[The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus by American Anti-Slavery Society]@TWC D-Link bookThe Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus CHAPTER III 97/626
Esq. Security restored. Self-emancipation. Self-respect. Shands, Mr.S. Shiel, Mr. Shrewsbury, Rev.Mr. Sickness, pretended. Silver Hill. Sligo, Lord. Smith, Sir Lionel. Social intercourse. Societies, benevolent. Society among colored people. " for promotion of Christian knowledge. Soldiers, black. Solicitor General of Barbadoes. " of Jamaica. Song sung in the schools. Spanishtown. "Speaking," a Moravian custom. Special Magistrates.
(See also _Partiality_.) Special Magistrates, Testimony of. St.Andrews. Station House, A. St.Christopher's. St.Lucia. Stock Keepers. St.Thomas in the East. Sturge & Harvey, Messrs. St.Vincent's. Subordination. Sugar Crop. " cultivation hard for the slave. Sugar Mill. Sunday Markets. Superintendent of Police. Suspension of faithful magistrates. Task-work. Teacher, Black. Teachers. "Telegraph," Remarks of the. Temperance in Antigua. " of negroes. " Society. Testimony of Managers. Testimony of clergymen and missionaries. Testimony of Governors. " of magistrates. " of physicians. Theft, decrease of. Thibou Jarvis's estate. Thomas, Mr. Thompson, George, Bust of. Thompson, Thomas, Esq. Thorne, Mr. Thwaites, Mr.Charles. Tinson, Rev.Mr. Toast to Immediate Emancipation. Tortala. Traffic in Slaves. Transition from slavery to freedom. Treatment of slaves ameliorated by discussion. Treadmill. Trinidad. Trustworthiness. Unwilling witness. Vagrancy. Value of an apprentice.
(See _Appraisement_.) Villa Estate. Wages. Walton, Rev.Mr. Watchman, Jamaica. " Remarks of the. Watkins, Mr. Ward, Sir Henry. Weatherill's Estate. Wesleyan Chapel, Antigua. " " New, ". " Missionary Society. Wesleyans in Antigua. " in Barbadoes. " in Jamaica. Whip banished. Whipping Post. White lady. Wilberforce, opinion of. Wickham, Richard S. Willis, George, Esq. Willoughby Bay Examination. Wolmer Free School. Women abandon the field. " condition of. Woolridge, Rev.Mr. Wright, Andrew, Esq. * * * * * THE ANTI-SLAVERY EXAMINER--EXTRA. * * * * * EMANCIPATION In The WEST INDIES, IN 1838. * * * * * IMPORTANT TO THE UNITED STATES. False prophets were never stiller about their time-detected impostures than are the pro-slavery presses of the United States about the results of West India Emancipation.
Now and then, for the sake of appearances, they obscurely copy into their immense sheets an inch or two of complaints, from some snarling West India paper, that the emancipated are lazy and won't work.
But they make no parade.
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