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A PHILIPPIC AGAINST SLAVERY

... A PHILIPPIC AGAINST SLAVERY. New Yoek, June 6.—Mr. Sumner, of Massachusetts, who was so brutally struck down in the Senate four years ago by Mr. Brooks, of South Carolina, revenged himaelf yesterday, in the same body, m the first speech which he has delivered ...

Mb. Fbbdbbick Douglass is to visit Newcastle in abont three weeks, and address the iuhabitanta of that town the ..

... Mb. Fbbdbbick Douglass is to visit Newcastle in abont three weeks, and address the iuhabitanta of that town the Slavery Question. It is also expected that he will visit Sunderland, Shields, Hexham, &o. _ , Suicidb of a Merchant Captain.—On Tuesday night ...

Republican Candidate for the Presidency:—

... these cardinal principles on the subject , slavery in the territories;— First, that Congress has no power to eboliali slavery in the temtones ) second, that the Territorial Legislature has no nower to aboUsh slavery in any territory, nor to Prohibit the ...

THE PRINCE OP WALES

... that institution, and left to our slaveholders foreign ally, for Brazilian slavery and Cuban slavery ore very different things from slavery the United States. The preparations for the Prince in New York and Boston promise decided success in the way of ...

AMERICA

... and Brown’s sons were murdered and his own property destroyed by pro-slavery men. Then he changed bis principles, because maddened with revenge, and in that spirit pursued the pro-slavery party. In his inaugural address on the 17th, the Governor of New Jersey ...

FOBEIGN INTELLIGENCE

... stringency, bo more likely to carry a free man into slavery than our ordinary criminal laws are to hang an innocent one. But all tliis, to my judgment, furnishes no more excuse for permitting slavery to go into our own free territory than it would for ...

RUSSIA

... recruited with wonderful facility, inasmuch as any roan who onoe enters the service of the Crown cannot again be reduced to slavery. Peasants who formerly crouched in presence of their masters now maintain insolent bearing, and refuse to work even for payment ...

would not think of employing foroe to prevent separation by which only the seceding State could suffer. The ..

... necessary to repeat that the election of Mr. Lincoln does not mean anything so gigantic and difficult as the abolition of slavery. But we have a right to expect that the surreptitious attempts at re-establishing the Slave Trade will be put down with a ...

MR. SEWARD

... labourer for his fellow. They knew that the one state of things was good, and the other evil; they condemned the practice of slavery, and they hoped for its discontinuance. But they were obliged to recognise it, and to establish a constitution on the basis ...

UNITED STATES

... 17th says Some progress was made yesterday towards the election of Speaker. After the usual amount of vapourising on the slavery question two ballms were had. On the first ballot, Mr. Sherman, Republican, had 96 votes; Mr. Bocock, Demoerate, 86; and Mr ...

THE AMERICANS

... in fact, any political principle whatever, than the foul fiend himself has to do with religion or morality. Guarantee them slavery, and they’d eome under Liuis Napoleon, the Austrian Emperor, or the Sultan of Turkey to-morrow. Not less than twice have they ...

APPEAL TO EHIQBATION

... of those who are in slavery are more cloeelj rivetted ; prejudice, more implacable perhaps than servitude, pursues and presses down those who are free. All ia diaputed to ua on that land whose freedom is ao vaunted. A new slavery baa been invented for ...