. The liberator. S . KOCK, E S Q ..\rro!;.\i-:v A cot \;i: at LAW,o. 6, Irjutokt Strut, : : : : BOSTON. THE LIBERATOR — IS PUBLISHED — EVERY PKIDAY MOEKIHG, — AT — 221 WASHINGTON STREET, ROOM No. 6. ROBERT F. WALLCUT, General Agent |E^ TERMS —Tito dollars and fifty coots per annum,iu advance. OT Fivu copies will be sent to one address for tew dol-lars, if payment is innclo in advance. E^ All remittances arc to bo made, and all lettersrelating to the pecuniary concerns of tlie paper are to bedirected (post paid) to tbo General Agent. ]EP Advertisements inserted at the rata of five cent


. The liberator. S . KOCK, E S Q ..\rro!;.\i-:v A cot \;i: at LAW,o. 6, Irjutokt Strut, : : : : BOSTON. THE LIBERATOR — IS PUBLISHED — EVERY PKIDAY MOEKIHG, — AT — 221 WASHINGTON STREET, ROOM No. 6. ROBERT F. WALLCUT, General Agent |E^ TERMS —Tito dollars and fifty coots per annum,iu advance. OT Fivu copies will be sent to one address for tew dol-lars, if payment is innclo in advance. E^ All remittances arc to bo made, and all lettersrelating to the pecuniary concerns of tlie paper are to bedirected (post paid) to tbo General Agent. ]EP Advertisements inserted at the rata of five centsper line. (ST The- Agents of the American, Massachusetts, Penn-sylvania, Ohio and Michigan Anti-Slavery Societies areauthorised to receive subscriptions fur The Liberator. (£P~ The following gentlemen constitute the FinancialCommittee, but are not responsible for any debts of thepaper, viz: — Wendell Phillips, Edmund Quincy, Ed-mund Jackson, and William L. Garrison, Jr. TO. LLOYD GARRISON, Proclaim Liberty throughout all the land, to allthe inhabitants thereof. I lay this down as the law of nations. I say that mil-itary authority takes, for the time, the place of all munic-ipal institutions, and SLAVERS AMONG TEH REST;and that, under that state of things, bo far from its beingtrue that the States where slavery exists have the exclusivemanagement of the subject, not only the President ortub United States, but the Cohmamder of the Army,HAS POWER TO ORDER THE UNIVERSAL EMAN-CIPATION OF THE SLAVES. .... From the instantthat the slaveholding States become the theatre of a war,civil, servile, or foreign, from that instant the war powersof Congress extend to interference with the institution ofslavery, in bvery way in which it can be interfekedwith, from a claim of indemnity for slaves taken or de-stroyed, to the cession of States, burdened with slavery, toa foreign power. ... It is a war power. I say it is a warpower ; and when your country is actually in war,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectantislaverymovements, bookyear1831