. Niles' national register, containing political, historical, geographical, scientifical, statistical, economical, and biographical documents, essays and facts : together with notices of the arts and manufactures, and a record of the events of the times . questions; ti occasion lo proclaim to the British empire that ixlcon years since he had drunk any wine. Tappan, of Boslon, also communicated his - ?- ^. , ,, ° , .J i personal history of abstemiousness and righteousness, L J . , . ? , --- men they very society in Glasgow, delivered an address on the on the 27th at the adiourmd of ih


. Niles' national register, containing political, historical, geographical, scientifical, statistical, economical, and biographical documents, essays and facts : together with notices of the arts and manufactures, and a record of the events of the times . questions; ti occasion lo proclaim to the British empire that ixlcon years since he had drunk any wine. Tappan, of Boslon, also communicated his - ?- ^. , ,, ° , .J i personal history of abstemiousness and righteousness, L J . , . ? , --- men they very society in Glasgow, delivered an address on the on the 27th at the adiourmd of ih» „„ ?na : ; rnl ^ replied, M; subject of free emi|ralion from Africa to the Westlal Temper ^ bet aV g orrn;^e o? lflo» 4, „^ T ?k ^ !^ ?= «^P •=• =* » == f henefitting the negro race: ex- the elevation and weighl in the United Slates oftho?otoa/neale.^^ •=?• P°S ^ ^hlessness of treaties, the cruising who undertake to represent our clnlryin theseH,Vl,„?„„„v,„ .J I 1,- ,-, u . u . J!. Sierra Leone, and another methods hitherto, London , my seven yearsabsence from ?.^^°.. .? !°?,^=^;^^ aloped for Ihe suppression of the slave trade; argu-, your . • \ . ars aosf nee irom. opposed 1 London iVloiniug licrala aiMl liui Times may S64 NILES NATIONAL REGISTER—AUG 5, 1843—LORD MORPETHS SPEECH. within your reach, I (.ray jou to mark an editorial,article of the Herald in the number of the 23d in-stant, on the composition and exhibitions of theBritish anti-slavery societies at this epoch. The realdignity and consequence of the former personnel are >ably set in contrast with the empty pretensions of the Jpresent. The Times of the 28ih instant ridicules thevagaries of the Universal Peace Convention, and ad-1verts, as it has often done with signal power, to thesocial eccentricities of the era and the fanaticism of!associations for the reform of mankind. Your cor- irespondent would not join in deriding or decryingany rationa


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Keywords: ., bookauthornileshezekiah17771839, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1810