DR TALMAGE'S SERMON: How to Conquer. “When shall 1 awake, I willseekit yet again.” Prov. 23: 5. Wrrn an insight into human nature such as no other man ever reached, Solo- mon, in my text, sketches the mental operations of one who, having stepped ASIDE FROM THE PATH of rectitude, desires to return. With a wish for something better, he says: «When shall 1 awake? when shall I come out of this hormd nightmare of iniquity?” But seized upon by uneradi- cated habit, and forced down-hillby his passions, he cries out, “I will seek it yet again. I will try it once more. Our libraries are adorned with an elegant literature addressed to young men, pointing out to them all the dan- gers and perils of life—complete maps of the voyage, showing all the rocks, the quicksands, the shoals. But Suppose fn man has already made shipwreck; sup- yose he is already off the track; suppose he has already gone astray HOW 18 HE TO GET BACK? That is a field comparatively untouch- ed. I propose to address myself this evening to I'here are those m this audience with every passion of their agomzed soul, are ready to hear this They compare them- selves with what thoy were ten years avo. and ery out from the b mdage 1n which they are incarcerated. Now, if there be any in this house,come with an earnest purpose, yet feeling they are bevond the pale of Christian sympathy, and that the sermon can hardly be ex- pected to address them, then, at this moment, I give them my right hand, and call them brother. Lookup! Ti glorious and triumphant hope for y« vet. 1 trumpet of Gospel deliverance. The Chureh is ready to spread a banquet at your return, and the hierarchs of heaven to fall into line of bannered procession at the news of your emancipation. So far as God may help me, I propose to show what are the obstacles to your return, 1 how to surmount th so obstacles. THE FIRST DIFFICULTY such. who, 1 disCussion. ere 18 ml 3 4} sound the ans in the way of your return is the force of moral gravitation. Just there is s natural law which brings down to the earth anything which you throw into the /IT, so there a corresponding org) gravitation. In other words, it is edgier to go down than it 1s to go up; it easier to do wrong than it is to de right. Call to mind the comrades of your boyhood days—some of them good, some of them bad. you? Call to mind the anecdotes that you have heard in the last five or ten years—some of them are pure, andsome of them impure. Which the more | easily sticks to your memory? During the years of your life you have formed certain courses of conduct—some of them | good, some of them bad To which style of habit did you the more easily yield? Ah! my friends, we have to take but a moment of self inspection to find out there isin all our souls a force of moral gravitation. But that gravitation may be resisted. Just as yon may pick up from the earth something and hold jt in your hand toward heaven, just so | py the power of God's grace, a may be La towprd »eace, toward | pardof, todas, halen. Force of moral | gravitation in every but | power in God's grace to that | force of moral gravijation. | The next thing in the way of your re- | turn is the power of evil habit. I know there are those who YOTY easy for them to give up evil habits. Ido not believe them. Here is a man given to intoxication. He knows it is disgrac- | ing his family, destroying his property, t ruining him body, mind and soul. If that man, being an intelligent man, and | loving his family, could easily give up that habit, would he not The | fact that he does not give it up proves | it is hard to give it up. It 18a very easy thing to sail down-stream, the tide carrying you with great force; but sup- pose you turn THE BOAT UP-STREAM! is it casy then to row it? As longas we | rield to the evil inclinations in our carts and our bad habits, we are sail- ing down-stream; but the moment we try to turn, we put our boat in the rapids just above Niagara, and try to | row up-stream. Take a man given to the habit of using tobacco, as most of ou do, and let him resolve to stop, and o finds it very difficult. Twenty years ago I quit that habit, and I would as soon dare put my right hand in the | fire as once to indulge in it. Why? | Because it was such a terrible struggle | to get over it Now. let a man be advised by his phy- | sician to give up the use of tobacco. He oes around not knowing what to do with himself. He cannot add up a line | of figures. He cannot sleep nights. It seems as if the world had turned up- side down. He fecls his business is going to ruin. Where he was kind and obliging he is scolding and frétful. The composure that characterized him has iven way to fretful restlessness, and he as become a complete fidget. What power is it that has rolled a wave of woe over the earth and shaken a portent in the heavens? He has tried to stop smoking! After a while he sys, “I am going to do as I please. The doctor doesn’t understand me. I'm going back to the old habit. And he returns. Everything assumes its usual composure. His business seems to brighten. The world becomes an attractive place to live in. His children seeing the difference, hail the return of their father's genial disposi, tion. What wave of opr has dashed blue into the sky, and greenness into the mountain foliage, and the glow of sapphire into the sunset? What en- chantment has 118d a world of beauty and joy on his soul? He has gone back to smoking. Oh, the fact is, as we all know, that HABIT 18 A TASK-MASTER; as long as we obey it, it does not chas- tise us; but let us resist, and we find we are to be lashed with seorpion whips, and bound with ship eable, and thrown into the track of bone-breaking Jugger- nauts. During the war of 1812 there as is | | n a3 1 soul one of us, OYErcoms i Say It 1s do 80? i i one coming down through the rapids, and through the awful night of temptation, toward the etercal plunge. Oh, how hard it is to arrest them! God only can arrest them. Suppose a man, after five or ten or twenty years of evil doing, resolves to do right. Why all the forces of dark- ness are allied against him. He cannot sleep nights. He gets down on his knees in the midnight anderies: “God help me!” He bites his lip. He grinds his teeth. He clenches his fist in a de- termination to keep his purpose. He dare not look at the bottles in the win- dows of a wine store, Itis one long, bitter, exhaustive, hand-to-hand fight with an inflamed, tantalizing, and mer- ciless habit. When he thinks he is en- tirely free , the old inclinations pounce upon him like a pack of hounds with their muzzles tearing away at the flanks of one poor reindeer. In Paris there is a sculptured representation of Bacchus, the god of ly He is riding on a panther at full leap. Oh, how sugges tive! Let every one who is speeding on bad ways understand he is not riding a docile and well-broken steed, but he is riding a monster, wildand blood-thirsty, going at a death leap. How many there are who resolve on g better life, and say: ‘When shall I awake?” but, seized on by thei habity, ery: ‘I will try it once I will seek it yet again!” Years ago, there were Princeton students who were skating, and the ice was very thin, and some one warned the company back air hole, and warned entirely to lL place. But one young man with brava do, after all the rest had stopped, cried ont: “One and more!” He swept around, and went down, and w brought out a My | ther and tens of thous | ands of me ¢ their souls in way, [tis “one round more. 1 have al o say that if a man wants to return from evil practices, 1 Ot Hore SOe from t 3 ’ the finally PII } ‘ “vt + 5 ns corpse friends, are ti Housal SOCIETY REPULSES HIM. Desiring to reform, he will shaks my old will find Christian companionshi And he appears at the church door son Sabbath day, and the usher greets with a look as much as to say: *“‘W you hgrg? You gre the last man I oxpecte i to Sop it chareh! Come, this seat right down by the door,’ stead of saying: “Good morning; I am glad to you here. Come; I will give you a first-rate seat, right up by the { pulpit.” Well { discouraged, i and some BAYS off Associates, } i M Be Vi enters a prayer meeting, Christian man, with zeal than common sense, says you; | and I suppose there is merey THE MAN, chilled, throws himself on his dignity. ver enter into the Perhaps notquite ully discouraged about reformation, he sidles up by some highly respectabl more iif 3} Gilad | tor send for you YOUNG DISGUSTED, 11 til 1 Will he house of God again. f f street, and immediately the respectable man has an errand Well, the prodigal, return, takes some member 1 hand, The Christian young man looks at him, looks at the faded apparel and the marks nstead of giving him a y of the hand, fers him is of the long fingers of the which is equal to striking a Oh, how few Christ ian people understand how and gospel ti i hand-shaking! have felt the down some other wishing to ir tries to. Warn grij hie left hand, man in the face! mnuet 3 ETE 18 ian Sometimes, i need of encouragement, Christian man has heartily by the hand, have ¥ thrilling throt every fibre of your body, mi taken jot felt Mi I vou ign nd, and soul an encouragement not know anything at all about this un man tries from evil courses he runs against when a to re turn REPULSIONS INNUMERABLE, We say of some man, he lives a block or two fre the church, or half a mile from the church. There are people in our erowded cities who live a thousand Vast deserts of in difference between them and the b Ihe fact is, we must keep our na Ese serish. Christ sinners, tens of thousands j uat with publicans and there come to the house of God with marks of dissipation upon people almost throw up their hands as much as to Asn't How these dainty, fastid- onr churches are I don't know, nnless they have an especial train of cars, cushioned and upholstered, cach RV . 2 re shocking cspin f Rrasfians in all heaven, with publicans and sinners Oh! ye who curl your Lip of scorn at the fallen, 1 tell you plainly, if you had been surrounded by the same influences, tared, and the refined, and the Christ ian, yon would have been a erouching wretch in stable or ditch, filth and abomination. It is not be cause you are naturally any better, but because the merey of God has protected you. Who are you that, brought up in Christian circles, and watched by Christian parentage you should be so hard on the fallen? I think men also are often from return by the fact that are too anxious about their ship, and too anxious about their de- nomination, and they rush ont when they see a man about to give up his sin and return to God, and ask him how he is going to be baptised, whether by sprinkling or immersion, and what kind of a church he is going to join. Oh, my friends, it is A POOR TIME TO TALK about Presbyterian eatechisms, and Episcopal liturgies, and Methodist love- feasts, and baptisteries to a man that is coming out of the darkness of min into the glorious light of the Gospel. Why, it reminds me of a man drowning in the sea, snd alife-boat puts out for him, and the man in the boat says to the man out of the boat: “Now, if 1 get you ashore, are you going to live on my street?” First get him ashore, and then talk about the non-essentials of re- ligion. Who cares what church he hindered churches member. wae a ship set on fire just above Niagara Falls, and then, cut loose from its m it éeame on down through the and tossed over the Fal It was said to have been a scene brilliant joins, if he only joins Christ and starts for heaven? Oh! you ought to hav my brother, an illumined face an hearty grip for every one that tries to turn from his evil way. Take hold of same book with him, though his dis- beyond a pompare. : ell there are evil habit, wipations shake the book, remembering that “he that converteth a sinner from the error of his ways shall save a soul from death and hide a multitude of sins, Now, 1 have shown you these ob- stacles because I want you to undar- stand I know all the difficulties in the way; but I am now to tell yon how Han- nibal may scale the Alps, and how THE SHACKLES MAY BE UNRIVETED, and how the paths of virtue forsaken may be regained. First of all, my brother, throw yourself on God. Gro to Aim frankly and earnestly, vnd tell Him these habits yon have, snd ask Him, if there is any help in all the re- sources of omnipotent to give it to you. Do not go with a long rigma role people eall prayer, made up of vohs,” and “ahs,” and “forever and ever, amens”’! Go to God and ery for help! help! help! and if you cannot ery for help, just look and hive. I remem ber, in the late war, I was at Antietam, and I went into the hospitals after the battle, and said to a man: ‘Where are you hurt?” He made no answer, but held up his arm, swollen and L | I saw where he hurt. 1} imple | fact is, when a man has a wounded soul, | all he has to do is to hold it up before | a sympathetic Lord, and get 1t hi aled t does not take any long prayer. Just | hold up the we and, Oh, 1t1 i thing, when an i DErvons an | and exhausted, of from h ways, to fecl that God puts two omnm- potent around him, | “Young man, [ will stand by | mountains may depart, be removed, but I will never nd then, i {18 too good t Lieve love, sintered Wis it MINNA Arius and YH Hii i as the soul think: v be true, it, and looks uj (God lifts his right hand affidavit, Mmylng i saith the Lord (rod, I have death of him that diet (rod for rospel as 1 SLICK thie sig 113 In Wir ia { oath, an ia the | be | the h SUCH | § thix,” ach u “or there will sund for th shand, il t thin.” Bless FO All AIHW slices A PULL LOA¥ FOR EVERY ( it! Bread % 1: BilCEes eno v1 thin at I remember | Street Hospatal, in Philade | opened during the war, { came, saying: ‘‘There will hundred w=» muded i ready to take care of them | my church there went in so or thirty men and women | thes poor wounded fellows As they | came, some from one part of the lan i, asked when or ud men from another, no « 1 Oregon, or from Minne | sota, or from New York. There | wounded soldier, and the only question was ho take off the rags the most gently, the bandage, and administer the cordial And when soul comes to God, He ni where vi from or what your cestry was. He ling for all your wi Pardon for all your ¥ ROmo JEL whether this man was from from Massachusettes, or Was a w to and put on "n it ask nil GOoes Mi Came nnas oF guilt! Comfort | if you want i I counsel you, back. to quit all venr bad associa Bis, x : 3 oral distem aan reforn ir desk, nke and etter something SELNYQIOH Like th Fare SII Your 1 bie a letter Ly bad companions, or giv is not ten bad « a man, nor Nn three bad companions, companions but One there for that ¥ the stree : him, urging him violently they foreed him to go in? summer and the door was left open, and | saw the process Chey held him fast, and they put the cup to his lips, and they forced down the strong drink. What chance is there for such a young man? I counsel yon also, seek Christian sd vice, Eveey Christian man is bound to help yon if you find no other human ear willing n to your y of struggle come to me, and I will, by every sympath my heart, and every prayer, and every toil of hand, beside vou in the struggle for i hope to have my forgiven and h pe to be ac utted at the judgment-soat of Christ, will not betray you. First of all seek [3 # & »iL0 PTAs MR PAnIons ve bad GOIN peal ae W What chanos is [ saw aloug men with of & grog shop, ; go in, he resisting, resisting, until after a while It was » - man ur or five young in front oung ti night, to List story 114 ¢ in oh my All a SEEK CHRISTIAN COUNSEL, Gather up all the energies of body, | mind, and soul, and appealing to God for success, declare, this day, everlast- | gaming practices, all houses of sin. | Half-and-half work will amount to | nothing: it must be a Watesloo. Shrink back now, and you are lost. Push on, | and you are saved! A Spartan general i foll at the very moment of victory, but he dipped his finger in his own blood, and wrote on a rock, near which he was dying, ‘Sparta has con/uered. " Though your struggle to get rid of sin may seem to be almost a death struggle, you can dip your finger in your own blood, and write on the Rock of Ages: ‘Victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!” Oh, what glorious news it would be for some of these young men to send home to their parents in the country! They go to the post-office every day or two to see if there are any letters from you, Nothing would please them half so much as the news you might send home to-morrow that yon had given your heart to God. I know how it is in the country. The night comes on. The cattle stand under the rack, through which burst the trusses of hay. The horses, just having frisked up through the meadow at the nightfall, stand knee-deep in the bright straw that in- vites them to lie down and rest. The porch of the hovel is full of fowl. In. THE OLD FARM-HOUSE AT NIGHT no candle is lighted, for the flames ela hands about the grom backlog, an shake the shadow of the group up and down the wall. Father and mother sit there for Yalf an hour, saying nothing. I wonder what they are thinking of! After a while the father breaks the sil. ence and says: “Well, I wonder where our boy is in town to-night?” And the mother answers: “In no bad place, I warrant you; we always could trust him when he was home, and since he has been away there have been so many prayers offered for him we can trust iim still.” Then at 8 o'clock —for they retire early in the country--at 8o'cloe they kneel down, and commend you to that God who watches in country and in town, on the land, and on the soa, | Some one said to a Grecian general: | “What was the proudest moment of | your life?” He thought { and said: fi moment, C“YHE PROUDEST MOMENT of my life was when I sent word home | to my parents that 1 had gained the victory.” And the proudest and most brilliant moment in your life will be the moment when you ean send to your parents in the country that vou have conquered your « vil habits by race of (rod, tor. Oh! de spise fe tae will neither and become eternal pate roal whi i Oi hinve father nor mother, and you go around the place where the y used to +] 3 find then 3 HORG, and gone irom hn me from the neighborhood ond for lorgiveness not come anxiety, nu, and Bs YOu nay 3 1 § 1 g the mound 1g the cunrevard, thes not answer wa will hair that brow J And then yo of ng inid against th | tenderness, he werful enon who has bre your father's God and your 1 be your (vod forever! -—-— The Health of College Girls Fnghsh in a recent letle mournfully eone { correspondent of the rather health and 3 s. The “sweet girl-graduate,” according to this ob server, exists only in the poet's fancy In reality, girl-graduate, looming the English public, contradicts of conturies, and 1fstead round, rosy, d plump, i a pale, scTawn) wings warded with short hair and ota as a rule; wearing her wenght and Latin does pot realize sod, which seed sol 10 thie raclves, unless ob alt the oolleo RAIN, ' iat Th Fe ir, speaks ry the “rang beanty college oir giv the on ‘ial traditions being lovely, and cles, inert, ww Oreck on shoulders bow wl the . Ni th fallen into a happi r ion ] have attended recent wot hoon pained by vies bos w Benis, Gave waists, round shoulders or angular elbows, Tb ¢ the ¢ ., the @ carned the contrary, #1 tise rs, health consequent ratio of go dd nong the diligent dlege girls of our country is marked, as to be 8 cans gratulation Athletic enltare among the young men not more popular than attention to gymnastic and thenic exercises by the and Vassar, Well sley, Swarthmore, Wells, colleges {i women, their college hone L004 3 i the ave rate of looks and and so ia calis- Mawr, Smith and other are out those who have sound bodies as well as sound minds, to take charge of the fu yotnes of the land overstudy, to which is excitements of socml life, quently happens when a girl pursues her edncational work at home, maj break down health and exhaust nervoud is an evident fact. That lack of ex , in attention to diet, depriva tion of sleep, and too much piano pra tice. or other straining for sccompl ments of little use to the may and do combine invalid, we all know girl at college is usually very fortunate as to healthful conditions, and carries in her bright fac and elastic step the rym or sending added ax fre tissue, Trois h average gins y render her an dat the American rain hemphysique. ME 8S. a Reliable Formulas, This prescription will be found in- valuable in many instances, It is a fever mixture for children. Sweet spirits of nitre, a half ounce; eamphor water, six drachms; spirits of minder- | erus, a half ounce; simple syrup, an ounce. The dose is a teaspoonful every two or three hours fora child over the age of one year, This combination promptly relieves belching of wind and flatulencey. To | two drachms of the tincture of nux | vomica and two drachms of the aromatic spirits of ammonia, add three ounces of the syrup of ginger. Take a tea | spoonful of this mixture in a table- | spoonful of water an hour or two after {ench meal, This combination is only | for adults. | This formula makes an excellent do- | mestic healing salve for ulcers, foul and | ranning sores, and for all chronic erup- | tions characterized by the appearance | of watery matter. Take of honey, beeswax and lard, two ounces each by weight; add to these one ounce of earbolated cosmoline, and an ounce and a half of the ointment of the oxide of zine. Melt over a slow fire and stir well together. Apply three or four times a day as a salve. LEARNING AND KNOWING, ~Child- ren object to nothing, probably so much as the drudgery of learning, although some boys are per almost as restive under the process of having their faces washed, . ‘ SUNDAY 3CHOOL LESSON, Busnay Auvoust 11, 1935, Samuel's Farewell Address. LESSON TEXT. {1 Bam. 12 : 1-15. Memory verses, I4, 15) LESSON PLAN, Toric or THE QUARTER : and Dizoledience Chedicnoy Gorpexy Texr ror the Quapren: De. hold, than sacrifice and to hearken than the fat of rans, 1 Bam. 15 : 19 ia better ale 3 hp {MW {ie HOCK Lizsson Tori Urged, Obedience iustrated 8) ue wed jay {ries Gonpex Text and serie Ji heart: for consider how hath done for cor the all aqreatl thing Sam. 12 : 24 Only | Lord, fm tn truth with Jie wou. 3 LESSON ANALYSIS. OBEDIENCE 1.34 IRATE 1. T And Venerable Leader : Fre I oppressed Walking in Lord blam all things Acta 20 : 35). Not having spot Ept ielens, In yo 1nd Heb. 7 The Emphatic Thou hast not defraud «1 nus, Presse fas (4 Now I EIN (en There perfect Well done, thing Holy, . from sinners iil 26 ii Commendation: Bor op “pd IMAOBREDIFNCE ILLUSTRATED i. A Favored People The Lord sent Mos ight forth vour fa I will os this p> 3:2 O Israel 33 : 29 He brought them forth gold (Psa. 105 : 37 1 brought thee up out of t Lgypt (Mie. 6 1 4 11. A Sad Forgetting: They forgat the Lord t Beware lest thou forget t i » If thou shalt \ i (Exod. who 1s like uz thee! (Deut. with silver and land of 3 LE heir God (9), he Lord (Deut. tS forget the Lord Deut. 5 : 19 the Lord vg shall surely perish is forgat their God Judg. 3 : 7) Forget 103 : 2 11. A Grievous Cry: They ered unto the We have sinned (10 Exan ervied wth an exceeding and bitter cry (Gen, 34). ] were sore afraid: and Exod. 14 : 10), we ity oried out (1 Sam. 4 : 13) en they eried unto the Lord in their rouble (Psa. 107 : 6). «It is the Lord that appointed, and that brought.” (1% De liverers appointed; (2) Deliverance brought.—(1) The Lord's appoint ment, —deliverers; (2) The Lord's gift, deliverance. “Stand still, that I may plead with you.” (1) A panse commanded; (2) A plea Jrojouad —{1) Life's hurry checked; (2) God's canse pleaded “They forgat the Lord their God, and he sold them.” (1) The Lord forgotten by men; (2) Men aban. doned by the Lord.—(1) The seed, forgetfulness; (2) The fruit,- abandonment. 111, OBEDIENCE URGED. i. Nature of Obedience: Fear the Lord, and serve him, and hearken (14). Fear the Lord, . .. .walk in all his ways, _...serve the Lord (Dent. 10 : 12). Fear the Lord, and serve him in sin- cerity (Josh, 24 : 14). Serve him in truth with all your heart (1 Sam. 12 : 1). Oh that my people would hearken,.... would walk! ( 81 : 13). {1. Rewards of Obedience: IH ye ,.«.both ye and also the King. . . . . well (14), rac not not all his fits (Psa Lord, and said, great 3 - cred If ye will oo x 1 shall be apeculiar Blond). 5 ne : 27). shall eat the good the land (lee. 1 +19). 00d ul Hearken, aah? my voice, and I will be treasare ) shall hearken (Deut. 14... .obedient, your (Jor. 7 : 23). 111. Penalties of Disobedience: If ye will uot, . . . then shall the hand of the Lord be against you (15). Bo shall ye perish; because ye not harken (Deut. 8 : 20). The curse, if ye shall not harken ( 11 : 28). Unto them that (Bom. 2 nj Ver would obey not, tos (2 Thess 1 : Ry. 1. “The Lord sent and delivered "(1 Whom the Lord sent: From what the Lord delivered (1, The Bender; (2) The The « rrand. * 2, “If ye will fear the Lord, and» well.” (1) The (2 The reward of FCRIII them that obey vii Wor go ANE, hand of the "Jehovah's o Why displayed; (2 d; (3) When displays pposi LESSON BIBLE READING VEAR, GODLY - —-— LESSON SURROUNDINGS attacked Jabesh-(31] make a treaty } ¢ condition of right Thes site, during which all Israel to th ybtained a decisive nonites wit! ™*t i CVER, was from the direction Ire It was ntents be pu 10 biected (1 Sam was Gilgal, wher le thesr first encamp the Jordan (Josh. 4 ELomws cmmained until rem 1 It was Samuel judge i “has been fairl: collection of n twelve wor ix natives as Jiljooli ndings for 188K, { “MOT probably » choice « or 10604 i —— gest manufacture 1a Japau 1 the Lark ol a all tree called the Mistama, which os ap altitude of about one metre, ihirtv-live centimetres and flowers In winter, flourishing also in sterile soil. | When the trunk has attained the de- sired thickness, it is cut down almost on a level with the ground, but in such | 4 manner that new shoots spring up, to in their turn cut down. A paper superior quality is made from the | Korna, another small tree of the mul. | berry family which can attain the | height of 5 metres, twenty-five cenli- | metres, This plant was, only a short {time ago, imported from China into { Japan, where il is now mach cu | vated. The plants are rooted at a dis- | tance of sixty centimetres apari, and | often in the form of a hedge to sepa- | rate the fields one from the other. The | well-developed branches are cuf off in | October, five years after the planting, { The paper is made from both trees in the following manner: the little | branches are macerated im water fora fortnight, and by this timee the outer | portion of the bark has fallen off, so | that the material underneath it may be washed and dried. It is exposed for three or four hours to the action of steam and of boiling water, and Is then beaten with sticks until it forms a fine paste, which is treated with the same processes as those employed in Europe, The Korna paper is very resistive in the direction of the fibres, and in order to have the sheets equally solid through out, one is placed upon the other that the fibres may cross. Thus are manu. factured those very resistive papers that serve to cover parasols and umbrel- las, and sometimes to replace leather. Another paper is made from the Gampi as strong as that manufactured from the Korna, but finer, softer, and more transparent. Japanese Paper. — The stron MN IDOnest paper l with © Ot s mate he ; Ol i= ' a ————— Bird-lime is made by boiling the mid- dle bark of the holly seven or eight bours in water; drain it and lay it in heaps in the ground, covered with siones for two or three weeks, till re. duced to a mucilage. Beat thisin a mortar, wash it in rain waber, and knead until free from extraneous mate ter. Put itinto earthen pots, and in four or five days it will be fit for use, An inferior kind is made by boiling lin. seed oil for some hours, until it be comes a viscid mass, A Orders have been received at the Portsmouth Navy Yard to put the historic frigate Constitution in condi tion to be towed to the Washington Navy Yard, The wealth of Frederick Doagiass, Unite i States Minister to 1H ae timated at $300,000, Hayt,