RUIN TINGDON JOURNAL gainttg nettiopoper—littiottV to ItZt*Watt fittelligence, anertfoina,Miro, Etteratttre, ploratitv, avto, 55tioncri, ilsticittturc, antuotiftent, Scr., kr. .7Qrciall.. KTc o. e) a. • YIIBLISIIBII BY JAMES CLARK. caacornuariso. The , uoukm..." will be published every Wed nesday morning, at $2 00 a year, if paid in advance, and if not paid within six months, $2 50. No subscription received for a shorter period than six months, nor any paper discontinued till all ar rearages are paid. Advertisements not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for $1 00, and for every subse quent insertion 25 cents. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continu ed, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged ac cordingly. 0:7 V. B. PALMER, Esq., is authorized to act as Agent for this paper, to procure subscriptions and advertisements in Philadelphia, New York, Balti more and Boston. OFFICES: Philadelphia—Number 59 Pine street. Baltimore—S. B. corner of Baltimore and Cal- vert streets. New York—Number 160 Nassau street. Roston—Number 16 State street. STANTON'S EXTERNAL REMEDY CALLED HUNT'S LINIMENT. I, NOW UNIVERSALLY ACHWOWLEDGEEI TO BE The Infalliable Remedy. For Rheumatism, Spinal .filllctions, Con tractions of the Muscles, Sore Throat and Quinsy, issues, Old Ulcers, Pains in the Breast and Chest, Ague in the Breast and Face, Tooth Ache, Sprains, Bruises, Salt Rheum, Burns, Frosted Feet, and all Nervous diseases. TUE following certificate of the resto ration to health and the perfect cure of a deformed and crippled child, who was thought to be beyond the reach of hope, shows that, no matter how appalling the case may be, there is a remedy in HUNT'S LINIMENT, that will conquer the most desperate cases, and that, if the disease be curable.this cerebrated external 'remedy will do it. It has never tailed in giving immediate releif if timely applied,as ►roved by the abundance of high and un impeachable testimony, the particulars of which are to be found in the pamphlets which are to be had of every agent. (lionising, June 10, 1845. GEORGE E. STANTON, EU:to—Sir—l feel called upon by the tie of gratitude, to offer the following testim , my in favor of Hunt's 'Liniment- My grandson, Clarke E. Evans, who is now ten years of age, has been tor the last eight years a cripple, caus ed by falling from a chair when he was two years old, and wrenching his spine. From the time of the occurrence, we have tried every means to restore him to his natural shape, but all without avail. We took him to New York and placed him under the care of a physician of skill, and after re• mining there some time, we brought him home no better than when we took him there. For several days at times he was -so helpless that he cculil only walk by plac ing his hands upon his knees for support, giving him the appearance of a deformed hunchback. He was also taken to Newburg and prescribed for without any better suc cess. At times he would be strong enough to go out doors, but alter playing:an hair would come in perfectly exhausted, and for several days would be again perfectly help. less. We had lost all hope of ever again seeing him restored to his natural strengh or .shape—but a kind Providence placed your external remedy in my hands. I have used lour bottles, and I am rejoiced to say that the boy is now as straight and strong as any boy of his age. Any of my neigh tors will testefy to the truth of this state anent. I take sincere pleasure in stating these facts for the benefit of those who are •suffering under the like calamity. Yours, respectfully, • __ RACH PI A SII UTE. This is to certify, That lam person ally acquainted with the subscriber, Mrs. •Shute, as well as the boy alluded to. and !rankly bear witness to the deformity of which he was seriously afflicted, aparent I y fur life.--Dated Sing• Sing, June 9, 1845. HENRY HARRIS, Justice of the Peace. (!r`! - For particulars of cures, see the err 'tifica te accornmpanying each bottle. HOADLY, PHELPS 4• CO., 142 Wa ter street, wholesale Agents. Orders ad dressed to them, or to the proprietor, Sing-Sing, 'will be attended to. GEORGE E. STANTON. Dated March 19, 1846. For sale by Thomas Read 4. Son, Hun tingdon, and the principal Stores and Druggists throughout (he country. July 15, 1846. DR. H. H. palm SURGEON DENTIST, Huntingdon, Va. JOHN SCOTT, JR. WI TTORA E r .1T .L.I IP, HUNTINGDON, PA., Will attend with protnptness and fidelity to all business with which he may be entrusted in Hun- tingdon or the adjoining counties. His office is the one formerly occupied by James Steel, Esq., nearly opposite Jackson's Hotel. Huntingdon March 11, 1846. fly Me President of Me United States of America. A. PROCLAMATION'. Whereas a Treaty between the United Sign of America, and her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Croat Britain and Ireland was conclu ded and signed by their Plenipotentiaries at Wash ington on the fifteenth day of June last, which treaty is word for word as follows The United States or America and her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, deeming it to be desirable for the future welfare of both countries that the state of doubt and uncertainty which has hitherto prevailed re specting the sovreignty and government of the ter• ritory on the northwest coast of America, lying westward of the Rocky or Stony mountains, should be finally terminated by an amicable compromise of the rights mutually asserted by the two parties over the said territory, have respectively named plenipotentiaries to treat and agree concerning the terms of such settlement —that is to eey : the Pres ident of the United States of America has, on his part, furnished with full powers James Buchanan, Secretary of State of the United Slates, and her Majesty, the Queen of the United Kingdon of Great Britain and Ireland has, on her part, appointed the right honorable Richard Pakenham, a member of her Majesty's most honorable privy council, and her Majesty's envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to the United States; who after having communicated to each other their respective full powers, found in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the following articles: ARTICLE L From tho point on the forty-ninth parallel of north latitude, where the boundary laid down in en kting treaties and conventions between the United States and Great Britain terminates, the line of boundary between the territories of the United States and those of her Britanic Majesty shall be continued westward along the said forty-ninth par allel of north latitude to the middle of the channel which separates the continent from Vancouver's Island ; and thence southerly through the middle of the said channel, and of Fuca's straits to the Pacific Ocean: PROVIDED, itowEvErt, That the navigation of the whole of the said channel and straits south of the forty-ninth parallel of north latitude remain free and open to both parties. ARTICLE 11. From the point at which the forty-ninth parallel of north latitude shall be found to intersect the great northern branch of the Columbia river, the navigation of the said branch shall be free and open to the Hudson Bay Company and to all Brit ish subjects trading with the same, to the point where the said branch meets the main stream of the Columbia, and thence down the said main stream to the ocean, with free access into and through the said river or rivers, it being understood that all the usual portages along the line thus described shall in like manner be free and open. In navigating the said river or rivers, British subjects, with their goods and produce, shall be treated on the same footing as citizens of the United States; it being, however, always understood that nothing in this article shall be construed as preventing, or intended to prevent the government of the United States from making any regulations respecting the navigation of the said river or rivers not inconsistent with the present treaty. ARTICLE HI, In the future appropriation of the territory south of the forty-ninth parallel of north latitude, as pro vided in the first article of this treaty, the posses sory rights of the Hudson Bay Company, and of all British subjects who may be already in the oc cupation of land or other property lawfully acqui red within the said territory, shall be respected. ARTICLE IV, The farms, lands, and other property of every dem iption belonging to the Puget's Sound Agri cultural Company on the north side of the Colum bia river, shall be confirmed to the said company.— In case, however, the situation of those farms and lends should be considered by the United States to be of public and political importance, and the Uni ted Slates government should signify a desire to ob tain possession of the whole, or of any part thereof, the property so required shall be transferred to the said government, at is proper valuation to be agreed upon by the parties. ARTICLE V. The present treaty shall be retitled by the Presi dent of tho United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate thereof, end by her Brit annic Majesty; and the ratifications shall be ex changed at London, at the expiration of six months from the date thereof, or maser, if possible. In witness whereof, the respective plenipotentia ries have signed the same, and have affixed thereto the seals of their arms. Done at Washington, the fifteenth day of June, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hun dred and forty-six. JAMES BUCHANAN, [L. s.] RICHARD PAKENHAM, [L. a.] . . . And whereas, thesaid treaty hasbeen duly ratified on both parts, and the respective ratifications of the same were exchanged at London, on the seventeenth ultimo, by Louis McLane, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of the United States, and Viscount Palmerston, her Britannic Majesty's principal secretary of state for foreign affairs, on the part of their respective governments: Now, therefore, be it known, that I, JAMES K. POLK, President, of the United States of Amer ica, have caused the maid treaty to be made public, aZ)g auadam. to the end that the same, and every clause and arti cle thereof may be observed and fulfilled with good faith by the United ritates and the citizens thereof. ••• to witness whereof, I have here unto set my hand and caused the zeal of the United States to be affixed. bone at the city of Washington this fifth day of August, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and forty-six, and of the inde pendence of the United States the seventy first. ny the President: JAMES BUCHANAN', Secretary of State THE COUSINS, One of the best stories we have lately read, iv entitled "Tus Cousms,— A Country It is from the chaste pen of Miss Mitford,lan Nnglish authoress of considerable reputation. The whole Is too long for ono paper; and it is a story which it will not do to divide. The first half of the story, like the bigger portion of the first volume of some of Scott's novels, is merely introductory to what follows. So we will sum up the prefatory part in a few words, and then give the denouement in Miss Milford's own beautiful language. Lawyer Molesworth was a rich landlord of Cran ley, the native town of Miss Milford. He had two daughters, to whom his pleasant house owed its chief attraction. Agnes was a beautiful woman; Jessy was a pretty girl. The fond father intended that Jessy should marry a poor relation, one Charles Woodford. Charles had been brought up by his uncle's kindness, and had recently returned into the family from a great office in London. Charles was to be the immediate partner and eventful suc cessor to the great and flourishing business of his benefactor, whose regard seemed fully justified by the excellent conduct and remarkable talents of the orphan nephew. Agnes, who secretly entertained en affection for Charles, was destined by her father for a young baronet who had lately been much at the house. But in the affairs of love, as of all others, (says Miss Milford) man is born to disappointments.— " L'homme propose, et Dieu dispose," is never truer than in the great matter of matrimony. So found poor Mr. Molesworth, who—Jessy having ar rived at the age of eighteen, and Charles at that of two and twenty—offered his pretty daughter, and the lucrative partnership to his penniless relation, and was petrified with astonishment and indigna tion to find the connection very respectfully, but very firmly, declined. The young man was very much distressed and agitated ; he had the highest respect for Miss Jessy, but he could not marry her —he loved another ! And then he poured forth a confidence as unexpected as it was undesired by his incensed patron, who left him in uniiminished wrath and increased perplexity. This interview had taken place immediately after breakfast; and when the conference was ended, the provoked father sought his daughters, who happily unconscious of all that occurred, wore amusing themselves in their splendid conservatory—a scene always beco.ning as it is agreeable to youth and beauty. Jessy was flitting about like a butterfly among the fragrant orange trees and bright geran iums; Agnes was standing under a superb fuschia that hung over a large marble basin—her form and attitude, her white dress, and the classical arrange ment of her dark hair, giving her the look of some nymph or naiad, a rare relic of the Grecian art.— Jessy was prattling gaily, as she wandered about, of a concert they had attended the evening before at the county town. I hate concerts, said the pretty little flirt. ‘. To sit bolt upright on a hard bends for four hours, be tween the same four people, without the possibility of moving or speaking to any body, or any body's getting near enough to speak to you! 011, how tiresome it is! I saw Sir Edmund trying to slide through the crowd to reach you, said Agnes, a little archly ; his presence would perhaps, have mitigated the evil. But the barricade was too complete; he was forced to retreat, without accomplishing his object. Yea, I assure you, he thought it very tiresome; he told me so when we were coming out. And then the music ! pursued Jessy ; the noise that they called music ! Sir Edmund says that he likes no music except my guitar, or a flute on the water; and' I like none except your playing on the organ, and singing Handel on a Sunday evening, or Charles Woodford's reading Milton and bits of Hamlet. Do you call that music? asked Agnes, laughing. And yet, continued she, it is most truly so, with his rich Pasta like voice, and his fine sense of sound and to you, who do not greatly love poetry for its own sake, it is, doubtless, a pleasure much resem bling in kind that of hearing the most thrilling melodies on the noblest of instruments. I myself have felt such a gratification in hearing that voice recite the verses of Homer or Sophocles in the orig• inol Greek. Charles Woodford's reading is music. It is music which neither of you are likely to hear again, interrupted Mr. Molesvvorth, advancing suddenly towards them; for he has been ungrate ful, and I have discarded him. Agnes stood we if petrified. Ungrateful! oh, father ! You can't have discarded him, to be cure, papa, said Jassy, always good natured ; poor Charles ! what can he have done ? Refused your hand, my child, said the angry parent; refused to be my partner and son-in-law, and fallen in love with another lady ! What have you to ray to him now ? Why, Ally, papa, replied Jesay, I am much more obliged to him for refusing my hand, than to you for offering it. I like Charles well for a cousin, but I should not like such a husband at all : so if this refusal be the worst that has happened, there is no great harm done. And off the gipsy ran ; declat ing that she must put on her hel:it, for she had promised to ride with Sir Edmur.d end his sister, and expected them every minute. The father and his favorite daughter remained in the conservatory. That heart is untouched, however, said Mr. 111olestvorth, looking after her with a smile. Untouched by Charles Woodford, nndoubtedly, replied Agnes; but has he really refused my sister. JAMES K. rouc. Absolutely. And does he love another He says so, and I believe him. Is ho loved again ? That he did not say. Did ho tell you the name of the lady? Yes. Do you know her? Yes. Is she worthy of him ? Most worthy. Has lie any hope of gaining her affections? Oh! ha must! he must! What woman could refuse him ? "He is determined not to try. The lady whom he loves is above him in every way; and much as he has counteracted my wishes, it is an honorable part of Charles Woodford's conduct, that he intends to leave his affection unsuspected by his object. Hero ensued a short pause in the dialogue, du ring which Agnes appeared trying to occupy her self with collecting the blossoms of a cope jessa mine and watering a favorite geranium ; but it would not do. The subject was at her heart, and she could not force her mind to indifferent occupa , tions. She returned to her father, who had been anxiously watching her motions, and the varying expressions of her countenance, and resumed the conversation. "Father ! perhaps it is hardly maidenly to avow so much, but although you have never in set words told mo your intentions, I have yet seen and know, I cannot tell how, all that your too kind partiality towards me, has designed for your children. You have mistaken me, dearest father, doubly mistaken me; first in thinking me flit to fill a splendid place in society; next in imagining that I desired such splendor. You mean to give Joey and the lucra tive partnership to Charles Woodford, and designed me and your large possessions to our wealthy and titled neighbor. And with little change of person these arrangements may still for the most part hold good. Sir Edmund may still be your son-in-law and your heir, fur he loves Jassy, and Jassy loves him. Charles Woodford may still bo your part ner and adopted son, fur nothing has chanced that need diminish your affection or his merit. Marry him to the woman he loves. She must be ambitious indeed, if she be not centent with such a destiny. And let me live on with you, dear father! single and unwedded, with no thong ht but to contribute to your comfort, and to cheer and brighten your de clining years. Do not let your too great fondness for me, stand in tho way of their happiness ! Make me not so odious to them and myself, dear father Let me live always wills you and for you—always your own poor Agnes v And blushing at the ear nestness which she had spoken, she bent her head over the marble basin, whose waters reflected the fair image, as if she had really been the Grecian statue to which, whilst he listened, her fond fath er's fancy had compared her. Let me live single with you, and marry Charles to the woman he loves. Have you heard the name of the lady in question? Have you formed any guess who she may be ? Not the slightest. I imagined from what you said that she was a stranger to me. Ilave I ever seen her You may sec her—nt least you may see her re flection in the water, at this very moment; for ho has had the infinite presumption, the admirable taste, to fall in lore with his cousin Agnesl Father! And now, mine own sweetest, do you still wish to live with me single 1 Oh, father! father! Or do you desire that I should marry Charles to the woman of his heart! Father, dear father ! Choose, my Agnes! It shall be as you command. Speak freely. Do not cling so around me, but speak. Oh, my dear father ! Cannot we all live together? I cannot leave you. But poor Charles—surely, father, we may all live together! And so it was settled. And a very few months proved that love had contrived better for Mr. Moles worth than he had done for himself. Jessy with her prettiness, and her title, arid her fopperies, was the very thing to 120 vain of—the vary thing to visit for a day, but Agnes, and the cousin whose noble character and splendid talents so well deserved her, made the pride and the happiness of his home. Ql' An elderly gentleman travelling in a stage coach, was amused by the constant fire of words kept up between two ladle.. One of thorn at last kindly inquired if their conversation did not make his head ache? when ho answered with a great deal of naivette—" No, madam, I have been mar ried for twenty•eight years," Counsel to Younng Men. DY THE REV. DR. NORT. Truth and justice are immutable and eternal principles—always sacred and al ways applicable. In no circumstance however urgent, no crisis, however awful, can there be an aberration from the one, or a dereliction of the other, without sin. With respect to every thing else, be ac commodating; but here be unyielding and invincible. Rather carry your integrity , to the dungeon or the scaffold, than re ceive in exchange for it liberty and life.— Should you ever be called upon to make your election between these extremes, do not hesitate. It is better prematurely to be sent to heaven in honor, than, having lingered on the earth, at last to sink to ruin and infamy. In every situation a dishonest man is detestable, and a liar is much more so. Truth is one of the fairest attributes of the Deity. It is the boundary which sep , erates vice front virtue; the line which divides heaven from hell. It is the chain which binds the man of integrity to the throne of God ; and like the rind to whoseithrone it binds him till thin chain is dissolved his word 'nay be relied on.— Suspended on this your reputation, your life's sate. But against the malice of a liar there is no security. He can be bound by nothing. His soul is already repulsed to an immeasurable distance from that Deity, a sense of whose presence is the se• entity of virtue. lle has sundered the last of those moral ligaments which bind a mortal to his duty. And having done so, through the extended reason of fraud and falsehood, without a bond to check or a limit to confine him, he ranges—the dread. ed enemy of innocence—whose lips pol lute even truth itself as it passes through them, and whose breath blasts and soils, and poisons as it touches. Employment, The following just sentiment was utter ed by Daniel Webster in a late speech in the Senate of the United States. It should be had in everlasting remembrance. Alit•. "Sir, I say it is employment that makes the people happy. Sir this great truth ought never to be forgotten: it ought to be placed upon the title-page of every book on political economy intended for America, and such countries as America. It ought to be placed in every farmer's al manac. It ought to head the colonies of every farmet's magazine and mechanic's magazine. It should be proclaimed every where, notwithstanding what we hear of the usefulness—and I admit the high use fulness—of cheap loud—notwithstanding that, the great truth should be proclaimed every where, should be made into a pro verb, if it could--that witEltF. THERE Is WORK FOR THE HANDS AND THE MEN THERE WILL BE 0000 FOIE THEIR TEETH. Where there is employmemnt, there will be bread. And in a country like our own, above all others, will this truth hold good—a country like ours, where with a great deal of spirit and activity among the masses, if they can lied employment, there is always great willingness for la bor. If they can obtain fair compensation for their labor, they will have good houses —good clothing—good food, and the means of educating their families; and if they have good houses, and good clothing, and good food, and means of educating their children, from their labor, that labor will be diem fill, and they will be a contented, and a happy people." The Moon in Lord Rosse's Telescope. Dr. Scoresby, of Ireland, whose admi rable discourses on Astronemy have been arranged alter the examination of the std• far system through the magnificent instru ment of Lord Bosse, rental ks, in a recent lecture, that, with regard to the lunar orb, every object on the muou's surface is now distinctly to be seen ; and lie had no doubt that under very favorable circumstances it would be so with objects sixty feet in height On its surface were craters of ex • tinct volcanoes, rocks, and masses of stone almost inumerable. Ile had no doubt what ever that if such a building as he was then ill were upon the surface of the moon, it would be rendered distinctly visible by these instruments. But there were no signs of habitations such as ours; no ves tiges of architectural remains, in show that the moon is, or ever was, inhabited by a race of 'mortals similar to ourselves. It presented no appearances ohich could lead to the supposition that it contained any thing like the green fields viol lovely verdure of this beautiful world of ours.— there was no water visible ; not a sea, or a river, or even the measure of a reservoir for supplying town or factory : all seemed desolste. Hence would arise the reflec tion in the mind of the Christian philoso pher, why had this devastation been ?-- Boston Transcript. CLERICAL War.—A distinguished clergyman, a few weeks since, being requested, in one of our churches, to open the services with prayer, but not having been invited to preach, declined, saying that if his friend was going to do the mowing, he might whet hie own scythe l" Dg - ictt)llclD tUmc. e)Eibd CASE of RonnlNG.—On rriday morn ing, the vicinity of 4th and. Walnut et., Phila. was thrown into considerable ex citement, in consequence of a report that Mr. John Barncastle, Bootmaker, at the. southwest corner of the above streets, had been gagged in his store, and rubbed of about 5400. Yesterday morning at 8 o'clock a testate servant of Mrs. Buyer, who occupies the dwelling part of the prem ises, heard a groan while in the cellar, and was the first to push the store door open, which had been nearly closed. She found Mr. Barncastle in a setting position with his hands tied under his legs, and a piece of stick in his mouth, which appeared to have acted as a gag. Ile was insensible, hut under the elforts of a physician, he recov ered sufficiently to make a statement. which was to the effect that a man purchas.- ed a pair of boots of him on Thursday a f ternoon, and said lie would call for them when the Theatre was out. About half past 10 Block, he returned to the store with two men, and While he Barncastle was stooping down to unbutton the strap of the pants of his customer, the men caught hold of him, and a scuffle ensuing, he was beaten and left in a state of insensibility. He discovered subsequently that he had been robbed of about 8400. The gag was a piece of stick about eit inches in length, and from the tact that several persons could eject it with out difficulty from be tween the teeth, some doubts were expres sed as to its ability of preventing Mr. B from giving an alarm. A GLimpsE or WATERLoo.—The cuir assiers how transferred their favors to some other qurater, leaVing us at liberty to contemplate the havoc. they have made ; and the duke of Wellington riding by, again addressed their general with "Well, llalkett, how 110 you get on?" The gen eral replied, 'My Lord, we are dreadfully cut up can you not relieve us tor a little while?" "ImpoSsible," said the duke.— . "Very well, my lord," said the general," "we'll stand till the last man falls:" The next time the cuirassiers made their ap pearance in our front the Life Guards boldly rode cut to meet them, and in point of numbers they seemed pretty well match ed. The French waited with the utmost coolness to receive them, opening their ranks to allow them to ride in. As they were so close, and we had nothing to do at the time, we had a fine opportunity of seeing theth, and were much pleased to find the Life Guards a match for them ; and we wonder that they had not been led against them earlier in the day. It was a fair fight, and the French were fairly bea ten and driven off. I noticed one of the Guards, who was attached by two cuiras siers at the same time. He bravely main tained the unequal conflict for a minute or two, when he disposed of one of them by a dvaely thrust in the throat. His com bat with the other one lasted about five minutes, when the Gardsman struck his opponent a slashing backhanded stroke, sent his helmet some distance, with the head inside it. The horse galloped away the headless rider sitting erect on the sad dle, the blood spouting out of the arteries like so many fountains—Revd/cc/tow,' of Milit2ry Service. To Wine Drinkers. It ie not generally known that wine balhB aro quite common in France, nevertheless, such is the case. The Duke of Clarence is not the only gen- tleman who hae enjoyed an immersion in Malmsey. Punch has tried it with the very best Sherry. Only imagine ; Punch—the veritable English Punch— swimming in French wino and kicking, and plough ing, and laughing, until the tears ran down his cheeks, and never thinking of the expense—a five franc piece! What ! a five franc piece for a tub full of wine! Franc.' Gently—gently. At least fifty others bathed in the tuts wine—afttr Punch. The keeper of the bague had a preference for Punch, ethl gave Punch the first dip. After him came fifty others—making in allfirty five frank pieces. A good price for the tub. 'rho wino was then thrown out.' 'Not at all. Not so by any means.' What then?' Bottled ! Bottled, of course.' Bottled! And for what purpose?' Why for drink, to bo sure.' Drink! Who would drink such stuff ' Why, the English do—the Yankees do! The tatter import it in largo quantities. It is a great favorite in Yankeeland.' RsotriAnLx USED Ur.—A pool editor out seat thus makes his exit: Dear readers, with this number ceases the ears. tence of the " Olio!" Our number is full end coin. plate, and we are a "busted establishment." We shall gather up our coat and boots, shave off our whisker., dun a few interesting specimen. of "pat rons" that will pay--in promises, and then we are going to go to some other field of operation. It may not be more extended, but it cannot be less." azl•The American Bible Society lest year put in eireulatien half a million of Bibles and Testi , menu