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The Rural Voice, 1979-08, Page 10The Farmer Eastern Canada's Ituratinagazint Volume XXXII Number 2 �(..117-)P °���°� Toronto, February, 1935 � Farm magazine asked in 1935 •ti Do your horses take a vacation? BY JANE ALLAN "Do your horses take a vacation when you need them most?" A half -page advertisement with this slogan would appear entirely out of place in a modern farm magazine, as would an ad for our modern equipment in a magazine of fifty years ago. While providing information and comment, a magazine is also a reflection of the lifestyle of the time and region in which it was produced. An old issue of a farm magazine can give an interesting picture of how rural life has changed. The opening quote came from the February 1935 issue of The Farmer --devoted to the interests of agriculture in Eastern Canada. Not unlike today's farmers the farming people of 1935 were feeling the effects of rapid industrialization. An advertisement states that, "On the farm it is also the machine age. New inventions and larger implements that cover more ground and do more operations, all tend to speed up farming in those seasons when every hour counts." These technical advances opened up many new possibilities for farmers in 1935. An example of this effect is evident in one of the feature articles. It describes an extensive attack planned against the warble fly, or heel fly that had infested many of Ontario's cattle. Before 1935 there hadn't been any wide -range attacks against the warble fly because its life cycle was not understood. Also, no safe, effective, easily applied method of killing the grubs had been discovered until that date. The Farmer, as a modern magazine would, outlined past successes with the treatment and described the campaign planned to begin in February of 1935. A subscription to The Farmer was fifty cents yearly, or five cents a copy. That nickel bought a large magazine with a full colour cover picture and, in February of 1935, 57 pages of farm -related material. Published during the "dirty thirties", The Farmer may have been the only publication coming into some farm households. Each person in the family could not subscribe to their own PG. 8 THE RURAL VOICE/AUGUST 1979 favourite magazine. For this reason The Farmer had to include something for everyone. The Farmer devoted 16 of its 57 pages in this issue to a "Women's and Home Section". Along with articles on family, cooking. and sewing, a special message on the Women's Institutes page is dedicated to "A young girl and her appearance". In the article girls are reminded that everyone loves a natural, wholesome girl, and that "it is not good taste to have your lips too red or your nails too vivid. Such things tend to make you conspicuous and therefore vulgar." Emphasis is also placed on bathing, as the "Saturday night only", bath is "a thing of the past." A feature that has disappeared from our farm magazines which may have been replaced by television soap operas is the fiction serial. Along with its highly emotional series "The Straight Road", this issue of The Farmer includes "A Short Story of tragedy, born of love, that will stir the deepest human feelings". Also included is a regular comedy page called "Chaff From the Old Mill". Although our language has changed somewhat, humour remains the same. For example: Miss Neverstop, seating herself between two much engrossed elderly men exclaimed: "A rose between two thorns," "No", retorted one, "say a tongue sandwich." A large proportion of The Farmer is made up of letters from the readers. The News, Views, and Opinons section includes a letter from a woman explaining how to raise tame chickens, and a letter that would not be uncommon in a more recent magazine emphasizing the value of post -secondary education for the prospective farmer. The magazine takes part in educating the rural youths with a "farm management class" and a "home management class". Each has a monthly lesson and a questionnaire to be answered and mailed to The Farmer.