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Show THE SAUNA SUN. tew $L SAT INA. UTAH BAYER ASPIRIN (fiara PROVED SAFE Lift Take without Fear as Told in Bayer" Package Pain! Off-- No - ZIHJ? SHOW VDZLpH? oi' 7jsr$mpvs . Does not affect the Heart Doesnt hurt one bit! Drop a little Freezone on an aching corn, InstantUnless you see the "Bayer Cross" ly that com stops hurting, then shorton package or on tablets you are not ly you lift It right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin for a few cents, sufficient to Freezone" proved safe by millions and prescribed remove every hard corn, soft com, or for by physicians over twenty-fiv- e years corn between the toes, and the foot Colds Headache ' calluses, without soreness or Irritation. Neuritis Lumbago Rheumatism Toothnclia Airships and- Great Guns Pain, Tain Neuralgia According to the occassionally reliaEach unbroken Bayer" package con- ble Moscow newspapers, the United tains proven directions. Handy boxes States has the greatest military avia- of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- tion service in the world. Russian gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. newspapers now describe two Ameri- can dirigibles, each mounting 20 cannon. The United States also has 14,000 military airplanes, according to of blotches and disfiguring V tlie information on which the Russian irritations. Uso commissar of war and navy bases his comparison to show the needs of the Soviet union. Though giant dirigibles capable of mounting 20 machine guns have not progressed beyond the Wooer From Afar drawing-bonrstage in the navy deSome years ago when the last pair partment designers office, they have of white-taile- d eagles were nesting become an actuality in Russian newsin Scotland one of the birds died. papers that have printed pictures of A country There was not dnother eagle of that them, cannons and all. species in the country, yet within a where peace is highly esteemed I" Is few days the remaining bird had sig- the sarcastic line of explanation under naled her loss to a continental bird the pictures. and it came over nnd they mated. fLEAR SKIN YOUR d farmers own radio sets? What programs hold the farmers Interest? What does his wife like? What time of day finds the greatest farm audience listening In? Surveys made by two independent organizations have resulted in the tabulation of certain definite Information concerning radio on the farm. Answering the first question, WLS of Chicago, says that one of every five farm homes in the United States contains a radio set This conclusion is based on a survey of more than 18,000 rural homes. Twenty-fivper cent of the farmers prefer music to any other program, while 24 per cent listen in regularly to get the daily weather and market reports, thus taking advantage of the more practical side of radio. This is found to be especially true, the survey showed, among corn-belfarmers in Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Indiana and. Ohio, where 42 per cent reported that they rely almost entirely on weather and market Information which the radio is able to bring to them. East and west-- of the Mississippi river, down in the cotton country, only 3 per cent view this as an important radio feature. Officials of WLS believe that the farmer Is just beginning to take advantage of the educational .value of his radio. Only 16 per cent are interested In the farm schools and lectures offered by" universities and other agricultural organizations. Relatively few .radios are in use In the cotton states west of the Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, Mississippi and Louisiana, but 26 per cent of all of them are tuned in regularly to the educational programs. Twenty-thre- e per cent of the wheat-bel- t and 20 per cent of the corn-bel- t farmers are going to school regularly via the radio. These three sections are served by stations which specialize in programs for farm folk. Church, sports and the drama via radio make little appeal to the farmer, according to the sur-- . OW many e t- . ' vey. Women on the farm generally prefer the houses hold programs, and 41 per cent tune In on those most frequently. .Musical programs are favored by 31 per cent, lectures nppeal to 8 ior cent, talks on gardens and poultry are especially interesting to 1 per cent, while 3 per cent enjoy their radio most for the church services and sacred music it brings to them. New Jin gland housewives were by far the mosf s enthusiastic group for the hour, with its suggestions on economics and new recipes. Corn-bel- t farm women run them a close second, clue perhaps to the fact that these sections are close to stations which offer programs of prime . ihterest to rural homes. ' "'VTomen on farms In the. tobacco lands, Kentucky. and Virginia, seem to prefer music, and they likewise are the most enthusiastic about church and religious- - programs. Women In the ' cotton-growinstates west of the Mississippi enjoy the serious, educational programs; 37 per cent will alwnys fish around In the ether after a lecture from distant stations. But farm folk, 'on' the whole, are not prone to be fussy about the kind of entertainment they can get over the alb; IS per cent of the men and 16 per cent of their wives refuse to state a pref- erence, because they like it all so well. The most radios fire found in the New England states, New York and Pennsylvania, .where they have invaded S3 per cent of the homes. The central corn belt, Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana find Ohio, runs a close second with 33 per cent. Put the eastern cotton states should be the radio salesman's. paradise, for radio has found its way Into only 3 per cent of the homes, according to the survey of WLS. The survey covers 18, 4.66 typical American farm homes in 42 states, and was gathered by some twelve hundred scouts or observers, each of whom studied carefully the conditions in a small group of homes In her own neighborhood. The survey Is being made in an effort to help the farm woman herself to find out how her home, her working renditions, her chances for racial life and health protection for her families compare with those of women in other walks of life. Radio is changing the marketing methods of entire groups of farmers, according to the survey rnr.de by the National Farm Radio council. Importance of radio in the marketing of farm products is illustrated in the National Farm Radio council survey by reports from 43 states, more than 46 per cent of the replies giving specific examples of cash savings effected by the use of radio, and practically every report Indicated the home-maker- home-maker- g . importance and value to the farmer of having market reports from 24 to 48 hours earlier than they are obtainable through any other medium. Typical of hundreds of reports of the farmers use of radio in marketing Is this one from a farmer Ijving near Keytesville? Mo.: Radio reported hogs due to drop in two days. Shipped at once. Saved $150. In same week put off haying because of. storm warning. This prevented heavy loss of hay. In conducting this nation-wid- e radio survey the National Farm Radio council gathered and tabulated 44,550 Individual expressions. The survey with was conducted by the council in 15 farm publications, 450 county agents. 200 boys and girls club leaders, 150 home demonstration agents, the National Grange, the American Farm Bureau federation, several hundred teachers of vocational agriculture, deans of 37 colleges and several radio stations. Nhaety-fiv- e owners, .per cent of farmer-radithe council said, think of their radios as a utility as well as an amusement device. They think of it as a utility because it brings to them market reports from 24 to 4S hours earlier than obtainable in any other way. These enable the farmer to market his produce to the greatest advantage. Results of the survey to determine just when the farmer listens in on his rndlo shows the maximum farm audience somewhere between 8 and 8 :30 in the evening. Starting at 6 :30, the audience rapidly increases up to 8 oclock. After 8:30 there is a sharp decline.' Determination of the size of the noon farm radio audience is one of the most outstanding results of the survey. A little more than 60 per cent of farm radio owners are on the air at 12 noon. 'In some states, notably Illinois, Kansas, Pennsylvania and New York, the noon audience approaches 75 per cent. Very few farm folks, according to the survey, listen to radio programs before noon. Concluding that radio market reports mean dollars and cents to American farmers, the radio council set about finding out just when the farmer wanted his market reports. Tabulation of many thousands of replies left no doubt heas to the air. time when market reports 'should go on-tThe farmer wants his mnrket reports at exactly 12 noon and at exactly 7:30 in the evening. Orchestra or band, educational talks, weather reports, market reports and singing are the features with the greatest appeal to the farm audience. The orchestra leads, with farm talks second. Weather reports and market reports have about the same general appeal. A wide decline of Interest was registered regarding vocal efforts. While the orchestra and band are given .first place, a general objection by farmers was mnde to Jazz and there was a wide demand for more music. Vocal selections Hawaiian and Male quartets were preferred were not popular. and soprano voices found general disfavor. News bulletins were in general demand. Turning now to a consideration of radio progress, we find that the' quality of speech or music station and ropro- as broadcast by an duced by a modern receiving set Is many' times better than the best of three or four years ago.' But despite this, many persons are. di satisfied with radio because there Is such a wide difference between speech or music as we hear it in the theater and as It emerges from the loud speaker. Radio speech or music does not feel the same. It lacks color, vitality and fine shading. Its quality is hard and metallic. Two explanations for this are reviewed by Charles Magee Adams in the The first, he says, New York Herald-Tribunis the limitations of receivers nnd transmitters. apparatus cannot catch Even the most or reproduce the overtones, both lower and high- er In the scale, which determine quality and character in sounds. In addition, Adams points out that broadcasting as it is now carried on is like listening with one ear. Broadcasting of the usual type, employing a single microphone, tends to give the same effect that we would get if we listened to a concert with one ear tightly sealed. These are not the only factors, however, which o . . . old-tim- e -- e. . contribute to the imperfections of radio, and Mr. Adams believes that the listener himself to a certain extent is responsible. We have five major senses sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell generally thought of as distinct functions operating altogether independently of each other. This is wholly natural. Each has a highly specialized purpose to perform, and, as equipment, an individual set of end orgaua for converting received impressions into nerve Impulses, nerves for transmitting these, and brain centers for converting them into sensations. Each sensation ns it Is finally registered Is distinct from every other, and the fact that these five faculties are even remotely perhaps never so much as occurs to us till a cold brings home the reminder that 'taste depends on smell for a large measure of its effectiveness. But these are not the only senses to be coordinated. The functions of all are bound up one with another many times more intimately than wo suspect, and most conspicuous of all sight and hearing. It is altogether logical thtft these two should he. They handle by far the greater bulk of all Impressions we receive, and were they not coordinated their combined efficiency would b6 far less than it now is. But it is the effect, of this particularly on hearing, with which we are concerned, and this is astonishing, even , amusing sometimes. For example: A quartet appearing on a small town Chautauqua program found Itself forced to present its afternoon concert in street clothes because the trunks containing their costumes had been delayed in shipment. The response of the audience was only perfunctory. By the time the evening program was presented, however, their trunks had arrivodand, appearing in costume, the quartet received an emphatically enthusiastic ovation. Their singing was no bettor than It had been in the afternoon. If anything, that In the afternoon was somewhat the better because they were trying harder. The audience mereJy responded, without thinking, to better appearance. It Is difficult to appreciate Just bow far this can be carried. Violinists, to cite another example, In playing selections with pianissimo endings, often raise the bow clear .of the strings when they have readied the point where they cannot play more softly nnd go on drawing It back and forth. The audience continues to hear something as long as the bow Is seen to move and the violinist receives credit for a masterful ending he did not actually play. It will .be seen, then, that under most condi- makes sight a very real and tions of But let us consider hearing. practical part faces In .the case the situation this of listening in on broadcast speech or music. Here there are no costumes or movements of performers to he seen nothing visible which proceeds roncwaitnntly with or ns part of tho music nnd its setting only the unchanging loud speaker and the music issuing from It. Vastly changed conditions are accordingly confronted by. say, a habitual concert goer who enjoys particular ly the Rachmaninoff preludes. He lias been accustomed to hearing them .In a spacious concert hall, lights turned low except on the stage, revealing a shimmering piano, the artist seated at It, hands nnd arms in swift, suro movement, back erect, head Intent, the faint rustle of programs nearby, a whispered comment on somi passage, faces nnd shirtfronts standing out in the dimness, the thunder of applause as t he number Is .finished. Of mt does this prelude consist by radio? The same notes, played with the same skilled artistry, but with only the lights of a living room rc.venling the cone or horn of a loud speaker for visual background. It is small wonder then that the concert goei protests in dismay that this is rnt the same music lie heard in the auditorium. That radio has rf! somethin? out. lie is right. Radio has left some, thing out the visual component to which he ha'; so long been accustomed, not to mention the usu"i background of concert ball sounds. 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