SLAVERY
... SLAVERY. “OEPLY Mr. LINDSAY'S SPEECH Jt\l Sunderland. 8. A. GODDARD. Just Published, and for Sale, E. C. Osborne, 59, Benoett’s Hill. ...
... SLAVERY. “OEPLY Mr. LINDSAY'S SPEECH Jt\l Sunderland. 8. A. GODDARD. Just Published, and for Sale, E. C. Osborne, 59, Benoett’s Hill. ...
... SLAVERY. The slavery question is touched on in a letter from New York, which appears in 'The Timm What (asks the writer) is to of negro slavery ? To hang the rebels is not to be thought of. To attempt to wheedle back the Seceded States, without offering ...
... real nature of slavery. An Englishman might call at the house a person in his own position of life, and upon seeing his domestic slaves he wouM say These slaves are in capital condition,’* and a superficial observer would add ** Oh ! slavery is not so bad ...
... SLAVERY AND ANTI-SLAVERY. l- s , e .1 - t e _ . en, TnE meeting of the Leeds Young Men's Anti- ily a] Lee 'Slavery Society took place on Tuesday evenin~g. Of only uncourse it derived a ulore than usual interest from the slave 'as present circumstances ...
... PRO-SLAVERY AND NO SLAVERY. England has got over the Pro-slavery fallacies: t shallowest, openest, most discreditable, that ever sent to the limbo of defeated frauds. The struggle is for empire, said the noodles, i^ ■as the struggle with the garotters ...
... ON BLACK SLAVERY WHITE SLAVERY WHICH AEE THE MOST PREDOMINANT UNDER THE BRITISH DOMINIONS ? Englishmen —There is a most meritorious, worthy, excellent intention of liberating the black slave, but 1 am truly sorry to say that I find no symptom whatever ...
... subject of slavery. are not going to uphold either savagedom or slavery, which, indeed, are, to a great extent, alike, but we cannot be blind to the fact thatthey are, not the normal and original, at least the general state of nations. As slavery its widest ...
... SLAVERY. TO THE EDITOR OP THE DAILY POST. Sin, There is a great outcry just now about slavery many speeches have been delivered, and much feeling evinced. My object in addressing you is simply to request our philanthropic townsmen to look at home. My ...
... SLAVERY AND EMANCIPATION. Almost concurrently with the receipt of the news that Fort Sumter had been taken, or rather had been knocked to pieces, intelligence was brought of another event infinitely more important and decisive. If the one gave tokens ...
... PRO-SLAVERY AND ANTI-SLAVERY It is reported, says the Morning Star. in Madrid that the sum of 250,000 dollars (.631,000) has been sent there from Paris, to be employed in each a manner as to obtain that the projected emancipation measures is relation ...
... advocate for slavery. I am nothing of the kind; blt I ask, if these things are so, and if you call neither deny nor ignore them, then in what sense are they abominable assumptions 7 I give no opinion on the rights or the wrongs of slavery. I have been ...
... SLAVERY. It was confidently expected, after such a vast out- lay from the lockets of Englishmen, that slavery would never be again tolerated. It is by all accounts a bitter draught; yet this &me not preclude its advocates, on the other side of the water ...