missouri, in the year 1853, while making his escape from slavery, was brought before the Court of d Common Pleals, on a writ of habeu corpu. Issued by Chief Justice Drper. The Toro*t*Gobe ...

THEATRICAL DIVORCE CASE

... Coevespondent telegraphs: ian Tlhe newvs according to wvhich thle Macerican Senate has rk- refused to ratify the Art of the Anti-Slavery Con- ab- ferenlce is not coasfi rmed here. e30 Mr. Hlarness has received a letter fremn Mr. Herb~ert Hll~unt, of 7, Fensonhy-plase ...

CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT

... said lie lied never commsitted an 2 offence against time British laws or any other laws in at the wvorld. He had suffered slavery, arid onl one occa- at sion five months of the most escruelating agonies and em torture at the hands of the mliahiteiits ...

A Californian Tragedy

... Leuafterwards crossed his path by defeating him in s the election for Chief Justice. They also took n opposite sides on the slavery question, and 10 TEpay, as a creature of the slave owners, i? challenged his benefactor to a duel, and shot o him dead, in ...