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Thomas Gold Appleton writes to Maria Weston Chapman in regards to her letter to a distant kinsman of his and made flattering allusions to the Appleton's wife-"a treasure I am not so fortunate to possess." However, he has spent her money in the purchase of articles for the anti-slavery fair, of which he gives an account. He is not an abolitionist "in the party sense of the term, but can esteem those who are." He looks for reform to arise in the south.
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