Show V THE BALT CAKE TRIBUNE SUNDAY tlORNINff TUNE X 183T1 3 0 'jr In the Field of Modern Writer “ P W A Aft Project Among America's Finest lEtclaers ti Suggests Revival ' In National Art Sponsorihlp of hundred of young lsts by th VA la the healthiest sign f a revival of Intereit 14 our national art yet to appear according to Thomas Craven whose book oa "Modern Art" (Simon and Schuster) ha Just Op peered Mr Craven who ha cant tut for cubism futurtam and the other "lam of modernist painters asserts flatly In hi new book that th "left bank" paint era of th part It year have been "drew-In- f cube and triangle curve and wig glea and calling them "aymbola of th eout" ' — -- - r ' s " Pont Neuf" vl! 'C i : i 'll 51: 'I v i etching by Mahonrl f if-- 1 Fine From Prints of the Year: 19) 3” — r (Minton ’ Commenting on work done' by th JWA Mr Craven atd: "It i true I believe that no enduring art movement can be created by th V regimentation code of th bureaucrat at Washington But th work of th PWA ha done much to encourage and cryatalllz the art Interest of America and haa elicited th cooperation of local board and group in every comer of America Thl 1 a moat hopeful tign When th American artiat ha been delivered from th New York racketeering art dealer when he paint for local market and local audience then we ahall e a genuine revival of th plaatlo "Th left bank of Pari la today bank rupt" Mr Craven continued positively "Th commercial value of th high god of modern french painting are rapidly declining— which thould be ciuae for general rejoicing Th value of the painting were th reault of market rigging They were worthier anob value" Such widely publicized artists a Brancuai and Derain Picaaso Mat! ar far leaa Important than th young American and Mexican of today who ara exhibiting their experience with a lift they know and underatand aald JJr n t- - In The Household Migazbia for June under the title "Three Thousand Times a Day" Whit Burnett formerly a newspaper man of Salt Lake City tell pf an eub reporter’s life that incident In nearly stopped hi career in its beginnings such an Incident a is -no novelty - In a big new office Mr Burnett who is now editor of the successful Story and deluged with ahort stories for publication atill baa time to writ a lew of hij own Ezra J Poulsen a Salt Laka writer of verse who J often found in the maga sines ha gathered together nearly BO ef hi lugltive poem in a small booklet titled "Poem in Variou Mood"- - In their wide rang of aubjact matter J n revealed a broad experience and of life an intimacy with nature Cravan “Tha ballyhooed workara of tha left he aeaerted “drew wiggle and s men were The eurvaa maker of bookend and polisher of amall exparlencea— but they were not artist "The art balanca baa iwung to Amir lean shore Th work of the Mexican Rivera and Orozco and th work of tha elder American lika Sloan and Robinson together with the younger men Benton Burchfield Curry Merah and of far greater ilgnlficance Gropper then the contribution of the Europesa egg-ltyer- 1 ‘ POETRY - "Tha Modern Mu" 1 th title of a comprehensive anthology exhibiting th rang and variety of writing among conIncluding British temporary poat American Australian African Canadian Zealand writer with other Irom-NaCeylon th Irish Free State Compiled by member of th English asaociationi Laurence Blnyon president the book issued by th Oxford University Pres AQUARELLE SHOW Arriving too late for more than a brief mention the Callfomle Water Color society exhibit Wa hung late in th week at the Art Barn where It will be on display Idufing the month of June It Is announced by Mrs John Jensen of the art committee DdDnu-l- IB I ’ :r - choosing It month" al ' u-- "The Long Day Closes" Is a new novel by Beatrice Tunstall author of "The Shiny Night" that Doubleday Doran is to publish soon Miss Tunstall who live in a house that dates back to 1880 civilizaprefers th past to present-dation and If she had her way would turn back th clock she says at least to the eighteenth eentury "the most glamorous period of English history" t - - e' 0 e 0 Ona of th first Books to appeal on th fall list of Th Vikln Pres will bo by Edith Olivier English author whose "Dwrf’g Blood" war Literary Guild choice In tha new book Miss Olivier turn to biography her subject Alexander Cyuden author of Cruden's Concordance to tha Bible whose fantastic Ilf intrigued th novelist "Good-By- e - Master- ’ t ' p t ’ cand mouth-to-"nout- b UT JelioR gregturaiw livl a 4 : 7 pi gi Ss ft Js 1 y the Bell Syndicate fcttJ t f ' V I i t v y - Ar f ' T ' 4'" - I I 'A V :i v - '('Jij '! v 0 t ' £ W'A f TFs'-r- t -v'r ' ui £ y : 4 4 i v ' - s yt v : v V t r s x jw- t i LV- - ‘V 1 -- r “ii i ' 4 - rvi v 1 v 1 - ¥ V u V taSTk 1 Ample testimony to (he superiority of her craftsmanship and to her creative artistry ia to ba found in the large ex- hlbit of Madam Marta at EkenStam’s original work which has been at th Art Barn for the past week or ten days "Arm and tha Men" th article which where it has excited much admiring when it appeared recently in tha maga-- Comment These examples of her skill sine fortune created a vast sensation and mas u copper gold and silversmith is now obtainabl in pamphlet form the tery of several allied arts justifying her right to tha honors sha has won in many publishers being Doubleday Doran and parts of th world as th only woman Company Garden City N Y -worker in precious metals follow a high This amazing paper whose tradition of workmanship statements roused ao wide an interest is Madame af Ekenstam’a career has been romantic since at 18 when sha was a in the nature of "a primer on Europe's teacher in th schools of Germany she armament makers" outlining their hold- apprenticed herself to Sven Bengtson out "their Inga and purpose pointing muter metal worker Ignoring tha oppo-- 7 sition of her family a Swedish military ability to supply everything you need for a war Irom cannons to tha casus family of conventional views Five yearsof unpaid apprenticeship and her exbelli" The incredible information rehibit in a national art show brought her international traffic in arms sup-" garding a scholarship at a school of arts and crafts plied by Fortune editors is matter with in Munich where she wa tha first wowhich ell the world should be made acman entrant This training haa been supquainted You won’t find an “Armament Ring" plemented by a sculpturing courseHol-at in Europe today they sty neither a Leipzig a course tn filigree work in land and a study of modeling et Naples MacWaveUl nor Dr Fu Manchu with de- sign - for the destruction of the world - under another government acholarship At various times the ambitious woman but "without a shadow of a doubt there ’ has served as adviser on precious stones ia at tha moment in Europe a huge and as a mem- for the Swedish custom-hous- e subversive force that lies behind the of nations ber of the national art research commitarming and counter-armintee and manager of an art shop with 30 there ar mines smelters armament men employes Having won many high works holding companies and banks awards in art salons of Europe she re- entangled in an international embrace ceived a call several years ago to present i yet working inevltebly for the destruction ef such little internationalism as the her first American exhibit at the John MoxM Bag achieved aa feC - r Wanamakeg flora ia New York which j International Arms Traffic in Expose - - g v - g ’ r ’ -- discovered her fin handicraft to art lovers 0! the east This New York how inf of her work hu been followed by numerous exhibitions over th country east and west Madam af Ekenstam is now resident in Pasadena and arrived in Salt Lake via Seattle and the northwest where she has been holding exhibitions -- Among the many examples of her exquisite handicraft in original design exceptional pieces are a beautifully bur nished copper bowl with petrified wood inlay the pattern of the wood suggesting " a waterfall among brown rocks a lamp of violet orrefors crystal mounted in silfiliver a crystal bowl with gree apoon tea or coffee set in himmered silver in simply chuts design "with ebony handles book cover plates and binding Especially interesting is a baton of polished wood and ivory dedicated by th designer to Professor A C Lund A crystal powdar box inset with turquoise matrix or one of hammered silver with tourmaline inset a pottery box with engraved copper cover copper vase standard with embossed dragon design ivory picture frames btmmered silver trays plates and many other pieces are Included An exclusive exhibit of much beauty ia tba thin gold box with turquoise inset and ivory inlay set in brilliants and delicate hind wrought pieces of Jewelry in lovely designs draw admiration for tha skill of the originator A lecture on "A New Future for Utah Metal and Allied Crafts" was given Madam af Ekenstam M on i eg11' gold-plate- h con-fusi- 1934 Jft $- — Telephones representing another army of employes ‘ 7 Airplane X Gas stoves and refrigerator 'Hiry don’t sound so important buhl tried my first gas stove in 1900 finding it— after th toil of a big country range the atrug- glea with soot amok coal and wood— a very miracle of comfort and cleanliness end today hardly a bom in tha land is without on In other wards if at 19 1 had aerl-- 4 ously worried about tha necessity to destroy machinery in Justice to the working classes it would havo been without any knowledge of th machinery that in Jess than 40 years would be invented to employ millions and millions of man and women So what? Ah that I'm not smart enough to work out Unless it ia to com to th conclusion that statistics are that w don't know what tha fu--' ture holds for anyone of u and that worry is almost always a waste of time (Copyright - £ Oil ' exhibit And what ar the aforementioned industries that my childhood did not know and that ara giving 0 much employment? Well hor they are and pen hap you may add to them tome that 1 have overlooked h 1 Electricity with Us railways light power heat cooking devices and its application to other machinery X Tha motor car listed second I believe as a maker of millions and employer of millions 1 The movies dependent upon electricity yet themselves almost as important employing and supporting their own countless dependents 4 The radio with tits bom equip ments offices officials musicians em' ployes 9 Th beauty parlors ' with their treatments creams powders their hundreds of thousands of workers and cus- v ’t "! h J af Ekcnstam’s 8 - -- - tomer self-respe- ' 7 ' t 4? f Selections at Art Barn ' I - from Marta ' 47 t I philosophical - 's i stint-inspire- d ' ' Handcrafts ' tha thought kept awhile back in yeasty noisy gang-infeste- d - r waaks vigorous in Varie'd mV i America other thoughts joined it And now I am the machinery btginning to believa-thaargument— so old and respected— ia only one more scare It may ba partly true it isn’t all tbs truth This is my line of reasoning When t was a child at least eight of America's most important Industries weren’t in x- -' istence at all Certainly the eight I am going to enumerate would rank today among tha first 10 of our national com- -' mercial resources And every on of them not only depends upon machinery but gives employment to millions of men Destroy all this machinery go back to hand work— hand looms hand mills hands on plough and churn and orchard —and you would throw all except a fractional part of us out of work - s Artist - e Sc a nvealiEai s Dy blind ' A By MAUD CHEGWIDDEN Mankind has slashed thy mountain aides" has left Scars from his shovels weals upon thy brow: Has flungJ thy torn flesh gaping fola'on fold Has ravished thee ' But thou are not bereft When thou canst hear the robin's mating vow In ageless raptura told When spring can cover thee with leafiness And autumn give thee dress Of royal scarlet burnished bronze and gold L M Rublnow’s delayed discussion of Id-wa- dsyf— - returning After V BINGHAM CANYON the question of social Insurance "The Quest for Security" ia to eom from Holt’s early In th month It ia a comprehensive book don in popular style ’ For extra-marit- e "Out of Chaos" Ilya Ehrenbourg’a novel dealing with conflicting forces in modern Russia is a new title from Holt's appearing at the same time as the postponed Cornelius Wtygandt book "The Whit Hills" which describes life in Now Hampshire o 7 its own "book of the a H?W T9 STAY MARRIED By Johit Wi ard Publisher The Library Guild Indianapolis the Despite promise of the title John Willard doesn't offer much advice concerning marriage problems except by inference One should know after reading hia Uttl book Just what to avoid In fact-it’- s rather likely one would deem it safest to avoid marriage altogether Mr Willard seems to have studied th whole prospect both past and of the modern day particularly th modern conditions surrounding marriage and there Isn’t an aspect he has overlooked from the days mating- instincts sex appeal versus love choice of the home the chldren affairs all the little minor difficulties down to old age His approach to the subject is entirely frarfk and probably be hasn’t anything to tell married people that will be new but his -flippancies may amuse - “How to Stay -Married" ia biological tautological historical hyvtericel— and ought to ba goodt for some hilarious time read aloud in the family ! y mad-nas- DmtftUq partji it The Literary Almanac Der-ryd- never be had disintegrated there would a Democratic party again ' Last yaar w had some Interesting statements in reference to Unemployment W were told until we were sick ef the sound of the depressing words that 11 million men wer out of work and that tha average of dependents to each man was four Did that statemant make you feal u desperate with pity 1 wonand balplauneu 1 it did me der? After awhile 1 took a pencil ' and ' By KATHLEEN NORRIS Whan you read a thing ara you pretty worked it out Thera were 49 million sure to believe ltt Most of us are Just persons IN jobs all through th depression and if taeh on of them also had to ats a thing in print is to make It seem true Especially U it V four dependents that cama out on hunx is surprising sense- dred and eighty million of them to Uonal alarming which ona must add tha 44 million of tha unemployed and their families a That is why war neat little total of more than a hundred get 10 easily under million more plrsons than there ara In wsy Startling sta’ tistics ar burled at ' th country altogether! la to to common lor hard sober a or few stick It ui days weeks w become aeni when these agitating summaries w tell ar given to us and yet UNLESS th frightened women of America begin to form th everyone w meet habit of waiting and judging and thinkjust what tha paper said and when th ing things out a little for themselves we are apt to run upon shoals Wa must call cornea for mobia lization tha old gird ourselves against everything that starts up ar prejudice and hyaterla can devise if we afresh Wa don’t not to be thrown Into hysteria our want to fight but it aelve t this and that and What is to m a striking example of tha other ar really own to last believa th my tendency Kathleen N err la th it said speaker occurred in connection with the ao in th paper— why then we’ve' GOT socialist argument against mapopular to fight Not Infrequently actual truthchinery Most socialist and communist ful facts themselves Jiav a way of mistheories include th idea that when maleading us chinery Wu invented man began to Centuries back when Henry V ef decay and pauperism and unemploy men began to be serious problems England mat th French at Aglneourt and later when Wellington met NapoAccording to their theory there is leon and whan Washington’s armies met serious social mente in th machine th expeditionary British forces statisthat dees the work of 20 men and can tic were all in fevor of what wasn’t be operated by three There have been true what wasn't going to happen Anywhole organizations headed by proone who reaaoned out th inevitable found thinker and scientists that have course of events in any on of these not hesitated to make th complete degreet world crises would have been struction of marhintry thetr object wrong The English publio wasn’t told They hope to restore berk log he individfor weeks that th upstart American ual bands of men spinning 'lumber cutcolonies had actually won their Indeting furniture making and the hammerpendence in 1778 and had broken eway ing of nail and pins and th sowing from tha mother country and when they and reaping cutting and cooking of food were told by alow filtering of news end so restore their right to live end to at and to along stag highways and by gossip many of them wouldn't Last November 1 heard an eloquent beliavs it Go back to tha newspaper man talking along thesa lines In Hyde and magazines of 1918 if you want tq Park London "Let them destroy the read statistic as to Germany's sure machines" he shouted “Let them dewinning of th World war Germany the stroy th single canning device that militaristic tha prepared was Invincipeels boils sweetens cans teals labels ble You could find article like that as fruit end that can be operated by a lata aa October ISIS three weeks beboy of 191 In on day such a machine does the work of 40 men" fore th armistice This talk disturbed m deeply WalkOnly a year ago great authorities on both aides wet and dry war stating ing along th banks of th Thames 1 with plentiful mathemaUcal proofs that meditated upon It with the boiling mass of London surging about mo— the poor it would taka 40 years to repeal th facet the meek faces the anxloue far ee eighteenth amendment Only a few of the London alums! Was tt true that years before that Just before Hoover's a election prominent Democrat in New in making machines to lessen labor we York put forth a pamphlet to provo that bad destroyed th right of millions of '! ft&g Wf "Million for Defense" a pictorial history of tha defen of th America’ cup by Herbert I Stone editor of Yachting magazine la Just published by Tha Pres Mr Stone bad a collaborator in Allred F Doomis maritime r thor : Machinery a Boon to Civilization Declares Writer Who Says Destroy It and Millions Would Be Thrown Out of Work Entirely £aart uraaniwia Mr Chips" the James Hilton story which appeared in the April Atlantic Js being brought out in book ‘ form by Little Brown because of tha lntarest aroused In la magazine publication It ia th story of a retired English public achoo-- instructor In th autumn will com the public- tion ef tha third and fourth volumes of r t r row George’ “War Memoir" Vol- -' ' Lloyd A tong in hi heart uma III J devoted to th military cam- smile face on hi brown A paigns of 1911 and America’s entrance Into th conflict The English statesman THI LITERARY WORKSHOP has reoantly completed his forty-fourt- h First printed intercollegista magazine year in tha house of commons Little devoted exclusively to the writings of Brown will publish the new volumes college students In tha United States th Literary Workshop made its appear- - f"A Law Unto Themselves" a novel ranc the first of the month This maga-sin- e of Austria in of feudal robber-baron- s had been indorsed by leading eduthe middle eges of which the author is cational authorities according to 7 Loveday Prior is an early June title A Sand of iha editorial board of Little Brown Th book haa achieved success in England The Journal is published In New York a London paper and a warm earthlnee of mood On of th beat ameng them is "Th Harrower" which read in part Up through th ahadow and billowed ’ aunahine irom tha road Ha ha traveled long yesterday And atill hi tread unfaltering ’ H faces the eternal myatary of tomor- - ‘ amdfF ftwtowm obaer-vatlo- modernist" MODERN A A -- “ bank" ' N WRITERS OF ROCKY' MOUNTAIN WEST - Counsel Advanced In Flippant Vein art" fn ' Quoting a discussion of tha availabl method and media of propaganda I Bernays counsel on public relations who for veers ha worked With the mas mind Mr Crowther says "A ’VX neutral or ostrich position Is unenough lor a business leader merely to attend to "hia knitting" he states the case for the' existing order mustb effectively presented to the public "Every great question today ha to b settled by propaganda" tha writer says "There is no other way of retching on hundred and twenty million people There should be no other way in a nation that desires for better or for worse to govern itself" the "The alternative ease for what 1 best In the existing orconcludes "is to der" th pamphlet let any and all experiments go unchallenged in the bop or belief that the right will eventually prevail That may Or it after all ba th best method ' may be no method at alL" "Tha failure of our business and financial guardians who art charged with the actual operation of our Mr Crowther writes system" "arise out of their inability to become articulate— to understand themselvea and their position and then to make certain that tha publie Underatand them Buslneu Is highly (killed in informing the publie as to its product But when it come to making plain the relation of business to the public end of the public to buslneu the efforts are mostly feeble and halting and in no wisa match tha vigor or Intelli-:enc- e to say nothing of the plausibility if those who would bring in aoma other economic system in which private enterprise would not have a part And so it always appears that the right is with those who would abolish tha existing order and that those who would uphold the existing order have only tha argument of brute force" Questioning the tendency of buslneu "today to mind its own business Mr "In our present soCrowther states ciety a business man or a financier In charge of considerable interests has a responsibility which at times becomes public one It is sometimes not enough for him merely to attend to his knitting— else there will be no knitting to attend to It is ea much his duty to defend th property tn his custody from destruction by revolution as it Js to prevent its destruction by fire" Th tenable— It Is pot pathy he state - Balcb & Co) ys nor by th ts j Young 41’ f Business and financial leaden must atop "playing ostrich" and becoms £ ticulate if what is’ best In th present' economic end' industrial atructura U to bt maintained says Samuel Crowther noted writer on business subjects in "Publie Opinion Private Business and Public Relations" a - pamphlet pub lihed recently by Llveright Tha “ostrich" policy of business and finance is largely responsible for the indictment being drawn against them today Mr Crowther assert Their leaders have be say refused to recognize the problem of public opinion They have ignored the effectiveness of propaganda technique by which their a ecus er have won the public’ tar and sym from an — j ’ f ? Artists Colony Stop Playing Ostrich Become — : Articulate Crowther Advises 4 if k' ' ' W r arb f ' ' ‘'V & ' ¥ Activities in Utah' 1 - intrut4 tudianc - r d 4 r ‘ b |