CHI ! ,-i r r -SR. TALMAGE PREACHES ON THE COMPLAINTS ABOUT THE RAIN, y Wonderful t'l Bonk I fob How thm Hlm4f -of It Una Made Wk Moo . Into toMela JiMr Wwln Over Tmmt Hnsd, .. JSboobxtM, -Ju' ; Or. TaJmttKe'o ser ason today itoaa kind of gospel in which ..few people believe.. -The weather is a com jwi object of complaint and fault finding, IMS Or. Talmage finds a gospel In it, which ' today he .proclaims from. -toe text. "Hath the rain a father" Job xxxviii, 28. This Book of Job has been the subject of.' unbounded, theological wrangle. Men have - made, it the ring in which, to. display their ecclesiastical pugilism. Some say that the Book of Job is a true history; others, that it is an allegory; others, that.it is an epic poem; others, tuat .it , Is a drama. SomeJ ,aay that Job lived eighteen hundred years before Christ,' others say that he never :. lived at alL Some say that the- author of ' this book was Job; others, David; others. . ..Solomon. The discussion has landed some in blank, infidelity.- Now, I have no trouble ' with the, Books of ,Job or Revelatjon the , two most mysterious books, in the Bible because of a rule I adopted some yearsago. " I wade down into a Scripture passage as long as, 1 can , (ouch bottom, aud when 1 cannot then 1 wade out. I used to wade in ' -until it was over my head and then I got browned, i I .study. passage of. Scripture a long as. H is a oouifort.ahd.help tony oul, but when it becomes a perplexity and. a spiritual upturning . I quit. ' In 'other' words, we ought to wade in up to our heart, but never 1wade In 'until .it is Over ' our head. No' man should ever expect to swim across this great ocean of divine . truth.. I go down into that ocean as I go ' dowD" into the Atlantic ocean at East Hampton, Long Island,' just-far enough to bathe; then I come out. I never . had any idea that with my weak band and foot I' could strike my way clear ,over to Liver-, pool. GOD'S MTSTKKIOUS OOTBKNMKNT. - 1 suppose, you . understand . your family , Ceoenjogy.-, You .know something about i your parents,' your grandparents; - your (reat grandparents. Perhaps ypu(. know! wnere tuey mra uorn,-or wun .tney- uiwu.' Have you ever studied the parentage of the shower, "Hathjapt the rain, a father?" This question is not asked by a poetaster ex a scientist.. but, by ,he head o& the ,uni veraeji To bumble and to uavevjob God ska him fourteen .questions: About the world's architecture, about, the ..refraction of the sun's rays, about theidesaboutihej. now crystal, about the lightnings, and then he arraigns him with' the interroga tion of the text, "Hath the rain a father?" With the scientific wonders of the rain I have nothing to do, ,'-. A . niinister get through with that kind of sermons within . the 4lmti three, years, and. if he .has piety enough be get through with it. to the first three months. A sermon has come to me to mean one w rd of four letters, "help!'' Ton all knowxuat .the rain, is not an or- ' phan. You know it is. not cast out of the Kates of heaven a' foundling. You would answer the question of my text in the af rmative. .. ..': fiafeiy housedlnring'the storm, you hear the rain beating against the window pane. and you find it searching all the crevices ,. of the window sill. , It first comes down in : solitary drops, pattering the dust; and then it deluges the fields-and-angere-uie moun tain torrents, and makes the traveler im .piore shelter. ..You know that the rain is wot n accident of the world's .economy .Too know it was born of. the, cloud. You know it was rocked in the rradle of the wind. You know it was sung to sleep by the storm, xou know that it a flying evan gel from heaven to earth v.You know jt ia the gospel of the weather. Y ou know that God is its father. ,.,If. tbb&st ibe.true, then bow .wicked .is oar murmuring about climatic 'change. '. The first eleven Sabbaths after 1 entered the aoinistry it stormed. Through the week it was clear feather, but on. the Sabbaths the old country "meeting "bouse looked hk Noah's ark before it landed. A few drenched people sat before a drenched pas tor; but most of the farmers Btayed at home and thanked God that what was bad t .for. tie church was good- for- the crops. ' committed a good deal of sin in those days in denouncing the weather. Ministers of the Gospel sometimes fret about stormy Sabbathspr . hob Sabbaths, . or., incitement Sabbaths.- v. They forget the fact that- the , same God who ordained the Sabbath and sent forth his ministers to announce sal ration also ordained the weather. "Hath the raia a father?' j ' t ,,. -.. HJ IMCE88ANT COMPLA1KT8 OF THE WEATHER. Merchants, also, with their stores filled with new goods, and their clerks hanging idly around the counters, commit the same transgression. There have been., seasons j "when .the .whole spring and fall trade has been ruined by protracted wet weather. The merchants then - examined - the "weather probabilities": with more interest than they read their Bibles.' They watched for a patch of blue sky. They went com plaining to the store and came complain ing home again. In all that season of wet feet and dripping garments and impassa- ,, ble-streets.tbey uvej onoe asked the ques-. Won, "Hath the rain a father?" So agriculturists commit this sin. There is nothing, more-annoying than-to have .'.. planted corn. rot in the ground because of too much moisture, or hay all ready for the mow dashed of .a. -shower, of wheat al . cnost ready for the sickle spoiled with the rust. How bard it is to bear the agricul tural disappointments. God-has infinite resources, but I do not think he has capao- Atj, to make . weather j to please . alL the ' farmers;: t Sometimes it is too. bat, or. it is , too cold; tt is too wet, or it is too dry;, it is too early, or r it ,1s too late. . They- forget .;' that the God who promised seed time and harvest, summer and winter, -cold and heat, also ordained all theclimatic changes. There is one question that onght to.be -written on every barn, on every fence, on every haystack, on every , .farmhouse. "Hath the rain a father?" If wo only, knew: what a, vast, enterprise it is to' provide appropriate weather for m this world we would, not be. so critical of the Lord. . Isaac Watts at ten years of age complained, that he did pot like the hymns that were. sung in- the . English chapel. "Well," said his father, "Isaac, instead of . .your complaining about the hymns, go and make hymns that are better." . And he did -- 4fO and make . hymns .that .were. better. .Now, I say to you if you do not like the -weather get up a weather -company; .and have a president, and, a secretary, -and treasurer, and a board of directors, and ten million dollars of stock, and then prpvid r weather that will suit' us all. .-There is - man who as a weak head, and he cannot stand the glaraof the sun. . You must have a cloud always .hovering over him. I like the sunshine; I cannot live without . plenty, of sunlight,, so you tnust alway have enough light for me. Two shipi jutet in mid-Atlantic. The one is going to S liMt-.. U. ' 1 1 -i t 1 iwioouiim; te BouthaaHta ii: Jiiwui-i' New York Provide weather that, while Uti 1aW..."are IMpVit fat -iwit a headshwar.ef tearful motiQn4. Yea, there lis a , wind for the other. There is a farm that ! is dried np tor the lack of rain, and there ! -ipleaare party-going-iout f o a field ex cursion." Provide -weather that" will suit the dry farm and the pleasure excursion. JMOr-sirs, I will not take one dollar of stock in your weather company. .There is only one Being in the universe who knows enough to provide the right kind of weath for this world. Hath , the rain a fa ther?" GOD tB IS FINITE ,1S INKINITKSIMALS. v My text also', suggests God's minute su pervisal. You see the divine Sonship in every . drop, of ; raijL ,1 he jewels of the shower are not flung. away,, by a spend thrift who knows not how many he throws or where they fall. '-They are all shining princes of heaven, .They all have an eter nal lineage.- rTbey are all the children of a king,,, .'Hath., the, rain a father?' , Well, then.1 say if. God .takes -notice of every minute raindrop he. will take notice of the most insignificant .affair of my 1li- - " ' the., astronomical i view . of things that bothers me. --" " ; -. . -. We look- up into tbe night, heavens, and a bav Wnplitsl wnrldat" Anil hnwinKiff we say.. .VWorldsl worlds!" and. row lnxig nificant we feell We stand at the foot of Mount (Washington or Mont .Blanc,, and we feel thai we are only Insects, and then we say to ourselves, i .Though the world is so large, the sun is one million four hun dred thousand times larBGr." ' "Ohl" .we say. it is no use, if God. wheels, that great i mac ichinery through immensity he will not ! he h'ave ,eft ,ns ana the8Q motherles8 chil ce the trouble to look down at me." lu- ! j. take I fidel conclusion. Saturn. Mercury -and uap-wrare no mo rouuueu ami wtagneu v. trt? the globules on a lilac bush the morning " terashower. ' God Is no more In magnitudes than he is in mintttias. If he has scales to weigh the 1 mountains, he has balances delicate enough to weigh the infinitesimal. - You can no more see him through the telescope than - yon can see him through the microscope; no more when 'you look up than when you Jook down. -.Are not., the hairs of your' head all numbered? And if Himalaya has God," Hath not the rain a father?" I take this, doctrine .of a particular Provi dence, and 1 tnrust it into tne very midst iof your veryday lite, rlf : God fathers a-fc raindrop, ta..tnere, anyttung eo insignia cant in your affairs that God will not father that? -; i ! When Druyse, the gunsmith, invented the needle gun, which decided the battle' f S&dow&t was ita-mere accident? When farmer's boy showed Blucher a short cut -by which he could bripg his army np soon enough- to decide Waterloo lor- England,. was it a. mere aecideat?..When Lord Byron ook Apieee of moaey and tossed it up to -decide whether or not he should be' a(H- ance4 to Miss Mlllbank, was, U, a mere ac cident which side pf the money was up and. which) waa down? . ; When -be. XJbristian army - was besieged at.Beziers, and a jlrunk,en drummer came; in at midnight and rang the alarm bell, not knowing what be waa doing, but - waking up the host in time . pa fight; then enemies . that moment arriving! was it an accident? Av hen in one of the Irish wars a starv ing mother, flying with, her starving child, sank down, and- fainted on the rocks in the night and her hand fell on a warm bottle of milk,.did that just happen so? God is either .in the affairs .of men or our religion is worth-nothing at all, -and you had bet ter take it away -from- ns and instead of this .Bible, wh.ich teaches the doctrine, give Uff a secular book,, and let- us, as the. famous Mr. Fox, the member of parliament!, in his last" "hour, cry uuc "Read me the eighth book of Virgil ' Ohl my- friends, let us rouse up to an ap preciation of the fact that all the affairs of Our life., are under a king's, command, and under a-father's watch. Alexander's war horse. Bucephalus, would allow anybody' to .mount bun, when he was unharnessed, but as soon-as they put on that war horse, Bucephalus, the saddle and the trappings of the conqueror he would allow no one. but Alexander,- to. touch' hinvU -And if a' soulless horse could- bave'so much pride in ' bis ownnfl; shall not We immortals exult in the fast that we are owned by a king? "Hath the rain a father?" GOD'S WATS" ARE PAST FINDING OUT. A train mv subject teaches me that God's dealings -with ns -are "inexplicable. : That was the original force of my text. The rain was a great mystery to the ancients. They could not understand how the water should get into the cloud, and getting there, how it should be suspended, or fall inz, why it should come down in drops. Modern science comes along and says there are two portions of air of different tetn perature. and they are charged with mois ture, and the one portion of air decreases in temperature so the water may no longer1 be held -tn; vapor; and, it falls. And they tell us that some of the clouds' that look to be only as large as a man's hand, and to' 'am; almost' Qniet In the heavens, are great -mountains of mist four thousand feet from base to top. and that they rush miles a ainutej , S . T f. S-. T .'i rr. r. But after all the brilliant experiments of Dr. James Hutton, and Saussure, and other scientists there is an infinite mystery about the rain. Ther is art ocean of the nnfathomable in every raindrop, and God ays today as he said in the time of Job, If you cannot understand one drop of -rain, do not -be-wurprised if my dealings with you are inexplicable." Why does that aged man, decrepit, beggared, vicious, sick, of the. world and the world sick of him. live on, while .here is. a, man in midlife. consecrated to God,-hard' working, useful in every respect, who dies? Why does that old gossip, gadding along the street about everybody's business but her own, have such good health, while the Christian mother, with a flock of little ones about her whom she is preparing for usefulness and for heaven -the mother who you think could not be spared an hour, from that household why. does she lie -down' and die with a caacerf . :. i -i u . ! ;i . .4 -.Why .does that man, selfish to. the ..core, go on adding fortune to fortune, consum ing everything . on himself, continue to prosper, while' that man, who has been giving ten '-per cent, of all. h?s income LjiO .God and the church, goes Into bank ruptcy? Before we make stark fools of ourselves, let us stop pressing Itbis ever lasting "why;"- Let "us worship Where we cannot understand. Let a man take that one question,, "Why?" and follow it far enough, and push it, and he will land in wretchedness and perdition We want in our theology fewer interrogation marks and more exclamation points. Heaven is the -place.' for -explanation. ' Eartli is the .place for trust;, .If you cannot understand so minute a thing as a raindrop, how can you expect to understand God's dealings J'Hatb the rain a father?" f ""' Again, my text makes me think that the rain of tears iB of divine origin. Great clouds of trouble sometimes hover over: os. They are black, and -they are gorged, and they are thunderous. They are more por tentous, i than , Salvator or Claude ever painted clouds of poverty, of persecution, - r bereavement. - They hover over us, and the get darker and blacker, and after awhile a tear starts, and we think by an " - - extra 'sweasos' o'fche .eyelid- to wtop it. Others follow, and after awhile there is a i rain of ..tears. . "Hath that rain a father?". 1 god sees odr tears. ,1 ' r - ( "Oh,"-you say, tear is nothing but a ! drop of limpid fluid secreted by the lach ryma gland it is only a sign of weak eyes.". -Great mistake. It.is one of the Lord's richest benedictions - to the world. There are people In Blackwell's . Island in sane asylum, and at Utica, and at all the asylums of this land, who were demented by the fact that they could not cry at the right time. Said ' a- maniac in one of our public Institutions, under a. Gospel sermon that started -the tears: "Do- you see that tear? that is the first 1 have wept- for twelve years. I think it. will help my brain." . . ' " ' . . . , , There are a great many in the grave who could not ' stand any longer - under the glacier of trouble. If that glacier had only melted into - weeping they could have en dured it. -There have been, times in your .life when you would havekiven the world, if you had possessed it, for one tear...' You could shriek, you could blaspheme, but you eould not cry. Have you never seen a man holding the hand of a dead- wife. who.. had been all the world to him? The temples livid with excitement,- the eye dry and frantic, no moisture on the upper or lower lid.; .You saw there were bolts of- anger in the cloud, but no rain. To your Christian comfort, be saidi "Don't talk to me about God; there .is no God, or if there is I hate- .But a few hours or days after, com- HOme lead pencil that she owned fn tA - HAinA ' lAiAPa tar lit ft It aha Wmfji h ,, ,vaB w.v 1ro homK outcry that appals, there bursts the foun- of aDd as the sunliirht of God's -mx-Uniy r.rik. ihat fountain of tears. you find out .that .it is. a tenderhearted., .merciful, pitiful and-all; compassionate God who was the father of that rain. "Oh," yon say, "it is absurd to think ' that God is going to .watch, oyer tears.' No, my friends.. There are three or four kinds of them .that God counts, bottles and eter nizes. - First, there are all parental tears, and there are . morn of these than of .any Other kind, because the most of the race die ing ail arouna tne woria. - i n ey never get over it. They may live to shout and sing afterward, but there fat always a corridor is the soul that is silent.'thongb it once re- sonnded. : -.' My parents never mentioned the death of a child who died fifty years before with out a -tremor- in the: voice and a sigh, oh, how deep: fetched) It-was. better-she should die. lilt was a mercy she: should die--itShe .would i have,--been a lifelong invalid.- But you; cannot, argue, away a parent's-grief. How often; you -hear ithe moan, "Oh, my child, my child!'? Then there are the filial team. - Little -children -soon get over the loss of parents. They . are . easily . diverted with a new -toy. -But -where Is the man that has come to thirty or -. forty , or fifty years, of .age, who can think of -the. old , people .without haying all the. fountains of . his soul stirred up? You. may have had to take care of her a good . many, years, but you never can forget bow she used to take care. of. you.., r..,. ',-...t , . i-.There have been many sea' captains .con verted in our church, and the peculiarity of them -was- that they were nearly all prayed ashore .by their mothers, though the mothers went into; the dust soon, after they went to sea. Have yon never heard ' an' old, man in delirium of some ' sickness call for bis ' mother? The." fact is we get so used to calling for her the first ten years of our life we never get over .it, and when ! 'she goes away, from us it makes' deep sbr- ' row. You sometimes, perhaps, in. days of trouble and darkness, when the world would say, "You ought; to be able to. take care of yourseir'-r-you wake up from your. dreams finding yourself saying, ' Oh, moth erl. mother!" Have these tears . no - divine origin? Why, take-all the warm hearts that ever beat in all lands, and in all ages, and put them together and' their , united throb would be weak .compared with -the throb of. God's' etdrnal sympathy.' Yes, God also is father of all that rain of re pentance. ; ' 11 Did you ever see a rain of repentance? Do you know what it fat that makes a man re pent? I see people going around -trying to repent; - They . cannot repent.- ..Do you know no man can repent until God helps him to repent?, How do I know? By this passage, "Him hath God-exalted to be a prince and a Saviour to give repentance." Oh. it is a tremendous hour when one wakes up and saysi"! am a -bad man have not sinned against the laws of the land, I but 1 have wasted my life; God asked me for ! myr-servioes--and I haven't adven-those, services.. . Oh, my- sins; God forgive i me.1.' When that tear . starts it thrills all heaven. An angel cannot keep his eye off it, and thechurch of God assem- blee around; and there is a commingling of tears, and God is the Father of that rain. -the Lord, long suffering, merciful and gra cious. - jt ; .v ui-j-iit. x:.-- '.;- i ,; "THE CRT OF A MOTHER'S HEART '"In a religious assemblage a man arose and said: "I have been a very wicked man; 1 broke my mother's heart. I became an Infidel , ' but- I have seen my evil way, and I have "surrendered' my heart to God. but it is a grief that I never can get over that, my parents should never have heard of toy salvation; I don't know whether they are living or dead." '-While yet . he was standing in the audience voice from the' gallery said.Oh, my son. my sonf... Ie looked up aud he recognized heri It was his old mother. . She had been -praying for-him -a-great many yea rev and when at the foot of the cross the prodigal aoe And tbe-praytng mother embraced each other, there was a rain, a tremendous rain, Lof Utars, sud -God-waj the-Fathar- of-fchose tears. Oh, that God would break us down with -ai; sense: of. our ein, and- then tift us with an-appreciation of .bis mercyi-. Tears over our wasted, life. .Tears over a grieved 'spirit. ' Tears over an injured father. Oh, 'that God would nidve"' upon- this 'audience with a great wave of religious emotionl The king-of Carthage was dethroned. His people rebelled against hitv. He was diiveh9intbcbanishment.ii -Hia wife and children were outrageously abused.: Years went,. by, And the king of Carthage made many friends.- He gathered 'up a' great raiy.;Ml -marched again toward-. Car thage.. ; Reaching the gates of Carthage iuuuhi saa vareoeaueo, una vvim rupes around their 'necks, crying, for- mercy. They said, "Wm abused you and we abused your family; but we cry for mercy. v ;The ,king of Carthage looked" down npon the 'people from'' bis chariot ' and said: "I came to bless,! didn't' come to destroy." You drove me -out,-but this day T pronounce pardon for all. the people. ; Open the gates and let: the i my come in," . Tha- king marched in and '.tookj the throne, and thev people alishouted. 'Libng live the" king!" -' ivly friends, - you - have . driven tne lxra- 1 Jesus -Christ, the- King of tbei churchy away irom your heart; you have oeea mau treating him all' these years; hut he comes back today. He stands in front of the gate j -O.i .'i u- a. u..'. .Riti.::aL:'J . . 'of youronL-, If yon will only pray for his paraon ue win meet yon with ,hw gracious punt ana ne wui say: '.r thy sins and thine iniquities t win rcmemoer no more"upen wlae lne i win iue tne tnrone. my ..A.. T t n ... t a .1 .it. f r. from the old, ' there will be a ram of tears. and God will be the father of that mini . J". - A Literary Cariosity. " A veritable literary curiosity is the invi tation to the annual dinner of the Fort nightly Shakespeare club in New York.; It reads this way: ; , . . . - : ' "Good friends.1 Sweet '-friends1 '"(Julius Caesar),; 'tis hot June (Henry TV), (but) there .are sweet rases -in--the summer air (Love's Labor Lost), (which) sweetly rec ommends itself unto bur gentle senses (Macbeth).-.' 1--'--1 ------ "We hold a 'feast (AOdsnmiher -Night). " It will be pastime passing' excellent (Tam ing of the Shrew). - The ix-nuty of the king dom will be there (Henry Vlll). Please grace us with your company (Macbeth). You shall be welcome (Pericles). "Excuses shall not be udmitted (Henry IV), and so fail notour feast (Macbeth). -; "That you lo-love me I am nothing Jeal ous (Julius Cteear), and so, 1 pray you, come, sit down and do your best (Winter's Tale). . , -. . - ' . , . ; - -'.:.: "We know each - other well (Trolius and Cressida).. let's take the ' instant by the forewarrl top (All's Well), frame our minds to mirth and merriment; which bars a thousand harms and lengthens life (Tam ing or the Shrew).- i We'll e'en) le red with mirtb(Winter's Tale), and fleet the time as carelessly as they -did in the golden time (As Yon Like It). ; :: :.:- "But wherefore: waste I time to counsel thee, (Two Gentlemen). Brief let me be (Hainlet). If' 'twere done. When 'tis done were well it were done quickly (Mac beth), .-.'' '. ;. ' -; - ;' . Writ it straight (As You Like It), a rare letter (Twelfth flight) (aye): a fine volley of works and quickly shot off (Cym beline). .' .' ' V ' " .'"'..T'.".'"".'.' t"(Say) It is near dinner time (Two Gen tlemen), I am as constant as' the; northern star (Midsummer Night) and will be there (Two Gentlemen)."- ,' - . I'll " drink the . words you Bend and thank you for your pains (Cymbeline). "When all is done (Macbeth) (each guest shall say) night hath been too brief (Troil- us and Cressida). I am yours forever (Win ter's Tale).. Adieu till we meet (Cymbeline). -.-i-J - -.--' AJSTS A -KANBALL DlEHt, '' ' President of the Fortnightly Shakespeare.' "Yet here's a postscript (Twelfth Night). Open- thy purse that the- money (for- the dinner) may be at once delivered (Two Gen tlemen). ' Defer no time; delays have dan gerous ends (Henry VI). A. B. D." Philadelphia Enquirer. As Strange as a Romaafse. , These are days of great and surprising financial boosts. . - . , - i i ''; -. . Twelve years ago a young man lived in a Maine town. His parents were poor, so poor that they- required help from, the town. , The young man himself was erip pled by rheumatism, was discouraged, and instead of hustling for the wherewithal spent his time in Idleness and fishing. - For several years he, too, was supported by contributions from relatives and the town fathers. - ' The current belief was. "He will never amount to anything." " Well, did he? He cut loose from his home and'- associates,- borrowed enough money to carry him to Massachusetts and struck in for fame and fortune with all the vim and' trrif for which thoroughly awak ened Maine boys are famous."" That was' twelve! years ago: " Today be can draw his check' lor $500,000; and unless indications are amiss will be a' millionaire within five years. ; He is one of the leading shoe manufacturers in Brockton, - Mass. and every dollar of bis fortune was won by bis own endeavors.- tie has made a pres ent of a handsome new school house to his uative town. - He still owns and pays taxes on the old home; place,-and ; there isn't a man in town but who Is proud to point out the house to strangers and. tell t lie story of the man who. has made a big bright, mark In the bustling world. Lewiston Journal, Tha Coffee dp Bulnew Therakometer. Germans began drinking -water during the Seven Years war (175tMJ3), stolidly scoffed at oppoafliou to the 'practice-, and hated Napoleon ali the more for restricting it by his "Continental Blockade."' U ni versal peace was accompanied by universal indulgence in the exhilarating cup. - Amerl cans took' kindly to its contents. and by constantly -' enlarging : demand Imparted powerful : impetus to eottee coramerce and culture. Rise in prices during the : great civil war "diminished the consumption about two hundred' thousand tons'v -But for that it is asserted' that "the world would not have had coffee enough." -1 Demand rose with: every Union victory. and. fell with, every Union defeat. -, Con sumption increased 80.84 .percent, in. 1864, 17.5 per cent, lo 1865, 23.8 per cent. in. laoo, and 27.25-per jcent. ,-h 867. ; Removal, of duties and. financial prosperity inereased the call i fori the aromatic berryi and ad ranee - in price uet-auacof short crops or syndicate operations, diminished It., The conee cup is a onsiness tnermometer in tne i Ubited '' States. - Richard : Wbeatiey a Harper's Weekly.: r ;.- ; -:',;.; TIm tmeit ilM Tank In .the World. ; -' .'The erection of an immense gas holder said to be the largest lit the world is now under, way for the East Greenwich station in London. . Soma idea of the magnitude of the structure may be obtained when' It Is stated that it will have a capacity of 13, 000,000 feet of gas; that It will be 800 feet in diameter, with' an altitude' of 180 feet when at its' full ' height; that Its total weight will be 8,200 tons,' of which '1,840 tons will be of wrought iron, 60 tons of cast iron and 830 tons of- steel, and- that it will require. 1,200 tons of coal to fill It with gas. For the reception of the gigantic gas ometer a concrete tank 803 feet in diameter and 81 feet G inches deep has been made, at a cost of. $75,000 the greater part. 'of the work having been done by the stokers, who would-1 otherwise ' have1 been ; discharged during- the summer months.) - The cost of the holder alone its manufacture, erection and ' completionwill ; be $205,975. New York Telegram. p - V -i.O i C 'Vaci Tlme -Eating : Ecca. ' ,' Edward Smith, a Wood Carver in the em ploy of the Gilbert Clock company, made a. wager with -one -of the workmen 'that he could eat. twenty-four - eggs in -three min utes. The contest between Smith aod the eggs cam ioff Sat&rday'-afterno6n, and was won by Smith.- As the bet was- for only one dollar it looks' decidedly i though Smith had the worst'-of It Wacerbury American.- :c. :- - Advantag-e of a Big. Wedding-. ... There is a certain - frankness of tone in this sentehed from a rtteut article by Mrs. Florence Howe Hall. "One advautag of o Urge wedding over a small tne and there- lore, in most cases,. 01 a church .wedding, is that the bride 'in 'likely to receive a greater number of presents." - if 8 inn MriiniD litniiiNiiiri ."iJi"-! .:. ')t!ja HUM iJ is here and has come to stay. It hopes to win its way to; public" favor by ener gy, iuslyfarnierit;1 jaM to thisnd wea& ttot if saiisned with its course 1 a generous support:.'' ' '.--.'i" The four pages of six columns each, will be issued ' every evening:, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail' for the moderate sum of fifty cens a month. will be to advertise city, and adjacent country, ; to assist in developing1 our industries, in extending and opening up;: new channels' for pur tradey'dri'-'Secum helping T to take her prop er! position -as the y Leading- City of The ijpaper; bhaiiy and weekly will be independent ;' in 'pblitics, aiid in Tits criticism of political ' matters,1 as; in ; its handling of local affairs, it will be 1 JUST. "We will endeavor cal news; ''and we as oi ouT 'Ouject ana course De iormeairom tne contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. j THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 per; year. It ;w;ill Contain ; frbm four ; to six eight cpltinin pages, and we shall endeavpr to i make it ihe equal of the best. -j!sk your Postmaster & address. TO Office, N V W; Cor. Wash i rigtori arid Second Sts. THE The . fi!t . ciitv of the Inlakd 'Emnire is sittiated at the head of navigation on is a thriving, OTGsperous ' ..." ' - ITS TERRITORY. V :- . it is the suprjiy city for cxiltxiral an Vgruzing conhtry, , its, trade , reaching' 'efcg far south as Snmnier ijaKe, a distance 01 over tve hundred miles. ', ,:. . . : . . . j ' . .-,THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. . " -The rich' srraziiLsf country' alone the '"eastern.. slope of ;thq the Cascades, furnishes-, pasture for thousands of sheep, the "wool from -which finds market here..;; i uUnei ' Jjaiies; is xneTiargesx original 'wuux Hiij.ppig: point , in1 America, i atout 5,0OU,uuu pounas oeing shipped last year. , i7. ...... .. :, '-:r;:, ;; - T.rrs prodijcts. .,x-. . ;7The salmon' fisheries are the finest on the Columbia yielding 'this yekr a revenue of $1,500,000 , hv-hich' can and iU.Tfje.jnoxe, tnan doubled in he near .future.' ' '. ,T. prpducts of .the eautifulKlickital " valley, find market here, and the country south .and east has this year filled the "warehouses, and all available storage j places to overflowing with.their products. ' ' :: :. , . ; itsvvaxth; : ' y : It is the richest city of its size on the coast arid it& ; money is scattered over and is being . used to develop, more farming country than is tributary to any other , city'EasternOregon,,,.;,..; u .v--;:i'v ; v: Its situation is unsurpassed! .s. Its . climate:; delight- , ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! And on these comer stones she stands. Da 1 . the resources of the Eastern; Oregon. t:!- j A Objects AND IMPARTIAL to give all the ' lo that your criticism the Middle,. Coltunhia,' and citya :i i i;. f an extensive and rich a' '''