OCR Text |
Show .... THE PAYSOX CHRONICLE, PAYSOX, UTAH . 1 tHHHUHMCMCmMW ' ; 1CWS iNOiGo It t I FAVOR TULLE FOR THE WEDDING; LARGE TAPESTRY SHOPPING BAGS j a Privilege to Live in Utah we MANTI Heavy morality among livestock followed .he wake of a light snowstorm in Sanpote and Sevier counties recently. At Aland It was reported that several hundred lambs born during the night had died, and stockmen feared that early lambing would be almost a total loss. By ELMO SCOTT WATSON NCE upon a time a song trriter sat him down and composed a song about the difficulty of "keop-- r yl lug em down on the iL farm after theyve seen ruree. Although It Is probable that this particular writer bad no more accurate conception of real farm life than the average resident of New Yorks famous Tin Fan Alley, his song did reflect a certain condition In our national life which has been causing concern for a number of years. That Is the steady drift of population from the rural sections to urban centers and economists have been painting dark pictures of what will result if this movement from the farm to the city Is not checked. A somewjjat brighter picture, however, has recently been painted by a man whose position puts him In close touch with conditions throughout the country. lie is Merlin H. Aylesworth, president of the National Broadcasting company, one of the two big systems which Is providing dally entertainment and Instruction for millions of Americans, and In view of the Importance of the migration problem, there is considerable significance to the statement which he makes. He says: Th old refrain How're you goln o keep em down on the farm?" wae written before the advent of radio. For, even a decade ago, the clttee then as now the centere of education, antertalnment and almllar Influences that contribute to the eatlafactlon and enjoyment of life kept their favors well confined within their own bound-erleThe outsider who craved them had to go to tha city to enjoy them or do without. Today, however, thanks to radio, this Is changed. The best that the city has In music and the drama. In art and literature. In entertainment and Information, la available to the farm family as quickly and as fully as It I to the city dweller. The greateet opera and concert stars, the Jaszlc!'1 artists, the stars cf !if farm-to-clt- y country and city In terms of spiritual as well as material values, no single factor has played so Important a part as radio. It has been estimated that there are now In use 10,000,000 radio receiving sets which serve between 30,000,000 and 60,000,000 listeners. Just what percentage of these 10,000,000 sets are In farm homes Is unknown, but a survey made two or three years ago showed that one of every five farm homes In the United States has a radio set Considering the amazing growth of the radio industry, which has Increased by leaps and bounds ev ery year, It Is reasonable to suppose that that ratio has held Its own, If not actually Increased, so that tt would not be a bud guess to assert that one In every four, or perhaps even one In every three farm homes, now has a radio set The results of the survey referred to, made by the National Farm Itadlo council, revealed some Interesting facts in regard to the importance of the radio to the fanner. Its Importance In changing the marketing methods of entire groups of farmers was reflected In reports from 43 states. More than 40 per cent of the replies to the questionnaire sent out gave specific examples of cash savings effected by the use of radio und practically every report irat....f(vt t lire vaudeville and all speak or sing or for the resident of the farm or the country village as directly as they do for their metropolitan audiences One result of this Is noted In recent per-Ior- census statistics covering the shift In and population, as between of cities radio tt Is farms. Since the advent noted that not only has ths movement of population from th country to the cities been checked, but that a countermovement from the cities toward the farms Is gaining Impetus. In 19J7, foi Instance, 1.347,000 persons moved from our cities to the country. In the same drift from farm to city was year-th- s reduced by about 300.000 as compared with 1930 and 1925. But this, In my judgment, la only a beginning. What radio has done In the Isolation and past toward relieving the monotony of farm life Is only an Index of greater things to be done In ths future. Improved conditions of life on the farm are not, of course, due to radio alone. Automobiles, telephones and. to a very large and an Increasing degree, tha extension of electric facilities InK agrlcultural territory, have each played Important parts. They have provided the farm dweller with comforts and conveniences equal to those enjoyed In the city and have definitely Improved his economic opportunities and outlook But In maintaining morale on the farms, in keeping the young folks satisfied, In establishing contact between Advice Advice must not fall like a violent storm, bearing down ami making those to droop whom it Is meant to cherish and refresh. It must descend hr the dw npon the tendet herb, or softer like melting fishes of snow: H Jalisj the longer It dweiVCnpca and ;she deeper lt.lriR IntrVoe niind. If are few v ' fnv.'ihe humility Jre i ve. ftdt ,e thcre'ar ought,. It Is few who; bave .MfPorfulic' und value to the farmer of having market reports from 24 to hours earlier than they are obtainable through any other source or 43 medium. Typical of hundreds of reports of the farmers use of radio In marketing Is this one from a farmer living near Keytesvllle, Mo.: Itadlo reported hogs due to drop in two duys. Saved $150. In Shipped at once. same week put off haying because of storm warning. This prevented heavy loss of hay. radio In conducting this nation-wid- e Radio Farm National the survey council gathered and tabulated 44JkiO Individual expressions. The survey was conducted by the council In with 15 farm publications. 450 county agents, 200 boys and girls club leaders. 150 home demonstration agents, the National Grange, the Farm Bureau federation, American several hundred teachers of vocational agriculture, deans of 37 colleges und several radio stations. Ninety-fivper cent of fanner radio owners, the council said, think of their radios as a utility as well ns an amusement device. They think of e the discretion to convey It by a proper vehicle, and the quality the harshness nnd bitterness of reproof, against which nature Is npt to revolt, by a mixture of sweetening nnd agreeable Ingredients. Woodman News. How Tobacco Got Name irginla. where tobacco found growing before 1C"7, the nns called the plant npooke." term tobacco appears not to been a commonly used name for theus from a peplant, and It conies to In GUNNISON Fruit Is not suffering due to the fact that there has not been warm enought weather for the trees to blossom, and therefore the fruit trees are not endangered by the frost. Onion crops anil some other garden crops in the Gunnison valley were damaged by the storm although to what extent Is not known. SALT LAKE Directors of the Utah Woolgrowers association went on record as favoring the Colton bill for the regulation in the Vermont building recently. Resolutions were also adopted urging the orderly marketing of vrol and offering to make cash advances through the Utah Wool Marketing association, to local woolgrowe: s. SPRINGVILLE Another step was taken in the poultry industry here recently when V. Cornell Alendenhall stocked his poultry farm with 3,000 baby turkeys. This is the first large shipment of the Thanksgiving Birds to be received here. Bern Mendenhall will receive 3,000 more next week, hut he will transfer his birds to a farm on the west side of Utah lake. FARMINGTON Delore Nichols, county agent, said that little or no damage would be done to the onion crop of Davis county by the recent snowstorms. Very few acres of onions were planted in the county before March 15. Alost of the onion planting was done principally in Farmington and the south end of the county, as the ground in tha north end of the county hasn't been ready for planting. BINGHAM Bingham was loaded with 18 inches of new snow recently, and traffic even in the center of town was practically at a standstill. The city was guarding against a snowslide, riZRZirrir.AYij&waKrif- as the heavy fall of wet snow has proIt ns a utility because It brings to vided real snowslide weather. The them market reports from 24 to 4S highway between Salt Lake and Binghours earlier than obtainable In any ham was open to travel in a few hours other way. These enable the farmer but drifting snow slowed progress conto market his produce to the great- siderably. est advantage. SAUNA Early completion of the It Is, however, as an amusement, Salina canyon-Fislake road is asrather tiiun a utility device, that the sured, to Supervisor C. A. according radio Is playing an Important role Mattson of the Fish lake forest reIn satisfying the desire of the farm serve. Sam AL Jorgenson, W. 11. youth for entertainment and helping Brown, Max Cohen and former Ranto answer the question of Howre ger John Barnhard, representing the you going to keep 'em, etc. Thanks Salina Lions club, met with the counto radio, the farm boy today sits In commissioners of Sevier county ty the great national sporting events. to secure funds to match govMonday He attends, by proxy, the worlds ernment money to complete the highseries games, the great gridiron clasway. sics, national championship bouts of HUNTINGTON Eastern Utah conall sorts. He thrills at a reception to Lindbergh, at an address by the tinued to be favored with dry weather Iresldent from Washington. He not during the early week of April storms of central Utah. Favorable, perhaps, only knows what Is happening when It happens, but he Is enabled to feel from eome viewpoints, this spell of y a real seuse of participation In the weather may seriously hamper the ranges and crops, which the early event. The voices of grand opera stars, rain so favored, this year. It ha3 the masterpieces of music, both vocal been three weeks since any moisture and Instrumental, the latest dance fell, with some hot days intermingled tunes or vaudeville jokes are as fa- since then, and the plant life is beginmiliar to the farm family today as ning to feel the dryness, which the recent winds have aggravated. they are to city folks. Farm life, inSALT LAKE Prospects for spring deed, has entered a new era of comfort, convenience and satisfaction. and summer range for Utah livestock For In a very true sense, and to a have been 'Improved by snow3 and far greater extent than the governrains in Alareh, the range and livements census figures yet show, thi stock report for April 1, released recity Is moving to the country. That cently by Frank Andrews, federal staIs, the factors that made the city attistician, declares. For the past four tractive are rapidly becoming equally months, precipitation has been above available on the farms. And in this normal, the report explains. Stock-me- n evolution radio Is playing a major feel, judging from county reports. d-- f T comes ERE spring bride the most likely in tulle, for fashion has decided to array many a bride as well us bridesmaids in tulle, this season. To gowns j those planning for a wedding group, the idea of a bride and her attendants all in tulle presents a theme of fascinating possibilities. Fancy can paint no lov- Her picture than the bride clad in white tulle exquisitely fashioned with classic simplicity, sm- rounded by a coterie of bridesmaids, one in rose tuile, another in larkspur blue, one in lavender, another in pale yellow, perhaps another in delicate green. The scene suggests a lily surrounded by flowers of every gay hue. tor the bridesmaids to carry wee muffs made of flowers matched to the color of Ilieir frocks, wearing tiny caps or toques of the same flowers, makes the scene even more enchant-inglflowerlike. Speaking of flower caps or toques for the bridesmaids, the wearing of lints In stead of the usual picturesque shapes of wide brims, marks an innovation. When It comes to the fashioning of the brides gown, designers are handling tulle in entirely new ways. That Is, instead of indulging in flounces and frills and tiers, such as most of us associate with the styling of tulle, the modern interpretation Is a silhouette of featured simplicity. A re cent wedding gown of great beauty stresses this idea. In that tulle falls very full from the normal waistline of a fitted bodice of satin, there being not the faintest suggestion of flounce or the customary tiers. The hemline finishes with points outlined in silver tlireadwork. Styled with even greater simplicity Is the tulle and satin gown in the picture. Not only Is the veil and the train of tulle, but the skirt is veiled in tulle In such a way as to in no way mar its classic lines. The model illustrated confirms earlier predictions that utmost simplicity will he made titstanding In matter of bridal gowns snug-fittin- IN BRIDAL ARRAY The smartness of these bags Is their amazing dimensions perfectly enormous! They are two or three tines the size of an ordinary handbag-meas- ure between eieveD and twelve indies from side to side and as much as ten or eleven from top to bottom. Most of them are made of gay tapestry and wherever they are on display women cannot pass them by, being attracted not only by their decided newness, but their genuine practicality at once' appeals. Being so roomy and large they can be used In endless ways for shopping or us overflight bags. But pricx them especially an original model and determination to become the happy possessor of one of these coveted bags wavers, that Is, if Howone must couut the pennies. ever, heres a message of cheer to the woman who can sew even a little bit. are Many faneywork departments carrying materials with patterns and directions how to make." The metal or shell frames or mountings are bought separately. Very Inexpensive ones are available, the entire cost of material and frame being a mere fraction of the amount asked for the finished product. The pattern of the bag depends upon the style of frame used, so tt Is best to select the mounting first The miniature sketches In the picture Indicate the different patterns to be used, according to the frame to which the bag is to be sewed. Note at the top the patterns are for bags with leg frames, that is. the frame extends down sev- - sjl F( role. This is due Jffll'lSIlt increase iTiere has oct-iin the condition of ranges now In use but that they are still very poor on the whole, the report says. SALT LAKE Complete destruction of the fruit crop in ths vicinity of Hurricane, Washington county, if predicted by the fruitgrowers as a result of the heavy frost which visited that section recently, according to information received at the state agricultural department The unseasonable frost, the messages said, formed Ice a quarter of an inch thick. Hurrincane Is located in the extreme southern part of the state, at a low altitude, and ordinarily enjoys semitropical climate. MYTON Water was turned into nearly every tai.t-- l of the Uintah Irrigation project recently under supervision of T. C. Guyn of Alyton, project engineer. The canals, totalling nearly 900 mile's in the system, serve 00,000 acres of Indian land and 25,000 acres of homestead land. With the opening of the Bystem, seventeen ditch riders began work for the season under Water Supervisors Will Preece of Alyton and C. L. Alarble of White Rocks. C. F. F.ngle of Blackfoot, Idaho, Is supervising engineer of the project. that greater extent In m"n elsewhere by reason of the lines along which our radio broadcasting has developed. Through natithe association of stations into on-wide network It is possible to the give radio listeners, throughout that finest programs the very country, talent and Ingenuity can produce. of these Without the stations, remote parts of the country would still be denied the pleasure of hearing many of our finest artists, since these artists for the most part and congregate are still In those centers of population where rich concert and theatrical contracts are to he found. But while the artist stays In the are dty, his voice and his artistrycorner broadcast, by radio, to every of the land. So are the latest news and the views of Informed men. Radio. In a very definite way, has carried the city to the farm. So, when today the question Is asked: ilowre you goln to keep em down on the farm?' the answer Is obvious, says Mr. Aylesworth. They dont have to be kept Theyre stay lug from choice. Unde Sams census configures themselvt-- prova it most clusively d 8 1 culiar instrument used for Inhaling smoke by the Inhabitants of HispaniTills Instruola (Santo Domingo). ment consisted of a small, hollow woodoo tube shaped like a Y, t he two In the points if which being Inserted nose of the smoker, the other end was field into the smoke of burning tobacco, ami thus the fumes inhaled This apparatus the natives called tn baco." Accord Is necessary to enable ih husband and wife to pull together. VERNAL Irony marked the hear dance of the Indians at White Rqgk which ended recently. The dance, celebrating the coming of spring, is su;r ying posed to end when the mythical Instead it appears. spring ended with the coming of one of the worst snowstorms of the season. Not only that, but during the dance, which began March 30, postponement followed postponement because of the severity of the weather. Nevertheless, all th maidens of the tribe who considered themselves eligible for marriage appeared in the customary white regalia. bear-typif- i -- 1 -- 7 ikj VS DETAILS OF THE SHOPPING BAG in many instances. This Is especially true of several wedding gowns enmnat are of white ln8 ,arils- These erui Incites at each side. just below are for handles. gate-fram- e The patterns or bar a8R,,n,M a ,ail,rd The bag which the young woman is . That Is, severity, which, however, achieves ex Is a carrying treme chic, and which most success throw bar the center of at the hinges and It Into a fully contrasts the voluminous square opening. Those who resplendent veil of real lace or billowy bar which prefer the stralght-ucros- s tulle. opens like the ordinary pockethook So as to emphasize, by way of eon will have no trouble In procuring it. trast, the classic lines of the very' The patterns allow three eighths new tulle bridal gowns which have inch seams. Cut material. Interlining or or no flounces frills furbelows, the and lining to fit size and style of colorful tulle gowns for the brides frame selected. For the hag with leg maids revel in picturesque boufTaney frame sew sides and bottom together If the liny huts and tiiulTs, previously up to part marked X nr, each evenly he then ure to fashion carried, cited, The lining and In side sketch) (Sec Insists on thp new princess silhouette stitched are togethei in then teiTining which takes on its sprightly flounces tn bag ntnl Insert the same manner Just uhove ttie kneeline, for a slender turn nt the top whip together neatly ized effect is necessary to successfully To mount on the in flie edges ing match the smaller chapeaux With frame sew top edge of hag across top the period frocks of tulle which are and legs of frame. The gate or bar ruttleit from waist to hemline hats o in seams at tin sewed frame are hags tinge (trim are preferred to side the very tap Otic of the cleverest items in the tins JULIA P.OTTOMl-Eway of an unusual handbag readied American shores viu Paris. taii. n ua. 199 W ratvrn N. 8a gate-frame- mipi |