. The liberator. , ..l Washington stmt, Room No. <;. Mao la N EVEEY FEIDAY M0BHIH8, — AT — 221 WASHINGTON STREET, BOOM No. 6. ROBERT F. WALLCUT, General Agent. ti^f TERMS— Two dollars and fifty cents per annum,in advance. jSTFive copies will bo sent to one address fur tendollars, if payment bo made in advance. OF All remittances are to be made, and all letters re-lating to tho pecuniary concerns of the paper are to bedirected (post paid) to the General Agent. |^~ Advertisements inserted at tbe rate of five cents perline. j^~ Tbe Agents of tbe American, Massachusetts, Penn-sylvania, Ohio and


. The liberator. , ..l Washington stmt, Room No. <;. Mao la N EVEEY FEIDAY M0BHIH8, — AT — 221 WASHINGTON STREET, BOOM No. 6. ROBERT F. WALLCUT, General Agent. ti^f TERMS— Two dollars and fifty cents per annum,in advance. jSTFive copies will bo sent to one address fur tendollars, if payment bo made in advance. OF All remittances are to be made, and all letters re-lating to tho pecuniary concerns of the paper are to bedirected (post paid) to the General Agent. |^~ Advertisements inserted at tbe rate of five cents perline. j^~ Tbe Agents of tbe American, Massachusetts, Penn-sylvania, Ohio and Michigan Anti-Slavery Societies areauthorised to receive subscriptions for The Liberator. g^~ The following gentlemen constitute the FinancialCommittee, but aro not responsible for any debts of thepaper, viz :—Francis Jacksos, Eosiukd Quincy, EujicndJackson, and Wendell Proclaim Liberty throughout all the land, to allthe inhabitants thereof * I lay Ibia down as the law of nations. I say that mil-itary authority taken, for the time, the place ef all munic-ipal institutions, and SLAVERY AMONG THE BEST;and that, under that state of things, ao far from it* beingtrue that the States whore slavery exists have the occlusivemanagement of the subject, not only tho President orthe Umitkr Status, but tho Commander or the Army,HAS POWER TO ORDER THE UNIVERSAL EMAN-CIPATION OP THE SLAVES. .. . From the instantthat tho slavebolding States becomo the theatre of a war,civil, servile, or foreign, from that instant the war powersof Congress extend to interference with the institution ofslavery, in every way in which it can be interferedwith, from a claim of indemnity for slaves taken or de-stroyed, to tho 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, whetherit


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectantislaverymovements, bookyear1831