The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 11, 1937 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Luther Register and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Celebrate Steel Plow's Centennial
Julio Kelenzi fainons New York sculptor is shown putting the finish-
ag touches to the allion commemorating the one hundredth anni-
ersary of John Deere's steel plow wl1e Cynthia Hope looks on The
Ytedallion will be used ii the national celebration tins year honoring
r)teie whose achievement symbolized the rapid conquest of the prairie
ltatts and the advancement of agriculture in general
'Scaling of Matterhorn
Now 13ccomes Fasy Task
Engineering Device Now
Aids Amateur Climbers
Washington D C—A 37passen
er cage on a steel cable now
auls nmdern mountain climbers
1art way up the Italian side of
he Matterhorn thus aiding even
mateur climbers to conquer the
nce difficult peak
The Matterhorn remained be-
lo ond man's reach until 1865 when
ptirty of SekT11 attained the hither-
unsealed summit" sx75 the Na
ional Geographic society "During
the descent four of the seven pio-
ricers fell to their death on a glacier
t011r thousand feet below
"Two days later the unconquer-
Aible' peak was readied again Since
then the Matterhorn has become
iincreasingly popular with skilled
Iclanbers Now as man) as two
dozen may be toiling up the hair-
tais'ng trail in a single day But
tit least 39 have lost their lives on
--- —
!1) BY SEN kTORS
The target of no less than seven
civil suits totaling $70000 is Mrs
Ellen French Vanderbilt Fitzsimons
(above) widow of Alfred Vanderbilt
End wife of Paul Fitzsimons The
suits were tiled recently at Newport
R I on behalf of seven itepublican
state senators of Rhode Island to
whom Mrs Fitzsimons is alleged to
have referred s "yellow dogs'' and
"traitors to their party"
the dangerous ascent or in coming
down which is even more perilous
"As high as twenty-severs Wash-
ington monuments one atop another
the Matterhorn soars above a ring
ef S nOW-C ripped summits like the
front peak el a tiara The moun-
tain wears a glacier flung glitter
ing over one shoulder and above
a tall sloping collar of snow The
actual peak rises to heights where
the winds allow no snow to rest
Lilt sweep it down from the stark
rocky top
No rrimrose Path
This pyramidal summit has pre-
eipitaus walls one of them over-
hanging which fortined it against
chmhers almost a century after
31ont Blanc hi been conquered
The Matterhorn was the last great
Alpine peak to surrender Although
rocks have been blasted away and
ropes fixed to the more hazardous
reaches the trail to the top is
still no primrose path
"The motaiita in's international
eidlooli is nut due exclusively to
tFe many countries from
climbers come It actually can
claim two countries as its place (if
residence SwiLerland and Italy
Their boundary line crosses the
summit dividing the roof-tree ridge
so that one end is Italian the oth-
er Swiss The latter is the higher
according to Swiss yardsticks by
just 43 inchesi—I4705 feet Only five
Alpine peaks are higher
"Pride in the Matterhorn how-
ever is greater than that figure
would indicate For it is (me of the
two highest peaks in which Italy
has even a share Switzerland par-
ticularly cherishes i t mountain
giants since it contains only twa-
thirds of the Alps and the two high-
est peaks are not wholly within its
boundaries Mont Blanc is in
France iind Monte Rosa laps over
into Italy aS does the 11atterhorn
"Alpinists rit the lop of the Mat-
terhorn in clear weather are as
breathless from the view as froin
climbing They can see miles of
ice and snow and valley strips of
green in three countries: the sur-
rounding peaks of Switzerland dis-
tant Mont Blanc in France and
southern mountains subsiding into
the Lconbardy plain of Italy
Ilas Several Names
"International prominence has
won the Matterhorn several BallieS
Italians have been known to call
it the Becca and Monte Silvio
French-speaking Swiss refer to it as
Mont Cervia or simply Le Cervin
'the stag' for the proud ‘vild way
it tosses its head Matterhorn has
been interpreted as the peak above
the meadow' but its more orthodox
German meaning is pointed out as
'the dim peak since its ice
shrouded outline emerges only dim-
ly from clouds
"For generations it was feared
as a hauthed mountain the home
of the Wandering Jew the strong-
hold of the old man of Becca—a
phrase to frighten children Valley
dwellers thought the unvisited
summit bore ruins of a city where
evil spirits lurked to bounce rocks
down against ambitious climbers
Avalanche after avalanche swept
down the rocky sides with such he
Hcii Are ENpcn4Ne Francv IYNcoNen
liospitelity Costs Republic 50 and as the cost IN urages 11111klt
$150 a day the total expenuthue
Million a Year
for the year 1935 was :mire than
$7000000
Fl""nPi — France spends Furthermore 43(i foreigners were
nearly S000O000 a year to main- sent to asylums in and around Paris
lain its old reputatiin of keeping during the same period Fourteen
its (loots open to foreigners and of the most inportant of these men-
therebY its "f Land of tal homes together required MONO
Refuge"
for board transport and repatria-
This is the huge F1111 required to tion expenses The total amount
cover hospaill court and schooling u ssistanoe to A
Al Al
Al
expenses as well s the unumploy- ""
enners of tie laris region i s esti-
ment dole to fOrc'grers rcsdiug
France mated tit cpproximately $1000000
Official state7nnts estimate A large amount is spent yearly
aghtly more tilon 400o0 unem- on schooling for foreigners
ployed person tie state an Almost 13 per cent of criminals
ver cent are unera YC:d in French prisons are foreign-
ployed per !Is His !le stale an ers and last Year France srent
AN( rag(f lju more than $125000 on just keeping
fore mole n $10!noo!ou is s-ent j them Under lock and key Several
yei ly Fraj rLia Un- hundred thousand have to in added
err iloyed to this sum for expenses involved
I
for hosptJ: jrisniu in the pollee checkup on tens
116 alone ca1 f f(Ygn- The $:100i10011a rgure is said to
7 T! ey too cr titoled have teen reesry t nil
6 0f C1 t-Jrtun expenses ih th
Dinosaur Tracks to Be
Protected From Thieves
Holyoke Mass—Dinosaur tracks
which have been imbedded in sand-
stone here for Eipproximate13 150-
000000 years without causing much
of a stir are to be protected against
thieves
The recent theft of several im-
vrints clitseled from a ledge has
spurred the chamber of commerce
unit trustce-- of public reservations
to act
The itriprItiri are to be protected
i IMIlqrliCtIHrl by the Massachu-
setti ltenartment of Public Works
tt a retalptlig wall around the area
iracks abouncL A four-
laghiviiv to make the area ac-
t to Inotorr4s also will be
built At preent it is impossible to
autcinottile along the coun-
try road leading to the section and
it is difficult to reach it afoot
Mud iocks stumps and washouts
now combine to make the area
practict11y inaccessible to the pub-
lic Nothing has ever been done to
preserve the footprints and as a me-
suit Many 01 them Hie under piles
oi sand und loose rock
They were discovered in 1858 by
Prof Edward Hitchcock of Amherst
college
To WED HOOVER'S SON
Miss Margaret Caber ly Los Ange-
les debutante will become the bride
of Allan Ilenry Hoover thirty-year
old son of former President and
Mrs Hoover some Mine in June it
has been iinnounced by Nir and
Mrs W B Coherly of Los Angeles
parents of the bride
quency that the 'Alittierhorn was
dubbed the London Bridge of Al-
pine Peaks'
"Untraveled natives once be-
heved it WilS the highest mountain
in the world Few of them had seen
the other side of it for their lioad
WOLIki lie over the Theodule pass
and its glacier int() Italy That
some bold trivelers ventured
through the glacier-paved pass is
proved by ancient Roman coins
found nearby
"Travel is far simpler around the
Matterhorn today frailroath run to
Zermatt on the Swiss side and to
Breuil on the Italian side and the
cable railway is on its way to join-
ing these two resort towns For
climbers who Nvnture skyward be-
yond the realm of mechanical trans-
portation there are huts to provide
shelter straw mattresses blankets
and a cup of tea"
Granite Dust Mask Protects Workers
Not for lecp-sea di ihg i1 not for service in the Spanish war are
these odd appliances that these men vear They are to be used for
construction work on a nev road to the national park at Yosemite Calif
and are dust masks which will prevent inhaling rock particles as these
men help cut 1hrou0 preOtitous Nv ails of stone A new Oak Flat road
costing $300000 a mile NvIll be built to provide mete convenient access to
beautiful Yosemite
after foreigners throughout France
1935
Largest Whaling Ship Is
Manned by Crew of 320
London England — The largest
and most modern whaling factory
in the world has left Springfield
for the antarctic
It is known as the Terje Viken
and also is the largest tanker and
has a greater freight-carrying ca-
pacity than any other NT ssel
When fully ladden the displace-
ment is 43000 tons The fuel tank
capacity is so great that the ves-
sel could steam full peed for eigh-
teen months covering a distance
equal to six times round the world
without calling at any port
Capt Gullik Jensen master of
the whaler has a crew of 320
Until March 7 the Terjr Viken
Nv i 1 operate from South Georgia
It will load fuel oil at Curacao and
at South Georgia will be jarred by
seven whale catchers each of about
320 tons which sailed from Norway
recently
THE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
1
A New Memorial to Stephen C Foster
America's "Tragic Troubadour" Elmo Scott —
I
7' r-
" '17'o E DIED poor but he
'
- I left to his fel-
°
low-Americans a
ii 0-4 t
'i
" i- 'i''''" 'I
dies 11i1:i1(fli nt-li(:1
‘(:
been t tiiir favor
it( s for nearly thri c-iit iarters
of a century--sui l iings as
"i‘ly Old Kentucky 'flume"
"Massa's in de Cold Cold
Ground" "Old -Ifolks at
Home" "Come Alert lqy
Love Lies DreanIing" ''Oh
Susannah" and "'e!ly Vas a
Lady"
And now—such is the irony
of fate—they are building a
memorial which w ill cost half
a million dollar3 to honor
Stephen Collins Foster in
whose pocketbook was found
when he died : cents in
coins and "shin plasters"
Civil war paper TiMney The
memorial will staitil on the
campus of the University of
Il'ittsburgh in the shadow of
Pitt's famed Cat fiedral of
Learning and it will be dedi-
cated early this year (lur-
ing Pitt's celebration of its
growth in 150 't ears 'from
log cabin to skyscraper"
Funds for the erection of the
Foster Memorial horlding vere
raised by the Tuesday Musical
club of Pittsburgh in co-operation
with the univc'sity and with
musical clubs in 25 other states
In it will be a 'hosier shrine"
containing the col!ect:ou of Fos-
teriana which Joseph K Lilly of
Indianapolis Ind has gathered
together at a coA of oprc'oxi-
mritely $160000
This collection tt d its cim:00c
Fletcher Hodges vlio for si x
years directed the gathering of
the original Foster manuscripts
first editions books and personal
belongings of the song writer
arrived at the Cathedral of
Learning recently and began
storing away these priceless rel-
ics of "America's Tragic Trouba-
dour" As soon its the neWly-
compicted stone work on the in-
terim of the menlorial is fiedhed
he will ITIOVe the C011eetiffi) to its
place in the shrine where under
the terms of Mr Iiillys gift
they shall 'belong to AllieriC"
The building iii ‘vhich this
Fosteriana will find a Louie is
adjacent to the main building
of the Memorial which contains
an auditorium seating i-ibout 750
persons with rehearsal and re-
ception rooms below It has been
built of stone to harmonize 'with
the other buildings of the Cathe-
dral quadrangle in the heart of
Oakland Pittsburgh's "civic cen-
ter" Depicts Foster Characters
Leaded windows vial colored
medallions depicting the charac-
ters in Foster songs will be in-
stalled this spring The memorial
room connected with the audi-
torium foyer by a covered pas-
sage will house the Foster col-
lection and will be open to the
public Students of Festers life
and times ‘vill have access to
the research facilities of the Lil-
ly collection
The collection includes literal-
ly "everytinng under the sun"
relating to the composer Theie
are hundreds of hooks in ‘cliich
he is mentained—some in only a
sentence—including Aume mod-
ern histories of jazz
One of the rare personal effects
is the pocketbook Foster carried
when he died containing the 'A
cents anti a scrap of paper on
lxhich ‘Vas written "Pear friends
ody i ooe of the valued
articles
His Most Popular Sting
One large bookcase ready for
installation in the Foster Memo-
rial contains 500 phonograph
recordings of every Foster
some made especially but most
—including the Japanese vrsion
of 'Day Old Kentucky Horne"—
produced for commercial sale
Alany songs such as the
popular -Old Folks At Horne"
which had 250 editions before
ll100 and limy more since ap-
pear in several 'versions
Second most potiukir the
classification based on numbers
of ed1tio4s published is "My Old
Kentucky Home" according to
llodges "Massa's in de Cold
Cold Ground" ranks third and
for learnt place "Old Black Joe"
"Oli Susannah" are tied
SA of the rarest items in the
(cliection are manuscripts front
Stephen Foster's hand for Eo:-:gs
containing both Nvordi
One notebook in the collec-
tcni 220 pageS long coil ains
practically all his draftSt for
Ncrscs writtea lietween 1151 and
Ia athlition to tlie Lil"y col-
lection the Foster Erine will
d:tipiy cttier eoetriliutions One
is the cumposer's flute given to
the uniVtirSity ty the grardsion
ti a personal friend cf the musi-
cti1 genins
riticently rinnooriced too was
the gift to the university tiy the
Arrcv Vt' Mellon Educiiitienal
First rages of "Massa's in Ile Cold Cold Ground"
and gentle hearts" probably the
last thing Foster wrote and the
likely title for a song it too
is in the collecti
Eighteen letters WI' itten by
Foster principally to members
of his family in Pittsburgh in-
cluding his brother Morrison
one of the few contemporaries
to appreciate his genius are also
included
Fosters melodeon only four
and a half octaves in range and
hence not suitable for the finger-
ing of a composer seeking a mei
Architect's drawing of the Stephen Collins Foster Memorial on the campus of the University ot
Pittsburgh It will house a "shrine" containing a priceless collection of Fosteriana
STLIIIEN COLLINS FOSTER
vom the portrait painted by Thomas flicks hi
and Charitilile Trust cf a por-
trait ef Foster which belonged to
the famed Thomas G Clarke ccl-
lection of American portraits
A Portrait of roster
The portrait 25 by 30 inches
and in an excellent state of pres-
ervation shows the composer ln
a three-quarter length pose and
depicts him as a young man in his
early twenties It was painted
by Thomas Hicks a noted artist
for Firth Pond & Co of New
York who were the publishers of
Foster's music Foster gave the
artist only one sitting Whether
the artist was not satisfied with
1he portrait or whether the pub-
lishing firm cancelled the order
cannot be ascertained and no
definite statement can be made
in tins regardThomas Hicks the
artist gave the portrait to
liam lb ks a prominent
thant of Brooklyn who was au
admirer of Foster William
flicks died in Iti95 His wdow
gave the liortrait to her grand-
daughter Mary Elizabeth Post
Holmes who in turn gave it to
her daugher Mary Elizabeth
Case she being the last of the
family to own the portrait and
who sold it in the summer of
1935
The reason for erecting a
memorial to Foster in Pittsburgh
lies in the fact that he was horn
in the Lawrjnceville seetion of
that city inuch of his ca-
eer Nvas spent there and his body
lies in Allegheny cemetery not
far frotn las Lirthplace beside
those of his Lther and mother
Cons4ler1ng the phie which he
and his songs hold in the Lents
of his COUlit3-yalen it is appro-
pifite that the birthday of the
nation should also be his birth-
day For he was born on July
4 102fi and at noon on that day
the ninth child of William B
and Eirta Foster was ushered
into the world to the tune of
"Hail Columbia" "Yankee Poo-
dle" "hail to the Chierand "The
Star Spiingied Ilanner" played
by blaring bands as Pittsburgh
celebrated ihe 50th anniversary
of the signing of the Declaration
of Independence
William Foster was at present
to k‘ieleonie his youngest for as
a prosiiicrous merchant tractor
and a leading citizen of the com-
munity he had been made an
as'- tant 10 the mayor of Pitts-
burgh in the conduct of the In-
dependence Day celebration So
Eliza Foster endured her travial
alone and it WZ7: she v-ho named
her latcit born Stephen Ccilns
for the seri of a neighbor nitd
cniiciliood friend of hors a little
boy who Lad died just hefere
her WA-11 !-:(:1 was LOVII
The Child llusician
'Ike youngest member of a
large family Stephen was both
petted and spoiled Lut he
s(ents never to have Leon very
ell undtirstood by the other Fos-
ters lie shoted an aptibide for
carlYe Whel he UPS two
he would place his sster's guitar
on the floor and 14inding over
it pick out harmonies frorn its
strings When he was seven he
was taken into a music store by
one of his brothers There he Faw
a flageolet picked it up and was
playing a tune upon it before his
brother reahred what he was
At the age of thirteen Stephen
was taken by his older brother
'William to Towanda Pa so he
could attend Athens academy at
Point not far away But
the boy WaS homesick at Athens
iind spent much of his time with
his brother at Towanda attend-
rig the 'Towanda academy as
well as the one at Tioga
lie not a particularly apt
i-lialent and llUt the wity
Lon:ince there to this period
in las career is that during this
time lie composed Ills first narsic
"The Tioga Waltz" arranged for
foar flutes rind written for the
commencement exercises at
Athens On that oecasion Stephen
played the leading part himself
while three other students played
the remaining parts
la l841 Stephen entered Jeffer-
son college at Carimisburg Pa
18 miles from his home at Pittirl-
burgh and stayed in this institu-
tion jnA Ft"1'11 days 'Then over-
come hy homesickness he left
college never again to seek a
fol-11 education A year later
lie corripofirrd the mimic of los
firi-t song 'Open Thy Li-Mire
l'Arn e" a pocin 'written I y Gehrge
Iiilurris which had appi aired
a istlirliiiiieut to tile New Minor
As a giiy young Haile of bine-
teen in Pittrliurgh :Foster Lad
a ff doyen Loon conipaiaog5
ytfl s of Lis ciwn age who niet
regularly twice a v r(: to sing
Simplirn's Lomie They troaght
thoir aid guitars with
them rind cared thenhirhes
'irriiniglits of the Sialare Tabhi"
It was for this firma) that fne-
Chen wroie 1Thiny of in3
com(t irwludmg
'Louisiana "Uncle Ned'
rind "Oh Susannah" The latair
was immediately taken uo hy
the minstrel shows of which
there were a great number then
on the road
For this song Foster received
$100 iin event which determined
career for him "Lnagine my
delight in receiving $100 in
cash!" he wrote later "Though
this song was not succesiifill
yet the two $50 bills I received
fir it had the eireet of stinting
rne on ray present vocation"
Disputed Aulluirship
Then E P Christy head of
Christy's Minstrels asked hill) to
write a song for him to sing be-
fore it was published and the
result was the world-famous "Old
Folks at Dome" or as it is more
familiarly k n 0 NV n "Suwance
River" By permitting Christy
to sign his name instead of I'us-
ter's to this song the composer
obtained an advance of $15 Later
he received more than $2000 in
royalties from its sales but he
had a great deal of difficulty in
establishing his authorship f or
Christy copyrighted it in his own
name
The decade 1250 to IP110 was
Stephen Foster's heydey In ifilA
he was married to Jane Mc-
Dowell In 185'2 he wrote
"Massa's in de Cold Cold
Ground": began efforts to have
himself acknowledged a s t h
rightful author of "Old Folks at
Home" and with his wife took
that memorable steamboat trip
te New Orleans the rich fruit
of vhich was to be the song "My
Old Kentucky Home" copy-
righted in 1253
But Fosters married life was
net a happy one Ile and
his who lived for a few years
with Stephen's family in Pitts-
burgh then moved to N7ew York
There the composer yielded more
and more to the temptation of
strong drink until at last his wife
loft him mainly because she had
to earn a living for herself and
their child Marion
Foster died on January 13
in Bellevue a charily hospital
in Nov Volt City In his clothes
they found the small purse con-
taining 33 cents and a slip of
paper with five rem-Oiled words
On it They wore "Dear friends
and gentle hearts" Says John
Taker lloward in his biography
of Foster:
''No doubt this was to have
been the title of an unwritten
song but whatever its intent tile
phrase describes quite perfectly
the dear friend and gende heart
who added Old Folks at Home'
and a &limn other immortal songs
to the world's spiritual riches"
Ncwsr:per Unlon
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Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 11, 1937, newspaper, March 11, 1937; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2068193/m1/4/?q=coaster: accessed June 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.