A 'POOR INVESTMENT. YOU HAVE BARGAINED .YOUR SOUL AWAY FOR NAUGHT. Dr. Talmage Show Bow the Foolish Salt, I Made and Bon It May lit Reme died Christ's Rlood Will Hay You . Back. - j Topeka, Kan.. Auk- V. Dr. Talmae reached this city yesterday in the course of bis western trip. He was warmly wel corned by the citizens, wbo came in large numbers to bear the famous Brooklyn di -vine. Tbe subject of the sermon for this week is, "A Poor Investment," and the text, Isaiah lii, 3, "Ye have sold yourselves for nauKbt: and ye shall be redeemed with out money." Tbe. lisird's people had none headlong into sin, and as a punishment they had been carried captive to Babylon. They found that iniquity did not pay. Cyrus seized Babylon, and felt so sorry for these poor captives that, without a dollar of com pensation, lie let them ro home. So. that, literally, my test was fulfilled. "Ye have wold yourselves for naught; and ye shall be redeemed without money.'! SOLD FOR VAUORT. There is enough Gospel in this text for fifty sermons. There are persons here who have, like the people of tbe text, sold out. You do not seem to belong either to your , selves or to God. The title deeds have been passed over to "tbe world, the flesh, and the devil' but the purchaser never paid up. "Ye have sold yourselves for naught." When a man passes himself over to the world he expects to get some adeq uate com pensation. He has beard tbe great things that the world does for a man, and be be lieves it. He wants two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. That will be horses and houses, and a summer resort and jolly companionship. To get it he parts with his'physical health by overwork. He-parts with his conscience. He parts with much domestic enjoyment. He parts with oppor tunities for literary culture. He parts with his soul. And so he makes over his entire nature to the world. He does It in four installments. He pays down the first installment, and one-fourth of his nature is gone: He pays down the second installment, and one-half of his nature is gone. He pays down the third installment, and three-quarters of bis na ture are gone, and after many years have one by he pays down the fourth install ment, and lo! his entire nature is gone. Then he comes up to the world and says: "Good morning. 1 have delivered to you the goods. I have passed over to you my body, my mind and my soul, and I have come now to collect tbe two hundred and fifty thousand dollars." "Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars?" says the world. "What do you mean?" "Well," you say, "I come to collect tbe money you owe me, and I expect you to fulfill your part of tbe contract." "But," says the world, "1 have failed. I am bankrupt. I cannot possibly pay that dept. I have not for a long time expected to pay it." "Well," you then say, "give me back the goods." "Oh, no," says tbe world, "they are all gone. 1 can not give them back to you." And there you stand on the confines of eternity, your spiritual character gone, staggering under tbe consideration that "you have sold your self for naught." THE WORLD 13 A LIAR. I tell you tbe world is a liar. It does not keep its promises. It is a cheat, and it fleeces everything it can put its hands on. It is a bogus world. It is a six-thousand-year-old swindle. Even if it pays the two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for which you contracted, it pays them in bonds that will not be worth anything in a little while. Just as a man may pay down ten thousand dollars in hard cash and get for it worthless scrip so tbe world . passes over to you the two hundred and fifty thousand dollars in that shape which will not be worth a farthing to-you a thousandth part of a second after you are dead. "Oh," you say, "it will help to bury me, anyhow." Oh, my brotberl you need not worry atiout that. The world will bury you soon euoiigb from sanitary con siderations. Post mortem emoluments are of no use to you. Tbe treasures of this world will not pass current in the future world, and if all the wealth of the Bank of England were put in tbe pocket of your shroud and you iu the midst of the Jordan of death were asked to pay three cents for your fer riage, you could not do it. There comes a moment in yojf existence beyond which all earthly values foil, and many a man has wakened up in such a time to find that he has sold out for eternity and has noth ing to shotv for it. 1 should as soon think of going to Chatham street to buy silk pocket handkerchiefs with no cotton in them, as to go to this world expecting to find any permanent happiness. It has de ceived and deluded every -man who has ever put his trust iu it. NOT TRUE HAPPINESS. -History tells us of ode who resolved that he v.ouid have all bis senses gratified at one and the same time, and he expended thousands of dollars on each sense. He entered a room, und there were the first musicians of tbe land pleasing his ear, and there were fine pictures fascinating his eye, and there were costly aromatics regal ing bis nostrils, and there were the richest meats and wines anil fruits and confec tions pleasing the appetite, aud there was a soft couch of sinful indulgence on which he reclined, and the man declared after- ' ward t hat he would give ten times what he had given if he could have one week of such enjoyment, even though he lost his soul by it! Ah! that was-the rub! He did lose his soul by itl Cyrus tbe conqueror thought for a little while that he was mak ing a fine thing out of this world, and yet before he came to his grave he wrote out this pitiful epitaph for his monument: "1 am Cyrus. I occupied the Persian empire. 1 was king over Asia. Begrudge me not this monument.'' But the world in after years plowed up his sepulcher. Tbe world clapped its bauds avd stamped its feet iu honor of Charles Lamb; but what does he say? "I walk up und dowu, thinking 1 nm happy, but feeling 1 am not." Call the roll, and be quick about it. Samuel Johnson, the learned! Happy? "No. I am afraid I shall some day get crazy.4' William Hazlitl. the great essay ist: Hanpyr "No". 1 have been for two hours ami ii half Koiug up and down Pater noster row with a volcd.no in my breast.' Smollet, the witty author! Happy? "No. 1 am sick oi praise and blame, and I wish to God tluit 1 bad such circumstances around me that 1 could throw my pen into oblivion." Biicbauau, the world renowned writer, exiled from his own country, ap pealing to Henry VIII for protection! Happy? "No. Over mountains, covered ' with snow, and through valleys flooded with rain. 1 come fugitive." lioliere, the popular dramatic author! Happy! "So., That retch of su actor just-now M-ecUed four of my lines without the proper iic-.vi:t and gesture. To hnva the children or my brain so hung, drawn, and quartered tortures me like a condemned spirit.", A WORLDLING'S DEATH. I went to see a worldling die. As I went into tbe ball I saw its floor was tessellated, and its wall was a picture gallery. I found , his death chamber adorned with tapestry until it seemed as if the clouds of tbe set ting sun had settled in the room. The man had given forty years to the world his wit, bis time, bis genius, his talent, his soul. Did tbe world come in to stand by bis deathbed, and clearing off the vials of -bitter medicine, put down any compensa- tion? Oh, no! Tbe world does not like sick and dying people, und leaves them in ' the lurch. It ruined this man and then left him. He had a magnificent funeral. All 'the ministers wore scarfs, and there were forty-three carriages it a row; but the departed man appreciated not the ob sequies. : ... V I want to persuade my audience that this world is a poor investment; that it does not pay ninety per cent, of satisfac tion, nor eighty per cent., nor twenty per cent., nor two per cent., nor one; that it gives no solace when a dead babe lies on yo,ur lap; that it gives no peace when con science rings its alarm; that it gives no ex planation in the day of dire trouble; and at the time of your decease it takes hold of tbe pillow case and shakes out the feathers, and then jolts down in the place thereof sighs and groatts and execrations, and then makes you put your head on it. Oh, ye wbo have tried this world, is it a satisfactory portion? Would you advise your friends to make the investment? No. "Ye have sold yourselves for naught." Your conscience went. Your hope went. Your Bible went. Your heaven went. Your God went. When a sheriff under a writ from the courts sells a man out the officer generally leaves a few chairs and a bed, and a few cups and knives; but in this awful vendue in which you have been engaged the auctioneer's mallet has come down upon body, mind and soul going! gone! "Ye have sold yourselves for naught." ONCE LOST IT IS GONE FOREVER. How could you do so? Did you think that your soul was a mere trinket which' for a few pennies you could buy in a toy shop? Did you think that your soul, if once lost, might be fouud again if you went out with torches and lanterns? Did you think that your soul was short lived, and that, panting, you would soon lie down for extinction? Or had you no idea what your soul was worth? Did you ever put your forefingers on its eternal pulses? Have you not felt the quiver of its peerless wing? Have you not known that after leaving the body, the first step of your soul reaches to the stars, and the next step to the farthest outposts of God's uni verse, and that it will not die until the day when tbe everlasting Jehovah expires? Oh, my brother, what possessed you that you should part with your soul so cheap? "Ye have sold yourselves for naught." But I have some good news to tell you. I want to engage in a litigation for the recov ery of that soul of yours. I want to show that you have been cheated out of it. I want to prove, as I will, that you were crazy on that subject, and that the world, under such circumstances, had no right to take the title deed from you; and if you will join me I shall get a decree from the High Chancery Court of Heaven reinstat ing you iu tbe possession of your souL "Oh," you say, "I am afraid of lawsuits; they are so expensive, and I cannot pay tbe cost." Then have you forgotten the lost half of my text? . "Ye have sold your selves for naught: and ye shall be redeemed without money." Money is good for a great many things, but it cannot do anything in this matter of the soul. You cannot buy your way through. Dollars and pounds sterling mean nothing at the gate of mercy. If you could buy your, salvation, heaven would be a great speculation, an exten sion of Wall street. Bad men would go up and buy out tbe place, and leave us to shift for ourselves. But as money is not a lawful tender, what is? I will answer, Blood! Whose? Are we to go through tbe slaughter? Oh, no; it wants richer blood than ours. It wants a king's blood. It must be poured from royal arteries. It must be a sinless torrent. . But where is the king? I see a great many thrones and a great many occupants, yet none seem to be com ing down to the rescue. But after awhile the clock of uight in Bethlehem strikes US, and the silver pendulum of a star swings across the sky, and 1 see the King of Heaven rising up, and he descends and steps down - from star to star, and from cloud to cloud, lower and lower, until he touches tbe sheep covered hills, and then on to another hill, this last skull shaped, aud there, at the sharp stroke of persecu tion, a rill incarnadine trickles down, and we who could not be redeemed by money are redeemed by precious and imperial blood. NO RELIGION OF BRAINS. We have in this day professed Christians who are so rarefied and ethereal ized that they do not want a religion of blood. What do you' want? You seem to want a reli gion of brains. The Bible says, -'In the blood is the life." No atonement without blood. Ought not the -apostle to know? What did he say? "Ye are redeemed not with corruptible things, such as silver and gold, but by the precious blooaV of Christ." You put your lancet into the arm of our holy religion and withdraw tbe blood, and you leave it a mere corpse, fit only for the grave. Why did God command the priests of old to strike the knife into the kid, and the goat, and the pigeon, and the bullock, and tbe lamb? It was so that when the biood rushed out from these animals on tbe floor of the ancient tabernacle the peo ple should be compelled to think of the coming carnage of the Son of God. No biood, no atonement. 1 think that God intended to impresss us with a vividness of that coloiv. The green of the gross, tbe blue of tbe sky, would not have startled .and aroused us like this deep "crimson. It is as if God had said: "Now, iuner, wake up aud see what the Saviour endured for you. This is not water. This is not wine. This is blood. It is the blood of my Son. It is tbe blood of tl- a immacu late. It is the blood of God.'" Without the shedding of blood is no remission. There has been many a man wbo, in courts of law. has pleaded , "not guilty," who nevertheless has been cuudemned because there won blood found on his hands or blood found in bis room, aud what shall we do in the last day if it be found that we have recrucified the Lord of Glory and have never repented of it? You must be lieve in the blood or die. No escape. . Un less you let the sacrifice of Jesus go in your stead you yourself must suffer. It is either Christ's blood or your blood. : "Oh." says some one, "tbe thought of blood sickens me." Good. God intended it to sicken you with your sin. Do not act as though you bad nothing to do with that Calvariau massacre.' You had. Ybur sins wer the implements of torture. Those implements were not made of steel and iron and wood so much as out of your sins. Guilty of this homicide, and this - regicide, and . this, tieicide, confess your guilt today. Ten thousand voices of heaven bring iu the verdict against you of guilty, guilty! Prepare to die or lielieve in that blood,. Stretch yourself ont for the sacri fice or accept the Saviour's sacrifice.: ' Do not fling away your one chance. HEAVEN WANTS TOC. ' '-' It seems to me as if all heaven were try ing to bid in. your soul. - The first bid it makes is the tears of Christ at the tomb of Lajarus, but that is not a high enough price. The next bid heaven makes is the sweat of Gethsemane, but it is too cheap a price. The next bid heaven makes seems to be the whipped back of Pilate's ball, but it is not a high enough price. Can it be pos sible that heaven cannot buy you in? Heaven tries once more. It says: "I bid this time for that man's soul the tortures of Christ's martyrdom, the blood on his temple, the blood on his check, the blood on his chin, tbe blood on bis hand, the blood on bis side, tbe blood on his knee, the blood on his foot the blood in drops, tbe blood in rills, the blood in pools coagulated beneath the cross; the blood that wet the tips of the soldiers' spears, the blood that plashed warm in the faces of his enemies." Glory - to God, that bid wins itl : The highest price that was ever paid for any thing was paid for your soul. Nothing could buy it but blood! The estranged property is bought bock. Take it. "You have sold yourselves for naught; and ye shall be redeemed without . money." - O atoning blood, cleansing blood, life giving blood, sanctifying blood, glorifying blood of Jes'isl Why not burst into tears at tbe thought that for thee he shed it for thee the bard hearted, for thee the lost?. "No," says some one; "I will have noth ing to do with it except that, like the ene mies of Christ, I put both my hands into that carnage and scoop up both palms full, and throw it on my head and cry, 'His blood be on us and on our children !' " Can you dosuch ashocking thing as that? Just rub your handkerchief across your brow and look at it. It is the blood of the Son of God whom you have despised and driven back all these years. Oh, do not do that any longerl Come out boldly and frankly and honestly, and tell Christ you are sorry. You cannot afford to so roughly treat him upon whom everything depends. - . BEWARE! BEWARE! ' 1 do not know bow yon will get away from this subject. You see that you are sold out, and that Christ wants to buy you back. There are three persons who come after you today God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost. They unite their three omnipotences in one movement for your salvation. You will not take up arms against tbe triune God, will you? Is there enough muscle rn your arm for such a combat? By the highest throne in heaven, and by the deepest chasm in hell, I beg you look out. Unless yon allow Christ to' carry awa'V your sins, they will carry you' away. Unless you allow Christ to lift, you up, they will drag you down. There is only one hope-for you, and that is the blood. Christ, the sin offering, bearing your trans gressions. Christ, the surety, paying yonr debts. Christ, the divine Cyrus, loosening your Babylonish captivity. - - 'Would you not like to be free? . Here is the price of your .lilieration not money, but blood.. I tremble from head to foot, not because I fear your presence, but be-, cause I fear that you will miss your chance for immortal rescue. This'; is the alterna tive divinely put, "He that believeth on tbe Son shall have everlasting life; and he that believeth not on the Son shall not see life, but tbe wrath of God abideth on him." In tbe lost day, if you now reject Christ, every drop of that sacrificial blood, instead of pleading for yourrelease as it would have pleaded if you had repented, . will plead against you. O Lord God of the judgment dayl avert that calamity! Let us see tbe quick flash of the sciixteter that slays the sin but saves the sinner. Strike, omnipotent God, for the soul's deliverance! Beat, O eternal sea! with all thy waves against the barren beach of that rocky soul anfl make it tremble. Oh, tbe oppressiveness of the hour, the minute, the second on which the soul 's destiny quivers, and this is that hour, that minute, that second! .. ALL MAT BE SAVED. - Some years ago there came down a fierce storm on the seacoast, and a vessel got in the breakers and was going to pieces. They threw up some signal of distress and the people on shore saw them. They put out in a lifeboat. Tbey came on, and they saw the poor sailors, almost exhausted, clinging 'to a raft; and so afraid were the boatmen' that the men would give up be fore they got to them they gave them three rounds of cheers, and cried: Hold on. there! hold on! We'll save youl" After awhile tbe boat came up. One man was saved by having the boatbook. put in the coliar of his coat , and some in one way and some iu another; but tbey all got into the bout. Now," says the captain, for the shore. Pull away now, pulll" The people on the land were afraid the lifeboat had gone down. They said: "How long the boat stays. Why, it must have been swamped and they have all perished together.' And there were men and wom en on the pier heads and on the beach wringing their hands; - and while they waited and watched they saw something looming up through the mist, and it turned out to lie the lifeboat. As soon us it came within speaking distance the people on the shore cried out: "Did you save any of them? Did you save any of them?" And as the boat sweptMhrougli the boiling surf and came to tbe pier head - the captain waved bis hand over the exhausted sailors that lay flat on tbe bottom of tbe boat and cried: "All saved! Thank God! All eavedl" So may it lie today. The waves of your I sin run high, the storm is on you, but I I cheer you with this Gospel hope. God grant that within tbe next ten minutes we ; may row with you into the harbor of God's I mercy. Ami when these Christian men I gather around to seethe result of this serv ice, aud tbe glorified gathering on the pier beads of heaven to watch and to listen, may we be able to report all saved! Young and old, good aud bad! All saved! Saved for time. Saved for eternity. ' "And so it came to pass that they all escaped safe to land." Clever Aanty. Little Jack had returned from a week's visit to his Aunt Jess' farm up the Hud son. He saw a great many things there very different from any he ever did at home, among others aunty churn butter. He was greatly interested by the dasher's jumping up and down in tbe churn, and the first evening of his return to the city , stopped, fur the first big bite'into his J bread and butter,-to remarks ' ' . : "You jw.st ought to see how aunty makes butter with a barrel and a broomstickl ' New York Recorder. . : . Of Value to Lecturers and Students. ' A luminous crayon' has been invented for j the purpose of enabling lecturer to draw : ou the blackboard when the ropni is dark ened for the use of the lantern.. The in vention is likely to prove of valne not only to the lecturer who ue the lantern, but also (in another form) to tho.-e .student tv'iio wish to take notes. New York Tcle j Krsm. . , ': - : - How to Cook Potatoes.' I have been dining at one of the best clubs, in London,. -But the potatoes are uniformly bad, waxy and indigestible. I do not write merely of a club grievance. I am - an old housekeeper-Aniarried over twenty years. ' I, am passionately fond of potatoes, and I carely ever get them to my liking.; I had to go to the other day, and my host is a large potato grower. At dinner the potatoes were perfect ravish ing! A few questions and answers elicited tbe remarkable fact that my own table was usually supplied by my host's pota toes. But mine were always like those of the club dull, sodden, waxy and abomina ble.: His were light, dry, mealy and per fectly delightful. . . , . . . . . Being, a bit of a cook myself I arranged with my host to spend the next forenoon in his kitchen. The potato is composed air most entirely of pure starch. , To . make this starch agreeable to- the eye and the palate its corpuscular elements' must be split up by heat in the presence of excess of moisture, and at a temperature just a little higher than boiling water at the sea level (213 degs.). Now, I -happen to live at such a height above sea level, that water probably boils at 210 degs. Hence I never get good potatoes. .My host's house was just as mine, and his cook said that the water in his well did not suit potatoes she knew nothing about .the sea level a' 1 temperature so that she was obliged to "soften it with salt." . : . , ., She put a big handful of salt in the pot of potatoes, and I think raised tbe boiling point to about 216 degs. - Then, after boil ing them till the skins burst, she poured off the water, cocked the lid half, off the pot, put the, latter ou the hob, and thus for .about fifteen minutes she thoroughly dried them. The result was amazing and delightful. I went home, and I made a series of careful experiments. You cannot steam a potato into perfection unless you inclose the steam so as to raise its temper ature to about 216 degs. : Potatoes must always be boiled in their skins and in a pretty strong saline solu tion in order to get them in perfection, de lightful to the palate and easy of digestion. After such treatment they may be made into soup; tbey may be baked or roasted (for a few minutes only) in their skins; they may be mashed, cboked a la maitre, saute, or .fifty things may be done with them, but. first of all they(must be boiled in their skins, with plenty of salt, and then well dried. Pall Mall Gazette. Social Aspirations. . Jinks That fellow Winkers is trying to get into the Four Hundred, isn't he? Binks I don't know. Why do you think so? Jinks He has given up business and has begun living on his wife's money. New York Weekly. Preparing for Contingencies. Blanche (after replying "Yes" to Hunk er's proposal) Do you want to speak to papa tonight? Hunker N.-no. Wait till tomorrow. I'll get an accident insurance policy before I come back. New York Enoch. Recent calculations show that the elec tromotive force of a bolt of lightning pro duces an energy of -upward of 3,000,000 horse power. - women, m , iiim,..,,.,,. The ronunou afflictions of women are sick-head-che.-i, indigestion and nervous troubles. They arise largely, from stomach disorders. As Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla is tho only bowel regu lating preparation, you can see why It is more cfTcctivo than any other Earsaparilla In those troubles. It is daily relieving hundreds. The action is mild,, direct and effective. We have scores of letters from grateful women. We refer to a few: - Nervous debility, Mrs. J. Barron, 142 7th St.,.8. F. Nervous debility, Mrs. Fred. Loy, 827 Ellis St.S.F. General debility, Mrs. Bcldcn, 610 Mason St, S.F, Nervous debility, Mrs. J. Lampberc, 735 Turk Bt, Nervous 'cbility.Miss R. Rosenblum. '232 17th M., 13. 1 . . Htoaach troubles, Mrs. R. I Wheaton, 70 Post t;t., a. F. . . , Sick headaches, Mrs. M. B. Price, 10 Prospect Place, S. F. . . Sick headaches, Mrs.' M. Fowler, 827 Ellis St, 8.F. fmliijetrtion, Mrs. C. D. Stuart, 1221M:ssion St., U.'istlpation, Mrs. C. Melvln, 126 Kearny St, S.F. Vegetable Sarsaparilla Mnt modern, most- effective, largest bottle. Sumo price, tl. 00 or 6 for $5.00. For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY. THE DALLES, OREGON. A Necessity. - The consumption of tea largely In creases every year In England, Russia, and the principal Euro- pean ; tea-drlnkine ; countries. Eut it : does not , grow In : America. And not - alone that, but thou. sands 'of Europeans sfSit-y I who leave Europe 3l ardent lovers of tea,: upon, arriving In tne . sUy discontinue Its nse, and finally cease It altogether. I This state of things fs due to the fact that the Americans think so much of business and so little of their palates that they permit -China and Japan f) ship them their cheapest -and most worthless teas. Between the -wealthy classes of China and Japan and the exacting' and cnltiva'ed tea-drinkers of Europe, the finer teas find a ready market. The balance of the crop comes to America.. Is there any wonder, then, that our taste for. tea does not appreciate? In view of these facts, Is there not an lm-. mediate demand for the Importation of a . .brand of tea that Is guaranteed to be un colored, unmanipulated, aud of absolute purityT - We think there Is, and present Beech's Tea.- . Its purity is guaranteed In every respect. It has, therefore, more in- . herent strength than the cheap teas you have been drinking, fully one third less being re- ' quired for an Infusion. - Thia you will dls . cover the first time, yon make it. Likewise, the Savor is delightful, being the natural fla-' vorof an unad iltera ed article.. It is a revela tion to tea-drinkers. Sold only In packages bearing this mark: BEEC "Pure AsWdhood: Price 60c per pound. For sale at THE DALLES, OREGON. Joys I I I ' ? 1 CH3 flOAfli fOHEPMGH shows . -$3,000,000 ' Oldest, Largest, Richest Exhibition in the World Inxroste dJ . $.5,500. DAILY EXPENSES. GHilND TRIPLE GIHGUS, DOUBLE JuENflCEHlE, HEAL KOtfflfl HlPPODIfO ' . WCItUDlflG njILD WEST, fJOST IWflGfllFICEfliT JWUSEUJ5. And: FOREPflUGH'S FPOUS FOREIGH FEATURES Positively arxcSL XTixca.xxia,1oly THE O N LY BIG .SH OWS Ooxrxxxisr TTlxijs Season. THE DALLES, ONE SHOW ONLY. ' felnMayifteniocn. 5 pi u e pp. rest-Bred IJ017 s -AI.I. PEBFORMED FREE AND UNFETTERED IN THE ARENA J I BV COL. BOONE AND MISS CAKLOTIA. THESE LOOSE LIONS are seen in America for the first time thia season Thev nrp t n a mnal novFoHv .n ; K... . - i. : 1 -. . ni ... . . J .ww.j vicwutru uiuwo ever c&.uiuiieu. 1 nt'.y are exnioited - in a Bteel encircled ring by Col. Boone and Miss Carlotta, assisted by the German boar hound, SAXON. LIONS are 'driven in harness yoked to a chariot, made to form beautiful group tableaux, play eee-saw, like" children, with Saxon, ride on tricycles . expertly as human beings, play circus, hold objects, leap, and do . ' jL. several other Most Difficult and Novel Acts. This performance is seen only in tbe Adam Forepaugh shows. There ia no other ; - - act like it in America, and is with us for this season only. Tlio Oreatest .eriallsits of All X . , THE CEIiEBBATEU HAN LON-VOLTERS The supreme and exalted masters of aerialists on all the great, earth. princely salary UllUU FOH THE fFIST TIflQE xUf4lDEf? CflflVflS Do their most wonderful and fearless act. Scientific, skillful and marvellous act THBIE, ' ASTOIsriSIIIlTa- TRIPLE BAR LEAP FOR LIFE. - Throwing double eomesaults 60 feet long while flying 40 feet high in mid-air. Still they ore but one feature in a host of features to be found In our great shows. Beneath oor huge, city of water-proof canvas artists from ull the celebrated urenas of the old world and the new moke up the roster of our ' GRAND TRIPLE WORLD - FAMED CIRCUS, With more principal, Jockey, menage, hurdle and general riders. 'More gymnasts, acrobats, vaulters, srriaiiKts contortionist!. More clowns, buttoons, jesters, jokers, puntomimists. More famous rirst-time-here Japanese artists. More unicycle, bicycle, tricycle, and roller tkating artists, first-class oil-round, A Ko. 1 circus artists. More simultaneous, new, novel and surprising acts. More circus, and of better quality than can be seen ANYWHERE ELSE IN THIS WI1K WORLD. REKL ROMHN HIPPODROME. . X Flying Steeds,' Daring Riders, mile race track, Roman Chariot RacPs, Roman Standing Races, Male and Female Jockey Races, Elephant and Camel Races, Monkey and Pony Races, Man vvs. . Horse, Hurdle and Flat Races, and various other Races. ONE OF'THE GREATEST DEPARTMENTS OF THE GREAT SHOWS. ADAM FOEEPAHGH'S GREAT REINFORCED WILD WEST. Renewed with all the startling incidents of the late outbrenk. Red AHwiah Craze, The Ghost Dunce, Death of feittins Bull, Wounded Knee EpiRode, shows also the Custer Buttle, Hanging of a Horse Thief, Pony Express, Attack on Emigrant Train, Etc., participated iu bv Indians, owbovs. Scouts and frontiersmen of every kind, who were actual participants in the scenes reproduced, Iow bv Cnptuln A.. H. Bcgurdns, the crack shot. 8BO.O0O Herd of Trained Elephants. 20.000 Troupe of Trained Itrnncnns. SIO.OOO .Troupe of Trained Stallions, and their Master, Adam Forepaugh, Jr. FOREPAUGH'S WORLD RENOWNED ' MENAGERIE. Rhinocerl, Hirpopotamia GiTafles and one of every species known to zoology. More cages of beasts than any two menageries. The most all-including menagerie ever organized.. THE GRAND AND GORGEOUS STREET PARADE Every mornfrg at 10 o'clock, where the shows exhibit one day only, and nt 10 o'clock on (he morning at the first exhibition day, where they exhibit more than one any will be given what -is absolutely and nndenicblv tbe roost stupendous, magnificent, enchanting delightful, largest, longest, richest Street Parade even seen. tree to alL 10,000 SEATS. One price of Admission Admits TWi All the Great Shown. Polite Vshers Always In Attendance. Ladies and Children especially eared for. GHIEAP ECXrRSTOIsrS OUST OIF" TEAVEL. For the accomodation of visiters who w old avoid the crowd at the grounds, reserved numbered seats (at the regular price) and admission tickets, at the usual slight advance, can be obtained at ' , SNIPES & KlKESSIiY DKUO ST01?E, SECOND STREET. James E. Cooper, SftoXo 'wner their dangerous art. The only uerialists of $775.00 per week. The highest salaried who receive the Sepiemiier 16.