THE DAILY LEADER.
Advertising rates made Known on
application.
West Virginia
The I.and of Prosperity and
l’leuty. Has the Greatest
Natural Resources In the
World.
Come to the Hills
Of West Virginia, Where
Nature Lavishes Her
Greatest
Gifts.
"Rntored ns second-class matter
April 8th. 19d6. at the post oftlce
at Blueflold. W. Vn . under act of
Congress of March 3. 1 879 ”
PIllHAY. MARCH I!MI7.
Mrs. Hetty Green is regarded as a
good deal of a nuisance by employes
of the Chemical national hank In
New York This does not worry
Mrs. Green a great deal, however, and
every day or so she appears Inside
the railings and asks a few Incisive
question of bookkeepers and clerks.
As she keeps a balance then* of some
where near $.’<,00o.onn all the while
the employes carefully conceal their
lack of reverence for the richest
woman In America, shabbily dressed
though she is invariably.
Ray Standard Baker in the Amer
ican Magazine, says the negro ques
tion in the South is at the clash
point between the “black brute” and
“the white fiend.” Cert ’. Every
white man becomes a fie ’hen the
“black brute” assaults n white wo
man. The trouble with these north
ern correspondents and students of
race sociology is that they come
South to study conditions, hut seek
only for evidence to support a theory
already held.
That President Mellon is a great
and good man is the settled convic
tion of the women in Pawtucket, It
I . who complained to him of the
soot and grime and cinders from
President Mellon’s locomotives. Her
washings in the back yard had been
ruined because of the railroad nus
sances. The order went forth from
the head of the New Haven system
that henceforth the engines should
lie regulated so that the £inoke should
not disturb my lady of the wash
tubs. Regulating the corporations
is becoming a terrific success.
John I). Rockefeller has his pri
vate benefactions of giving reduced
to a system. It is in charge of ills
almoner. Frederick T. Gates. Mr.
Gates was formerly a'Baptist clergy
man, but he has none of the man
nerisms or the apenrance of a man
of the cloth. He is always attired in
an up to date business suit, and his
manner Is brisk and incisive. He
has an office on one of the upper
floors of the Standard oil building at
2f> Broadway, where he sits for a
large part of the day at a great roll
top desk. Clerks and stenographers
are within call, and everything about
him moves with the regularity of
clockwork. Every application for
charity or for any purpose is con
sidered on its own merits, irrespec
tive of sentiment.
\n interesting situation 1ms arisen
<n Wlnnetka. 111., over tlie proposi
tion to build a municipal pas plan*.
Those who favor pivinp a franchise
to a private company to build and
operate a plant have nominated a
ticket pledped to that purpose, and
hrv p been working cm ’iietleally to
defeat th*1 municlj al id'-a At this
Juncture William Ftro- Lloyd eldest
son of the late If it Lioyd. h.o come
forward with an offer to pive Wln
netka a pas plant costing $2r,.onn as
a memorial to his father It had
•riglnally been the Idea to build a
library in memory of H D Lloyd, but
in a letter to the library committee
of Wisconsin the son stiys that he
and Ills brothers feel that Wlnncfga
needs a gas plant far more than It
needs a library, and adds that If
Wlnnetka does not Instal a munici
pal gas plant ti«* will feel very much
like deciding that “the level of gen
eral Intelligence Is such that a li
brary would be a useless feature of
village life, and therefore will prob
ably not give the library. If the gas
plant Is accepted Its earnings ran be
devoted t<> building a library.
Chinese labor In the Transvaal Is
ultimately doomed, and all other
Asiatic labor as well, under the now
government. The “Asiatic ordi
nance.” which excludes all kinds of
Asiatic immigration, bus been the
first Important legislation to pass
both branches of the new colonial
Parliament. Whnt Japan will do Is a
question of some Interest. When
Mrltlsh Columbia enacted an exclu
sion law. the Dominion government
annulled It at the request of the im
perial authorities, who sought to
avoid giving offense to the Japanese.
The Transvaal, however, is in a more
Independent position than British
Columbia: its will can be thwarted
only by the direct action of the Im
perial government In London. The
liberal ministry. If sounded by Japan
I on the subject, would probably not
venture to veto a measure which ap
pears to be demanded by an over
whelming majority of the white peo
| pie of the Transvaal. Australia’s ex
clusion law has never been even
I protested hv the Imperial govern
j ment. although the Japanese consid
ered It a reflection upon themselves.
John IV Rockefeller’s Cleveland
pastor delivered a midday sermon at
the Star theater In Cleveland on
Monday and took a dreadful fall
out of the "muckrakers,” while ac
cording to reports, "many chorus
girls listened to the sermon from the
stage wings.” In the course of his
sermon the preacher remarked:
I have seen men who In the pub
lic press have waded through oceans
of Ink and the figurative gore of the
"plutocrat.” stand with their tongues
cleaving to the rooTs of their month?
with awe and trembling when they
entered the presence of a rich man
I know*.
That "rich man I know” w’as evi
dently John D.
Mrs. Russell Sage has many ad
visers. but there is none whose opin
ions she holds in higher regard than
some of the simple and unaffected
village folk who live at Lawrence.
L. L, near her summer home. They
have a way of speaking their opin
ions frankly and they have nothing
to gain. Often last summer when
her doors were besieged by scores of
persons seeking money for all sorts
/of purposes educational, religious
or for more or less chimerical
; rhemes it was a relief for her to
talk to somebody who had no ax to
gi ind and was not looking for con
tributions.
Radium, that mysterious mineral,
a pinch of which is worth a king’s
ransom, is believed to bo existent in
tho hills or Virginia, a few hours’
ride from Washington. Government
scientists are watching with deep in
terest experiments now under way:
and if tlie tests are successful, the
wealth of Virginia will dwarf into
insignificance the riches of the Klon
dike or the Nevada mining camps.
Press Telegram.
Happy Tennessee. When one red
t ad goes wrong there is another to
t 'it him right. The Hardeman Free
Press remarks: “My kingdom for a
horse," said George III. when he lost
his mount during a battle engage
ment in ancient times. — (Kvenlng
>IIMRMR()*!f f !■■■■■■■■■■■■
•» M
A Dead Dollar j
Is the one which you hide away; £
■ which earns you nothing, and ■
* which is liable to turn *
■ up missing, without a
m moments warning m
m m
■ ..A., is th. on.. »i.ich We Want !
■ _ you jdac*1 in this xr ■
■ T Your ■
m JLjM W Mil;i1;'■' s:‘f" *nd Business ■
■ Aiwa- s harnini/ ■
i DOLLAR' S i kkks i i
; AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK, ;
BLUEFIEI.O, W. VA ■
■ KT.vn; tsiom m i'omi wu ■
B Thfl'o f* ; I on irr.*» B
B An B
B B
sheet). I nle»H we dlsreuieiuber our
history our steutiled ionteniptuary
has got Its date lines crest. It wt,*
Will> 11 in Shakespeare who made this
remark to Corporal O'Flaherty aTter
the battle of Hull K„n. nad before
Ooorge III ascended the throne or
Anstro-ltoosliy."
CHANDLER’S
LONG AIR TRIP
Washington. March 2!).- A bal
loon trip front Washington to the
army pout nt Fort Leavenworth, Kan
sas. Is being planned by the slg
Hal corps of the army under the di
rection or Capt. Charles |)e F. chaml
! I«‘r of the army and Leo Stevens, the
! well known New York aeronaut.
The r.sccLdon will he made about
May I and provisions will be taken
along for a four or five days' trip.
I Leo Stevens Is now making the hal—
j loon, which has been sold to the gov
ernment. Capt Chandler will he in
charge of the balloon during the
\n. i-t and he will be accompanied
by l,'» Stevens and thr«*e signal
corps men
All over the Slate of West Vir
ginia tli** people are asserting their
rights In municipal government
'I'll** tidal wave of reform Is sweep
ing over th«* country and It now
looks like Bluefleld mtlght he re
dcoined from the continued rule of
a gang that hu sgrown corrupt and
Impudent from a long lease of pow
er fostered by an ignorant and Il
legal vote
TO HELP WELLMAN
REACH POLE
MA.IOU II. 1$. IIKIISKV, OF THK
WFATIIKIt HFItVIFK, CiO
INCJ TO l*A It IS.
Mlwaukee. March 29.—Major H.
li. Ilersey. Inspector of the Weather
WHY PAY PENT?
Ill 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
11|0 “ sen you a Lot. * On the
Build You A House. * Inctall
1I/|11 * Insure Your House. * ins,:a! -
| II 111 * Insure You. ment Plan
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
Bargains in Graham Real Estate.
Bluestone Insurance Agency,
J. (iUI I A l.K, Mana<;kk.
GRAHAM, VIRGINIA.
Office Over First National Hank.
BLUEFIELD BOOK & STATIONERY CO.
NEW BOOKS! NEW BOOKS!
Below wo nlvu a list ot a low ot the latest Books that you should
read:
Haifa Rogue, (McGrath.)
Malefactor, (Oppenhetm.
The Mystery, (S. A. White.)
The Lion and The Mouse (Klure.)
Port of Missing Men, (Nicholson.)
The Princess, (Potter.)
Bishop of Cottontown, (More.)
$1.25 EACH.
And dozens ot others just as goo l as those named above. Wrlto tor
our Catalog, "Latest Hooks." and give ns an order for what you desire.
Just received a shipment ot 260 recent works, which are worth $1.26,
that we ahall sell for 60c each. Call and see the line.
Phone 73.. 101ks Building.
Bluefield Book & Stationery
COMPANY.
Bureau, will Kail for ParlB on April'
3 to assist in tin* arrangements for
the Wellman aerial polar expedition
to the North Pole.
Major Heraey received a letter
from Walter Wellman today In which
Mr. Wellman stated that he would
reach New York on Saturday of this'
week and expects to leave for Paris
I on April 11. According to advices
| received by Major Hersey the Well
| man party will leave for Spitsbergen
on May 1 arriving at that point a
month later. The night to the North
I Pole will take place about July 1.
NOTICE OF APPLICA
TION FOR LICENSES.
I his Is to certify that the follow
lt»K is a complete list of Applica
tions for Licenses to sell at retail
j spirituous liquors, wines, ale,, beer
and drinks of like nature, and to
sell at wholeeale beer, ale and drinks
of like nature, as filed In my office,
which said list contains the names
of said applicants, their respective
re«ldences, and the place for which
the application is made.
NOTICE.
The following is notice that J.
S. Burnett, who resides at Bluefleld,
W. Va., has tnls day filed In my of
fice an application to the County
Court of Mercer County, for license
to sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, porter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature hi ttfe Cahstsdny anJ
Wilkinson Building In te town of
Ingleslde, W. Va.
Given under my hand this 9th
day of March, 1907.
ESTILL IJAILEY, Clerk,
Mercer County Gourt, W. Va.
J. Baker, residing at Bluefleld,
W. Va , application for license to
sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, porter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature at No. 11 Bluefleld
Ave., Bluefleld, Mercer County, W.
Va.
I. L. Cohen, residing at Bluefleld,
YV. Va., application for license to
sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, porter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature In Building No. 4 49
on Princeton Ave., Bluefleld, W. Va.
H. R. Hunter, residing in Bluefleld,
YV. Va., application for license to
sell at retail ttpirltuous liquors,
wines, ilnrter, alu, beer and drinks
of like nature at No. 29 Princeton
Ave., In the City of Bluefleld, W
Va.
P. J. Kelley and Jas. H. Moyers,
partners trading as Kelley & Moy
ers, both residing at Bluefleld,
YV. Va., application for lloense to
sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, porter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature at No. 35 & 41 Bland
Street. Bluefleld. W. Va
H. M. Cohen, resldmg at Bluefleld.
W. V'a , application for license to
sell at retail spirituous Mquors,
wines, porter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature at Altamont Bar hi
the City of Bluefleld. W. Va.
J. H. George residing at North
Fork, W. Va., application for li
cense to sell at retail spirituous li
quors. wines, porter, ale, beer and
diitflts of Ufce nature In the H. R
RaiKtenhush house en Raleigh street.
In the City of Bluefleld, W. Va.
L. Lazarus. E Goodman and B. A.
Heller, partners trading as L. Laz
arus A Co., and their respective
residences are L. Lazarus and E.
Goodman. Lynchburg, Va., and B. A.
Heller, Bluefleld. West Virginia, ap
plication for license to sell at retail
spirituous liquors, wines, porter,
ale, beer and drinks of like nature
in the Lazarus Building at Corner of
Stewart and Princeton Avenues
Bluefleld. W Va.
M. H. Kelley, residing at Glatto
W. Va., application for license to
sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, porter, ale. beer and drinks
of like nature In the Ashworth A
Halley Hotel Building, Glatto, Mer
cer County, W. Va.
Hoster Columbus Associated
Breweries Co., a corporation of the
State of Ohio, residing at Columbus,
Ohio, application for license to mil
at wholesale porter, ale, beer and
drinks of like nature. In tbfe Hutso..
and Garrett Building on Bluefleld
nve, Bluefleld, W. Va.
D. A. Fudge, residing at Bluefleld,
W. Va., application for license to
sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, perter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature at No. 450 Raleigh
St., In the City of Bluefleld, W. Va.
C. L. Stinson, residing at Bluefleld,
W. Va., application for license to
sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, porter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature In the J. A. Hicks
Building, in the town of Qlatto,
Mercer County, W. Va.
W. F. Stinson, residing In the
City of Bluefleld, W. Va.. applica
tion for license to sell at retail
spirituous liquors, wines, porter,
ale, beer and drinks of like nature
at No. 34 & 38 Bluefleld Ave., in
the City of Bluefleld, Mercer Coun
ty, W. Va.
The Jung Brewing Co., a corpor
ation with 1 ts principal ofllcc at
Cincinnati, Ohio, application for li
cense to sell porter, ale. beer and
drinks of like nature at No. 34 He
38 Bluefleld Ave., Bluefleld, W. Va.
J. L. Corvln, residing at Bluefleld,
W. Va., application for license to
sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, porter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature at No. 133 Princeton
Ave.. In the City of Bluefleld. W.
I M
Bluefleld Brewing fo. a Cori*>ra
tion of the City of Bluefleld. W. Vm.,
application for license to sell por
ter. ale, beer and drinks of like na
ture at .their building In the City
of Bluefleld. W. Va.
Ernest II. Arters, resiling at
Bluefleld, W. Va.. application for li
cense to sell at retail spirituous
liquors, wines, porter, ale, beer and
drinks of like nature at No. 453
Princeton Ave., In the City of Ulue
fleld, W. Va.
John Turner, residing at Bluefleld,
W. Va., application for license to
sell at retail spirituous liquors,
wines, porter, ale. beer and drinks
of like nature lu the Turk Building
on Bland street, in the City of Blue
fleld. W. Va.
J. Walton Thomas, residing at
Godfrey. Mercer Co.. W. Va., ap
plication for liaease to sell at retail
spirituous liquors, wines, porter,
ale, beer and drinks of like nature
in the D. P. Crockett Building in
the Town of Godfey, Mercer Co., W.
Va. • #
‘E. G. Asbury, residing at Giatto,
Mercer County, W. Va., application
for license to sell at retail splritu- •
ous liquors, wines, porter, ale. beer
and drinks of like nature In the
Barbara Asbury Building, In the
Town of Giatto, Mercer County, W.
Va.
O. R. Tabor & Co., residing at
Hock, Mercer County, W. Va., ap
plication for license to sell at re
tull spirituous liquors, wines, por
ter, ale, beer and drinks of like na
ture, In the L. A. Foley Building,
In the Town of Rook, Mercer Coun
ty, W. Va
Wm. Llnkenhoker, residing at
Bluefleld, W. Va., application for li
cense to sell at retail spirituous liq
uors, wlnos, porter, ale, beer and
drinks of like nature In the O. W.
Atkinson Building, in the Town cl
Thornhill, Mercer County, W. Va.
R. M. Corvln, residing at> Bluefleld,
W. Va., application for lioense t«
sell at retail spirituous liquor^
wines, porter, ale, beer and drinks
of like nature in the Martha C.
Cassaday Building, in the Town q|
Ingleslde, Mercer County, W. Va.
Floyd Lusk, residing at Clarke
Gap, Mercer County, W. Va., appli
cation for license to sell at retail
spirituous liquors, wines, porter, al%
beer and drinks of like nature in hii
building in the Town of Oakvale,
Mercer County, W. Va.
Given under rny hand this the 6tb
day of March, 1907.
Teste: ESTILL BAILEY,
Clerk of the County Court of
Mercer County West Virginia
j I ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
{The Better the Boy
THE BETTER THE BARGAIN.
i -_- 1
<> <
o THE BOY that stands on his head, slides down banisters and plays leap-frog, may be a very good boy for all ;
o that, honest, truthful and gentlemanly. But few boys have time to consider external appearances, or the ^
«► strict rules of propriety. They are usually more interested in baseball or marbles.
<►
n
;; Mrs. Jan Hopkins’ “Boy»Prooi” lo'hes
o
o were specially designed for bc^s of this caliber - that is 97 per cent of AJ,I. bnv«a \ Tbev ar: mad to
It Peai T’*ice and shapely wh - ril like • m. They aro strengthened in THOS - v JffiYB'. nix** fS
<► B LACES wrhere a boy’s clothes are ordinarily s:.pp;s3.1 to be werk.
• I 1Vr^Ar.d.mr^?^ i'*sPect the> are MONEY SAVEK3, LASTING LONGER than two ordinary suits and GIV
jt 1NG SATISFACTION all the time they last.
a ■■ ■ ■ e m m as 3 £ ■ u & w
K
v ‘"‘ ‘ '•'*•"•* -H4 4~H* ’i~H* *!~M ++-!• *H-!* +-H- +*M* *l~M* •J-H* «H*
‘Security Bond* S
Guaranteed Boys’ Suits, at ;
are the high toned brothers of the above, maybe more ®
dignified in appearance with a iittle extra strength in ■
the weak places. The “Bond” means you can have the ®
price $5 back, if the suit is not as good as we claim. ■
*+ +++ '"W +++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++ + *
Nov, is the time to select your boys Easter Suit at *
THE NEW STORE. Boys’ “Confirmation Suits” are *
here at from $3.50 to to $7.50 So are all the necessary *
things to go with the Suit— _
Shoes, Hats, Shirts, Ties and Other Furnishings. m
.;. -! -W- 4-M> 4-++ +*M* 4-H- -J-H* +++ -I-H- +-H* +++ -hi- ■
.....
< 4 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiitiiiiiiiifJii!iiiii""a<tin
< 4
i: ONE PRICE
3! Head to Foot Outfitters
3 3 For Mon and Boys.
33 ii7 nii\<r.To\ \\. iim i t
4 4
< I
3i IHIMIII’’’fin • lit**
4 4
4 4
4 4
4 »
4 I
4 4
ONE PRICE
Head to Foot Outfitters
For Men and Boys.
117 I’RIX Kl<>\ Av. IIVA i;K!KUl.
iiiiffiiunsikitiuisi;: ..jwiiiiii