<h2> <SPAN name="massacre" id="massacre"></SPAN>MY BLOODY MASSACRE </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG alt="p243.jpg (123K)" src="images/p243.jpg" width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<p><br/></p>
<p>The other burlesque I have referred to was my fine satire upon the
financial expedients of "cooking dividends," a thing which became
shamefully frequent on the Pacific coast for a while. Once more, in my
self-complacent simplicity I felt that the time had arrived for me to rise
up and be a reformer. I put this reformatory satire in the shape of a
fearful "Massacre at Empire City." The San Francisco papers were making a
great outcry about the iniquity of the Daney Silver-Mining Company, whose
directors had declared a "cooked" or false dividend, for the purpose of
increasing the value of their stock, so that they could sell out at a
comfortable figure, and then scramble from under the tumbling concern. And
while abusing the Daney, those papers did not forget to urge the public to
get rid of all their silver stocks and invest in sound and safe San
Francisco stocks, such as the Spring Valley Water Company, etc. But right
at this unfortunate juncture, behold the Spring Valley cooked a dividend
too! And so, under the insidious mask of an invented "bloody massacre," I
stole upon the public unawares with my scathing satire upon the
dividend-cooking system. In about half a column of imaginary human carnage
I told how a citizen had murdered his wife and nine children, and then
committed suicide. And I said slyly, at the bottom, that the sudden
madness of which this melancholy massacre was the result had been brought
about by his having allowed himself to be persuaded by the California
papers to sell his sound and lucrative Nevada silver stocks, and buy into
Spring Valley just in time to get cooked along with that company's fancy
dividend, and sink every cent he had in the world.</p>
<p>Ah, it was a deep, deep satire, and most ingeniously contrived. But I made
the horrible details so carefully and conscientiously interesting that the
public devoured them greedily, and wholly overlooked the following
distinctly stated facts, to wit: The murderer was perfectly well known to
every creature in the land as a bachelor, and consequently he could not
murder his wife and nine children; he murdered them "in his splendid
dressed-stone mansion just in the edge of the great pine forest between
Empire City and Dutch Nick's," when even the very pickled oysters that
came on our tables knew that there was not a "dressed-stone mansion" in
all Nevada Territory; also that, so far from there being a "great pine
forest between Empire City and Dutch Nick's," there wasn't a solitary tree
within fifteen miles of either place; and, finally, it was patent and
notorious that Empire City and Dutch Nick's were one and the same place,
and contained only six houses anyhow, and consequently there could be no
forest between them; and on top of all these absurdities I stated that
this diabolical murderer, after inflicting a wound upon himself that the
reader ought to have seen would kill an elephant in the twinkling of an
eye, jumped on his horse and rode four miles, waving his wife's reeking
scalp in the air, and thus performing entered Carson City with tremendous
éclat, and dropped dead in front of the chief saloon, the envy and
admiration of all beholders.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG alt="p245.jpg (27K)" src="images/p245.jpg" width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Well, in all my life I never saw anything like the sensation that little
satire created. It was the talk of the town, it was the talk of the
territory. Most of the citizens dropped gently into it at breakfast, and
they never finished their meal. There was something about those minutely
faithful details that was a sufficing substitute for food. Few people that
were able to read took food that morning. Dan and I (Dan was my
reportorial associate) took our seats on either side of our customary
table in the "Eagle Restaurant," and, as I unfolded the shred they used to
call a napkin in that establishment, I saw at the next table two stalwart
innocents with that sort of vegetable dandruff sprinkled about their
clothing which was the sign and evidence that they were in from the
Truckee with a load of hay. The one facing me had the morning paper folded
to a long, narrow strip, and I knew, without any telling, that that strip
represented the column that contained my pleasant financial satire. From
the way he was excitedly mumbling, I saw that the heedless son of a
hay-mow was skipping with all his might, in order to get to the bloody
details as quickly as possible; and so he was missing the guide-boards I
had set up to warn him that the whole thing was a fraud. Presently his
eyes spread wide open, just as his jaws swung asunder to take in a potato
approaching it on a fork; the potato halted, the face lit up redly, and
the whole man was on fire with excitement. Then he broke into a disjointed
checking off of the particulars—his potato cooling in mid-air
meantime, and his mouth making a reach for it occasionally, but always
bringing up suddenly against a new and still more direful performance of
my hero. At last he looked his stunned and rigid comrade impressively in
the face, and said, with an expression of concentrated awe:</p>
<p>"Jim, he b'iled his baby, and he took the old 'oman's skelp. Cuss'd if I
want any breakfast!"</p>
<p>And he laid his lingering potato reverently down, and he and his friend
departed from the restaurant empty but satisfied.</p>
<p>He never got down to where the satire part of it began. Nobody ever did.
They found the thrilling particulars sufficient. To drop in with a poor
little moral at the fag-end of such a gorgeous massacre was like following
the expiring sun with a candle and hope to attract the world's attention
to it.</p>
<p>The idea that anybody could ever take my massacre for a genuine occurrence
never once suggested itself to me, hedged about as it was by all those
telltale absurdities and impossibilities concerning the "great pine
forest," the "dressed-stone mansion," etc. But I found out then, and never
have forgotten since, that we never read the dull explanatory surroundings
of marvelously exciting things when we have no occasion to suppose that
some irresponsible scribbler is trying to defraud us; we skip all that,
and hasten to revel in the blood-curdling particulars and be happy.</p>
<p><br/> <br/> <br/> <br/> <br/> <br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />