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troops are the two great instruments by which emancipation without revolution will be carried out. And here we are now at the end of two years and a half, having made slow but regular progress in this movement, until it has taken shape distinctly before, us, so that we can foresee the ultimate issue. Mr. Adams concluded by enlogizing the honesty and fidelity of Mr. Lincoln. Numerous other "patriotic" loasts were then drunk and responded to. Movements of Confederate agents. Mr. Spence, of Liverpool, the writer on occasion in the London Times, has been addressing large meetings in Glasgow in favor of Southern independence. He urged that England should take the lead in inviting the European powers to intervene in the American war. The Southern Independence Association of Manchester have invited a New York adventurer, Cornell Jewett, to deliver an address before them during December. Jewett accepted, conditional on his not being confined to the subject of the Southe