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Show CACTI E AMERICAN, LOGAN, UTAH Twice a Cold as Zara Tha weather bureau eaya that tha expression twice as cold aa aero" ha no physical meaning bee os w hare no aero of cold, or plsc from which to count colL W only count heat. The question Is much like a man has only $100 to hi nsm; how much would he hav tf ha were twice aa poor? Thera la no answer, because w count In riches, not In poverly. W know what ha would hare If half aa rich, but twice aa poor bus no meaning. When wa say twice as cold" we probably refer to a rough estlmatt of our and not to the rending of a thermometer. Ne.l la Thors far Safoty Hhtt-- tha chiil! cctu fiat, throughout both tha thorny rauclaw and lota slope leading up to the Santa Rita tnountalna aeen from Tucson, you find cactus wren nests, "tha most conspicuous ornithological feature of the Their large at ra vr colored, retort shajied form stand out strikingly though well protected by an armament of thorni from hawk, 'llnr enemies. (if 64 busl.e or tree, fou",n I'loru-cla",ur Magazine, 35 were ad- by being aafeguarded ,lonllylnkll8 'hk rl"nll" of the red flowered mistletoe, whoa 'berries offer desert food to the bludt pbaluupepla. Abova WAS aMIEIR.IICAS E TROUBADOUR " botory. ernliireil standing Pitta-bitrL'Ii- Is to tlie fm Stephen was taken by his older brother, William, to Towanda, Pa., so he could attend Athens academy at Tioga Point, not far away. Rut the boy .was homesick at Athens and spent much of his time with his brother at Towanda, attending the Towanda academy as well as the one at Tioga Point He was not a particularly apt student and about the only importance there Is to this period In his career is that during this time he composed his first music, The Tioga Waltz, arranged for four flutes and written for the commencement exercises at Alliens, upon which occasion Stephen played the leading part himself, while three other students played the remaining parts. In 1S41 Stephen entered Jefferson college at Canonsburg, Pa., IS miles from his home at Pittsburgh, and stayed in this Institution just seven days. Then, overcome by homesickness, he left college, never again to seek a formal education. A year later he composed the music for his first song Open Thy Lattice, Love. a poem written hy George P. Morris which had appeared in a supplement to the New Mirror. song, without title It was Issued as a page, with this heading on the first page two-pag- e OPEN THY LATTICJ3 LOVE Composed for and dedicated to Miss Susan E. Pentland Of Pittsburgh hy L. C. Foster Lines from the New Mirror . Poor Stephen, the pubSays his biographer: lisher failed to print his name correctly on his very first song Perhaps It was prophetic of the long list of misfortunes that were to be his throughout his career. It was during this period that the first negro minstrel shows began to appear on the American scene and Pittsburgh seems to have enjoyed Its share of them. Foster found the songs of the current minstrel shows crude, vulgar ditties that struck the popular fancy, but which neverthe ! nig in 10 of be 1 t emlnre fur reiiiurlea to come. For be was ho wrote aonie of a nation's best the limn hoed ballad nml a new biography of Iilm by Join Tl.er llounnl, published by tlie Thoniim r Y. Crowell company, the appropriate title of "Sephen Foster. America' Troubadour." Considering the phiee wliieh Foster and til soups bold In the heart of bin countrymen. It i also appropriate that the birthday of the tuition should also lie hi birthday. For he waa born on July t, I sjil, the fiftieth anniversary of the signing of the lieeluratlon of Independence, and at noon on that day be was ushered Into tie world to the tune of llnll Columbia." "Yam kis Itoodle." "Hall to the Chief" anil The Slnr SpHtuded thinner," played by l.larlng bands, while raution with their noisy salutes shook the y round so heavily that some were afraid they would d. slurb the delicate, though accustomed, operation at the White Cottage In I .aw retire-vlllc- . tn. (now a district In the city of doing. At the age of thirteen tha out noted In t b e Washington political alto a tlon these day the renewed courage and strength being gathered by tlie minority. There no longer any doubt about 1L The wlnorhy In the guiernuient, consisting, first, of and, Republican who secondly, of old line Demm-ratcannot quite follow all llema of the New Deal, have begun to pull back. For the first time since President Itooseielt came in, there Is at least a real opposition party," Astute aiudenla of politics and government Insist It is a most healthy sign and that It will make for better government In the end. There ha been opposition to a great many of the Roosevelt policies heretofore, but a considerable portion of It lias been Just silent mum bllng and grumbling. Most of them seemed to be afraid of the widely advertised Roosevelt popularity throughout the country. Mr. Roosevelt is popular, more so, perhaps, than any President we have had In many years, but the support so represented doe not apjiear to run to all of his proH)sals. It certainly does not apply In favor of all of hls subordinates. Tlie opposition now apiiears to have found out these fuels and they are concentrating their attack. I noticed the first signs of tt In debate In the house of representatives and In the senate w here a desire was, and Is, plainly evident to call a halt New Deal plans are not being swallowed without mastication any more. The most Important phase of the trend, however, appears to be In tlie tendency of the opposition to question continued enactment of every kind of legislation under the guise of emergency needs. Everything tip to this time has been pushed through with a loud cry of emergency I Some of It, If not most of tt, was emergency legislation. But now everybody with a pet scheme Is rushing In with It as "emergency" legislation, and It Is an overworking of that word that has brought about concentration of the opposition forces, according to the consensus that I have been able to gather. From what I have been able to see, of the old story It Is a of giving the calf too much rope; tt Is choking Itself to death. The Importance of this trend, perhaps, Is best pointed out by tlie fact that there are dozens of units of the New Deal setup that are predicated wholly on the fact that they were proposed as a part of the general program for recovery. I think none can doubt that the depression has presented an emergency Just as great as any arising under a war. But when any war wns concluded the emergency was over, then and there, and emergency legislation was neither passed by congress nor sustained In courts. One might possibly conjecture a bit as to where the emergency ended in the fight to get the economic structure back on a prosperous footing, but the new developments certainly show a considerable number of lenders in congress and outside who are unwilling to have the emergency continue forever. It might be natural to assume that the movement to halt enactment of emergency legislation had developed naturally from tlie fact that this is an election year for the 435 members of the house and some 35 members of tlie senate. Political analysts of long service and able judgment assure me, however, that this is not the whole case. They say that existence of a campaign probably has strengthened the backbone of some of the opposition, but that the trend more properly represents the divergence of thought In the two schools of students of government. If that be true, as it appears to be, then we may expect to see more and more assaults on the Roosevelt position. Every time he slips with an error of judgment or on had advice and he is human and those slips have and will come the opposition can be counted on to make the most of it. One Washington. Cy ELMO SCOTT WATSON T WAS a Sdiich KiIiiii-u- l writer who un-rHi. in two reniurlt-- a ago. nlil in ftiil'Kintire : "I care imt nliu make mu Inn laws If I have the making nf Hit hullitiN," Iml II remained fur an Ami rli-nto give real elgnltU'nnce to ami usually (Iml oft quoted B.IJ Inc. Willi bill few rxrep-llnim- . Hie fmiie of the hundred of our lawmaker ban eeureely lurvlved their br.ef moment on the alnce of bill the fume of Stephen Foster hn for nearly a evnlury and seem llkeli The reference to the aceustomed operation I that the new memlier of the Foster family was the ninth child born to William R. and K!l;'a Foster and had Stephen been the firt, rather than the ninth child his wife had borne hint, William II. Foster might not have felt as free to absent himself from his home at noon on that 4t li of July." Rut that does not necessarily mean that such events were too com monplace to keep William Foster at the side of his wife. For he was a prosjierous merchant and trader, a leading rltlzen of the community on the banks of the Allegheny river and on that particular occasion on assistant to the mayor of Pillslmrgli In the conduct of the Independence I ay celebration a good reason for Ida absence from the White Cottage. A part of the celebration was an excellent dinner at which 1.1 toasts (In honor of the Thirteen Original States) were given and William Foster came second, as first vice president of the day, following the mayor, who drank to 'The I'nlted States of America.' Foster toasted The Indiqienileiioe of the L'lilted States , , . 'acquired by the blood and valour of our venerable progenitors. To us they bequeathed the dear bought Inheritance; to our care and protection they consigned It; and the most sarred obligations are upon us to transmit the glorious purchase, unfettered by power, to our Innocent and beloved offspring.' Was he thinking of his latest offspring, of whose coming by this time he must have known I" Under the circumstances the newcomer In the Foster household perhaps should have been given a name In keeping with the Importance of that day, for it was one of the most significant Independence days in our history In that It saw the Thomas Jefferdeath of two former Presidents son and John Adams. A month Inter a relative, writing to the little hoys older sister. Charlotte Foster, ashed How does . , . the little Hero, for I prophecy 1m will he one, being horn on so great and eventful a day. You certainly ought to call him JefTerson or Adams and no other Rut Ids mother thought other name. . . wise. She named him Stephen Collins for the son of a neighbor and childhood friend of hers, a little boy who had died just before her son was horn. Tlie youngest member of a large family, Stephen was both petted and spoiled, but he seems never to have been very well understood by the other Fosters, nis aptitude for music came Into evidence early. When he was two, he would place his sister's guitar on the floor and, bending over It. pick out harmonies from Its strings. When he was seven he was taken Into a music store by one of his brothers. There he saw a flageolet, picked it up and was playing a tune upon It before his brother realized what he was land-arape.- less were lyrics and songs that In spite of their vulgarity actually represented something definitely American. Stephen made of this class of music a literature thut Is well worth preserving he brought artistry and sincerity to a medium that before his entry had reeked of the alley and the barroom." The gayest of them all Is "O, Susanna! written when Stephen was a blithe young blade of nineteen. He had a half dozen boon companions, youths of his own age, who met regularly twice week to sing at Stephen's home. They brought their banjos and guitars with them, and called themselves Knights of the Square Table.' was for this group that Stephen wrote many of ORIGINAL COVER. his finest and earliest songs, Including "LoulsI DESIGN OF A POPULAR FOSTER SONG ana Relle, Uncle Ned" and O, Susanna!" Tlie min all the was taken (All photograph from Howard' latter Stephen Fosup by Immediately strel shows, of which there were a great number ter, Americas Troubadour, courtesy, Thomac Y. then on the road. It also became the marching Crowell company.) s song and the campfire song of the on their way to the gold fields of California. Foster received $100, an be Immortalized In the Old Folks at nome." For "0. Susanna event which determined his career for him Ilis brother, Morrison Foster, told it first In hls of Stephen that the composer wanted Imagine my delight In receiving $100 In cash ! biography he wrote later. "Though this song was not suc- the name nf some southern river two syllables In cessful, yet the two $.10 bills I received for It length, rejecting both Pedce and Yazoo, which hnd the effect of starting me on my present Morrison suggested. Then the latter took down an atlas and Suwannee was found. That's it vocation. Of all the popular songs that had their birth exactly, the brother reports Stephen as saying, on American soil In Fosters time, his were the and continues: He left the office, ns wns hls without saying another word, only ones that lived. The others were sung for custom, abruptly, a year or two and forgotten. Curiously enough, and I resumed my work." Although Mr. noward admits the ring of auStephen Imagined that his songs would be forgotten as quickly as the others. It never seemed thenticity, he doubts the exactness of the account to occur to him that they might have the seeds of the Incident as here set down. We know of Immortality In them. Proof of this was to be from Stephen's workbook, he says, "that Pedee found In his willingness, after receiving $1,000 was probably not Morrisons suggestion, but In royalties for one of hls songs In six years, to rather Stephens first Idea, one with which he sell the copyright for $100 In the belief that Its was dissatisfied." The decade 1S30 to 1S60 was to be Stephen day was nearly speDt and It would not be likely to bring in more than that So he presented Fosters heydey. In 1830 he was married to Jane In 1832 he wrote Mnssas In the O, Susanna I and Old Uncle Ned to W. C. McDowell. Peters, a friend of the family who was In the Cold, Cold Ground; began efforts to have himmusic publishing business and who proceeded to self acknowledged as the rightful author of Old Folks at Home," and with hls wife took make $10,000 out of them. Fosters Indifference to what became of his that memorable steamboat trip to New Orleans, songs led to their being copyrighted by other the rich fruit of which was to be the song, My persons. Even in the case of Old Folks at Old Kentucky Home, copyrighted In 1853. What s and claim the state of Kentucky may have upon this a song which became Home, which Mr. Howard believes has been printed song Mr. Howard discusses at length. Stephen more often than either Home, Sweet Home or had cousins living In the beautiful mansion "Annie Laurie, he authorized, for a small con known as Federal Hall In Bardstown, and that slderatlon, the publication under the name of he visited them there Is certain. Beyond that E. P. Christy, who headed the Christy minstrels. Howard Is not willing to go. The house was reMorrison Foster has related how hls brother cently purchased by the state and made a Foscame to him with a letter from E. P. Christy ter shrine. However, although he was to write asking the composer to write a song for him to literally hundreds more of songs, this marvelous good-nigpiece, with Its haunting sing before It was published. line, was Morrison told Stephen not to do it unless never to be surpassed by Stephen. Fosters newest biographer treats the subject Christy paid him. A form of agreement was drawn up and the paper was sent to Christy. of his marriage cautiously, declaring that Jane Afterward, when the song had become closely doubtless put up with a great deal of nonsense associated with Christys name and had been and that it would have required a saint to becopyrighted with his name as author and com come the perfect wife for Stephen Foster. But It poser, Stephen wrote to Christy to permit him to seems that Jane had some Irritating ways, such On as talking during concerts, which must have claim It as his own. ne wrote humbly; receipt of your free consent to this proposition, been exasperating Indeed to her sensitive huswill, if you wish, willingly refund you the band. Mr. Howard thinks It probable that she money which you paid me on that song, though nagged him. They had a child, Marion, but the For example, and as indicating It may have been sent me for other consideradreamy Stephen may not have been very good how the lineup is changing, attentions than the one in question, and I promise In at family life. His efficient wife subsequently tion need only be addition to write you an opening chorus In my learned to make her own living as a telegrapher. called to the op- Changing in other and best style, free of charge, any way They lived for a few years with Stephens l,os!tion tlmt lma Lineup to advance your interests hereafter. I find I family in Pittsburgh, then moved to New York been encountered cannot write at all unless I write for public ap- where the composer yielded more and more to In the house on new agricultural legprobation and get credit for what I write. strong drink. Jane left him only because she islation. Most of these bills are Although Stephen had told Christy that he had to earn her living, and, when he died, she designed to go further than the procould accomplish little so long as Old Folks at and Morrison hastened to New York together. gram laid down in the agricultural Home" stared him in the face with another Stephen Collins Foster died on January 13, adjustment act, and to use compulman's name on It and although he expressed 1804 still a young man and he died almost sion where the present New Deal the hope that the singer would appreciate an unrecognized, a patient In a charity hospital," philosophy has been based on volauthor's feelings In the case, there Is no record Bellevue In New York City. In the pocket of his untary from agriculof a reply from Christy, and It was a long, long clothes they found a small purse containing Just ture itself. There are half a dozen on the name Foster's song. 38 cents and a slip of paper with five penciled or more time before appeared pieces of legislation, the naDear friends and ture of which need not be recounted Although Morrison Foster said Stephen received words on it. They were: $500 for the song, he confessed to a friend In gentle hearts. here, that would give the federal New York that he got from $10 to $13 for hls No doubt this was to have been the title of government added control of farmtwo received he hut that from Christy, songs an unwritten song, but whatever its Intent, the ers' affairs. One of them, for incents a copy for the 100,000 copies of the first phrase describes quite perfectly tlie dear friend stance, would give the secretary of Patti Adelina exhausted. soon was edition which and gentle heart who added 'Old Folks at Home' agriculture authority to tell a farmand Christine Nilsson helped to make the song and a dozen other Immortal songs to the worid's er what to do with the land taken popular by singing it In their concerts. out of production hy his agreement spiritual riches." The story has often been told of how the to limit acreage of cotton, or w heat, Thus, the end of the sad saga of America' Suwannee river, a small stream iD Florida which Troubadour. or corn, or tobacco. Most observ- to came or even knew never of, saw, StepheD by Westers Newspaper Union. Forty-niner- ! world-famou- i1, era tier construe that legislation aa siting the government alomlute domination over the farmer, and 1 auiqiect that most farmer are not going to atand for that At any rule, this and other proposal are moved forward Iwaitse there la an emergency." Rut I hav teen ilgu of a reaction among the Copper Countries fanner. They are signs that never Butte, Mont, Is the richest and fatL from agriculRepresentative tural area have been getting mall most Important copper producing a M oriel, ttfi Anaconda from home and there are many the house niemler who now Insist 'mine being the largest The largknown deposit of native copIt Is time to call a halt Frankly, I hear frequent sharp declarations per ar in tha Keweenaw peninsuthat the professor In the adminis- la of northern Michigan. Chile, tration have gone fur enough. That South America, la said to have the largest coprr min In the world mean votes against the hill. Y'et the professor are hard wor- and also tha greatest known copreker. They never cease to turn out per reserve, though the copjier Afnew plans, and the proposal con- serves of the Belgian Congo In tinue to flow from the White House rica form a close second. to the CupItoL Among the newer T B aw Embalmsr project la one that proposes to esTlie course of atudy In one of the banka tablish a set of government to aid what the promoter deacrllie targe embalming school ts as foOrganic chemistry, physi as the small business. The plan con- llow: templates creation of the regional ology, anatomy, chemistry, morbid bank much after the manner of the anatomy, pathology, bacteriology, sanitation, Federal Reserve bank, with the hygiene, disinfection, modern preservation of tba human treasury supplying the Initiation capdead, medical Jurisprudence, algna ital to the extent of $1 10,000, (SKI. and testa of death, and bandaging. Here, again, Is an emergency Gotdfiach.s Lata Builders measure. It la pointed out, however, The golilfinehes are among the that the project latest of our native bird to build Banking for la designed for their Deals, usually delaying till permanency. It Is, tnduMirv until August It has been therefore, a move activity auggested that the reason for this by which the federal government, would be put Is that these birds like to line their through a with a thick layer of thistleInto the business of banking for In- nests down and this la not available dustry, and, of course, once that earlier. bapiiena, the system will hang on and on. It will hold so much comMany Bats Carry Bugs mercial paper, representing loans, Many bata as well as swallows that there really will be no time when tt can quit and retire from and pigeons are Infested with a species of Insect that greatly rebusiness. I was talking with a rather welt semble the ordinary house bedbug. known senator about the plan, the But according to the bureau of enother day, and he voiced hls pri- tomology, these bug belong to an vate objections most vigorously. He entirely different specie and do not human beings. suggested that there was grave dan- ordinarily attack loan Industrial of the system ger Ice and Snow Evaporate being strongly Influenced by politic Ice and anow will evaporate In and that this condition would surely lead to the making of loans Im- extremely cold weather even though properly secured, loan that no the temperature never gets near the sound bank would dnre make. melting point Washed clothing In I will tell you just how far that tha Arctlce and Antarctic region thing could go, he added. It could freezes stiff when first hung out but be dry tn a week's time. easily reach the .point where, If a business man wanted to borrow Treasure on Ocoaa Bod money, he would have to go Into the bank on the arm of an office Of all lost treasure tying on the holder." ocean bed, the largest tingle mass of Another piece of legislation that gold specie Is the $150,000,000 worth Is going to have rough sledding Is of coin In Vigo bay, off the Spanish the Roosevelt tariff adjustment pro- coast, which went down with the 40 posal. It says on the face of the vessels of tlie Spanish Flate fleet of bill that It Is emergency legislation. 1702. Down In the text, however, there is a provision that any of the InternaProgress of Dry Cleaning tional tariff agreements reached unThe process of dry cleaning was der provisions of the bill may be first employed In France about the renewed and that they will continue middle of the Nineteenth century. in force as long as one nation or the The work was done by hand and other, parties to the accord, do not the operations simple. Elaborate give notice of cancellation. The op- machinery was gradually Introduced. position holds this to be a proposal for permanent legislation under the Oldest Musical Instrument guise of emergency plans. A musical pipe made from a lion's Some of the few Republicans left tooth, found on the rollau mounIn the senate and house have been tains In Czechoslovakia Is believed chiding the Democratic leaders about to be the oldest musical Instrument administhe tariff proposals of the In the world with an estimated age tration because they would delegate of thirty thousand years. to the President and the tariff commission more authority to revise Persistent Innocence rates upward or downward than now There is a persistent Innocence, recallexists. The Republicans are said HI Ho, the aage of Chinatown, ing to their Democratic friends how that ennobles mankind. Each genthe Democrats fought against this eration la amazed to discover follies idea when It was proposed by Presi- and Iniquities that have endured dent Coolidge. through the ages." ' of,"1 at step-chil- Officials of the Department of Agriculture admit little about reported criticism they re-ceive. They con- Farmers tend that crit1' Object cisra Is to be ex pected and that, under the AAA plans being molded by Administrator Davis, the organization and rules are to be kept flexible. I understand, however, that there Is quite a bit of objection reaching the department about the necessity for farmers allowing government agents to examine their records. The reports I get are to the effect tlmt since most of the facts have to be gathered by county representatives of the Wash- ington government, many farmers do not like the idea of neighbors knowing all about their affairs. I have inquired around to find out whether there is any way that such a condition can be corrected and have found no answer, except the statements of the high officials who argue that there is little examination necessary. The condition seems to be one that must be expected If the concerted effort contemplated by the AAA principles of crop control are to be effective. The situation is one that obviously and naturally develops as the government wades further and further Into private business. Most persons recall the circumstances that came with the inauguration of the Income tax as a system of raising federal revenues. Business men objected vigorously to granting government agents the right to dig Into their books and records, but their fight was to no avalL Q by Wfcatem Newspaper Union. rt Egypt Does Not Cbawg Eg) PL the cradle of civilization, was great before either Greece or Romo waa born. The valley of tba Nile furnished the stage for tba greatest drams of tha past. Hera wera reared Egypt's stupeudooa pyramids, temples and monuments In the highest form of archttectura to honor her great, while tha rest of mankind wa living In rude huts. Time has made but alight changes tn the land of the pharaoh a. Egypt does not change. Swims Through SuJ The ocellated sand aklnk found In North Africa cannot move over the ground very rapidly but can bury Itself several feet below tba surface by burrowing In the sand of It desert habitat In a remarkably thort time. It baa been described a giving the appearance of swimming through the sand tn lta awlft burrowing. Woodchuck For Not Vatuohto The woodchuck ts of amalt Importance economically and lta fur ts so coarse that It baa tittle value. It la considered the least valuable of all our native and at such la seldom trapped. It ta the one animal that we would mlsa the least tf It disappeared entirely from our farm lands. Fly's Eyesight The greater part of the fly's bead ts made np of two remarkable eyea, each composed of thousands of facets, o that It ta enabled to see In nearly all direction. Besides these there are three small (ingle or simple eyes, placed at the top of the head between the two large compound eye. 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