OCR Text |
Show THE PROVO HERALD, FRIDAY. JANUARY 13, 1924. PACE FOUR. I - - - - ' '- - - -- f - - 1 "''-- I si mi " 1 I vv I .few U vhEelaOOtsM:i I ll ir if This Plao ONLY ONE MORE DAY Scotch Plaid Ginghan, ! out if Knit Goods Ladies' High Top Shoes Indian Head High grade; black, brown, grey. 59c value. 7Qq J7TT Ladies' Unions I i I atumng Winter boats nvEONLV CCrN H CA All Linen r Bath Robe vA)( lou. napam Blankets I $8.95 Slightly soiled; $7.50 value. When you see the handsome styles, the dependable fabrics and colors that embody these coaU, your own good judgment will prompt you to buy while their I g prices are down to this low level ffQ QC 1laf 0neLot Oil Cloth Gowns Knit Caps 40c value. $1.75 value. 95c values. 98c 49c II" value-D- ozen fltl Ytf M Ladies' Flannel i , DamaSK 131116 89c Values to $50.00 LZZlJ - 4 all . PAIR H. 25 Silk and Wool Dresses Values to $29.50 54 Inch EXTRA! If On Sale Saturday Clearance isr' "if THIS BIG SALE WILL CLOSE SATURDAY NIGHT we With Bargains II: .Dresses Fit White Good. fVEL. 4 Ladies' Sateen Bloomers 95c value. 29c 59c : I soon work out the problem of atclothes that still conformed to the standards of WANTS SCHOOLS TO FORBID ii' tractive GIRLS TO WEAR THIN HOSE from Scene I'.iMiih Tarkinyton's stni'il t hilar-imi.- s By CHESTER B. BAHN, which will bo jiliiy, " AND TOO LITTLE CLOTHING '"Penrod" I he I'rovo hih wlmul iiMililiiriiim Satur- ban International News Service Staff Correspondent. SYRACUSE, N. Y., Jan. 17. A state-wid- e campaign to short-sleeve- frowns, sheer low-neck- d, silk stnrkino- freak hair styles and the powder puff and lip stick in the high day evc:iii.', .Isi nuary 10. schools has swung under way here with Dr. Merton P. principal of Jamestown high school, as its leader. ilrainnlic cl'ib cf Dr. Corwin, who outlined his campaign before the conlint srill.nl. The iv will clave of the Associated Academic Principals of New York Mai (l under the State, wants schoel authorities to have the right to bar girl students who are guilty of conspicuous dress and attire. , of Mrs. Kathrvii Cor-wi- FOR WORKING PEOPLE. CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION There will lie a civil service examination held on March 8. 1924 at I'rovo to secure for the position of general clerk in the field embracing the states of I'tah. New Mexico and Wyoming. All citizens of the S. both male and female who meet the requirements may take the examination. Kor application blanks and Information see J. It. Hudson- local t The best of workers get out of sorts when the liver fails to act They feel languid, half sick, "blue" and discouraged and think they are getting lazy. Neglect of these symptoms might result In a sick spell, therefore the sensible course is to take a dose or two of Heroine. It is just tne medicine needed to purify the system and restore the vim and ambition of health. Price 00c. Sold by Hedquist Drug Co, Advertisement. four stores. n, i hi- 111 ! i Art Pottery for Polychrome Decoration I'ur-drp- instructor of dra- matics nt the high School. ...... -- v , ; , J, ...... "I!! ll. whose name has as not yet been quarters." FOUR MAGAZINES There were Friday morning 64 eases of contagious diseases reportWith all subscriptions to the Daily and Sunday Herald, ed in Provo; of these 6 were CANAL paid in advance, either new or present subscribers, will be llKill LINELEVIES the great number being such ASSESSMENT given free annual subscriptions to the following monthly diseases itecullar to childhood as annual IS. The .Ian. PAYSON. mumps and chickenpox. magazines : FREE! dip-theri- I: - meeting of the stockholders of the THE FARM JOURNAL Strawberry High "Line Canal comTHE PEOPLE'S POPULAR MONTHLY pany was held Tuesday in the First THE HOUSEHOLD ward church. GOOD STORIES A report of the conditions of the subannual AD these four magazines are included with company whs submitted. A tax of $1 The Herald and at in advance office, sections when paid a share was levied for t lie probable i XKTiscs for the year 1!VJ4. without any increase in price. I.v It. Taylor, Thomas Keece and The subscription price of the Daily and Sunday Herald, in (!. II. Twii'de were elected to Utah mail county is By $3.50. when delivered by carrier, themselves as directors for a now at The Herald office on y the price is $2.50. If paid tern, of three years. i r i kuc-ei-c- be HEBER PEA FACTORY TO BE ENLARGED HEBEU CITY, Jan. IS. Officials comof the Wood Cross ( 'a lining business with met pcugrowcr, pany moml-crof the chamber of jnen and commerce in the auditorium of the Wasatch high school early this week mid discussed plans for the enlargement of 'the pea factory in Vuisatch comity. h V It was decided to s built throughout the comity. TEACHERS CONTAt.IOlS IHSEASES INS'NTl TE AT AMERICAN FORK I'be teaching I.KIU, Jan. 1 corps of Alpine school district will! hold an institute ut the American! Fork high school i.ext Saturday.; Addresses will lie made by Suite! Superintendent A. C. sislant Superintendent Maihe-oi- i. A.- - T. Worl-ton of the Salt Lake City school Lelluy K. "..ules of three-storbuilding fitted with the and Professor of Clali. also he I'niversity Jt modern machinery. best A new feature of the infinite uii acreage the increase to is proposed lie lie special session for janitors to 7M as compared with I"1 last and the superintendents of grounds and to increase, is hoped year. It who will be addressed by buildings, In the future. iicreage to loot) Jensen and a niciu-i will Superintendent new on building the Work board of education! state of the her will also 1. viners New u March '"'' y I I he-p- .1. dur-1t.t- . The honor evening. Wednesday guest was Mrs. E. T. Cluff of Wnsh. Special guests were Mrs. Paul Allen, Mrs. Kawhns Hughes and Miss Ethel Hales. Top-IH'uis-h, d Ml ST I5E REPORTED POLCE Homes where (here Hie contagious diseases must display the notice of to Chief of warning, according Police Wren Wilkins. and Dr. Arnold Itobison. city physician, who hope by this method to prevent the spreading of contagions diseases tlirouthoiit the city. "There are no more contagious r dis.-is now than usually conn1 mostlv the wiiior months, mumps and chickciipox." explained "but by closely Chief Willu-.sgnanliir: the lVv cuses we now have we wMI have still fewer later on. Hence the warning to report all );iscs ef cot a git o is diseases to 'he city phjsicinn or to police head . SOROSIS CLl'B MEETS. SPANISH FORK, Jan. IS. Miss Florence Jones was hostess to the Sorosis Junior club at her home PAYSON WOMAN IS LAID TO FINAL REST PAYSON, Jan. IS Funeral serv ices for Mrs. Wayland Wightmnn were held Tuesday at the Nebo stake fiilKTiiacle. Bishop JasiMT Hill of the Second ward was in charge. were President The speakers Henry (iardner. Jr.. of Spanish Fork. President Frank Birch of the Ihtrcka stake, John Smith of Provo. former bishop of Siher City ward; Elder Samuel K. Tavlor ami Elder Charles II. White. A large cortege followed the body to the cemetery. The floral offerings were itianv and beautiful. Scissors invented by a German jean be used for the work of IS different finds. The liMd. rn method of di'i the high school is one of the est problems of the high i principal today, he maintains, The problem, he said, did not orij inate in the school, rattier it was forced uiHiii the school by conditions put liefore the girls by the motion pic tures aim tne younger social set of the present generation. Like "High Life." In most communities, Corwin pointed out, there is a strictly modern younger set which glories In what it terms "high life." Girls of high school age, only a little younger than many of the girls In that set, look np to their mode of living and dress and set out to mimic it as closely as possible, he said. Each, trying to outdo the other, brings the style of dress be yond the bounds of common sense and close to the point of indecency. Among things Corwin wants kept out of school are silk stcokings. However, he explains, that doesn't mean that the texture of the hose must undergo an examination to determine whether it is silk, cotton or wool. The word silk, he says, is used to designate the too sheer hose hose worn, as the bright-colorehe says, to attract attention. Service Is Test. The test, he says, of the proper dress to le born by the schoolgirl is whether it is worn for service or npiiearanee only. None can possibly claim, he says, that the flimsy excuse for sleeves, the sheer stocksandals ings and the are purchased for serviceable qualities. He insists that school authorities have the right to demand that the girl wlio comes to school rouged or with face unnaturally made up should be asked to wash her face, just as the boy coming with fiirt. covered with mud would be to wash his. In Jamestown Corwin definitely barred the bringing of imwder puffs ami to school. He said that if d d All Shapes and All Sizes PROVO GIRLS MODEST. grav-i-ho- The girls of the Provo high hool today dress more sensible than they did two or three years ago, according to Mrs. Elsie C. Carroll, matron of the Provo high school. "Every high school in the nation, I suppose, has its dress said Mrs. Carroll. problem," "At the present time we have very few girls who dress freakishly. Of course, we still have our problems. However, we have never made it a rule to expel any of the girls who have transgressed in this particular but have tuken up an individual labor with them to show them the error of their way. "We are constantly doing our utmost to curtail extreme makeup and are happy to say that most of our girls are too sensible now difys to go to the extreme in these matters." sc . they are brought in secretly the rule at least prevents their use in public. Garb Too Costly. Too expensive clothes, he believes, should be barred from the school as well as too little clothes. He believes girls and bovs in high school have a right to attend classes on an equal basis with all the other pupils and not he divided into classes bv the stvlo f clothes their parents can afford to buy them. In spite of the fact that Corwin asks for serviceable dresses, serviceable shoes and stockings and a girls' original complexion in the high school, he does not especiallv advocate the uniform adopted by so many schools. School would lie a dreary place, he thinks, if every girl wore a blue or brown middv he said. If the high school authorities in each community would insist on the common-sensstandard of serviceability, be says, the girls would e at the Right Prices, Made in Provo. For Sale at the Provo Pottery. PROVO POTTERY Fine Modeling Clay for Sale. 690 West Third South. The Charm of Passing Years Lives in Portraiture The family treasure chest holds no more cherished reminders of loved ones than their photographs. Larson Studio Makers of Fine Portraits Columbia Theater Bldg., Provo. |