D. D. Glover
David Delano Glover (January 18, 1868 – April 5, 1952) was a U.S. Representative from Arkansas's 6th congressional district, which was abolished through reapportionment in 1963.He served as delegate to several state conventions and a prosecuting attorney of the Seventh Judicial Circuit Court of Arkansas from 1913 to 1917.Six years later, Glover himself was denied renomination by the attorney John L. McClellan, then of Camden and formally of Sheridan, Arkansas, and later a U.S. senator.Mr. Glover, known for his talent as a trial lawyer, once commented on legal fees taken on contingency, “I don't know but one way to divide and that's by two.”[2] He is interred at Shadowlawn Cemetery in Malvern.[3] This article incorporates public domain material from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress