VOLUME XUil, SO. 15 flnS" GRAVE ERRORS IN I STORY Of UNNEi ?i;litb DUtrict C'jojTcsswao Tatke-i U$uf; Witb WoiSc on Hi* Congrea s:on?.l HUtory. Linnej and Claude KsJclnn Were Not in Cong/M? *t Swae Time. Complete Letter. Hen. Robert L. Do ugh ton. Eighth District Representative in Congress for more than twenty years, has found the story carried in Inst week's Democrat relative tt? the career oi the late Col. Romulus Z. Linney, altogether incorrect in so far. as the historical data is concerned. The biographical sketch referred to was pared by Professor 0. B. Woltr.. Mr. Doughton submits a letter to The Democrat in which he sets forth the discrepancies found in the story, and the same is published herewith in full: "My dear Mr. Editor: "J have read in your paper of October eighth, an article by one Claude Bernard Woltz, entitled 'The Bull of the Brushies.' This article purports to Rive some very interesting information touching the life ami public services of Colonel Romulus Z. Linney. who represented a North Carolina District in Congress in the Fiftyfourth, Fifty-fifth, and Fillty-sixth Congresses, or from March !, 1S95, to March 3, J 901. "In this article a most graphic account is given of p.n alleged debate in Congress between Colonel Linney and the late Claude Kitchin, who defeated the last negro member I of Congress up to the advent of Depriest, a Republican of Illinois. In glowing rhetoric Mr. IVolts recites hew Colonel Linney, or as Mr. Wolts terms him, 'The Bull of the Brushies.' won n great victory over Mr. Kitchin in a debute in Congress, and how Champ Clark, who Mr. Wolts says was Speaker of the House at that time, threw his arms about Col. Linney's shoulders and congratulated him. "The absurdity of this part of the story is shown by the fact that' Claude Kitchin nod Colonel Linney never served in Congress a single day simultaneously; Mr. Kitchin did not enter Congress until the beginning of the Fifty-seventh Congress, March i. 1901, Mr. Linney retired at that time, so there could never Jpiva been any debate in Congress between these two distinguished statesmen. More-, over, Champ Clark did not become] Speaker till 1911, ten years' after] Mr. Linney's retirement. So lni- as 1 know or have ever heard, Mr. Woltz is the only man lving or deail, Democrat or Republican, to assert that Claude Kitchin ever liau a superior in Congvi : oh u debater, or thnt lie was at any 1 time worsted in. a forensic discussion, either in or out. of Congress. T have hoard many distinguished men who served with Mr. Kitchin, including Speakers Champ Clark, Democrat, Joseph G. Cannon, and Nicholas Longworth, Republicans, say, so far as they knew, Claude Kitchin was without an equal as a debater. In a memorial address, delivered in memcry of Uie late Claude Kitchin, Speaker Long-worth spoke in. part, as follows: 'Mr. Speaker. Claude Kitchin's good nature and his sense of humorwere always with him. I never heard him in debate or in private conversation apply a harsh or coarse epithet ;o any man, and yet he was, among all I have known in this House, the most 'dangerous roan to meet in debate. The memory of my association with him will always be one of the pleasant recollections of my life, and particularly will the memos y of our close and enduring friendship abide with me always ' "Mr. Woltz has the effrontery to insinuate that Claude Kitchin was lacking in; courage. 1 quote the following remarks which he says were j"-._ j: i rt-.i* i T - .. Afv i-. i uy VyUiviivi iuuii:*zy iu .ui. Kilohin: . . but I wish to stay that no man, and't emphasize no man, not even the y nun ft, dashing representative front North Carolina, will dare mate those statements to me outside the walls of tlie House of Representatives of the Congress oi the United States.' Anyone who knew Claude Kitchin is a wave of the fact that he possessed as much courage both moral and. physical, as any man who ever lived, and no one would have ever challenged him tn vain rc repeat any statement outside of the Hall of Congress which he had mad, within its walls. "When one writes fiction he is permitted to give his imagination un restricted latitude, but when he as sumes the role of historian he shoult state feo+s and speak the truth, es peciaHy when writing of the aeau. "Nothing in this letter must bi construed as in any way criticizinf or in disparagement of Colonel Lin ney, as nothing could be farther fron my thought or purpose. "Very sincerely yours, ' "R. L. DOUGHTON.' Just at press time news <.- i. L> nuilUlUU'U vam/u ivccac uvmg unv 2 j of the roost outstanding:. Dinner was -! served on the ground. At no time i-1 during the day did the large church ! hold as much as* half the crowd. swspaper, Devoted to the , WATAUGA COUNTY, NORTH CJ First to Make Not Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Her $25,000 vrlien they stepped out ot thei by the Japanese newspaper, Asahi. 1 BARGAIN CARNIVAL OPENS THURSDAY; RUNS THREE DAYS Thirty-three Boone Business Houie* Join Together in First Co-operative Selling Event. Valuable Cash Prizes to Be Given. Seasonable Meachandisc Offered at the Lowest Prices Since Pre-war Days. Last minute plans are now going forward for the staging of Boone's first co-operative selling event, and from indications the first of the veek it is deduced that the Fall Bargain Carnival will bring an unprecedented number of visitors to Boone ;he last three days of this week, when more than thirty business houses of :hc city are joined together in giving shoppers the greatest degree oil /alue for a dollar attained since be-1 fore the inflation of th?^ World War. Printed matter is being distributed tjv'er the local tr&dn territory, and a, page ad appearing today in Th? detailed acedttife"^ the inducements being held out to the thrifty buyer.' The widely-heralded event will :ome to a close Saturday night when four substantial c??h prizes will be jiven away to as many shoppers who lave patronized the co-operating nerchants during either of the three iay3. Names and addresses ?6f cus omers must be Written on the trade :necns, available at i.nc several stores, which lVi turn will he deposited in boxes, located at strategic points along the street, three of chero, and at 9:30 in the evening a - ommittee of merchants will meet, assemble the coupons, and a child will select the winners. Should one of those eligible he unable to be present for the awarding of the prizes, it is explained that money will be mailed direct to filigzr address. Present plans call for the locating of a receptacle in the block of the Theatre, one between the two drug stores, and a third in the vicinity of the feller Produce Company. The merchants are anxious for customers to deposit the trade coupons, properly filled in, at either of 1ha repositories. Business men of Boone believe that never in the history of the city has the time for buying been more opportune. With the approach cf winter and the increase in the bill for necessities, together with the lowest prices since 1914, they feel that trade records should reach a new high peak during the Bargain Carnival. At any rate, they want, the folks to come to town this week and give them an opportunity to prove that Boone is the logical trading center in the northwestern hills. Readers will find paying information on page three. ATTEND BIRTHDAY DINNER On Wednesday, October 7lh, a party fiom the Sugar Grove section motored to Elizabethton, Tenn., where they attended a birthday dinner spread in honor of Mr. M. P. Johnson, former. resident of Beaver Dam. They reported a most delightful occasion. Those who went from Sugar Grove were: Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Vines and daughters, Mary Lou and Carolyn; Mrs. Sena Cable, Miss Hattie Vines; . Messrs. Frank Vines, Spencer Cable and Mike Ward. SOME Ptime KINS! Mrs. P. C. Wyke's garden in Boone this season prodnced probably the champion pumpkin vine of the county. The vine, a "volunteer" came up in an onion bed, branched out in four prongs that measured more than two hundred feet each way, and thirty pumkins set, all of which have ripened to a golden yellow. The editor will enjoy pumpkin pic, too, foi Mrs. Wyke kindly sent him one of the largest. Can anyone beat it? iVj:' \ W'i,. dem< Best Interests of Northwe kROLfKA, TEUKSDA f, OCTOBER 15 '-Stop Pacific Flight ~~ ^ ndon, Jr., were handed a check for ir plane at Wenatchee, Washington, flierc's plenty more in sight. MDC I T UCMUDIV jiinio. j. i. nmiuaiA |DIES IN ROANOKE; BURIAL SATURDAY j Dr. O. J. Chandler Conducts Funera! Services at Boone M. E. Church Floral Offering Profuse. InterI mcnt in City Cemetery, ilusoand and Parents Survive. Large Crowd I Attends Rites. Mrs. Roystcr Critcher Henririx. 39, j [wife of J. Turner Hendrix, formerly \ 1 a resident of Boone, died in a hospital at Roanoke, Va., on Thursday evening, August 7. She had undergone a serious operation on the eve- j ning previous, from which she was 1 thought, to have been recovering, 1 when a heart attack occurred which 1 proved fatal. 1 The remains were brought to ? Boone Friday by an ambulance from the Moretz Funeral Home, and services were held from the Methodist :Church on Saturday afternoon at 2 ffikek. J- Chandler, pastor, assisted Ky Tfcev. P. A. Hicks; was in charge of the rites. The auditorium was packed to overflowing with a host of sympathizing friends. < The floral offering was most profuse and bore mute testimony to the high regard in which she was held i durinb- her oarthlv smhiiVir IJV.Ifnw n ? iog the service? at the church, interment took place in the city cemelery. Active pallbearers were Paul A. Coffey, W. C. Greer, H. Grady Farthing, George Greene, Henry Hardin. Russell D. Hodges, A. E. South and D. J. Cottell. Honorary pallbearers.' included R. P. Preddy, H. L. Banard, D. W. Howell, B. J. Council), J. A. Williams, J. D. Rankin, George P. Hagam&n, Dr. John 1). Hnganmn, Ben A. Watson and John W. Hodges. Flower bearers were Mrs. Paul A. Coffey, Mrs. Grady Farthing, Miss Ruth Cottrell, Miss Erie Greer, Mrs. Graybeal, Mrs. Wiiilenei, Mrs. Bessie Cook, Mrs. Frank William?, Mrs. W. Ralph Winkler, Mrs. George Thompson, Mrs. Russell Hodges, Mrs. Ben Council!, Miss Louise Critcher. Mrs. Henry Hardin, Miss Mell Trivett, Miss Louise Hodges and Mrs. Jessie McGuiro. Mrs. llendrix was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Critcher, of Boone, and was reared in this city, where she resided until six years ago. Smce that time she had made her home in Roanoke, Va., where her husband is affiliated with the Reynolds Tobacco Company. She was extremely popular in Watauga County, and the entire community shares grief with the husband and parents in the untimely passing of the highly esteemed lady. Many Legionaires at Charlotte Meeting! A number of members of Watauga Post* American Legion, went to Charlotte last week to witness the air pageant and to hear the address of the National Cotnmanderj Henry L. Stevens. Those going included Lioneil Ward, Stuart Barnes, M. G. Barnes, Roy Haynes, Bob Gingrich, Henry Greene, B. A. Hodges, L. D. Woodard, Cliff McConnell, Lloyd S. T