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Show i THE PROVO POST FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1922 ' f DO NOT FAIL TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE r r i to ? LOOK OVER THUS LIST AND YOU WTLLFINDMANY ITEMS WHEREIN YOUCAN SAVE MONEY This Is Only A Partial List Of The Many Items We Are Including In This Offer FIR DOORS SCREEN DOORS fir inside doors. Several, 'good No. Regular price $5.50 CLEARANCE PRICE from $2.50 to $3.90 1 A little out of season, bat you can save by buying now and holding until $3.50 $1.60 CLEARANCE PRICE SELECTED WAINSCOTING 5 .Several hundred feet good fir rustic. Excellent for chicken coops and ga- We have an accumulation j of1 Regular price $55.00 per M 2 CLEARANCE PRICE! GMfi nn PER OHUiUU stock-reducin- Regular price CLEARANCE PRICE M S' sl$40.00 per M PER $30.00 M vu zJ ll BUILDING Two-- g A good selection of A-- l transoms, in many sizes. Good for repair of houses Many sizes in this style of a window wili give you a good selection for re- and could be used to advantage to give light in coops. I Regular price $2.50 ! CLEARANCE Cl OH PRICE j. p I iUU pair and new work. Regular price CLEARANCE PRICE : $6.25 $4.50 V MOULDINGS Barn door track and hangers for your garage door: Hangers, regular price $2.75 CLEARANCE CO OE PRICE pZiZO We have several patterns of mould- ings of A-- l grade. O A HARDWARE This list includes odd patterns as well as regular stock items. Regular price, hundred feet CLEARANCE PRICE hundred feet $1.00 Track, regular price, per foot CLEARANCE PRICE per foot 75c nn n n Phone TRANSOMS T WINDOWS WINDOWS Our stock of these windows is very complete, but we will place them in this sale. Regular price $64)0 CLEARANCE PRICE $3.90 from $1.90 to several fir ceiling. rages,. $2.50 FOUR-IIGH- T hundred feet of short lengths No. . i 3-- Regular price CLEARANCE PRICE : TWELVE-LIGH- We have several windows in each size from 12x16 to 36x26 in the 2 lights 1 8 thick which we are putting in at the one price. Average regular price $5.50 fly, time. CENTER MATCHED RUSTIC WINDOWS TWO-LIGH- T ' ! 20c tn. lUu f headquarters Burn Peerless Coal ' mm Favor Dancing in Public Schools WHERE CHRIST TAUGHT Ruins of Synagogue in Which He High school principals in Detroit Preached Found in have taken a stand for school dances Capernaum. as the means of promoting morals, A discovery of unique interest has grace, education, good fellowship and been made in the Holy Land. Hither- good spirits among young people. to there has been no building known Miss; Elizabeth Cleveland,, super' to have been conspicuously associ- visor of 'girls activities in the public ated with the life of the Saviour. At schools, of the city has taken the lead last this deficiency has, it seems, in urging thatevery city adopt school been remedied. Prof. Lucein Gaurth dancing as a means of bringing about between pupil and ier, of Geneva, a very eminent cal' archaelologist, reports that the teacher. actual synagogue at Capernaum, "It is evident, says Miss Clevehas Saviour the where land, "that the teachers, as well as preached, found. imparting the traditional education, have had to aceept additional reon the situated Capernaum, shore of the (Sea of Gallilee and sponsibilities of looking after the entering into his home pear its northern end, was the scene childs health, he gets his share of that life, permiracles seeing no five less than of a job, and making him formed by the Saviour mentioned in play, finding an him was in worthy citizen. It this the New Testament. It to get away from no use is His trying He Ministry, began region that of education.. It is and bore most of its important this conception or events before His entry into; Jeru- here to stay. School dances,recof come the head under course, salem occurred, reation. They are permitted, and The gospel of ,St. Mark begins by even in our high from schools. encouraged, telling us how the Saviour camecalled Nazareth to Gallilee and there the apostles,, who were working as Wed Sons Rich fishermen. Then we read in- chapof this verse gospel: 21, ter I, And they went to Capernaum and Divorced, Model Says He on Sabbath the day straightway entered into the synagogue and "A girl with talent should never marry a rich young man who desires taught. On this occasion our Saviour pe- her as he would any plaything to A mau amuse himself with for a while and rformed His first miracle. who was possessed of an unclean then to cast aside when the. glitter present in the synagogue, has worn off. spirit was out in torments. Christ sent This is the statement of Edna H. crying the unclean spirit out of the man. Sheill, artists model of Detroit, who Further important .information recently was granted a divorce from about this synagogue is given in St. Charles S. Sheill, son of a wealthy stated shoe manufacturer. Luke; chapter VII. There it isservant centurions that' a Roman Marry the man, she says, "who to scuttles about in a cheap little car 7 was dying and fthe people came the Saviour in Capernaum, and beg-g- e he probably owns it. Avoid the feld Him to save the man, for "he low who rumbels about in a juggernaut it most likely (the centurion) loveth our nation and hath built lis a synagogue. The belongs to his father, and he is led servant was healed. about by hi dad at the end of a ' shore the oil now found The ruins financial purse-strinnot is who of the Sea of Gallilee are very ex.happy with girl is herAny a building the, husband after Although marriage years pensive. in a ruinous state, it would should leave him at once, Mrs. Sheill largely not be difficult to restore it to its says. been "Dont bother weeping out your original condition. It must have handsome and rich a remarkably eyes for a man that scorns you, she doorways says. "He isnt worth while wasting synagogue. The arches and and mag- tears on. and roof are very heavy ' A struggling young business man nificently carved. Several of the is the best mate for any girl, Mrs. doorways are still standing. ornamented was The synagouge - Sheill says.a man who is so busy getwith fine carvings of lions (the sym"Marry bol of the tribe of Judah), with ting ahead that he has no time for " iambs and with eagles bearing gar- nonsense with other women then These stone you'll be happy. The gay dog with lands in their beaks.found in profu- - inherited money rhe always is on carvings have been sion among the ruins, In; viewfor-of- the go, seeking excitement. r the fact that such carvings were the time of Christ. The strictbidden among the ancient Hebrews about ' ness of the old Jewish law had been were images "graven at because they considerably relaxed at that time. the finding of these objects is particularly interesting There is also much in the style of strong evidence architecture and the solidity of the Their occurrence is. was not of very building to support the belief that synagogue that was built it was built by a Roman centurion. it that and early date, I DETROIT A MECCA FOR STREET GIRLS ; ! United States for Flirtations, Says Policewman Blames Automobile. Worst City in i . V Detroit is the worst city in the United States for street flirtations, in the opinion of Miss Virginia May Murray of the Travelers Aid Society of New York, who has been chief of the Detroit Womans police department for the last year. Miss Murray has returned to her duties in New York after being loaned to Detroit to organize the womans department. While she believes that she has accomplished much during her year in Detriot she is far from satisfied with the results her policewomen have been able to obtain in curbing street flirtations-"The automobile is the greatest menace to the young womanhood of America, Miss Murray declares. I never saw anything like the wild picking up of girls op the streets that exists today, especially in Detroit. I spent a year there trying to get girls to realize the danger of acflirting with total strangers. Onautocount of the Large number of mobiles in Detroit this practice is ojjserved more widely there than in hny other ciijy I have ever knowii. "What (Detroit and Michigan need are more laws and institutions in which to place the women who come under these laws. At present Detroit is a mecca for all the street girls in America; today there are more there than in New York or Chicago. The (inly way to curb thissen-is give them indeterminate tences, and even if the laws were adequate there are not enough places in which to confine them. This is the greatest handicap which policewomen have to contend with. Miss Murray feels that a womans police bureau in Detroit is badly needed, and that New York and Chicago and other large cities' would do well to pay more attention to the field of work which the women police are capable of taking care of. She says that girls naturally come to the police for aid and protection, and they will not go to the regular police divisions. This means, it is claimed, that policewomen have come to stay and should be trained for it. She says it is not the policewomans place to interfere with the duties and work of the regular policemen, but to pay special attention to street flirting, dance halls and parks where young people congregate. She also sees a need for them in the various railroad stations of the country to meet incoming girls and guide them in the right direction. , wTest-ejf- w all-rou- nd . j of Dont - . i ; , high-power- 7 ed g. , -- - . - Ca-perna- Tell 'Em With Flowers. l Some girls have to be kidded have to le orrhid-er- l ; others French Publication Comments on Book "Soil Alkali: Its Origin, Nature and Treatment, published by President P. S. Harris, of the Brigham Young university while director and agronomist' of the Utah Agricultural Experiment' Station, continues to receive favorable criticism in foreign agricultural and scientific journals. The most recent notices are in the French publication, La Revue Generals des Sciences, and the British "Bulletin of the Imperial Institute, a quarterly record of progress in tropical agriculture and industries and the commercial utilization'of the natural resources of the dominions, colonies, and India. The later publication discusses the book as follows: In spite of the large amount of research work which has been carried out on the nature and treatment of soils containing an excess of soluble salts, the present volume is the first to present a concise compilation of the results obtained. The term "soil alkali is applied, not only to alkaline salts present in the soil, but also to any accumulation in the soil of soluble salts, such as chlorides, nitrates, and carbonates of sodium, potassium and magnesium, and the chloride and ,nitrate of calcium. Large tracts of alkali soils occur in India, Egypt, United States and Australia, id, after a brief description of these?" the author discusses the origin of its effect on plant growth, and the recults of experiments designed to indicate the maximum quantities of the several salts which can be tolerated by various plants. The character of the native vegetation as an indication of the soil conditions is next considered, followed by a comprehensive account of the several field and laboratory methods which have been used for the accurate determination of the amount of soil alkali present. An account of the influence of soil alkali on the physical and biological character of the soil is given, together with methods of reclaiming affected land, whilst the crops suitable for such soils are also dealt with. The last two chapters discuss the effect of irrigation li water containing and the methods by which the probable value of alkali land for agricultural may be judged, The booli has been carefully compiled from ia wide range of material, and copious references to literature are given at the end of each chapter. It should be of service to all those who have to deal with the cultivation or reclamation of alkali soils, or with the irrigation, of land in arid regions where such soils may occur. sul-hate- . Big es Cinchona Forest 25,000 Acres. The cinchona forest In Java covers 25,000 acres. The large part of the world's supply of qiiinine comes from that oountrv. j WA 20 ryc Off on Papers to 50c 20 Off on Oatmeals 30 & 't Off on Xll Papers Above 50c i i Select Your Paper Now for Spring Cleaning r i li, pur-pros- Pre-Seaso- n i s, soil-alka- f t , s soil-alka- ' i .. I SALE STARTS SATURDAY MORNING i Provo Paint' & Glass Company West Center Street i i j I i 110 v i Phone 53 t , i . . 1. 5 3 And Hurt More. Sapient Fissure says : Busybodies do more stinging than busy bees. Want Ads Get Quick Results i I i . 1 : 1 , I i V ? |