If You Read The Democrat, you don't need anj- other newspaper. It's all here. One Dollar a year. : : Established 1899 wniin Comprehensive Estimate of Americas Late Literary Gen ius, Whose Pen Swayed the Heart of the World. 0 0 By R.OBERTUS LOVB. MARK TWAIN is dead! The king is dead—long live the king! But there is no heir, either apparent or pre sumptive. The throne of humor, whose kingdom was the world, is empty. The scepter that swayed the universal heart—the pen—lies idle at last. The empire of laughter and also of tears which this king of the writing craft founded and which he fostered for nearly fl£t y years is become as whirl ing dust in the abyss* of the things that were Only there remains the heritage of tln* dead ruler's kindly philosophy. THE LATE MARK TWAIN. [Samuel L. Clemens.J his droll fun. his quips and jestings and his pathos. Mark Twain became before be died the most famous man on earth. He was not merely a man: be was an in stitution. He was a sort of neighbor hood settlement of good cheer, with many braucbes located in the oases as ID the waste places, where admission and refreshment were free to all. Mil lions—how many millions is beyond estimating—came and partook of bis wiue of optimism and stayed for sup per. His fame was and is universal. Though an American born, a native of Missouri, he belonged to all lands. He b:ul traveled in all lands and lived in most of them He had more near permanent homes perhaps than any other man of bis day. Nearly always be was a wanderer, sometimes from necessity, more frequently from choice. Tbe world was his plaything, and he was uot content remapping for himself tbe entire surface of the big ball. Of Most Striking Appearance. He was a man of most striking ap pearance—the kind that attracts atten tion anywhere in a crowd and causes others to take a second look, in liiy later years his shock—no, his crown of hair, perfectly white and glossy like finespun silk, became his trademark oi recognition by strangers wherever IK went. 1 have seen a woman who nev er before saw Mark Twain pick him out without opera glasses, though sh*- sat in the top gallery of Carnegie hall and he occupied a lower box near the stage, and the great house was crowd ed. He had no doubles as to personal appearance—there was only oue os him. And there was only one of Marl-. Twaiu as a literary syndicate. It ha become the fashion to describe him a « the great American humorist. This undoubtedly he was, but he was more His appreciation of Joan of Arc, first published anonymously, is accepted by critics of acumen as one of the most refined works in the serious literature of the nineteenth century." The book won its way before Mark Twain ad mitted its paternity. While he was writing the Joan classic he worked, time and time about, ou that amazing funny masterpiece, "Pudd'nhead Wil son." He simply couldn't be serious altogether for a stated period. Never Altogether Funny. Nor must we take it for granted that Alark Twain, summing up his career as a writer, ever was altogether funny. He never was. He was one of the closest observers of iuman nature and institutions, places acxl things, that ever lived. Even in his most humor ous books we find that he has made accurate trauscripts of tbe things which impressed him. Though he ex aggerated, a privilege belonging to his profession, one can read between the Hues the inhering truth. He was an inveterate foe to shams of every sort, and apparently knew his highest hap piness when with droll sarcasm he punctured a popular fraud with bis Pen. But Mark Twain often wrote books Just because .he had the story to tell. The tale of "Tom Sawyer" is one of these, aud the "Huckleberry Finn" hook is another. Each of these is true to life—to boy life. Rudyard Kipling is f o liave remarked that he would THE HICKORY DEMOCRAT HE OFJUIR Tribute Paid to the Ability, Kindly Philosophy, Droll Fun and Pathos of the Man Whose Optimism Cheered Millions. rather be the author of -'•fom Sawyer" than all of his own works. "Tne Innocents Abroad." of course, always will be associated with Mark Twain's name as one of his most char acteristic books, but that may be be cause it was his first big work and won for him the fame and the for tune which enabled him to write what he pleased. Mark Twain's name was Samuel Langhorne Clemens, but it was used chiefly as a vessel whereon universi ties hung LL. D. handles. He was "l)r Clemens" three times over, but the distinction never spoiled him. With no school learning save such as he gained from a few years' attend ance at the village school in Hannibal, Mo., his scholastic titles were earned by literary work which the whole world accepted. He Was Intensely Democratic. Mark Twain was intensely demo cratic. He was easily approachable, aud ha never emitted any bear's growl or lion's roar. Even the humblest per son was made to feel at ease in his presence. Shrinking reporters sent to interview him quit their shrinking and puffed up when they found him as easy to interview as the aspiring au thor of the poem published in the low er corner of the town weekly. He could talk on any topic, even the weather, and glorify it with his hu mor. If the insistent attention be stowed upon him was distasteful to him he did not permit the fact to be known. Mark Twain was one of the politest men I ever knew. He was considerate of the feelings of others. ; , jffijifajj Wfefflr ; ffisjgjjfr : :&Jl£H&3& lip,"**praß%£§^ ..^5:"" , -, sS3§H§Jj^ >v^4"' "'' ' ?'' ~ 4 F 1,? .. -. >••'*' * *'|y ; *??'■• - MARK TWAIN'S LATEST PICTUKL. HICKORY, N and therein lies (he soul of politeness Those obsessed by the uotion that It was impossible for Mark Twain to open his mouth without saying some thing funny should revise their im pressions of him. In the course of his last visit to his boyhood home at Han nibal in the summer of IJ>O2 he said solemn thiugs in the most diguified manner possible. Several times he was so deeply touched by the pathos of the occasion, his meeting with boyhood friends then grown old like himself, his visit to the graves of his parents, that his voice quavered and broke, and the inevitable tears trickled down his face, tie was overcome with emotion, conquered by tender sentiment, and those of us whcse privilege it was to observe him upon these occasions went away with a new notion as to Mark Twain. lie was not the mere Jester, not the buffoon who sees in life only the guffaws and works assiduously to evoke them in boisterous riot of laugh ter. He was the man of feeling, the tender hearted old fellow, the owner of a heart as gentle as any that ever beat. His Many Personal Sorrows. Mark Twaiu's life was not a rose bed. He walked no primrose path. He encountered stumbling places and had steep hills of difficulty to climb. And he had sorrows that bit and griefs that bludgeoned. At the close of his life, so far as relatives were concerned, he was almost alone in the world. His best loved daughter, Susy, died iu America when he was in Europe. His story of her death in his autobiog raphy is a piece of pathos seldom sur passed. His wife, who was Miss Olivia Langdon of Elmira, N. Y., his compan ion for many years, died in Italy after vain wanderings for the restoration of her health. He built a big country home near Redding, Conn., and settled down to continue growing old as grace fully as he could with his two remain ing daughters, Clara and Jean. In No vember of 1009 Clara married a for eigner and went abroad to live. Jean was left with him. On the day before Christmas, with a Christmas tree for her father trimmed by her own hand* iu one of the rooms, Jeau Clemens was found dead in her bathtub, having been seized with an epileptic fit and drowned. Wlieu Mark Twain was fifty years old aud worth about $1,000,000 a pub lishing firm in which he was a part ner became bankrupt He lost his for tune and was Involved aeavily in debt. He set to work, made a lecturing and writing tour around the world and in ten years had paid off his indebtedness and again was ahead of the" wolf. By that time he had become so universally famous that his work commanded Its own price. Thereafter he could write or rest as he chose, and he chose to write much. Mark Twain's writing life began In his pilot days and continued up to bis death—half a century of devotiou to the art of making people happy. For several years he was simply a hard working newspaper reporter and spe cial correspondent, searching for gold in Nevada and California between Jobs at journalism which grubstaked him for prospecting. Rut he found bis purest and most paying streak of ore when in ISG7 he wrote "The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County." That story, picked up in a mining camp, was his first promising literary prospect. He had struck the mother lode. Printer, pilot, reporter, humorist, novelist, philosopher—he is safely em i baimed to enduring fame. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1910. The Passing of Hon. R. Z. Llnstey How Ha Gaye ttis tes "June Bag" to the A. T, & 0. R. R. HIS CAREER IN CONGRESS What he said when they Made Him Apologize for Unparli amentary Language-" A Whet stone to Intellectuality" AN APPRECIATION. Rarer than the diajnohd, more priceless than the white stone of Golconda, North Caftlina fur nishes a gem of purest ray se rene which has never been found elsewhere in all the hidden wealth of a wide world. Authorities on the aristocracy of jewels assert the kinship of this gem to the noble family of the Emerald. Un der the purple shadows of the Brushies, the nervy little picket line of the giant army of the Blue Ridge; where the modest mountain sweet briar unfolds its pink petals, there in Alexander County, the Hiddenite makes its bed in the rock. The world reckons that the Hiddenite stone is the richest gift of "Little Aleck" to the race. But the world reasons reck lessly. In so far as a man is of more value tlmn a stone; in the proportion that the thinking of an intellect is higher than the irridescent scintillations of a jew el, by SO much more was Romu lus Z. Linney the richest and rar est gift of "Little Aleck to the world. The stone was a mere symbol of the man—a priceless treasure in an unlooked for quar ter; a jeweled shadow of an in carnate reality. Linney was "Little Aleck's" j and North Carolina's human Hiddenite. He died on the doorstep. Fumbling at the keyhole, stumb ling upon the threshold of his law office in Taylorsville, the unpretentious little smithy where4ie had forged his court room thunderbolts—the sudden summons came. There is d sort pathos in the picture of his death. There is an awful loneli ness in the death-moment and the friendliness of the inside of his workshop might have less ened it. With the passing of Linney the last of a remarkable coterie of great mountain and piedmont lawyers disappears. "And there were giants in those days." Geo. N. Folk, of Lenoir; f.linton A. Cilley of Hickory; Davie Schenck,of LincolntonjC. M. McCorkle, of Newton, and their contemporaries—tall timber of the law any one of whom would have graced the Supreme Court or the Attorney Generalship of the United States. Romulus Z. Linney conld hold his own with any of them. The radius of the circle of his practice was as wide as that of any law yer in the State. And Linney had Blackstone and Coke at the tip of his tongue as glib as any of them. His mingled know ledge of the law and human na ture made him well nigh invinci ble before a mountain jury. Linney's genius had no more appreciative admirer than the distinguished editor of the Char lotte Observer, Mr, J. P. Cald- 1 well, yet he could not conceal his annoyance over one quality—and the only discounting quality—of Linney's oratory, his exaggera tion, his hyperbole. Linney al ways overshot the mark in his eulogies, except the time when he declared that the mountaineer preacher. Rev. Parks Gwaltney, —who by the way conducted the deceased's notable funeral last Tuesday a week—was a greater preacher than Talmage. Linney could write an exquisite "In Memoriam." The Taylors ville Scout, Mr. Linney's home paper, recently printed a fine piece of this kind of work from his pen—his tribute to the late Partee Matheson of Alexander. But he could never approach the exact shade of delineation at tained by the Hon. Risden Tyler Bennett, of Wadesboro in similar writing. As for instance, when he paid the last adieu to the late Sam Fort, who fell from his chair at 3a. m. and expired, and of whom Judge Bennett said: "In the hour of the night when men are not courageous, he blundered upon death." The explanation of Linney's hyperbole may lie in the fact that he saw "mute inglorious Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Miltons" or "Cromwells guiltless of their country's blood" in his countrymen who just fell short of great opportunity. Linney's education was interrupted by the Civil War through which he fought. He made up for the lack by omnivorous reading, and was easily familiar with the great figures of history. He saw re semblances in character and in little achievements on the part of his friends to world notabili ties, and naturally to the general reader these comparisons seemed like gross exaggerations. The mountain men voted Lin ney into Congress as a Republi can and here this diamond in the rough scintillated as never be fore. The appreciation by the "Honorables" of his genius, his originality, his repartee, his un conventionally gave him con stant inspiration, so that he ex celled himself and adorned his State. Jerry Simpson failed to squelch nim. Tom Reed culti vated him, probably for the same reason as a brilliant North Caro lina woman to whom Mr. Linney paid court in the days of his wid owerhood.Mr.Linney told me the story. : "if you will not marry me," he quoted himself as saying, "why do you evidently care so much for my company?" "I took it as a quite a compli ment," Mr. Linney continued, "when she replied, 'Because you are a whetstone to my intellectu ality.' " Linney loved to look back upon his congressional experience. He told me in an interview of the time they made him apologize for unparlimentary language. "It was in a contested election case," he said, "and I had in the heat of debate said that the Dem ocrats 'stole votes.' It was de clared by the Democratic leaders that I had been guilty of unnarli mentary language and ought to retract. "I told the House," continued Mr. Linney "that I was sorry that in the heat of debate I had been betrayed into using the lan guage I did. I therewith with drew the words and begged leave to offer in lieu thereof my views in the form of an illustration, "Down in my section of North Carolina many years ago, I went on to say, there had been a quar rel in the church and a judicial committee consisting of old man Doughton, of Alleghany; Dr. Todd, of Ashe, and a man named Smith, of Wilkes, had been ap pointed to meet and settle the trouble. They lived far apart and across mountains; but on the day appointed Doughton and Todd were on hand, having rid den over snowy roads distances of 25 miles or more to come to the meeting. Smith had not shown up, and the other two were indignant that he should fail to be on hand. 4 'They were about to separate j when Smith appeared and when taxed about his tardiness, he ex cused himsalf that he could not get away from a fox hunt in time. "He said he had a dog named Truman, famed as the best fox hound in North Carolina. That the dog had been running the foxes in the mountains and just as Smith was about to start for the meeting, he saw the hound was in distress from being run down. Now Smith had invented a wonderful liniment that would put ne .v life and power into man and beast. He went after the hound, picked him up, warmed him by the fire and rubbed the liniment in his joints. Soon he began to squirm like a young pup. Smith rubbed on and in a little bit the hound had broken loose and was running the fox over Nigger Mountain, and from there on to Old Baldy. In a lit tle bit Smith caught sight of him. "Brethren," said he to the judi cial church court, "I'll be hanged if old Truman wasn't three miles ahead of the fox so powerfully had my new liniment worked on him." "Now the Democrats have been using this same liniment, and I want to say that in their arguments and evidence in this election case, they are 15 miles south of truth and only two miles this side of the gates of Hell!" "Well the House roared." Mr. Linney finished, "and Champ Clark worked my illustration up into a story and printed it in Henry Watterson's newspaper. "Champ came over to my desk and said: "Linney,you make me plaguegoned mad sometimes but I always admire native ability wherever I find it, whether in friend or foe." We were riding at the time Mr. Linney related this story, over the "June Bug" road — as the Atlantic, Tennessee & Ohio rail road is nicknamed—and it was not a far cry from that fact to Mr. Linney's own story of how Democrat and Press, Consolidated 1905 ihe came to christen it by that name. " I had proposed in the North Carolina legislature." said Mr. Linney, "to take the money from the sale of the state's interest in the Cape Fear and Yadkin Val ley railroad and put it in the ex tension of the Atlantic, Tennes see & Ohio railroad from Char lotte to Taylorsville. The north ern terminus of the road was then Statesville. "My friend Cy Watson, of Forsyth, was leading the fight against me, his proposition being to make the northern terminus of the road Danbury. He exhibit ed on the day he made his main speech in the state senate, a map which he had gotten up, making it appear that the route I pro posed was without any streams of water while his line was well watered and fertile. Further more he made a strenuous argu ment that his line would open up coal fields and deposits of iron ore, while Iredell and Alexander counties, through which my route lay, were, he held, practi cally without any mineral wealth. "I slept on his speech that night and the next day I had my line of defense well in hand. 1 had studied geography some my self in the meantime and had a maD on hand, too, to show the many streams that flowed through the section from States ville to Taylorsville. "As to minerals, I said that coal and iron were so common up our way that thev were lying around loose; and furthermore, we had in our section what no other spot on earth could boast ol —the Hiddenite stone. I added: "A well wintered June-bug can carry away $l,OOO worth of this valuable gem, which rivals tne diamond in sparkling beauty, tied to its hind-leg! "When the vote came to be taken almost the first senator on the roll, said: "I vote for the June-bug road!" "And a majority in both houses voted for the June-bug road, and June-bug it remains to this day." Howard A. Banks. Monroe Shuford. Written for The Democrat, Monroe Shuford was the oldest son of Uncle Eli R. Shuford and wife. He was born m Catawba county. After leaving the coun ty, he made his home in Wood county, Texas. He left the county of Catawba when a young man. He was about the age oi Hon. Leroy Whitener of Cataw ba county. He and others will be glad to hear from him. My brother A. A. Shuford will re member him well. Monroe Shu ford died at Little Rock, Ark., in 1862. The cause of his death was measles. He was with his command on their way east when he took sick. He was a Confed erate soldier and belonged to a regiment of cavalry from Texas. His colonel was Lock. Uncle Eli R. Shuford and wife were the parents of six sons; five of these boys were in the Confederate army. One of these boys is yet living, and five of them have an swered the last roll call. Their early life was spent in Catawba county. They are a part of the history of Catawba county. J. H. Shuford. All Kinds of News. Accusing Geo. Rabish of being a spy on the men at the Avella, Pa., mines of the Pittsburg and Washington Coal Co., a crowd oi angry, drinking miners on Fri day crucined the man, having first placed a crown of thorns upon his brow. He died soon after he was taken down from his cros3 by rescuers who were too late. Fire practically destroyed Lake Charles, La., Saturday night, starting in an opera house. Loss $4,000,000 Tom Taggart is a candidate for the Democratic endorsement for the Senate in Indiana. Mr. Lutz Gets 4 Out of 5 Prizes Mr. H. P. Lutz informs the Democrat that the Dutch Dairy Farm has won four of the five prizes totalling $75 offered by the state department of agricul ture for the best dairy products.' Mr. Lutz won prize 1, $25; prize 2, $2O; prize 4, $lO, and prize 5, $5. The 3rd prize was won by a Charlotte man. There were 30 contestants in all all. Mr. Lutz is one of the finest dairymen in the South> and the Democrat congratulates him on his success. Children Cry , FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA The Democrat Gives the news of Hickory and the Catawba Valley in full. Ilie news of the world in brief. • Mr. Elliott Will Be Next Mayor He and Mr. J. D. Lentz Have a Close Run [or Honor TWO BALLOTS TAKEN In Largest Non Partisan Pri mary ever Held in Hickory, Messrs. Setzer, Stroup and Campbell were named for New Aldermen —School Commissioners After the closest kind of a run in the non-partisan municipal primary convention held in the opera house last Thursday nighty Mr. J. D. Elliott was named for mayor over Mr. J. D. Lentz. Mr. Elliott on the first ballot got 82 votes, Mr. Lentz 81 and Dr. W. hi. Nicholson 2. Chairman Jones W. Shuford was about to rule that Mr. Elliott had the nomina tion when the point was raised that no one had received a major ity of the 165 votes cast. A second ballot was then taken resulting in a vote of 91 for El liott to 78 for Lentz, and Mr. Elliott's nomination was made unanimous. C. Setzer, W, S. Stroup and J, W. Campbell re ceived the highest votes for al dermen. For school commissioners, Messrs. J. F. Abernethy, H. F. Elliott, S. L. Whitener and C. C. Bost were nominated. Owing to the fact that Mr. C. F. Blalock had recently resigned from the board of School trus tees. it was decided to take a bal lot for four members for this board instead of three as is the usual custom. Mr. E.B.Cline called the meet ing to order and Mr. J. W. Shu ford was made chairman. The convention was the largest of its kind ever heldin Hickory. HEFFNER VS. ABEE. Two Candidates for Mayor in West Hickory—Storks 11th Visit. Correspondence of the Democrat West Hickory. April 25.—The town of West Hickory has al ready held two primaries to nominate candidates for the town offices and there is another primary called for next Wednes day evening, April 27. Donse quently. everybody is satisfied that there will be plenty of can didates to choose from*when alection day comes. Mr. W. A. Heffner is heading one of the tickets for mayor and Mr. H. H. Abee the other ticket, and the people are just waiting to see who next. The nineteen-months old child of Mr. H. C. Smith of this place, died Saturday morning of meas les, and was taken to Morganton Sunday for burial. The rest of the family are sick with measles. Some of the children are very low. The bereaved family has the sympathy of the town. Mr. Jim Abee is all smiles at present. The Stork visited his home for the eleventh time one lay last week, and left him a fine boy this time. It seems that the baseball teams of West Hickory are hav ing unfavorable luck at present. Ne have two teams in town mown as the First and Second lines, and on last Saturday, Vpril 23rd, the First nine went :o Newton, crossed bats with the Newton boys, and reported jn their return that the score ?tood 16 to 24 in favor of New con, and on the same day the Second team went over and played Rhodehiss and they report he score standing 14 to 18 in c'avor of Rhodehiss. Don't get liscouraged boys. Try again! Mr. Dan Wilson and wife were here Sunday visiting their son, Mr. Arthur Wilson. Mr. Mac Travis and wife of Brookfoid, were here Sunday visiting the family of Mr. Jeff Holler. Mr. W. A. Sherrill, of this place, vent over in Caldwell county Saturday to visit his brother. He returned Sunday. Success to The Democrat. lota. HICKORY PRODUCE MARKET. Corrected weekly by Whitener & Martin. Hens, per lb 12c Spring Chickens, per. lb 23£ c Turkeys,per lb 12 l-2c Eggs, per doz 17c Butter per lb 15 to 25 Apples, eating 2 50 a bu Sweet Potatoes 1.60 acr Irish Potatoes $1 00 a bu Cabbage, per lb 3 to 4Q Strawberries 8c a