The liberator . OOT slnvu in this country I if you will recognise thia country, you would recognise it as a free country only. THE LIB E R A T O 11 19 PUBLISHED EVERY EKIDAY MOENING, .11 221 WASHINGTON STKEET, HOOM iTJo. 0. ROBERT F. WALLCUT, General Aokm 5^ TERMS — Two dollars and fifty cents per annum,in iulvauoi;. {J3jf Fivo copies will bo sent to one address fur ten dol-lars, if payment is mode in advance. 33f All remittances are to bo made, and all lettorsrelating to the pecuniary concerns of the paper are to bedirected (tost PAID) to the General Agent. J£§F~ Advertisements inserted at th


The liberator . OOT slnvu in this country I if you will recognise thia country, you would recognise it as a free country only. THE LIB E R A T O 11 19 PUBLISHED EVERY EKIDAY MOENING, .11 221 WASHINGTON STKEET, HOOM iTJo. 0. ROBERT F. WALLCUT, General Aokm 5^ TERMS — Two dollars and fifty cents per annum,in iulvauoi;. {J3jf Fivo copies will bo sent to one address fur ten dol-lars, if payment is mode in advance. 33f All remittances are to bo made, and all lettorsrelating to the pecuniary concerns of the paper are to bedirected (tost PAID) to the General Agent. J£§F~ Advertisements inserted at the rnto of fivo centsj>er line. %jT The Agents of the American, Massachusetts, Penn-sylvania, Ohio and Michigan Anti-Slavery Societies areauthorised to receive subscriptions for THE Libehatoh. I^jgr* The following gentlemen constitute the FinancialCommittee, ^but are not responsible fur any debts of the[japer, via: — Wendell Phillips, Edmbxd Quincy, Ed-mund Jacksos, and William L. Garrison, Jr. ^ #::f-^-. Proclaim Liberty all the land, to alltho inhabitants thereo£M I lay this down as the law of nations. I say that mil*itary authority taken, for tho time, tho place ef all inunio-ipal institutions, and SLAVERY AMONG THE REST;and that, under that state of things, so far from its beingtruo that the States whure slavery exists have the exclusivemanagement of the subject, not only the President ortub Uihteij Status, but tho Commander op the Army,HAS POWER TO ORDER THE UNIVERSAL EMAN-CIPATION OF THE SLAVE3. .*. . From the instantthat the ulaveholdiug States become the theatre of a war,civil, servile, or foreign, from that instant tho war powersof Cujuiiikss extend to interference with tho institution of Slavery, IN KVEUV WAr IN WilICO IT CAN BE lUTKErEBBD with, from a claim of indemnity for slaves taken or de-stroyed, to the cession of States, burdoned with slavery, toa foreign power. ... It is a war power. I say it is a warpower ; and when your country is act


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectantislaverymovements, bookyear1831