VOL.CJHE X7. NEW SERIES. NPHE BEDFORD GAZETTE IS PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING RV B. F. MEYCKS, At th following terms, to wil: $1 .150 per annum, CASH, in advance. $2.00 " " if paid within the year. *2.50 11 it' not paii within the year fry-No subscription trkcn lor !** than sis months paper discontinued until all arrearages an oaid, unless at iheopiion of the pui o w. it ha •reen decided by the United Stat- "mrls.tha: tn toppaeofa newspaper without . vay "ent ot ar reams-*, is prima facte evidence oi Ira. lit and is I Qy't'he courts have decided (hat persons are ac countable tor the subscription price o' newspapers it thej take them from the post oißce.whctoer the; subscribe for them, or not. TEE SCEOOL-K ASJL'ER'E SOKG. A PARODY ON HOODS SONS OF THE SHIRT. With talking weary and worn, With eyelids heavy nd red, A schoolmaster sat in his threadbare co?t, Plying nis tongue and heaJ. Teach ! teach ! teach ! 'Mid poverty, cepsure and wrong, And still, with a voice of dolorous pitch. He sang "The Schoolmaster's Song." Teach—teach —teach ! While the cock is crowing aloef; An-' teach—teaeh —teach ! Till the stars shine through the roof. It's oh, to be a slave— To be quarterd and roasted as pork,l In Africa's centre, at a "Feast of the Brave,' It this is Christian work ! Teach—teach —teach Till the brain begins to swim j Teach—teach —teach ! Til! the eyes are heavy and dim,} Writing, and spelling, and reading, And reading, and spelling, and writing; Till over their noddles I fall asleep, And dreaming still heai them reciting. Oh, patron* with horses dear 1 Oh, men who love your wives, It is not broadcloth you're wearing out, But human creatures' lives ! Teach—teach —teach . Without cash or negotiable note, Earning at once, in a double reward, A shroud as well as a coat. But why do 1 ta'k of death, That phantom of grizzly bone T 1 bardly fear this terrible shape, It seems so like my own. 1? seems so like my own .he -t -nl 1 I —* . .. „ O God, that bread should be so dear, And brains should be so cheap I Teach—teach —teach! My labor never flags : And what are its wages ? A haggard face- Disease, and a coat in lags — Dishonor and honor, a kick and a ptifT, Ingratitude's horrible stare; And despair so blank, my tears I thank, For sometimes falling there ! Teach—teach—teach, From weary chime to chime i Tiach—teach—teach, As prisoners work for crime. Spelling, and writing, and reading, And reading, and writing, and spelling, Till tke heait is sick, and the brain beuumbec As well as the tongue in telling. Teach—teach —teach, In the dull December light ; Teach—teach—teach, When the weather is warm and bright, When the farmer and trader are moving About, like the birds of the air, And the doctor goes flying along, Ir. his magical swift-rolling chair. Oh ! but to sell the silks Of the merchant, with smiling face, To p!-ad the cause of ihe rich. And pocket the fee for the case. To be honored for houses and lands. To marry a foitune and wile , To "laugb and grow f.it" like a priest, And take a new lease uponfli/e. Oh, but for one short hour ! A respite beyond the reach Of ihe curses of fathers and mother- 1 , Whose dailings 1 honored with beech ! Whose sons would all have b-en gov'nors, . Whose daughters would all have been queen- But lor weeks, months and years oi my labor, Unceasingly spent on their teens. With talking,weary and worn, Wltn eyelids heavy and red, A schoolmaster sat in his threadbare coat, Like a tombstone over the dead, Teach—teach-- teach. 'Mid poverty, censuie and wrong; And still with a voice of dolorous pitch, Would that it's trne could reach the rich, He sang "The Schoolmaster's Song." A SHAVING INSTITUTION. —A few days since a traveller stepped into a bank, and immedi ately polled olf his hat, coat and cravat. This done, he cast a look at the cashier, who was seated in a corner, "calm as a May morning," and with a commanding shake of the head, said : "Hadn't you better be getting that hot wa ter !" The teller informed him hhat he was in t he wrong shop. "You are in a bank, sir, "and nol io a barber shop," "Hank, whew !" ejaculated the astonished •Iranger. "Blame it, they told me it was a place where they shaved people." fUiscciianeons. Foil THE BEDFOBD GAZETTE. KIND WOKDS' When God made man, He endowed him with I ev-ry requisite lor happiness. lie gave linn Ij^h! f j love and n-ace. And what God mad" our fir-t parents hrir to, in Pjradis*, has been trans mitted unto us. Although &V. sin we have ! IJETOUIE children of sorrow ; still we possess, in jan emitieiit degree, qualiiie's of soul, calcula ted to make us nappy, and not ourselves only, ! hut .dsn our fel'ow m n. A iw, t • promote the happiness of our fellow i mo) ii is nut r* quired, that we deprive our js- Ins oi any ei joy.iieni. We need not lavish 1 upon, i.he sorrow nig poor ordistr-ssed pilgrim, stores ol silver and gulu to alleviates nis suffer ings—nor need we lay aside ihe marble ol happiuesslor toe cloak ot gloom, to heal the woun.led sj inl, or dispel tne ominous shades ol sorrow wtncii tiaug in melancholy silence around the b-ait ol some poor desponding bidder. No ! more simple, by far, is the anti dote tor sorrow—the balm lor, distress— kind words furnish every requisite. They will accomplish what gold fails to do and tiiere are none so j oor that they have them not. Wnatan influence do they wo Id ! How potent, how mistily! K.n.i words spoken to the erring vviil reclaims him—snatch him from the iiand of the strong despoil-r—cause him to loresafe tiis evil habits ot thought and life—and drive bun from the flowery paths ot j ease, and indulgence that have lead him awav Iroui truth, and whose dazzling allurements I have caused ins mind to err, have contaminated, j his heart, and made his feet sink to lollow after ' evil. Kind words addressed to one suffering the i excruciating pains ot disease, will alleviate his sutfei ings and lighten the burden of hi* afflic tion,—siiid words spoken to the poor, will sweeten the cup of tlieir pnvation will light up their almost destitute hovel with the sun light ol happiness, and thiow a beam oi con tentment over Uieir rugjed pathway of iite* They will encourage the child plodding his j "weary way" up through dithcuhies, and opposed by almost insurmountable barriers, and ! those weighed down with care, they will cheer ; and those troubled, distressed, burdened with; I the galling yoke ol bereavements, they will J I condor!. It matters not what be the distress of mind i I and sorrow ofsoul,.Hie suffering mortal is called to; endure, kind woid will_ soothe and mui- ! and enable the sufferer to bear up manfully against the Ills ol life—-and resigned- I ly submit to the afflicting and insciutab.e dis- j pensations of Hun, who rules in righteousness, the affairs ol His people. Sweet, then, is tne m ; smn cf,kind words I Gentle as the dew that ' descended from Mount Zior;, and watered tne i j "whole face ul the ground," they fall in the wounded heart, moisten its grief tortured aven ues, and < ause to spring up the life in I used germs of peace and j>y ! Nor do they cost anything. Why, then, not let them lal! by the wayside to cheer, comfoit, and bless, those 1 who are bowed down under heavy burdens '! | j Why not whisper them in the ears of the sons | jof want and calm, by their magic spell, the j j sayings of their bleeding, sorrowing aearts ? I i Why withhold from any suffering son o! j humanity, a boon so precious, so divine, when i its bestowal costs us no self denial whatever ? ! Restrain them not. Let them flow Irom the j fountain of a pure and sympathetic heart. In j this imitate the blessed Saviour. He had a j kind word for all. They shall not be spoken j |in vain v No, many a sorrowing heart, has j j he"n comforted by their healing balm, and ! j cheered by the sweet relief which liny have j administered. And, oh ! how true, that "Kind words will never di ; Never die—no never die !"' They not onlv cheer, comfort and bless us but, tiiey live lorever. "Deep in the breast they he, cherished and blest." And what can drive them from their sacred J utg- i men!, HI a grateful heart ? They lie too deep j fit tfie unrelenting hand of time to erase ; the-:: - j remembra ice awakened in the thankful soul, is tofjumd an t lasting, to be washed out bv the j waterHo! oblivion. Aye ! forever while lite j remains, tiiey will linger with silvery sweet- I ne>s, on lb" ear and sound a thrill of gladness through itie heart of nun whom thev have curnt r'.ed. But whilst they cheer ih° disponding, j con f irt Hie desltevsed, leclaini the erring, and ' eucouiage the young. they a - e a source of the 1 < gieateat pleasure ti. him who speaks them.— !i Who does not I •* I a lliousand limes compensa- j tel, if by any act of his, he bar in any way, ! benefitted his fellnv man ? Duty bids us use ; i thein. And from Hie sacred truths of the ! blessed Bible there comes a voice of duly,' I pleading in tones of ineffable love. "Re, kind- | 1 ly affectionate, one to another. Comfort the j bowed down, and bind up the broken hearted." 1 ' But the sweetest truth ol all is, (hey will j not lose their reward. In proportion, as they j ] have contributed to promote the happiness and j , enhanceithe welfare of a poor, lorlorn, heart- 1 , sick brother, they will be rewarded by Him j | wtio halh said, Even a cup ot cold ! i water given ia my name shall not lose its re- i j ward. j < Penn'a College, DUNCAN. MAMMOTH HOG.—The Virginia South Legion notices a mammoth Chester hog, butchered by Martin F. Milley of that vicinity. He weigh ed D't eight hundred and fourteen pounds and three quarters of a pound! We consider Vir ginia ahead oil hogs. If any of our readers know anything to beat or even come near to this, and sends us an authentic account, we will publish it with doe credit. The Virginia news paper considers this hog "as heavy as two com mon beeves, and tnore valuable".— which may do for Virginia, but won't apply to New York, Ohio, Kentucky oj Illinois, or Pennsylvania. BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1861. ABJIT F.GGS. i All the wcrid and his cosmopolitan wife and family like new laid eggs. Nor do we depre cate their tate ; on the contrary, we share it. The relish of eggs is honorable, and to prefer them fresh evinces a due appreciation ol the '•fiiiies- of things." Tradition runneth nul back to the time when eggs, in this condition, were of evil repute, although the use of ibe stale variety as a missile has never been popular wub the recipients. Piobably the antediluvians were fund of eggs, lor we are given to under stand thai they feisted high, and what would a banquet be without "the fruit of the lien I'he Pdriarch c! the Deluge, and his wife, sons, and daiighters-in-iaw, doubtless had omelettes for the.r breakfast occasionally duiiug theii providential cruise. j 1 tiat ttie Egyptians were fond of eggs is be ' yond peradventure, for one of our aicl terlogist.- j orought home with him from Eg\ pt some doz ens, which had been at least 3UOO y-.ars in the catacombs, having been placed there lor the accommodation of the mummies, in case they should wake up and feel peckish. These egg;, cackled over by the hens that flourished in the time ol the early Pharaohs—laid, probably, be j fore the children of Israel returned from their exodus by the way of the Red Sea —we have seeu, and many of them are is perfect external ly as if they baa been bought iu market yes terday ; but although Egyptian wheat of (tie same date is saul to have germinated and re j produced uself, we are not aware that aoy of the eggs ot that ilk have been set upon and hatched. To leave the ancient heathens and be prac tical—this is the season when well disposed | hens are expected 10 commence their oviparous j operations. Our country lr*ends are either ex pecting or already receiving these deiigh'lul tributes of aff'. clion from their leathered depen dants. Perhaps we may be able to put them in the way of "hurrying up" the dilatory Dame Paribus. Hells cannot lay unless they can have access to inaierial wherewith to manufac ture the white shells in which the gold* n globes and the albumen in winch they aie suspended, ate enclosed. That material is carbonate o lime. A certain quantity of chalk or lime should therefore be scattered with tin ir food,or old egg shells will da. Professor Gregory, of Aberdeen, in a letter addressed to a In-mi, and published in an English newspaper, says : "As I suppose you keep poultry, 1 may tell you that it has been ascertained that if you mix with their food a sufficient quantity oi chopped egg shells or chalk, wtiich ihey eat greedily, they will lay, other things being equal, twice or thrice as many eggs as belbre." WHO ARE ABOLITIONiSTS rf'he late vo'e in the House of Representa tives at Washington, upon the Cor won amend ment i . Lonstiiultrrri shows cbficiuafveiJ who, ol that body, are Abolitionists : JOINT RESOLUTION TO AMEND THE CONSTITUTION or "TIE UNITED STATES. Be it resolved, By the Senate and House ol Representatives of ihe United States of Amer ica, in Congress assembled, two-thirds ol both Houses concurring, that the following article be proposed to the Legislatures ot the several Stales as an amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which, when ratified bv three-lourths of said Legislatures, shall be valid to all intents and purposes as part ol the said Constitution, viz : j ARTICLE XII. —"That no amendment shall i be made to ih- C institution which will author- I z- or give Congress power to abolish or infer | fere within any State with the domestic inslt | tutious therein, including that of persons held jto labor or servitude by the laws of said State." The above was the joint resolution voted up on; which is a proposition so lair and just, as Well as necessary to it'slore peace to the coun try, that we cannot •ee how any reasonable and honest-minded man could oppose if. We have the right to charge those who voted against it with being Abolitionists in the true sense of the word, and in favor of Congress abnlishing sla very in Use Southern Stat-s. We did not be lieve that sixty-five members of tha body would dare place themsi Ives upon this revolu tionary platform, ami outiage the opinion and patriotism of tbe country. Here are their uan.es—let bern bt remembered: .W —Messrs. .Mien, Ashley, Bpale, Bing ham, B'.tir, Blake, Brayton, Butiiriton, Burlin game, Mmnham, Carey, Carter, Case, Cobutn, C'onkli. g, Dawes, Pent on, Ferry, F .ster, prank, Gooch, GROW, Gurley, HICKMAN. Hind man, Hutchins, Irvine, Kellogg, ol Michigan, L-ach, ol Michigan, L-e, L mgnecker, Loom is, Livejoy, Mars'on, McKean, Pettit, Potter, Pottl , Ed win R. Reynolds, Rovce, Sedgwick, Somes, Spinner, STEVENS, STEWART, of Penn'a., Taj pan, Ton pkins, Train, Vande ver, VunWyck, Wade, Wafdron, Walton, Washburn, of Wisconsin, Washburn, of Illi nois, Wells, Wilson and Woodruff—6s, They ate about the same who voted for Blake's abolition resolution last wiritpr. A mong those who opposed the Corwin amend ment, we rtgret to find Mr. Blair, (he Repub lican rnemoer from (his district. We do not believe he represents'the sentiments'ol hi 3 paity, lor we have already heard indignation express ed among Ins own political friends at his vote. He tias listened to the no-compromise, radical teaching of the Tribune , and thus been precip itated into the black gulf of Abolitionism.— Huntingdon Globe. is a fellow in Vermont who has a bugle, the notes ot which are so sweet, that when lie plays the whole neighboihood catches them to use instead of sugar. | (UP" We heat, said lue young man rather sharply j "that old gentleman was going to Middlebury loses a dying sou, who will now be dead and htiripd, protra fly, before his father can get there. Prat's one ot the results ot your officious imer ineddling with things concern you. Ac I 'hat caipe; bag is my carpet bag, and has got my wedding suit in it. I was to have been married to night, it it hadn't been lor you.— , You've damaged a funeral and spoiled a wed di -| with your d—d nuuseu.se!" And so he h- J, sure enough. rlie KMI'UL'SS EIGE\'IL'S RlVAL •u'be London correspondent of the New Or it . K' Delhi gives the h;s!ory of a certain count er- from Italy, who is initialed C-, and who 6,1 f caused heart burnings to E./genie. She is at on tit ess '-as much as my mother," as the fat j •er of Spam had it—being ihe daughter of a • y worthy cobbler of Milan, who*"waxed" 1. i irirfj (vinous) and spiteful, and drove fiis ' ighter to se- k the protection of her "uncle*" a .i test of Ancona, and here the young lady . i R *;id became that tare and beauteous thing, an Italian blonde.— Not the downright r d Lair of the Highland lassie, nor the iivckled skin offai i,is< with which it mates in the North ; but a iroJJen, glossy tress, that descended —in lux/nance which would lival Macassar's be&t growth—to the knees, and a fairness that was alabaster, with running under currents of many streams of blood led. She was too lair to be unnoticed. She ran off with a sailor to Sicily, and was—not mar ried—but hei sailor was, and a m the floating tresses, giving a tug enough to lilt the Cirvat Etstem's anchor, when pop, off came the "superabundant," and the lady Jay faulting, m her mortification—so the Italian j Countess was left the mistress of the field, seek ing no conquests, apparently, but making thein by slmais of "lions" at a lime ; such is the per veisity of mankind. But she was cold in h.-r saner days, and Lad changed her beautv for Wendham Lake ice—nil, oh, what will not ambition do at a certain age in woman ! fbe greatest in the laud ol Prance came, saw, and was conquered, and Ihe fair Empress had to yield to a fairer aim, but here the piquant history cl..se ß , and whether the lady yielded as quickly as the Emperor, history sayeth not. .-is a true defender of beauty, and a'man of the world, I siv she did not. But, for all that, we have the Empress of the French amona us,' in high dudgeon, and she sings she w o n't go home, till Christmas—till t'otheis gone away. A LEARNED JUDGE. One of the first mummies brought into Europe Irom the East gave rise to a most dramatic ad venture. .-\boul a hundred years ago, duting the reign ol his immaculate majesty Louis XV. < ol fiance, an antiquary returned from Giand Cauo, brought a mummy with him piesumed to I be at least three thousand six hundred vearsold. Our savant, tired of the dillig-rw-s in which he had been traveling from Marsadles, look a b.nge at lont A iubleau, which landed hun safe and sound at Poit St. Bernard. Eager to see his family, he had his effects load-d on a lifter, but lelt his precious mummy in the bottom of boat. The custom house officer, on boarding it ! discovered a box of a strange shape and aspect. ' Suspecting it to contain contraband goods, he had it opeu-d. What a spectacle A woman swathed in linen bandages from head io foot ! > No doubt this v/as 3 wretched vic>irn sHangl d oy a jealous lover or a grasping heir. Thecom mis arc of police was instantly sent for, and made ins appearance, flanked by two surgeons as skilful as himself in archeology. The crime t was recognized, a repoit made of it, and the i body transported to the Morgue, that the (fiends might come and identify it. It is p'esumed that none o| them made their appearance. Our learned traveler, however, in taking an inven tory of his effects the next day, bethought hun seif ol his greatest curiosity. He flew to the boat, when the learned commissary and three minions ol the Jaw seizid him and dragged him before ihe magistrate. Aha ! my fine fellow, cried the judge, we're got you. W o black hanging over your head ? Now sir, look m u in the face, and answer the questions I shall put. By whom was the y ourfg girl placed in the box in which she was discovered ? Bv myself sir. i\lr. Clerk, phase take down his confession, said (he magistrate. Who swathed Imr with linen bandages fioin h-a-i to foot ? I did your honor. Writedown Air. Clerk, jthat he admits his Ci iuie. The expression is rather *'i m?. Tlie deed is heinous. How old Ras the girl ? About nineteen yea r 9. Memphis, I think. Fancy importing a girl such a distance to i murder her! When did her death take place? About three thousand six hundred years ago. Prisoner ! how* dare you indulge in this mis placed levity? lam not joking sir. I assure you til" de ceased lived iu the reign of one of the Pha rolis. I'll put handcuffs on you. Your honor, said the prisoner sternly, this pleasantry has been carried too far. And let me say, sir. that you are the trod marvel mslv ignoiant man ibat ever sat upon the judicial bench. Where we<*e you brought up, that von haven't even suspei ted that for two days"you have been holding an inquest on the pretended murder of an egyptian mummy ? A mommy ! Of course sir : and if you had conducted your examination properly, you would know "that i you are addressing Count de I) , a mem ber of the Academy of Inscriptions and Belles Lett res. My lord, said the judgp, I beg a thousand pardons. I hope your lordship will forget i will forget everything. Give ne my mummy, and try in future to obtain experts who will come a little nearer than three or four j thousand years in guessing at the date of a per son's death. Yi -YthTIBER, The |>o!ic< magistrate, very murh morlifid a! ins blunder, gave up t/st* mummy, but be nev beard the last pait o( the story. SCENE IN A POLICE OFFICE- I lie J,I JIORER IN this case, whose name was Dicken Swiven,alias, '-Stove Pipe Pete," was placet) at 'be bar and questioned by the Judge to the following efF-ct ; Judge—Hiing the prisoner into court. Pel-—Here I atn, bound to blaze, as the spiiits of turpentine said, when he was ail a lire. We will lake a little fire out of you. How do you live. I ain't < irticular, as ?lh- oyster said when I bey asked him if he would be roasted or fried. We don ! want to h-sr what lb- <> ys' •• onhe spirits ol turpentine either. \\'■ at do you follow ? Anything that comes in my war .i- 'he lo coinutiv- said, when it run over ;t;-- I■f |. i. • ** r * Don't care anything about the locomotive.— W hat is your business. That's various, as the cat said when she stale the chicken ofT the tabie. It I hear any more absurd comoarisons, I will give you twelve months. I in done, as the beefsteak ?aid to the cook. Now sir, your punishment wii! d-pend on the shortness and coirectnrss of your answers. I suppose you live by going around the docks. No sir, I can l go around the docks without a boat, and hain't got none. Answer me s>r. How do you get your bread ? Sometim-s at the baker's and sometimes I eat fa'era. No more of your stupid nonsense. How do you support yourself ' Sometimes on my legs and sometimes on a chair. How do you keep yourself alive ? By breathing sir. I order you to answer this question correct! v. How do you do ? Pretty well I thank you, Judge. How do you do 1 I shall have to commit you. Well, you've committed yourself first, that's some consolation. PATRICK HENRY. A man stands upon the floor of the House ot Delegates of Virginia. He turns an eye of tire arouniHiim—hejtrenrtbles with some mighty emotion. That emotion, reader, was the "first breath of new borr. liberty. She started into life at this inspiration, and the days ol Tyrranny were numbered. The grandeur of that scene cannot be compassed at one glance. He stood a miU a grave a,w prude.-/ body e{trea, iyn sc.'ous, indeed, of the wrongs of his country, but relying upon the modest petition lor re dress. 1 hey had never let their imaginations ramble into visions of upright and fearless in dependence. A thousand things forbade the idea. J heir habits of thougbtj ar.d action, their pitiable weakness as a country, their dis gust for war on account ot recent and exhaus ting conflicts, all tended to indispose them to treedom. They were, besides, legislating be neath the jealous eyes of royal who would not fail to call treason by its name. 1 hey sat as it were under the glimmerings of the diadem. Who would dare, if so inclined to,stalk forth from their midst, and throw down the gauntlet to the mightiest Empire of the world—to princi ples as old as the great globe itself, interwoven with every page of past history, sanctioned by venerable ages, and proud and awful as the heavens ? \\ ho would dare to leap on the mossgrown and frowning ramparts of monarchy, and pluck its blood red flag? Who would rush from the security of submission, and Sampson like, grasp the lion by his mane ? It was ttie grandest moment of that time, bnt God haJ rein d up one to fill it. That one was Paint k Henry. He opened his lips. His heart, big with the destinies ot the World, struggled for a moment with doubt— but no longer. The electric ap p-al shot tjrth, drifted on—flash and brighter, and growing in overwhelming majesty, until the last words—'-Give me liberty or give me D.-a:h I' 5 filled up its measures of terrible might : 1 the last link ot the chain that had entire), md the former *'HS riven. He has finished nis sublime task. T; e revolution was a fact. TIT- HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. From a table puhli>h-ri in one of the Harrishurgh pa pers, we learn that ttie present H use of K-*- preseiilatives is initde up of thirty one farmers, fourteen merchants, one railroad contractor, seven physicians, thirteen law vers, one lumber dealer, eight iron manufacturers, one dyer, two editors and printers, two coach makers, one architect, one clerk, one manufacturer, one horticulturist, one coal merchant, one coa/ operator, two powder manufacturers, one engi neer, one cooper, one carpeiilc, one tin smith, two wheelrights, one grntleman, one agricultu ral implement manufacturer, one moulder, one viclnailer. Ol these, six'y-seven are natives ot Pennsylvania, two of Massachusetts, one of Ohio, two of Connecticut, one ot Maryland, five of New York, one of Virginia, two of New Jersey, f uir of Ireland, one of England, one ot Wales, and one ot Getmanv.-j ttf" What-would <>ur wives say if tbey knew where we were !" said the captain ola schooner, wfien they were heating about in a thick fog, t-aiftil of going on shore. "Humph ! I shouldn't mind '.hat," replied the mate, "If we only knew where we were onrselves.'* iCfll an empty nurse could sneak,'!'bat love like speech would ii make '—"You'l! find no change in me VOL. 4. NO. 32.