( - A -- 7((z Anfittq6cA , BY JAS. CLARK. GOVERNOR'S MESSAGE. Tv the Senate and Honss of Rspi etentatives of Pinmyltrania Garments : The States of Virginia and Geor gia have transmittted to the Executive Depart ment of this Corrimdnitealth, Resolutions in ref erence to the preservation of the Union ;—the Institutiotr OT Slavery :.—and complaining of cer tain alleged violations of the Constitution of the United State.. A respectful courtesy to these distinguished members of the confederacy, tie- Mands front the Government of Pennsylvania an early and calm Coinsideration of the grievances thus presented. The known character of the citizens of this Commonwealth, for their faithful adherence to the National Constitution;—their deep' Veneta tior for, aid attachment of the National Union, ifid their uniform respect, and regard for their rights, privileges and happiness of the citizens of the other States 0; the confederacy, is a suf ficient pledge that they would feel deeply Wdinid ed should their Representatives by silence and acquiescence seem to admit, that they or their Government were justly obnoxious to the asser tion that they,' , had commenced, and were per sisting in a system of encroachment upon the Constitution and rights of a portion of the peo ple of this confederacy, which is alike unjust and dangerous to the peace and perpetuity of the cherished Union." . _ Persuaded that thernexists no unkind feeling among our citizens, to any other portion of the Confederacy, and that a cordial love for the Na tional Constitution and Union, pervades our en tire population ; it is deemed a pleasant duty to transmit those resolutions to your Honorable bodies, that the necessary measures may be adopted, after a candid consideration of the whole subject, to give a decided negative to the complaints of our Sister Republics, if they have done our people and Government injustice in these charges i end if otherwise, to offer the amplest assiirance that the speediest remedies will be provided to redress any just grievances. This action is necessary in order that no truth fill accusation of a wilful and wanton breach of the Constitution;—infidelity to the National Union, or invasion of the rights of others, shall stain the social history of Pennsylvania. The wrongs alleged may be classified as fol lows • lest, That the people of the non Slavehold- Mg States have encroached upon the Constitu tion of the United States. Second, That they hove done r ets hostile to the peace and perpetuity of the National Unicin. Third. That they have unjustly, dangerously end injuriously trespassed upon the rights of other portions of the confederacy. These etc grave charges against the faith and lictner of this Commonwealth—and hence the necessity of a careful examination of their jus tior And truth. Questions connected with the Slavery of the colored race, have given , origin to these com plaints. It is not necessary to discuss the abstract question of slavery. If it were now to be es tablished ;—if the footprints of the bondsman, were now for the first time to mark the soil of our common country;—if the Constitution were now to be formed, it would be our duty to en ter our solemn protest against its introduction or recognition. We should feel a pleasure in the aderption of a different policy from that im puted upon us by our British progenitors. Where they forged and rivited, we would strike the chains of bondage from human limbs. The Constitution of the United States, how ever, having guaranteed to a c,rtaln extent, the existence of Slavery; and recognized the rights of the people of the Slave-holding States, in their peculiar property; all inch discussions in ref erence to the institution as it exists in those States, are properly precluded by a just sense of Constitutional duty. With Slavery there fore, in th• several States, there is not now, and never has been, arty disposition On the part of the government or Pennsylvania to interfere. Let us examine how far the general charges, made against the people of the Free States, ap ply to our citizens. To do so, with more clear ness, a recital of the events preceding, and at tending the formation of the Constitution, is deemed necessary and proper. . a Pennsylvania had been Slave-holding State. The introduction and use of servile labor, and the moral and political depredation of the color race had been engrafted upon her liberal in stitution.' by the cupidity of our Britist ances try. While the Revolution and the separation of the colonies from the mother country were in progress; and before the recognition of their inde pAndence by the government of Gre-t Britain, liar Legislature, by the act of the In. of March, 1180, abolished slavery within her bordors. A copy of that statute is hereto annexed. The preamble to this act in strong and appro priate language expresses an atilicirtence of that condition of civil bondage to which the arms and tyranny of Great Britain were exerted to reduce us,—acknowledges the benificent agen cy of the Supreme God, in our deliverance from the threatened dangers, and admits Cie great in justice, and wrong done to the servile race, by m-ans whereof they had been « deprived of the common blessings to which they were by na ture entitled ;" and then in commemoration of our own happy escape from tyranic and despot ic power, provides that all persons, as well mown and mulattoes as others, who shall be burn within this State, from and after the date of the said act, shall not be deemed and consid td servants for life, or slaves. The farther provisions of this humane la* (e -late to the registry of slaves,--the service of !b. it rbilclren,—their support when left null gent,—their trial for offences; .d whilst it thus declares in most express terms, that no man or woman, of any nation or color except re gistered slaves shall at any time thereafter be deemed, adjudged, or holden within the terri tories of this Commonwealth as slaves, or ser. vents for life, but as free men, and free women, it maws provision for protection of the prop erty of non-residents in slaves, or servants for life, who may be sojourners for a period of six months. ' On the 09:h Of March, 1788, another act intending to cure the defects in the act of Ist Marching°, was passed and is hereto annex ed. Thews enactments made Pennsylvania, a non alaveholding State; and in terms attic clearest and strongest character marked the determina tion of her people to abolish, forever, servile labor within her borders. Whilst the pream ble to the first act recited, and embodied the reasons for the abolition of, and expressed her fealinitu in relation to the institution of Slavery, it furnished notice of the most authentic kind, of her determined resietance to its increase end extestien. The Congress Of the States in session to New York, Virginia, Georgia and Pennsylvania, being', represented therein, on the 13th of July, 1787, passed an ordinance with great unanimity, that Slavery or involuntary servitude should never be established ? except for ctimei within the then territories otthe confederated States. There is no excepting or wilting, chase ; n 6 tine of com promise or designation of degrees of latitude to limit the Of ha of freedom, tint an entire, absct lute, and unconditional prohibition of the insti tution in all the territories then under the jut is diction of the Congress. The act of 1980, had given notice to the other IStates, of the views entertained by Pennsylla ' nia on this important subject. The ordinance of the 13th July, 1987; was conceived in the same spirit, and gaVe an assifrance, that the evils of htfrinan bondage should never be extend ed ; and would eventually cease to exist among a free people. It was in this belief that the citizens of Pennsylvania consented to a consti tution, which recagniied to some eictent the in stitution of Slavery. The Constitution being adop'ed went into op eration on the 3,1 cf April, 1789. It contains the following provisions directly dr indirectly erinnected with the servitude of the colored Hee First, as regards representation, it provides, " That representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several States Which may be included withht this Union according to their respective numbers, which shall be deter mined by adding to the whole number of free persons including those hound to Sertice for a term of years and excluding Indians not taxed, three-fifths of all other persons." Second, « The migration or importation of such persons as any of the States 71010 existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohib ited by Congress prior to the year MS; but a tax or duty may be imposed upon such impor tation, not exceeding ten dollars for each per son." - Third, a No person held to service or labor in one State, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on the claim of the party to whom such service or labor may he due." The prdtision in the Constitution limiting the duration of the slave tralic ; and the act of the National Congress immediately preceding its adoption, in relation to its non-extention to the 1 territories of the Union, would set m to leave nO doilbt upon the Mind, that it Was the inten • tion tutu meaning of the framers of the Consti tution to prevent the extension and increase of human slavery; and at an early period to se cure its entire abolition in the several States. The qualified representation of the servile race, and the delivery of fugitives were concessions made to the people of the slaveholding States. To this organic law, containing these provi sions, Pennsylvania gave her assent ; and it is therefore a duty on her part to respect with re ligious ddelivr, the rights therein guaranteed to other States. • That this Commonwealth has been faithful in the discharge of all her federal obligations it is believed can be made manifest. It is true that her business pursuits , have been frequently in terrupted ;— i t is true that her just weight in the National Councils has been lessened by the representation of the servile race;—it is true the representation of property instead of peo ple has been felt by her citizens as anti-Repub lican and wrong ;—nevertheless she has always felt it a duty faithfully to discharge her obliga• tions as a member of the National Onion. The institution of Slavery has assumed a new position and importance by the successful at tempt to extend it beyond its original limits. In every instance of the kind this Common wealth has raised her voice in earnest protest. In the written Constitution, to the observance of whose provisions her with had been pledged, there was found no authority for its introduc tion into new, and after acquired territory. With the knowledge that the framers of the Constitution had taken a part in the delibera. tions of the Congress of 1757, and that the in tention of their ordinance was the preservation, front the malign Itilitiences of slavery, of all the territory then belonging to the Union; it was reasonable to suppose that any acquiescence on her part, in the acqUisition of immense regions to be covered with Slavery, would be given with great reluctance. The same liberality of sentiment that breathed in the Declaration of the National Independence—the same ardent love of human freedom that conceived the ordi nance of I7B7—the same hatred of human bon doge that induced the abolition of the slave trade It was believed, would intlitence and direct the opinions and actions of those illustrious fathers who placed these proud memories among the venerated archieves of the Republic. At the time of the admission of Missouri it is well known with what unanimity this Govern ment protested against the introdUcticin Of ser vile labor into that fertile region. The lan guage of her protest is clear and strong; it breathes the true feeling of her patriotic chil dren. To the compromise line at that time adopted, it is presumed, no assent was given on her part. To have done so, would have done violence toiler principles, and would have been an abandonment of her early and cherished pol icy. It was an infraction of the spirit of the ordinance of 1787, and was a doubtful exercise of Constitutional power, as Well as a species dl infidelity to the National Union. The act of 1180 abolished slavery, and alleged there Was no human right to exact human bondage. The ordinance of 1787 prohibited Slavery in the territories of tue then confederation, and the reasonss for its enactment applied as forci bly to the West bank of the Mississippi. as they did to the North Bnnk of the Ohio. The Na tional Constitution contained nothing to author ize the acquisition of new territory, and the erection of further slave institutions. On the contrary, by its provisions in reference to the slave tratic, and the current events attending its formation, it appeared to mark limits to the extent and duration of the institution; hence any action enlarging its boundaries was an un waranted assumption of power. The Union of the States -vas endangered by the erection of imaginary lines, tending to engender and keep alive sectional jealousies and prejudices. Penn sylvania desired no new .M. 5003 & Dixon's line, to mark distinctive characters and tastes among a homogeneous people. In the powers of the National Congress is found no authority to create Slavery, unless its introduction formed a portion of a treaty acqui ring territory, or was the condition' of a grant of lands. The spirit of universal liberty guarded all soil blessed by the institutions of freedom ; and to establish bondage, positive enactments HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1860. were necessarily required. These sentiments of Pennsylvania remain unchanged, and it their expression, with a perfect willingness to submit their accuracy to the Supreme Judicial Tribu nals of the country, were aggressions on the rights of the citizens of Virginia and Georgia —if they were an infraction of the National Constitution, or tended the dissolution of the Union, the demonstration thereof has not been Made manifest to Our eitieenl. The National Government is admited to be a government of limited powers,' and that no authority cart be exercised by it unless conferred by the Constitu tion. In the Constitution is found no ex press authority for the acquisition of net' territory by pnrchuse—nu eiprtss authority to admit new States into the Confederacy formed from' such acquired territory—no express or written power to absorb and annex another and a dis tinct sovereignty ; to assume its debts, finish its unsettled warfare or to take charge of its public domain—no ex• press authority is given to plant the institution of slavery where it does not exist; and certainly none to gnarantee to h, in its new home, the unequal and anti-republican representation to which it is entitled in the original States. The practical and common sense exposition of the Constitution, it is freely conceded would invest a government of limited powers, trlth all the authority, necessa ry to carry into effect its expressly gran ted_..powers. 'The powers of Congress over the terri tories of the Union, and the District of Columbia, are embraced in the following provisions : First. New States. may be admitted by Congress into the Union. Congress shall have power to dispose of, and make all needful rules and regulations, res pecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States : and nothing in this Constitution shall be so construed as to prejudice any claims of the United States or any particular State. Second. Congress has the right to exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever over such district,(not excee ding ten miles square,) as may, by ces sion of particula- States, and the accep tance of Congress, become the seat of Government of the United States. The parts of the Constitution herein• before detailed and mentioned below, enthrone all the provisions necessary or essential for our present purpose. 1. The slave representation in the Na tional Congress. 2. The non-importation of slaves af ter 1808. 3. The extradition of fugitives from Tabor, 4. The authority of Congress over the territories. 5. The authority of Congress over the District of Columbia. Which of these provisions of the Na tional Constitution, has been encroached upon by Fensylvnnia 1 There is no part of her hislory, Legislative, Executive or Judicial, that shows any interference with the right of representation belong ing to Virginia or Georgia. No charge has been mode against her faithful ob servance of that portion of the Consti tution in relation to the importation, or non-importation of slaves. The author ity of Congress to establish slavery in territories wherein it does not exist, this State has denied, in mild and friend. ly terms ; and in submitting heretofore to the exercise of the power when new slave•hoding States have been admitted, no bitterness has marked her complaints and protests. 'rhe authority ofCongress to abolish slavery in the District of Col. utnbia, is npparent unless the words employed confering it, gives less and a different power when inserted in Consti tutions, than when used in other por• lions of the written and spoken lan guage of the country. The complaint in relation to the non delivery of fugitives from labor will be best answered by a review of the laws enacted on the subject. The act of 1780, although it denied the use of slave property to her own citi zens, with a careful regard for the rights of the slave-holding States, permitted sojourners to retain the ownership of such property for six consecutive months *Rhin the State. The frequent evasions of this part of the statute, and the effort made to extend slavery to the offspring of slave mothers caused the act of 29th of March 1788. The Con ' si itutional provisien'before mentioned for the reclamation of fugitives followed soon after, and was supposed to place all power over the subject in the Nation al Legislature. The act of Congress of 12th February 1793, entitled an "act respecting fugtives from justice and persons esenping from the service of their masters" appeared to confirm this opinion. It was believed however, that a concurrent jurisdiction is vested in the National and State Legislatures. At the request of a number of gentle man of the neighboring State of Mary land, as is stated in the anument in the case of Prigg vs. Commonwealth, the act of 25th March 1826, was passed. Three objects were intended to be se cured by this legislation, to wit : the de livery of fugitives front labor, the pro tection of free colored peopfe', and the prevention of kidnapping. The Ist and 2d sections describe the offence of kidnapping and prescribe its punishment. The propriety and justice of its enactments cannot be questioned. The other sections of this statute rela tive to the reclatnation of fugitives from labor and the powers given to the ow ner to retake his property and the obli gations to aid and co , operate with him, imposed upon the officers of this Com monwealth, was of such character as ought to have satisfied all reasonable and fair dealing men, of the disposition of this Commonwealth, to have the pro visions of the Constitution, and the acts of . Congress, completely carried into effect. While the law provided ample security for the safe keeping of the alleged fugitive, until the owner might have an opportunity to obtain the proof of his former conditions, it re quired other proof of this fact, than the oath of the interested claimant, or his agent or attorney. The provisions of this law were fair and equitable, and well calculated to aid the owner in the recovery of his property ; and it is deem ed a matter of surprise that it was con tested and annulled, through the agency of the same State whose citizens had pro cured its enactment. The guards, in the statute, intended to preserve the liberty of the free man, would by the investigation it demanded, cause some trouble in procuring the final extradition of the fugitive slave. The proof. of property, by other evidence than the oath of the claimant, was certainly de manding as little asour Southern friends in justice, should have desired, when they asked the aid of the official power of the Commonwealth, to send from her jurisdiction, and territory lumen beings, invoking the protection and guardian ship of her laws. The Supreme Court however decided, that the provisions of said law, imposing restraints upon the claimant's power to remove the alleged fugitive were unconstitutional. If the restrictions imposed by the statute were intended to aid the escape, or to prevent the extradition of the fugitive, the accu racy of the decision, cannot be doubted, but if these guards were inserted as necessary to protect the liberty of the freeman, the decision was wrong, unless it was adjudged that the sole authority over the subject was vested in Congress. This decision, left to the master the au thority to claim as provided in the Con stitution and also authorized him to seize and remove the individual whom he alleged was his property, and to use for that purpose the official power of the State, without permitting, to her, the right to control, and regulate the manner of the procedure, or to deter mine the truth and justice of the alleged claim. It established the principle that a stranger to the soil of Pennsylva nia, might enter upon it, and by possi• bility, inflict the deepest injury upon her sovereignty by the abduction oilier citizens on false pretences. The Su preme judicature having so decided the question, our law abiding citizens sub• mitted, but with the determination, that in the spirit of that decision the officers of this Commonwealth should not be made the instruments even by possibility on such slight foundation, as a claim ant's interested demand, of enslaving free men. To prevent this great possi• ble wrong, the act of 3d Alarch, 1847, repealing all legislation on the subject, and forbidding the officers of the State, to take any part in the recapture of such alleged fugitives, was enacted. The con stitutional provision, and the act of Con gress, our State has endeavored to carry into full effect. She has denied and ft is hoped, ever will deny, the power of Con gress to impose the performance of du ties upon her municipal and judicial offi cers, without her consent, An act of Congress, providing a mode of procuring due proof of the correct ness of the claim of the reputed owner of a fugtive from labor ; and requiring satisfactory evidence from disinterested parties of the former condition of the person claimed, would receive the sanc tion of our citizens, and their co-oper ation in carrying It into effect. No en actment would satisfy the citizens of Pennsylvania, that failed to require strict proof of the right of the master. In this recital of her Legislative his tory, it is imposiblo to discover wherein this Commonwealth has been unfaith ful to the National Constitution. If the obligations imposed upon us by the Constitution, have been thus faith folly discharged ; and if every page of our history—every volume of our laws demonstrate, that our federal relations have been honestly regarded; is it not an act of injustice, on the part of Vir- r ginia and Georgia, to charge us with a wilful neglect and infraction of our du ties to the National compact 1 Is it an egression for our people, in the exercise of the liberty of speech, to proclaim that slavery is an evil, and a wrong, and that at the adoption of the Constitution these principles were avowed and maintanied Is it a wrong in them, to say, that pow er is vested in Congress to prohibit the introduction of slavery into the Terri , toriee, and to abolish it in the District of Columbia I The federal Constitution denies to them no right to speak freely l on these subjects. If it did, this Govei n meta never would have existed clothed with power so despotic and unjust. Whether it is expedient to legislate upon the subject of the exclusion of sla very from the Territories, and of its ab olition in the District of Columbia ; at the present time by the National Con• green, or to permit the people of the respective Territories, and the District of Columbia, to act for their own best interests and nccording to their own views of policy and right, is no part of our present duty to determine. These questions may well be left to the Repre sentatives in Congress, under the in structions of the people, to decide as may seem most conducive to the Wei , fare of all sections of our common coun try ; but it is nevertheless, right and proper, and a duty we owe to the people of Pennsylvania—to the memory of her early and patriotic statesman—to the reputation of the public men of the past generation, and to those now entrusted with her destinies, to deny in dignified and decided terms the insinuations and charges made against her faith and in tegrity. 'The - nllegation of infidelity to the na• tional Union is best answered by the his tory of her devotion and attachment to this palladium of our civil and religious freedom. The alien and sedition laws of the national Congress; while they found no sympathy in the hearts of her citizens, but roused their deepest and deadliest opposition, failed to provoke her people to enter into any arrangements for their resistance by force, even to a destruction of the Union. 'the extension of slavety over portions of the vast domains of the Louslanna purchase, although in direct opposition to her united and solemn protest ; and calculated to outrage the feelings of her people, produced no threats of dissolu• Lion. The prostration of her industrial put , suits, caused by the influence of the augumented slave representation in the national Congress, by the admission of Texas; while a deeply wounded, could not destroy her confidence and love for the national compact. The compromise of the Revenue laws, made to win an erring sister to the du ty of obedience to the Constitution and laws, by which wide-spread ruin swept over her borders, wrung from her citi zens no denunciations of the Federal Union, The refusal on the part or certain slaveholding States to deliver tip, al though required so to do, by express provisions of the Constitution, kidnap pers, whose wrong doing was against the very sovereignty of the Commonwealth, furnished, in her opinion, no valid rea son for assembling conventions to dis rupt the confederation of the States. All these nets, so injurious to her people, might have authorised deep and loud complaints, but her love for the Un ion, rendered her silent ; and induced the hope, that different and more friend ly counsels would prevail. Her voice was heard only in kind remonstrance.— No harsh complaints of a violated Con stitution end invaded rights were uttered to wound a brother's ear, and interrupt the social and kindred friendship of a united people. She remembered that we were a common people,—that a com mon purpose, fur the advancement of humane rights, had produced our connec tion,—that a common danger had united us in fraternal bonds,—and that it corn• mon destiny awaited us. She reflected that the same soil had been red with the blood of a common ancestry, and that the same religion, laws, institutions, hab its, and pursuits, governed, and guided, and marked our common pathway. Re lying on the justice and fraternal feel ings of a common country, she believed that her rights and interests would be, in proper time, admitted, recognized and protected. The attachmeat of Pennsyl ennia to the Union during her entire ca reer, has been as pure and ardent as it was in the first hours of its existence, and her faith in its stability and perman ent preservation has never changed. She feels that the cement of the Union is the heart-blood of the entire people; and that in the hands of the masses the fabric of liberty is placed beyond the reach of its secret foes. She confident ly believes, that to prevent its disruption 4 VOL. XV, NO. 14• and overthrow, in the common dangef i would be found side by side, as of the sons of Virginia, Georgia, and Penn sylvania patriotically and robly striving in a common purpose, to plant on a high er, safer, holier, and more stable basis the National banner, and united there with, forever and indistrectible, the 'Vir tue, Liberty, and Independence,' of Penn sylvania ;—the "Sic semper Tyrannis," of Vitgraia ; and the .‘ rffsdom, Justice, and .ittoderation,' of Georgia. In obedience to the constitutional du ty requiring me to transmit such infor mation to the Legislature as may be deemed pertinent to the welfare of the people, 1 beg leave to submit these re solves of Virginia and Georgia, with this message; and to request the pas sage of such rescrlutrorts, to be fOrwar• ded to the Executives of Georgia and Virginia, as may indicate the injustice done to this Commonwealth, in the dec larations made by their Legislatures while at the same time we offer assur ances of our cordial respect for, and faithful support of, the National Consti tution and Union ; and of our sincere, and fraternal feelings towards their pea. ple as citizens of a common country. WM. F. JOHNSTON. Harrisburg, March 22, 1850. The Witty Collteript. Two countrymen were to draw lots to serve in the Mifflin. The president of the ballot had been earnestly solicit ed to save the youngest and had prom ised so to do. In order to keep his word without any apparent partiality, he put two black tikets into the box and said to the men— He who draws the black Oche IS to serve,"• " You draw first . ," said he to the man he wished to go. This man suspecting some trick, from the unusual method of ballotting, drew his ticket, and immediately swallowed it. " What hare you done 1" said 66 president " are you mad 1" " replied the man, " if the tick et 1 have swallowed is black, the re maining one should be white ;—in that case 1 must go; but if I have swallow. ed the white ticket my comrade will of course draw the black one. You may easily know the truth:" The president was thus obliged to let both escape to fulfil his promise. i n- An old deacon in Yankee land once told us a story. He was standing one day beside a frog pond—we havo his own word for it—and saw a large garter snake make an attack upon an enormous bull frog. The snake fed upon one of the frog's hind legs, and the frog to be on a par with his snakesli ip, caught him by the tail, and both commenced swallowing one another, and continued this carniverous operation until nothing was left of either of them. ID= iltankind are more what they are made by mankind than they are made by their Creator. The wolf is ferocious because hunted from a whelp. The snake turns upon you, because you &A ttu!, and pursue it. The child grows surley, because unjustly coerced. But above all, man becomes unjust and cru el, because pursued with cruelty and injustice by his brother man. OUR DEVIL'S SOME.—Here's his last; "There is a man living back in the woods, who being invited to a New Year's Dinner, eat so much pear's meat that he went home and hugged his wifea thing he had never been guilty of before. rE 7- The meanest man in the world lives in West Troy. In helping him oat of the river once, a man tore the collar of his coat. The next day he sued him for assault and battery. (1:7-. An honest man is believed with 'out an oath, for his reputation swears for him. lja- It is the great art and philosophy of life, to make the best of the present, whether it be good or bad. ra- Idleness wastes a man ns insen sibly ns industry improves him. pi- Flatterers only lift a man tip, as it is said the zagle does the tortoise, to .gi.t something by his fall. E t : 7 - The best cure for hard times, is to cheat the doctor by being temperate ; the lawyer, by keeping out of debt ; the demagogue, by voting for honest men ; and poverty, by being industrious. [Da." Sir," said a bypochondrical pa• tient, while describing his symptoms to Abernathy, I feel a terrible pain in my side, when I put my hand to my head." Then, sir," exclaimed the mild physician " why the deuce 40 . yoq put your hand to your head 1," , :