Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Great Falls Tribune from Great Falls, Montana • Page 2

Location:
Great Falls, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

GttEAl FALLS DAILY WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER II, 1908 GREAT FALLS DAILY TRIBUNE ESTABLISHED PRINTED EYERY THE TRIBUNE (Incorporated) PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS WM. M. BOLE, President O. S. WARDEN.

Manager all communications to The Tribune, Great Falls, Mont. For a Warm Bath Room A bath in a cold room is a and is extremely liable to cause colds. The bathroom above all should be kept warm. This is easy and the bath is a comfort if you nave a SWORN CIRCULATION WILL BE printing it or setting it up. Through her help he became a successful teacher and recipient of royalties on many successful compositions.

At her famous Italian gardens at Green Hill, a suburb of Boston, Mrs. Gardner has frequently had on her payroll a number of educated young men. Persons have sometimes wondered why so many were needed to prune the hedges and cut the grass. Those who have known the circumstances, however, have understood that they were employed rather to assist them than to help Mrs. Gardner.

At times as many as 50 narvard students and candidates for musical career have thus been at work around the estate. Laboring outdoors, amidst, attractive surroundings, these student proteges have found reasonably remunerative, dignified and interesting work for which they have to thank the ever helpful "Mrs. Jack." Mrs. Gardner's troubles and tribulations with Uncle Sam's treasurer have grown out of her unselfish anxiety to promote American Recognizing that a first essential to our having competent painting and sculpture in this country is to make available to the SUBSCRIPTION RATES ment of a popular vote is the ship subsidy bill. This particular bit of graft has had a rocky road to travel.

It was devised first in the days of Mark Han-na, and it was a lusty steal as first proposed. There is little doubt that it would have gotten through both houses and been signed by President McKinley had it not been for one fortunate circumstance. The would-be looters of the treasury got to quarreling among themselves as to the division of the loot. It was asserted that the bill was so drawn that the scores of millions of dollars to be abstracted from the United States treasury would mostly into the pockets of the big steamship trust organized by J. Pierpont Morgan and other trust magnates.

There was opposition from the smaller ship owners and the bill was defeated. When it next made its appearance the Ilarrinian and other Pacific coast interests were better taken care of, but by this time the graft had begun to smell loud to heaven, and it failed of passage. At every session it has made its appearance in some form or other and as it has been formally indorsed by the republican party, it will doubtless bob up again at the coming session with a claim that it has back of it the mandate of a majority of the people for its passage. We do not well see how this argument can reasonably be disputed. It is unquestionably a fact that so far as the majority vote, is concerned they are recorded in favor of this bit of special legislation designed to give a bonus to steamship owners out of the pockets of the general taxpayer.

Yet in view of the deficit in the revenue of the government the advocates of DAILY. 'One Year, in advance Six Months, in advance 3.50 One Month .75 Subscribers desiring address changed must OFFICIAL PAPER OF WEDNESDAY, 0511 Meatier (Equipped wlt2i Smokeless Device) It may be carried from any other room to the bath room, which it will heat while you are preparing for the bath. Impossible to turn it too high or too low. The most economical heater you can buy intense heat one filling. The IPrfhk nrm hold pur steady light Made brass throughout and nickel The Squealing of the Political Rats.

Following Mr. Bryan's third defeat for the presidency we notice the usual chorus of squeals from the political rats of the democratic party, headed by Boss Murphy of Tammany and Colonel Guf fy of Pennsylvania, to the effect that this ends the political leadership of Bryan, and that he is in some way to blame for defeat, In this TOngenial sexton work of burying Mr. Bryan for all future time in political oblivion, the corrupt dollar devotees of the democratic party have the eager aid of the whole republican gang of newspapers con Slated. Equipped with the latest improved central rah burner. Handsome simple satisfactory.

Every lamp guaranteed. If you cannot get heater or lamp at your dealer's, write our nearest agency for descriptive circular. CONTINENTAL. OIL. CO.

(Incorporated) MOST REMARKABLE WOMAN HIM AMERICA That Is How Mrs. "Jack" Gardner of Boston Is Classed. She Has Lately Been Put Into a Book How She Has Tamed Lions and Helped Struggling Musicians. trolled by the money power of the country, that hates Mr. Bryan i almost, as much as it fears him.

In complete accord the traitorous democrats who are democrats for revenue only and the republican press, are following their usual occupation after election of burying Mr. Bryan beyond all hope of resurrection. Disappointed and surprised as The Tribune is at the results of the late election, it serves notice on these amateur undertakers that Mr. 35ryan is very much alive, and a long ways off from the political bone-yard where they would fain dump him. He is the idol of millions of democratic voters, who love him in defeat with all the fervor they would in victory, who follow his political leadership with all the devotion which blazed out in flames that consumed the opposition at the Denver convention like dry vines before a furnace blast, and who "will continue to follow his leadership in the future as in the past, "until the sure day of victory arrives, as it always does arrive, to vindicate the living truth.

The democrats of Cascade county, of Montana, and of the nation, hug that conviction to their hearts, and wait with patience, in spite of their present disappointment, the day tf Mr. Bryan's personal vindication and triumph, and the confusion 'Df his enemies. He is young and likely to live to see it, and if he does not history will none the less record it. There is no regret over our choice of a leader in the late campaign in the heart of any true democrat, no hesitation or faltering in our admiration for the man and all that he has done, no shadow of doubt about the righteousness of the principles for which his name stands. Our disappointment and regret does not sully with one breath of disloyalty the shining armor of our great leader.

It rather finds its object in the masses of the common people, who, for the time being, permitted themselves to be stampeded with threats of business disaster unless they sold their birthright for a mess of pottage cooked "up in Wall street, and which has no strength or nutriment in it-even if they get the promised pottage. Let it not be forgotten by loyal democrats, no matter what the political Hessians and hired falsifiers of the press may say to the contrary, that Mr. Bryan was no candidate for leadership in the late fight. He sought no nomination at our hands. We called on him to come to the front and lead us, and, like a good soldier, he answered ur call.

We may call on him again in 19 12 We could not have lor 9 hours with kmP lot all-round house )scs. bives a dear. a say, has been more in the public eye than "Mrs. none is quite so well known throughout the length and breadth of the land, although it is often surprising to find how few people have a definite knowledge of her personality and accomplishments. Thus four meu not long ago, each from a different city, meeting at a hotel, were asked what they knew of Mrs.

John L. Gardner of Boston. They asked, nearly in chorus: "Who's that? Mrs. Jack?" On being told that that lady was meant the man from New York replied: "Why, she's the lion tamer, isn't she?" The Pinladelphian said: "Oh, she's the woman with that big Venetian palace." The man from Pittsburg remembered that Mrs. Gardner had bought a Japanese kimono over his wife's head at an auction sale, and the citizen of Chicago recalled that she was a woman who had a fine feeling for music and a liberal purse opened frequently to the needs of impecunious performers.

Each had remembered a single fact or incident about a personality that has impressed itself upon- the public as few women have able. Since Isabella Stuart of a fine New York family was married to one of the wealthiest and most aristocratic of Bostonians, she has consistently lived up to a reputation for doing remarkable things. The Goth-amite's recollection of her lion taming was due to the circumstance of her borrowing a good-sized cub she never actually owned it as some newspapers stated which had been on exhibition in an animal show. It is a fact that for some days the animal was installed in the Gardner mansion where he ran things, including the servants, pretty much as he pleased, and, according to rumor, ran some of them so far that they never returned to the mansion. The creature was merely an exuberant little romper, like any other kitten, but servants and neighbors failed to appreciate the fun.

When, however, the newspapers discovered what Mrs. Gardner was doing the Incidents of her playful gambolling with his youthful majesty naturally made good Apart from such occasional feats as lion taming, Gardner has leen distinguished for many years for her patronage of struggling musicians, painters and sculptors. She was largely responsible, it is understood, for the social prominence of Timothee Adamowski, for many years one of the chief performers "of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and now one of the most celebrated private teachers in America, and of George Proctor, the pianist. In Giosue a needy Italian sculptor of the North End, she once found a man capable of doinr better than ordinary- commercial work and made it possible for him to get his start in life, once at a South' End theater she notice 1 a musician cheaply attired and evidently poorly pa ill, whose performance was such that he seemed capable of higher things. On inquiry she discovered that this man had written music but that he had no money to pay for 1 DAY IN THE YEAR.

GIVEN TO ALL ADVERTISERS WEEKLY. One Year, in advance 91.50 Six Months, in advance. .75 Three Months, in advance. .50 One Year, not in 3.00 send former address as well as new one. CASCADE COUNTY SSSKEEL- NOV.

11, 1908. its flavor. Mr. Bryan will not be the next four years the more the type may add their noise to the who are for the third time pre and triumph by it. i od of bringing forward legislation in the I house of representees, to reiiect better 1 ne opinion of tne wiioie country, to conserve better tne weiiare of au t-ue people; and also to insure the election of a republican noue in 15)10 Kviuently it has oecome safe lor a republican to say tins, alter election; uelore election, it would nave been party heresy, inasmuch e- the ilryan piattorui eoutaiued a scorching denunciation of (Jannonisni and pleuged the democrats "to adopt such rules to govern the no use of representatives as will enable a majority of its members to control legislation.

Air. Fowler now proposes to have the Denver carried into effect by the republicans, and to that end he offers the lollowing project: 'The house of representatives shall elect a board of managers, consisting of seven members, which shall be charged with that direction of legislation which is now assumed by the speaker of the house. "If the plan suggested should be tried experimentally, the country would watch its operation with sympathetic concern and hopefulness, just as it would watch the working of some other scheme equally designed to reduce the speaker's power; but we need not delude ourselves with the notion that such reforms as the one Mr. Fowler suggests will make the slightest headway in the 61st congress." The Ship Subsidy Issue. Among other more or less obscure issues which will come to the front claiming to have received the indorse- RELAXATION Periods of relaxation both physical and mental, are of much benefit to tired body and mind.

They are necessary at times to relieve the strain of strenuous existence. In moments of relaxation yon will find both enjoyment and benefit in American Beer Order a case for home use. AMERICAN BREWING AND MALTING CO. 1 09 Central Avenue Great Falls TELEPHONE 211 TRUTH IN POLITICS. citizens, shouted the candidate, "if I am elected for this district I shall endeavor to make you glad that you did not elect another.

"That's right!" yelled the drygoods box philosopher. "I reckon one would be a-plenty." Puck. INCORPORATED 1889. Ihe Cascade Bank OF GREAT FALLS. Capital $75,000.00 Sarplas $15,000.00 ACCOUNTS SOLICITED.

Every accommodation consistent with safe and conservative banking extended. S. ATKINSON. F. P.

ATKINSON. Presides! No. 355. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Great Falls, Montana. UNITED STATES DEPOSITOXT.

CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, faaoMM. DIRECTORS: John G. Morony John D. Xya W. Goodale E.

J. Bowman W. M. Thornton. OFFICERS: John G.

Morony Pretiitai John D. Vice President W. M. Thornton. Cashier M.

Skinner. Asst. Caahisr W. A. Brown Asst.

Caahisr Pioneer Bank of Cascade Connty. Interest Paid on Tint Deposits. CONRAD BANKING CO, UNINCORPORATED. Paid Up Capital Icdnridaal Responsibility 00.000 RC00.00O OFFICERS: W. G.

Prsaileml James T. V. P. and Mamartr A. E.

Scfawingel Omar J. Malcolm. Cashitr This bank solicits accounts and offtrs to depositors absolute security, prosapi and careful attention and the most liberal treatment consistent with sals and profitable banking. Sells foreign ex change, drawing direct on all principal American and European cities, and issuing its own letters of credit. Interest paid on time deposits.

PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Da R. H. AnoRB OSTEOPATHS Conrad block, rooma 7-8, over 8 train" dry goods store. Both three Tear grmdnatea of Lbs of the science.

Or. a. T. Still. Acute and chroma cases successfully treated.

Phone 16 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOB mmi DR. EARLE STRAIN Eye, Eart Nose and Jhroat 317 FIRST AVE. NORTH Telephone No. 4 tcoeoooooooooooooassissso MCALLISTER'S Special attention riven to Ladles and Children by ladr attendant. Mrs.

McAllisters tea rradoate of the Chan-plon College of Embalming, and holds a solatia state License. L. E. Gagcler. associated with McAllisters, licensed from Slates of Michigan and Montana, Tel.

149. Open Day and 20 Ccatral Ar. Greet Palla. Prompt attention siren to city and all oat of town calls. W.

H. GEORGE Undertaker Embalmer 0PXH DA7 A2TD RIGHT. Lady Assistant Graf nate Champion School of Cat-palming and Licensed (m Colorado asi KonUaa. 409 Cnteral Amis Tries hast 39 whole public examples of tne greatest! art of the ages, attractively set forth, she built some years ago in what was! then a Lleak and barren district on the outskirts of Boston her famous Italian, palace. This is legally denominated the I "Isabella Stuart Gardner Museum in the I Fenway, Limited." It is more generally known as the' paraphrase in Mrs.

Keays look indicates, by the name "Fenway-Court." In this structure, plain out picturesque in outward appearance, are the treasures gathered during a lifetime of discriminating collecting. The perfect adaptation of all the pictures and sculptures and other objects of art to their surroundings make the palace quite different from the ordinary museum. The compartments are given such names as the Titian room, the Veronese room, the Dutch room, the Chinese room, and so on, each on account of the general character of its contents. Among the treasures are world-famous works, such as the Chigi Madonna which disappeared from Italy and a few years ago turned up in the Fenway a bronze bust by Benvenuto Cellini, of which Michael Angelo once wrote in a ersonal letter, "I have for years known you for one of the ablest jewelers in the world and I now find that you have equal abilities as a sculptor;" Titian's great masterpiece, "The Rape of Eu-ropa," painted for Philip II. of Spain, as part of the dower of his daughter, who was to have leen married to Charles I.

of England; a little Pieta by Raphael, which was once in the possession of Queen Christina of Sweden i Botticelli's "IJeath of Lucretia," from Lord Ashburnham's collection, and many others. The expectation that as Fenway Court is open to the public at stated intervals, and is thus virtually one of the art museums of the country, works of art could be imported without payment of the duties which are assessed upon wealthy private collectors. In this way Mrs. Gardner's comparatively limited funds for she is not enormously rich as fortunes are now measured would go much further, to the permanent advantage of all classes of Americans. But the courts ruled otherwise and the owner of the Palace in the Fenway in 1903 paid the government somewhat over $200,000 in contested duties on importations.

She might then have decided to close her palace to the public altogether, but, despite Uncle Sam's attitude, she has continued to open it on certain days, the proceeds from the admission fees goinj to some of the charities in which she is interested. A recent case which a friend of Mrs. Gardner's in Chicago imported treasures destined for renwav Court on a basis alleged to be one of under-valuation is generally familiar. Mrs. Gardner is generally supposed to be hostile to the newspapers.

She prefers, it is said, to read Walter Pater or Epictetus in books printed on hand made paper and bound by Cobden-Sand-erson. It has been reported, however, and not denied, that she has maintained a private press clipping bureau, the entire time of one man being devoted to reading newspapers for articles which mention her or which in any way are connected with the subjects in which she is interested. Whatever her attitude toward the papers, she cannot be induced to give out interviews. One of the few occasions in which she talked for publication was when two young newspaper men attended a public opening at "Fenway Court. They realized that here was no use in trying to induce "Mrs.

Jack" to answer questions. Accordingly as a ruse both stood in front of one of her treasures and started a dispute as to its authorship. Louder and louder grew their tones as they argued pro and con. Presently Mrs. Gardner, who was ouietly passing through the room, overheard, and interrupting the young men whom he did not susjiect Iinjf.

reporters, explained that Ioth were wrong. She then proceeded to give them detailed information not only the work in but alwut nvny other features of her collection- all of which information appeared in the form of interviews in the morning Considering the prominence which Mrs. Gardner has enjoyed not only in Iioston but throughout the United States, it is rather remarkable that she has not figured in contemporary fiction more extensively thah has leen the ca. Even in Mrs. Keays book the is simply introduced as a minor character, the main action hinging upon the relations of a daughter to her mother who was divorced from her father and who offered to take lwick the child any time her services were reallv needed.

HE WOULD RETURN. Marlow was 3 Tears old. One day his mother said to him, "Xow, Marlow, you may go outdoors to play for awhile, but if I see you crossing the street to play with that naughty little loy, Willie liurr. asrnin, I'll give you a hard, hard spanking." Half an hour later the mother looked out after her boy and saw him playing with Willie Burr. She raised the window and called, 'with forced gentleness: "Marlow, come here to me." Marlow came, but as he did so, turned to his companion and said: "You stay wight here, Willie.

I'm doin in to det spanked. Til be wight baek." The Delineator. Zortman Malta Stage Line This first class stage line operate-between Zortman and Malta, leav ing Zortman Mondays. WedneV days and Fridays, at 7 a. Icavu.

Malta on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, at 7 a. m. a better or more competent leader. There are none braver or truer in all the wide world to the people's best interest. But whether he is again selected to lead as a candidate, or another is chosen for that Boston, Nov.

10. Somebody in Boston is always putting somebody else into a book. When Hawthorne wrote "Blithe-dale Romance," everybody recognized that though he was not a realist in the modern sense of the word, he had definite persons in mind members of the queer little colony or socialists who made Brook Farm famous in the annals of American literary The genial "Autocrat" delighted in little personal touches. When William Dean Howells was still a Bostonian he wrote a series of novels in which there was no doubt as to "local color. Only a short time ago "The Opal," by an anonymous author, astonished society in the Hub and the metropolis bv a recital of episodes known actually to have taken place.

And how Mrs. John L. Gardner, "Mrs. Jack," as she is more usually called, the wealthy Boston art collector whose name has rightly and wronlv leeonie associated with deeds extraordinary, fantastic and unexpected, l'as leen featured, though in a minor role, in a literary production. Mrs.

II. A. Mitchell Keavs, a western writer, author of "The Road to Damascus," "He That Eateth Bread With Me," and other works, who has been living in the precincts of Harvard university for some time past, in her latest novel "I and My True Love," includes among her characters "Mrs. Planter" of "Moorway Court." The personality has immediately been recognized as drawn from Mrs. Gardner of Fanway Coourt, just as people are already speculating as to what governor of Massachusetts was really meant in the characterization of the dashing bachelor, "Eben Gregory," and whether the actress, "Edith Borringdon," may or may not be regarded as identical with Miss Ethel Barryuiore, and whether "Hiel Sargent," the playwright, has any actual xrototype.

1 The tone at all events of social life in Boston, including its doinance by one lady, is aptly suggested when Christina says fractiously, 'I'm sure it doesn't matter how late we are at that old 'It will annoy Mrs. Planter protested Mrs. Warder. 'Going to Moorwav Court to a function is always to me like going to church at' Saint Peter's and befnrr waited for at the door by the And later when Christina urges upon the governor of the state that lie should marry Mrs. Planter, she receives the reply: 'She's 10 years older than I am more.

'There'll be 10 years less of her remarked Christina consolingly. 'And then think, she looked profound, 'you'll have that place, and all her heaps and heaps of money, and pictures, and statues, and' "Just such wonderment why some notable has not succeeded in marrying the; most famous widow in North is so characteristic of social speculation in the New England capital! For no American-woman, it is safe to end, Mr. Bryan's influence and power in the democratic party will remain unabated. Let the cringing worshipers at Mammon's throne put that in their pipe and taste president of the United States in a big steamship subsidy are likely to meet with difficulty. fco far as the Pa cific coast ship- owners are concerned they have also lost one of their chief excuses for demanding a subsidy, and that was that Japan paid a subsidy to steamships under the Japanese flag and that they must have one too, to com-nete with the Japanese in the carrying trade of the Pacific.

Japan in the past few weeks has announced a new fiscal program which among other economies cuts off the steamship subsidy feature, so that it can no longer be used as an excuse for an American subsidy. It will be interesting to note what congress does with our old friend, the subsidy this G01PERS SAYS HE IS HONORED By President Roosevelt's Cutting Him Out of Conference About Labor Legislation. Nov. 10. Considerable comment was caused by that portion of the annual report of President Samuel Gompers read before the convention of the.

American federation or labor yes-terdav afternoon, in wnich Mr. Gom- pers said that President Koosevelt had issued invitations to a number of labor leaders to meet with prominent lawyers and jurists at a dmnerat the White house a week from today for the purpose of discussing labor legislation. President Koosevelt said the report of Mr. Gonipers, had excluded from the list of invited guests the officers of the American Federation of Labor including its president. Mr.

Gompers in an interview on the subject, refused to discuss the question from a political standpoint, but contented himself with a statement to the effect that he deemed himself honored by the exclusion and considers the president's act a tribute to his honesty. He said "I am honored by the president when he excludes me from his guest list. It is a high tribute to the manner in which I have represented the interests of the millions of working men and women banded together in the federation, both in the matter of pressing the administration for fair labor legislation and the political campaifm just ended. "This is the first affair of the kind I know of at the White house to which I have not been invited, but despite the fact that I have frequently been asked to meet the president and his friends socially, I have never availed myself of such an invitation. "My dealings with the president have always been on strictly business basis.

I have frequently required an audience with him relative to matters of importance to. the federation and its members and have always been welcomed and treated courteously. "I by virture of the trust imposed upon me by the federation, represent the millions of people of the country who toil with their hands, the hired men and women, so to speak. If the president or any other person cares to say I don't represent them, so be it; I don't care to become involved in a. contro versy or criticise his stand.

"When the need presents, I shall meet President Roosevelt or any other per son or public man as the representative of the workers of the nation if they reelect nie or care to have me represent them. The other federation officials declined to discuss the matter, but many labor leaders in Denver declare that the action of the president is simply a part of a plan to divide the forces of organized labor so that it will be ineffective in future contests. John Mitchell, James Duncan and Daniel J. Keene, who were invited by the president, said that they expected to be in Denver at the convention session next Tuesday, but would decide whether to accept or reject the invitation when they received the president's letter. WOULD CUT DOWN TARIFF.

Washington, Nov. 10. -Senator Cul- loni of Illinois, who was a caller at the White house today declared that revision of the tariff would be disposed of at an extra session to be called shortly after March 4. The Senator said lie favored a reduction on a num-; ber of articles such as iron and steel, WON'T TAKE PAREGORIC. Pekin, Nov.

10. The emperor of China who has been suffering from intestinal disea.sp i irnrw tnriav Hia majesty refuses foreign medical aid or 10 taiie foreign medicine. Some men would do almost anything for a women except go to work. 1 pity. But he will retain all the admiration, and affection, and influ ence that he has heretofore enjoyed with the rank and file of the democratic party, intensified and added to because he lost instead of won the fight, The snarling curs of the Guffy chorus of the republican politicians, dieting that at last they have succeeded in burying Mr, Bryan politically, but they little know the quality and fiber of the feeling of the loyal democrats for their great leader.

They can't know it Their hearts and consciences are dead to such feeling for anybody, Politics and political principles to them mean only material gains, "They are summed up on a counting machine, and expressed by a dollar mark in front of the result. But the moral and spiritual world contains forces greater than the material world in which these men live alone. Some day that truth will be made plain. We expect that THE CORRECT SHOE FOR STYLE, EASE AND GOOD WEAR You could never hope to buy a more stylish or serviceable shoe than the Leadine Lady." It is rieht UD-to-date in annear- Mr. Bryan will yet live to see it, Speaker Cannon's Triumph.

The comment that reaches us from the east is all to the effect that Uncle Joe Cannon ha a mineh on again being elected speaker of the house under prac tically the old rules which makes lam the whole show in congress. Why not? The democratic platform promised reform in this matter of one man power In congress, and by a decided majority the people by their votes said they did not want it. They even re-elected Cannon by an unheard of majority in his own district. Why then' should anyone, and especially a republican, seek to defeat the expressed verdict of the voters. Yet Congressman Fowler seems to have started out on such a task, and even desires to be a candidate for speaker himself.

It is true that he is' not thought to have, any chance of success. We cannot see why he should. The Springfield Republican commenting on this strange attempt of a republican leader to thwart the will of the majority as expressed in the republican rote, "In soite of the dubious prospect of upsettting the house oligarchy, Mr. Fowler's proposal for a reform in the house procedure, with which he associates his speakership candidacy, is of interest. Here is a republican member of extended experience who declares that 'there must be some change in the meth- ance and fits the foot perfectly from the vrv first.

RmMm mi ft. a. a a -S ucug sryiisn ana comiorxaDie, me wears much longer than most shoes. It Is so well made that it lasts twice as long as the average shoe, and will retain its shape to the end. IVhy buy inferior shoes when, with the same money.you can get the "Leading LadyT" Your dealer will supply you; if not, write to us.

Look for the Mayer Trade Mark on the sole. f-RFR If mn will uni tin tha nam of dealer who tinea islungron wran and Special Aiera SHOE CO "woanaie Leading Uiay Shoes, we will send you tree, postpaid, a beautiful picture of Martha Washington, size 15x20. us aiso make tlonorbilt Shoes, Martha iort Shoes, Yerma Cushion Sboes ocoool Shoes. F.MAYER BOOT MILWAUKEE. WISCONSIN.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Great Falls Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,257,013
Years Available:
1884-2024