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The Slave-trade

The Slave-trade image
Parent Issue
Day
2
Month
March
Year
1877
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

It will be Btoundiug news tw maiiy American Ohristians that the slave-trade is still earried on to nu-h ui extent aa to involve the loss, animnllv, of at lpaHt 5(X),000 livefl. Snob, we iv assired by the MittKiotuiif i irn, is the (SAt, Froiu the H-ime sourco we lesrn thftt while tliiw large number die or are massanred iu ;his iuhumau traffi?, oulv 70,0.X) Afri;ans reaoh the coast and be-'orae bI'ivbs. rhe JS'cwn utatce that there are Üve routes by which slaveg ira ... Central Afita; "1. ThCft hara dwrt to ïnnw and vi tll! i Down the Nüe, via &$L.. Egypt. 3. Down the Nilo" " boforc rcaclüng Kliartomn ,,r J"-' portB on the Kod ma. 1. 'Dirwi'l1 Ziinzibnr const, for Znnziir etc. 5. Two routes fnun L;,, E? to the Moznmbiquo coast („r",i" ;nscnr iiiid the North." ïn,i ;,i "The treatiPS with Znzihr ,, really prevent the trnffio, m tll hn no powor to enforcoüb Tlifl Eiglih cruisers captmg (rnotion of the dliowg engnged Araba in tho slnyc-trade. It ' become necessary to k directlv ï' justiftnble means, to aboffiali ? Egyit, Turkey, Penda, ZHnahar v gasear, Tiuiíb, Morocco Cuf Brnzil." '

Article

Subjects
Old News
Michigan Argus