2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. PIT »ear M 0* b ptIC In Mdra.nct t M ADVERTISING RATES A*»ert!sements are published at the rate ol •is Collar per square for one insertion and fifty •eats per square tor eacb subsequent insertion Rates oy ino year, or for six or three months, •re low and uniform, and will be furnished on •■pUcat.on. Le*nl and Official Advertiser per square, three times or less, 12 each subsequent in»er- Jler. bO rents per square Local notice* !u cents per line for one Inser sertlon; 5 cents per line tor each subsequent tenseeutive Insertion. Obituary notices o»er fire Une», 10 cents pel |S»e Simple announcements of births, uiar rleees and deaths will be Inserted tree Business cards five lir.es or '.ess, per year. »ver five lines, at the refular rates of adver tising No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per las us. JOB PRINTING The Job deportment of the Pusss is complete »c 4 *.ff. rds frt. :iities tor dointf the be*t class ot trnrk PARTICULAR ATTBNII' H PilUTo L.AW fraINTISCi. No paper will be discontinued ntii arrear- Pies are paid, except at the option of the puo iher. Pipers Rent out ot the county must be paid for advance J CURRENT TOPICS. TIIE donkey is the longest lived of domestic animals. NEW YORK'S police department em ploys 7,400 persons. THE engines of a first-class man-of war cost about $700,000. PHYSICIANS' carriages have the right of way in the streets of Berlin. THE number of children and youth in the United States is 21.082.472. A COLOSSAL statue of Gladstone is to be erected in Blackburn, England. THE brooklyn bridge has contracted 14?. feet since it was opened to the public. IN Russia people must marry before 80 or not at all, and may marry only •ive times. THE prince of Wales's breakfast never varies. It consists of tea, toast and one egg. THE czar is considering the advisa bility of abolishing exile to Siberia as a punishment. WOCLD-IIE Columbuses will be glad to learn that one-tenth of the world is still unexplored. THE Siberian railway already has 50 refrigerator cars for taking butter to the Russian cities. THE first advertisements ever known were placed on the doors of St. Pauls cathedral. London. GERMANY makes an excellent brand of "Scotch" whisky, which finds a ready sale in India. WHEN first known to the Romans silk was so dear that it was sold weight for weight with gold. , GERMAN post office employes are not permitted to marry without the special consent of the government. THE maximum weight of freight lo comotives is now 218,000 pounds, against 100,000 pounds 15 years ago. IN some eastern city a proposition has been made to fumigate all the books in the public library. AN offer of $23,000 for three orchids exhibited at the Antwerp horticultural show has been refused by the owner of the flowers. THE men and women of today are nearly two inches taller than their an cestors. This is no doubt owing to the growth of athletics. THE coal production of Great Britain amounts to 100,000,000 tons a year, of Germany to 100,000,000 tons and of France to 28,000,000 tons. IN llayti there is sunshine almost every day in the year. Even during the rainy season the rain seldom falls until late in the afternoon. IT is said that one pound of butter gives a working force equal to that of five pounds of beef, nine pounds of po tatoes or 12 pounds of milk. Fr>vit thousand five hundred dollars was the cost of the cake provided at the wedding of John Jacob Astor to Miss Willing, of Philadelphia. MRS. CHOATE, wife of the ambassa dor in London, is in Paris, where she has bought some of the most exquisite court gowns made in that city. IT has been found that in bald people the growth of the hair is stimulated, and its color changed, by the judicious application of electric current. AT present England sells Colombia nearly 70 per cent, of the cotton cloth used by the latter, and the United States only about 11 per cent. THE shepherds of (iermany predict the weather by observing the wool on the backs of their sheep. When it is very curly fine weather will prevail. DURING the past year the exports of watches from Switzerland amounted to over 813,000,000. The watches went to almost all parts of the civilized world. ALEXANDER IJKAUHKIN, the first white child born in Chicago and a son of lien. John IJaptiste Beaubein, has just celebrated his golden wedding at his home in that city. AN Atchison society woman has tak en down the picture of"Washington Crossing the Delaware" in her best room and replaced it with "Funston Crossing the Bagbag." A CLUB has been formed in Peoria. 111., with 35 charter members, all pledged to marry none but widows. There is no age limit or other require ments in regard to the widows. DANIEL M. BURNS, named by the governor of California as United States senator to fill the vacancy left by the legislature's failure to elect, is a man great wealth, mostly made in mines. THE Emperor William, despite the fact that he has only one arm with which he can shoot, is nevertheless quite one of the finest shots in Europe. Last year he brought down s!»7 head of game while attending the court differ ent shooting parties. THE largt st loaves of bread baked in the world are those of France and Italy. The "pipe" br ad of Italy i; baked in loaves two or three feet long, while in France the loaves are made in the shape of very long rolls, four feet or five feet in length, and in many eases bix feet. SEDITIOUS AGITATION. Effu'ls of the Tri'aaunalile ESorta uf ilir AiiierW'Uii AKIII II llltudy of the situation, is positive that the natives would never have made war nad it not been for the encouragement they received in the senate debates, and that, they would not have protracted hostilities as they have except for the inspiration they received from Bryan, Atkinson and all that class. lie says that the Boston mar' - pamphlets were "meat" for the Filipinos. Miseliief making Spaniards at Manila seized upon such literature, had it translated and SHAV to its distribution in the quarters where it would do the most harm. Not only were the insurgents persuaded that they had powerful allies in this count ry, but ;e of the documents sought to piake it appear that Americans outside the select circle of the natives' friends were tyrannous and cruel. Spite of the remnant lhat would save, they were harsh to subject and inferior races, and the Filipinos might read their own future in the story of the negro and the Indian. In the freedom of our own debates it is of course permissible for us to criticise our own policies even in ex aggerated terms. But for a faction to g«> with these criticisms to an enemy in time of war is infamous. The effect which Mr. Barrett witnessed was in evitable. A wiser people than the Fili pinos might, have taken comfort from the wretched pamphlets, might have looked for aid to those who were at tempting to create a diversion against the government in the United States. How any American can think of the matter without experiencing a feeling of disgust and repulsion it in difficult to conceive. But for others Ihan the anti-expen sionists it will be pleasing to learn that the success of sedition with the Filipirsos was abundant]}' offset, by its failure with the American troops. Our soldiers were not only true to their duty and the law of military discipline, as they might have been if they had had no relish for the war, but they responded intuitively to the true sen timent, of the people on this side of the water and jeered the specious ad dresses that were sent out to convert them into mutineers. Their reply in action was to fight all the harder. The volunteers whom Mr. Barrett consult ed scorned the idea of returning home if such a course would embarrass the campaign, and all expressed a perfect willingness to await the arrival of more regulars. Their spirit is revealed in the following: "When the flKhtiner was begun on Febru ary 5 SOO men who were on stek leave ap plied for permission to retern to their reg iments and sot it. Of the Minnesota regi ment, to which Gov. Llnd's statements at tracted attention, I can only say that while the r' tfiment was doing patrol duty in Ma nila scores of men took the tlrst opportu nity to skip out and go to the front and tight. When men will risk court-martial to fight it does not look as if they wanted to come home in a hurry." A review of the whole case should nrntkc the agitators long, like Dickens' haunted man, for a loss of memory.— Chicago Times-Herald. POLITICAL DRIFT. CTMr. Bryan is compelled to glare very intently at imperialism in order to avoid seeing the many evidences of prosperity at home. —Kansas City Jour nal. E7"We note with interest a growing disposition to let Mr. Edwtjrd Atkinson, have a monopoly of the business which has lately engaged his attention.—X. Y. Tribune. inT'The democrats are waiting to see what the republicans will do. That is why the strongest kind of a plank should be putin the republican plat form.—Cleveland Leader. r7"lt would be just like Mr. Bryan to tie free silver and anti-imperialism by their tails and hang them over the clothes line in 1900. What a Kilkenny consequence would follow! Brooklyn Eagle. (CTFree silver politicians will regard Admiral Dewey's willingness to sit down to a SSO-a-plate dinner as forever .settling his chances to become presi dent, even should he change his mind. —Washington Star. ETThe Atkinsons and Lauglilins arc noisy, but they do not. represent the deep and settled conviction of the Amer ican people, at least as they are repre sented by those that live in the great middle west. —Indianapolis News. CThe Philippines belong to Ameri ca by cession, by purchase, by the right of conquest and by possession. And yet there are some who dispute all these and would have the property turned back to anarchy, fire and sword. —Cin- cinnati Commercial Tribune. P.New Jersey kept irp its republic an majorities in the spring elections. The once rock-ribbed democracy of that state dwindled into a minority when threatened with a bogus dollar. Bry an's new gospel of socialism will finish whtat is left. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. iTT'O'.ir protective tariff hurts Eng land, but a request in parliament for its abrogation has just been officially disapproved. England's only hope is that, free trade will some day win in t his country, but that is hoping against hope. Protection is the only safe guard of the American standard of liv ing- for American labor.—lowa State Register. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE i, 1899. TOO MUCH PROSPERITY. The llryunlte* Ar; ISilim I'pset lij the iaoot! Time** tiii.l In creased Woget. Papers of the ultra Bryan and popu list variety are beginning to be troubled about the good times. They seem to realize the force of (he remark of Mayor Taggart last fall, that a demo cratic victory cannot be expected as long as good times continue. Therefore they declare that the good times are de ceptive—that there will be no real pros perity until the United States perfects a vast silver-bullion trust by legislat ing to stamp every 45 cents' worth of it one dollar. To them the outlook is not cheerful, and so they make it as cheerless as they can. Unfortunately for such cliques and newspapers, but fortunately for the country, the people knew better. Most of them read newspapers, and when in one issue, as was the case on Monday, they read that 4,000 wage-earners in Cleveland had their wages advanced from five to twenty per cent., that I">,- OOu iron workers in Birmingham, with out solicitation, were given an advance of from ten to fifteen percent., and that advances were announced in Tfending, I'a.; Springfield, ()., and other places, most people will come to the conclusion that prosperity of the substantial sort has come very generally. One of these papers declares that the prosperity is artificial, having been manipulated by Senator Ilanna for po litical purposes, lie is the bold, bad man who is inciting employers in ex tensive industries all over the country to increase wages and to make it ap pear that there is an unprecedented de mand for all the staples of the country. Thereat they invent some new story designed to show the depravity of the man. The Journal is not an admirer of Sen ator Ilanna. Doubtless he does not care a fig, but the Journal has never taken to him. For that reason and others we would warn the agitated Bryan-popu list editor that he may overdo the Ilan na talk. There is more labor seeking men to perform it than there ever has been in the country before. Workers are getting millions more as wages each week than they did three years ago. Never before did T5°.000 of men have their wages increased without asking. Now, if all these people whose condi tion has been improved by the better times should be persuaded by Ihe Bryan-populist editors that Senator Ilanna has brought it about he would be the most popular man in the land. He could have anything he desired at the hands of those people. What if they should make Senator Ilanna a pop ular idol? Dreadful thought!—lndian apolis Journal. COMPANIONS IN CRIME. Another Shot fit the AnNocluted Prenehers of Treason In This. Country. Brig. Gen. Harrison Gray Otis, who has just returned to the United States from the Philippines, adds his testi mony to that of the other command ers in praise of the American* troops who have been participating in the cam paign about Manila. For a fact Ihe American soldiers have made a record for valor, endur ance and perseverance in the Philip pine campaign, considering the fact that most, of them were raw volun teers. which has astonished the world, and every American should be proud of the men who have been following the stars and stripes through jungles and swamps under a tropical sun. These brave volunteers have put their hearts into their work, and there has been rare pluck behind every gun. Furthermore,, they have made the sac rifice willingly, because they were in spired by a patriotic desire to uphold the honor and glory of their country. Yet while the American soldiers have been demonstrating that they are the best fighters on earth, traitors at home have been trying to breed insubordina tion and mutiny among them in the hope of so weakening the forces of Gen. Otis as to make it possible for the in surgents to win. It is impossible to contemplate the splendid work of the American army and navy in the Philippine islands without feeling the utmost contempt for Edward Atkinson and his asso ciated preachers of sedition. —Cleveland Leader. The Rlnei of Silver. The upward movement of silver will do more, if it continues, to put Bryan against silver than could all the argu ments of Ihe honest money men of the country. Of course, if silver should go up anywhere near the mark at which the silver dollar would tie intrinsically worth 100 cents Bryan would drop sil verism. Anyone who would then talk sixteen to one would be an "agent of Wall street" and an "enemy of the hu man race." Bryan is not bigoted in his devotion to silver. He shouts for the silver dollar because it is a dishon est dollar. He wants to force it on the farmers and laborers of the counfry be cause its general adoption would cheat them out of more than half of their earnings. He wants it for them because it is only worth 4f cents. If it was worth only 26 cents or 16 cents, he would shout twice as loud for it. Un til silver starts down again, which il is likely to do to-morrow or the next day. Bryan will keep very quiet about sixteen to one. —St. Louis Globe-Demo crat. C7"The democratic party got on the wrong moral side of the union question of the emancipation question, of there construction question, of the financial question, and now, as an organization, is getting on the wrong moral side ol the expansion question. The numbel of democrats who will not follow th< insanities of the party still remain/ sufficiently large to save the country And they will do it again nextyear- Brookh*n Eagle. NEPHEW OF HIS UNCLE. The K\pedient Kmvloyed by n French Explorer to Get tin with the -Sitter \ntlveM. Lieut, llourst, the Frenchman who made himself famous awhile ago by sailing down the Niger from its upper waters to its mouth, has just published a book describing the journey. Every part of the river he saw had been pre viously visited, but he was the first trav eler who traveled down the entire river. His journey was a great success in spite of the rapids and the enmity of some natives, with whom, however, he did not come to blows. llourst attributes his success largely to the fact that he was ad vised by one of the Mohammedan natives, an elderly man, who had seen Barth during that explorer's great journey to represent himself as being the son or nephew of the famous German. The man told llourst that no white man that ever came into the country had made so good an impression upon the people as I'arth had done. The fame of the ex plorer had been handed down from fa ther to son, and all the more intelligent people of the western Soudan knew of the great man, had heard how much he was liked by their fathers, and would exert themselves to show their friend ship for anyone connected with him by family ties. llourst acted on the hint. All along his journey down the river he caused himself to he heralded as the nephew of Hnrth, and in many places he was re ceived with special hospitality on this account. Inasmuch as he never fired i gun at a native, but treated all with ourtesy and consideration, it is likely that any other "member of Barth's family" who may visit the Niger will meet with a kindly reception. MOTHER-IN-LAW DISSOLVED. An I inpeeunioiiM ArtlNt Who Went ( l«'oi"ttrn. Serpent of the* Xlle, One He tier. When the engagement was in its first juarter Wagers painted the portrait of HON. JAMES SCHOOLCRAFT SHERMAN. This gentleman, who is the leading easiern candidate for thf speakership of .he national house of representatives, was born in Utica, X Y , in 1855. He is a yo tri& man full of vigor and energy, and one of the most popular members of congress. He rtei'ivert both an academic and collegiate education; graduated from Hamilton col lege in the class of IMS. studied law and was admitted to the bar In ISSO. in 18S4 he was elected mayor of Utica. He was elected tir.-st to the Fiftieth congress, and has K'.rved in :i.»e house ever since, lie is said to be a line presiding officer. his mother-in-law-elect., says the New York World. He had never done any thing better in an artistic sense, and his friends gave him credit for unex pected diplomacy. The course of true love seemed strewn with roses, and the lecture had the place of honor in his studio. Then, all at once the bride-to be was whisked off to Europe and Wa gers found himself a jilted man. For a little while he was inconsolable. Then he rallied his spirits and spread a feast for the boys in the old den. When ilie champagne sparkled in the glasses the speeches began, but, with rare delicacy, the subject of his recent masterpiece was not mentioned, al though everybody noticed that the place it had occupied knew it no more. Then Wagers rose, and his smile was mellow as the moon. "Gentlemen," he said, "when Cleo patra, lovely sorceress of the Nile, gave a banquet to her fr'en's she dissolved a pearl in wine. Rut I, gentlemen, go th' fair serpent one better. I've dissolved —my mother-in-law." And so he had, by the aid of the pawn broker around the corner, to raise funds for the feast. CNN of ItllMMinnN. A writer in the Contemporary lieview claims that there are other points of similarity between the Russians and Americans besides the bigness of their territory and their industrial under takings. lie says: "What impressed me most about the educated Muscovite, however, was his extreme nervousness, lie is conscious that his country has lagged behind western nations; he is also conscious that it has been going forward this last decade by leaps and by bounds. More I'recloiiM Than Diamonds. Among the rarest of precious -tones the green garnet is probably the most valuable. This gem is of superb, rich shade, far more brilliant than that of the emerald. A green garnet easily commands double the price of a pure diamond of equal size, because it is so exceedingly rare, while red garnets are so common that their cost is trifling. Militnry MuMlelnnN. The German army includes more than 10,000 military musicians. Other powerful nations on Ilie continent em ploy rather less numbers in military bands. FIRST WARM DAY. The Country Folk ill Southeaatcrn l'enii»> l vii iiin C all II a w fath er llreejer. In southeastern I Vnnsylvania there comes a day in Fein nary that brings with it an indefinable sense of joyous ness. A southern wind wanders up the Delaware with a touch of spring in its air that quickens, for the first time, the slumbering life. It is then, soy* Ap pleton s Popular Science Monthly, that those mysterious forces in the cells of living things begin their subtle work— hidden in the dark, underground store houses of plants and the sluggish tis sues of animals buried in their winter sleep. On such a day the groundhog ventures from his burrow, some rest less bee is lured from the hive to wander disconsolate over bare fields, a snake crawls from its hole to bask awhile in the sunshine, and one looks instinctive ly for the first breaking of the earth that tells of the early crocus and the peeping forth of daffodils. The south erly wind is more than apt to lie a tell tale, for with all its springtime softness it is drawing towards some storm cen ter, near or remote, that will inevitably follow with rough weather in its sweep. The countryfolk rightly call such a day a "weather breeder," and even the groundhog knows its portent in the very sign of its shadow. Come as it will, the day is really a day borrowed in advance from the spring, as though to hearten one through till the dreary days that will follow, and.in starting the growing forces of vegetation, to make ready for tin- season's coming. THEIR PET BELIEF. \enrly All "Women Think They Have a Fine Kli »<■ k for Men *l - TlillI KS. If there is a woman who can lay her hand on her heart, or the region where it ought to be. and solemnly declare that she has ever succeeded in mending anything permanently with paste, gum or cement, I should like to meet her. I have known many housewives and I many varieties of paste and cement in the course of a brief but useless life, | and 1 have never yet met with an in \ stance where anything mended by a j woman with any of the devices in ques j tion has remained mended for ten con ! secutive minutes when subjected to the j slightest strain, says Pearson's Maga zine. A woman can mend a saucer with ce j meat, and its broken parts will con- J tinue to adhere until some one picks it | up. She can also mend an umbrella J handle with gum, and it will present a ! decent appearance until some one tries j to take it from the umbrella stand, i This, however, is not thg sort of mend ! ing which the woman desires, and it is needless to say that it is worse than no mending whatever. Yet, although every woman who has reached the age of 35 has probably made 450 attempts to mend things, every one of which has failed, she fvill still continue to believe that broken articles can be firmly and permanently mended with her favorite sticking mix ture. Whence comes this indomitable faith? Echo declines to return any an swer whatever. v liiiM'Ne PoilteneNMi When in Shanghai I'rince and Ptln eess Henry of Prussia were given an amusing' example of ('hinese politeness. While visiting a notable mandarin their host asked through the interpreter the age of Prince Henry. On being told that the e._:peror"s brother is a little over 36 the mandarin turned to the prince and said: "You appear 50." He then inquired the age of the princess, who is .'"2. The interpreter, llerr Yoigt, an honest citizen of Stettin, hesitated to inform the princess what the man darin replied oil learning her age. Prince Henry, however, has a smatter ing of Oliinese, and laughingly com manded: "Out with it. Voigt!" The Chinese flatterer had told the princess: "You look 60." A Pertinent Question, The weak fellow was making the girl j tired by his long and vapid talk on the advancement of women. ! "Don't you ever wish you were a | man?" he asked, as a kind of clincher, j "No," she responded, in the sweetest, most womanly way; "do youV"—l!'t- I Pits. Joke on the Mnjor. The major, just returned from Boston,, tells in strut confidence this story: "I had engaged my berth, and was stand lDg on tin- rear platform live minute* be fore the train pulled out of the Park. Square depot, when a middle aged woman ami a handsome girl, both ladies, passed me and entered the ear, accompanied hy a. fentlemaul.v-looking chap wiro carried their baggage. A moment later this fellow pushed up to me and said he was in a most embar rassing position, had his sister and mother &l>oaid, and had lost his mileage book. He would introduce ine to them and give me any security tor I said I needed neither introduction nor security, but would give hi in ten dollars all J had to spare. He in sisted on giving me his diamond scarfpin, arul then rushed into the station to see if he could get more cash. As the train pulled out without him, he came running wildly after it, but had to give it up. "Then the porter approached me tenta tively. 'Was that man annoying you?' he «aid. I told him no. 'He insisted on carrying the baggage of two ladies inside, sail, an' — an —did he get any money out of you?' " 'Of course he didn't,' said I; but J took the first opportunity of examining that pin. It was worth about five cents. —Buffalo News. Catarrh Cannot be Cnred | with Loral Applications, as they cannot reach the sent of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, ami in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and lets directly on the blood and mucous sur faces Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is com posed of the best tonics known, combim with the best blood purifiers, acting direct ly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is w hat produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. .), CHUNKY &CO , Props.. Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, price 75c. Hall's Family Piils are the best Slk ii s of the Times. "Chew your food with the celebrated Dewey false teeth." "Eat at Hashem's and try the surpassing Dewey tinkers. "P ,iy your patriotic pieces on the unex celled Dewey mouth organ." "Buy Dewey pies for dinner." "Cool your throat with Dewey ice crean> goda.'' "Wear Dewey waistcoats." " lake Dewey bitters for that tired feel ing." "Attend the Dewey picnic given by the Patriotic Sons of Manila." "Spank your children with the Dewey chastiser." Pittsburgh Chronicle-Tele graph. " Think of Ease But Work On." If your blood is impure you may 44 ' work on" but you cannot even 44 think of ease. The blood is the greatest sus tainer of the body and when you make it pure by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla you have the perfect health in which even hard work becomes ease» 3 fcodSS?»«9S»SOI ij Try Grain-O! ij ijTry GrainOl | [ Ask your Grocer to-day to show you * • 0 a package of GKAIN-O, the new food ' I 1 . drink that takes the place of coffee. < | J | The children may drink it without J [ < ► injury as well as the adult. All who « s !) try it, like it. GBAIN-O bos that ! \ J J rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, j j I » but it ia made from pure grains, and ' I it the most delicate stomach receives it <> J | without distress. j the price of coffee. J j ( 1 15 cents and 25 cents per package. " i ' > Sold by all grocers. ' I J! Tastes like Coffee J1 II Looks like Coffee • Ik Insist that your procergiTWyoaGKAlN-O <1 J J Accept no imitation. Epworth League NATIONAL CONVENTION, Indianapolis, ind., JULY .20-23, 1899. ONLY One Fare Round Trip Except that from points wltliln 3S mile* the excursion fare will be One anil One-third Fare for Kound Trip not to exceed one dollur. 810 FOUR Ticket* will be on sale from all points July 19. r address the undersigned, WARREN J. LYNCH, Uen. Pass. & Ticket Agent. CINCINNATI. O. BOYS Spalding's Athletic Library should he read by every boy who wants to become an athlete. No. 4 Hexing. [lete. j No. 8. r >. official Foot Ball No. !♦. How to bean Ath-1 Guide I Bull Guide. No v. How to pl.'iv Koot J No wi official Basket ltall. hy Walterfatnp. No. sT Athletic Primer. No J7.College Athletics |No Official A A. V. No. Ilow to plav Base | Hules. Ball. "let ics No. M. Athletic Records. No ,;r. All Around Ath No. uv Official Base Ball No 4'J. How to Punch! Guide. the B.*i« N ». Hi How to be a 111- No. .sJ. How to Train. 1 cycle Champion PRICE, IO CENTS PER COPY. Send for catalogue of all sparts. A. G. SPALDING & BROS., NEW YOKK. CHICAGO. DENVER