From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10325 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Thursday, December 15 2022 Volume 14 : Number 10325 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Your package could not be delivered. ["Yeti Tundra Cooler Winner" Subject: Your package could not be delivered. Your package could not be delivered. http://dicksyetisweeps.shop/kSa7hLi_mcu4vzz1o1A2qr1CUEa8nWogXbRkAKaith1v8sPdBQ http://dicksyetisweeps.shop/kuP34RQvT7Y4IDkulOrLkpmnAVl3Qxxep5mj7tvjh9QJ9ndrfg epublicansbhad lost control of the House, and Sherman found himself in the minority. The sectional crisis had also deepened in the past year. In March 1857, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford, holding that Congress had no power to prevent slavery in the territories and that blacksbwhether free or enslavedbcould not be citizens of the United States. In December of that year, in an election boycotted by free-state partisans, Kansas adopted the pro-slavery Lecompton Constitution and petitioned Congress to be admitted as a slave state. Buchanan urged that Congress take up the matter, and the Senate approved a bill to admit Kansas. Sherman spoke against the Kansas bill in the House, pointing out the evidence of fraud in the elections there. Some of the Northern Democrats joined with a unanimous Republican caucus to defeat the measure. Congress agreed to a compromise measure, by which Kansas would be admitted after another referendum on the Lecompton Constitution. The electorate rejected slavery and remained a territory, a decision Sherman would later call "the turning point of the slavery controversy". Sherman's second term also saw his first speeches in Congress on the country's financial situation, which had been harmed by the Panic of 1857. Citing the need to pare unnecessary ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2022 06:31:28 -0500 From: "Low Blood Sugar" Subject: what happens when you have low blood sugar what happens when you have low blood sugar http://bbwdatings.us/KlvKpRMPcTiRvz-QAhmxXdcBnqwE_WN31XPfbKxfoJBCzyHLHg http://bbwdatings.us/7Daf0XyiLN755gaYheBRFwNbEVJ-scIF3WOcHEWmuxPz-EpuYQ herman moved north to Cleveland in 1853 and established a law office there with two partners. Events soon interrupted Sherman's plans for a new law firm, as the passage of the KansasbNebraska Act in 1854 inspired him (and many other anti-slavery Northerners) to take a more involved role in politics. That Act, the brainchild of Illinois Democrat Stephen A. Douglas, opened the two named territories to slavery, an implicit repeal of the Missouri Compromise of 1820. Intended to quiet national agitation over slavery by shifting the decision to local settlers, Douglas's Act instead inflamed anti-slavery sentiment in the North by allowing the possibility of slavery's expansion to territories held as free soil for three decades. Two months after the Act's passage, Sherman became a candidate for Ohio's 13th congressional district. A local convention nominated Sherman over two other candidates to represent what was then called the Opposition Party (later to become the Republican Party). The new party, a fusion of Free Soilers, Whigs, and anti-slavery Democrats, had many discordant elements, and some among the former group thought Sherman too conservative on the slavery question. Nevertheless, they supported him against the incumbent Democrat, William D. Lindsley. Democrats were defeated across Ohio that year, and Sherman was elected by 2,823 vote ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2022 08:52:56 -0500 From: "Peripheral Vision Loss" Subject: Strange Chemical Linked To Blindness Strange Chemical Linked To Blindness http://ocutamins.shop/y-3-bJNZHDwmFBpnGrcAjjl8xWHUi3-hN9w-Ic7rb-p7EnCi0A http://ocutamins.shop/zbElUy1Or9mnr0SRS41anD0HWNC1h8iBinHVV6JbbvP9OHlJNA e voters returned Sherman to office for a third term during 1858. After a brief special session in March 1859, the 36th Congress adjourned, and Sherman and his wife went on vacation to Europe. When they returned that December, the situation was similar to that of four years earlier: no party had an absolute majority. Republicans held 109 seats, Democrats 101, and the combination of Oppositionists and Know Nothings 27. Again, sectional tension had increased while Congress was in recess, this time due to John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, Virginia. The election for Speaker of the House promised to be contentious. This time, Sherman was among the leading candidates, receiving the second-largest number of votes on the first ballot, with no candidate receiving a majority. The election for Speaker was sidetracked immediately by a furor over an anti-slavery book, The Impending Crisis of the South, written by Hinton Rowan Helper and endorsed by many Republican members ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10325 ***********************************************