demands Fugitive Slave Law, [88];
asserts doctrine of non-intervention in Territories, [88];
not satisfied with Compromise of 1850, [92];
fails to secure Kansas, [98];
applauds Brooks for his assault on Sunnier, [100];
enraged at Douglas's opposition to Lecompton Constitution. [108];
reads Douglas out of party, [116], [142];
its policy described by Lincoln, [125]-[128];
fairness of Lincoln toward, [138], [139];
demands that North cease to call slavery wrong, [154], [155];