OCR Text |
Show LEW FREE PRESS, LEHI, UTAH MGKOR AMjsterg Roadside Stands Sell Many Foods the Younger Set for Frocks Party MCHOLAS By CIIERIE Customers Are Attracted by Quality of Articles and Prices. r 1 - -f if - W " - 8rc. ed to roadside selling: vegetables come next; while fruit Juices, honey, eggs, poultry, baked goods, flowers. Jams, and Jellies have all been sold success- -- Si y I , V?? if f X i !NwV - A ,.4i. :f ,:,. J 4 - i " , A Cambodian Temple Dancer. Prepared br National Oe'xrraphle Boclitjr, Waehlncton, D. C WNU Serf. op In the Junplea of French gome 300 miles from F,B doorstep of the world as measured In distance, a thousand In time, , years In the past as measured and aeons back tn the unknown as measured In history, Is Angkor, one 'of the most puzzling works ever contrived by the hand of man. j Temple and. town and network of Idlm and forgotten shrines, It repre-- j Bents a culture that must hate been i far In advance of anything coeval with j It and power that must have been Irresistible even In Asia, j virtually where men at arms were plentiful and warfare was a favored business. But the culture died and the men who had built It disappeared, and for hundreds of years the forests of banyan and bamboo hid from the eyes and memory of the world what had been a metropolis of a million Inhabitants. Two generations ago a French naturalist broke through the wall of Jungle In a search for specimens of tropical life and came upon a spectacle such as the slaves of the lamp might have contrived for Aladdin. Before him, In the quivering silence, rose the five towers of a vast step pyramid, a stone tapestry representative of an art and architecture like noth lng else within the ken of man. A moated wall surrounded It and a cloistered gate opened upon a causeway that led to Its rocketing staircases ; and, for all that Jungle growths were close about Its lower stage and odd clumps of verdure grew from Its arched roofs. It seemed that life had been In Its shadowy galleries oniy a moment ago. The temple was virtually Intact Still an. Unsolved Puzzle. ' It Is now more than seventy years since the stunned eyes of Mouhot, the naturalist, looked upon the magnificent heights of Angkor more than seventy years since the grentest detective story in the history of the world was laid out with its million stony clews to puzzle the savants. Today, with Its principal remains classified and ticketed, Its Inscriptions translated, and Its monuments lifted out of the Jungle, Angkor Is still the vast and. silent mystery that It was In the beginning. But the monuments are there and no mere shutting of the eyes will dispose of them: Angkor Thorn, a walled city within whose metropolitan area at one time must have lived more people than were to be found In the Rome of Augustus or the Carthage of Ilannlbal; and Angkor Vat, supreme architectural effort of this strange culture, not only the most grandiose temple of the group, but one of the most begun by stupendous undertakings man since the cornerstone was laid for the Tower of Babel. About Angkor Thorn are scattering remains of earlier edifices, .and far In the Jungle are capital cities built and abandoned with that prodigality which seems always to have been character Istlc of oriental monarohs. Traces of this lost civilization have been found wherever a lean trlbutacy of the Mfr kong river branches out toward the north Once a Splendid Metropolis. Here at Angkor was the finest metropolis In Asia a town whose swaggering splendor Is permanently embossed In temple wall and tower and terrace. It was tlie perfect expression of a race of conquerors and must have been as wealthy as Rabylou unAnd yet, for der Nebuchadnezzar. some cause which an archeologlst can only guess, the populace walked out of It apd never came back. The Jungle moved In and engulfed It for five cen- - turies. There begins and there ends the mystery of Angkor. Little enough is known about the origins of the race that evolved the culture which centered In Angkor Thorn. The people were called the Khmers and were either of Hindu extraction or the diligent pupils of Hindu teachers. That about', sums up the available information concerning them. There Is mention In Chinese records of a kingdom under Hindu direction If not domination. In Indo China as early as the year 233 of our era, and there is evidence that the Khmers were still flourishing In the Thirteenth and possibly In the early Fourteenth centuries; but, strangely enough, their civilization, wonderful as It was, made little Impress on the neighboring nations. It seems Impossible that a culture such as that which bnllt the pyramid of Angkor Vat could have perished without a word of Its demise reaching the civilizations with which It must have been In constant touch. But such appears to have been the case. Two generations ago the modern world had never heard of Angkor. A dense forest spread across French trade was confined to the coast, and there was no commercial traffic on the Mekong river north of Pnompenh for the reason that Cambodia's resources, the same resources that had given this region a possible Identity as the Golden Chersonese of legend, were as deeply carpeted with useless verdure as the hidden cities of the north. Pnompenh, the capital of the Kingdom of Cambodia (western portion of the peninsula), was a village of nlpa thatch and bamboo, a comic-oper- a metropolis, where a despot ruled In fear of his life over a If not completely savage, people. Early Stories Not Believed. Saigon, the present capital of French enterprise In the East, was Just rising from the marshes south of Annam. What might lie hidden In the masse of foliage to the north no one knew The world had heard, but had forgot ten, the tales of Portuguese missionaries of the Seventeenth century, that marvelous cities with leaping towers stood dead among the trees of th Tonle Sap. Wherever there Is unexplored territory one is certain to hear of such cities, and the world had grown too wise and too skeptical to pay attention to such nonsense. True, there had been a Chinese travby name, who eler, Tcheou-Ta-Quahad written what purported to be a chronicle of his service as ambassador to some kingdom In the Mekong It was conceded that the valley. writer might actually have had some such service, but It was obvious that In his description of the marvels he had found In his dubious kingdom he was merely a pleasant liar. What the Ruins Are Like. The name Angkor has been somewhat loosely applied to the ruins. There are two principal groups: Ang kor Vat, the temple and Angkor Thorn, the town. The word Angkor Is believed to be a native corruption of the Sanskrit Nagara, meaning capital. Thorn Is a local word, meaning great or grand. Vat Is an appellation des lgnatlng a temple and Is generally associated with Buddhism. Angkor Vat was the last Important work of the Khmers and remains today the finest expression of their peculiar art. Built as a shrine to Hindu gods and apparently devoted to Vishnu, Siva, and Buddha In turn. It has departed a long distance from the parent architecture of the Hindus. It Is a step pyramid which rises through three cloistered stages to a group of five mlttrllke towers, of which the one In the center Is dominant. The temple area Is about a quarter of a mile square and Is surrounded by a moat and a high wall. A causeway crosses the moat and strikes through a gate pierced In the middle of the western wall, whence tt leads to the porThe lower tico of the first stage. galleries measure nearly 2.r0 feet on a side. The facade Is five times as wide as that of Notre Dame of Paris. s of a mile to the About north of the temple one comes to the wall of Angkor Thorn, where the Naga, legendary deity of the Khmers, Is upheld In the arms of stone giants to form a balustrade for the entering causeway. Access to the old capllal Is through a tower, from each of the faces of which a head of Siva the Destroyer leers down upon Indo-Chln- a. Indo-Chine- semi-savag- e, two-third- fully. City residents like to buy directly from the farmer, which Is one reason for the Increase In the number of roadside markets. Another reason Is that wholesale prices to farmers have been so much lower than retail prices that farmers have made money from direct selling. However, the best way to discourage buyers Is to charge unreasonable prices. It Is unwise to charge as much as the city retail price, but farmers must receive more than the wholesale price to afford to operate a stand. Prices should also vary with the grade. It Is always desirable to separate produce Into different grades, for there are buyers for each quality. Prices may be set according to the prices In the nearest city, with due allowance for distance buyers must come, the grade of produce, and the size of the container. The most profitable roadside market business comes from repeat customers, who also are willing to recommend the stand, the produce, and the proprietor to their friends and neighbors. Tree Windbreak Saves Soil Blowing Damage Severe damage to farm lands by strong winds that sweep great quantities of valuable top soli from fields may be materially reduced by planting windbreaks of trees, or by early spring or fall listing. Planting cross windbreaks of one or Intwo rows of trees at quarter-miltervals at right angles to prevailing winds Is suggested by Fred R. Johnson, regional forest Inspector of the forest service In Denver, and State Forester W. J. Morrill at the Colorado agricultural college. Such windbreaks would be In addition to shelterbelts around farm builde ings. Cross windbreaks at quarter-milIntervals would furnish protection against soil blowing for a distance of about ten times the height of the trees on the windward side and about 15 to 20 times on tbe leeward side. Investigations have shown. As the trees grow taller they would provide protection for gradually Increasing areas. e Buckwheat Mids for Pigs In studies looking for a good protein supplement for pigs, Longweil of the West Virginia station found that buckwheat middlings have proved equal to or slightly better than linseed meal and cottonseed meal. Protein supplement mixtures consisting of two parts tankage, one part linseed meal, and one part alfalfa meal; the same proportions of tankage,, cottonseed meal, and alfalfa meal; and tankage, buckwheat middlings, and alfalfa meal, have all given excellent results when fed as supplements to corn. Equally good results followed the replacing of tankage with fishraeal. But those mixtures containing buckwheat middlings resulted in more rapid gains and required less feed to produce gains. Dutch Hog Control An example of an attempt to control production by law Is reported from Holland. An emergency hog act was passed last July. Its purpose Is to maintain domestic hog prices at a level that will represent at least the cost of production. The act Is now In effect A tax Is levied on practically all hogs slaughtered In the Netherlands, to fund. Hogs support a stabilization killed for consumption by the owner may likewise be taxed. An Import duty Is Imposed on all hogs and hog products brought Into the country. An organization engaged In the hog Industry has exclusive monopoly on hog exports, which Includs or more of the total production of pork. Indiana Farmers' Guide. one-thir- d Post Timber farmers In the Ohio valley, looking for supplies of fence posts at less cost, are asking the state agricultural colleges about the best species of tres to plant, according to the United States forest service. Farmers are showing unusual interest In preserving and developing farm woodlands to Many maintain supplies of lumber, fuel, and posts for farm use, and In this way keeping down the cash outlay for these materials. Among the species recommended for planting for post timber are black locust, mulberry, Osage orange, and red cedar. 1 Lb ' season which calls now COMES to the go partying in frocks which tune to flowers and birds and sunshine and twinkling stars set in skys of blue and all such beauteous things which go to make a summer. Well, here they are In the picture, three charming frocks, Just such as are sure to win their way Into the heart of every young girl who sees them. Airy-faircreations are they, made of chiffon, of taffeta and of net these being materials which fashion stresses with emphasis this summer, when it comes to favorite media for the younger set's party frocks. It Is said in regard to favorite colors that this Is a "pastel season" and the trio of lovely dresses Ulus trated goes far to prove It so. Togeth er, they look as If a bit of a rainbow must have been coaxed to lend some of Its coloring te the scene, in that the first gown, on the cunning little dancing figure. Is of chiffon In a dell cate blue, while pale pink taffeta is the choice of the smiling maiden centered in the group, the tali girl to the of right wearing a green silk net In a delicious cool green. A significant feature about two of these models Is the fact that the skirts are formed of tiers of ruffles. This styling is very popular this season, so much so that even dresses for are fashioned in this wise, grown-upwith this difference, however, that for adults the skirts are fitted decidedly movement snug, the beginning Just above the knees. y s e the world. It Is one of the most pretentious capitals of antiquity. Its walls, most of which are Intact today, measure nearly two miles on a side, and it contained a temple, the Rayon, which was almost as large as Angkor Vat tst material. The taffeta raffles for the other dress are put together with self-sllso as cording covered with to accent the sprightly silhouette which crisp taffeta Is supposed to have. Exquisite lace edging with countless tiny rosebuds nestling among Its frills, outlines the cap sleeves and wide pointed collar of the dainty frock which the little dancer Is wearof narrow Long streamers ing. double-face(pink on one side and blue on the other) satin ribbon dangle gracefully from the neckline down the front of the frock. The pink taffeta frock has perky cap sleeves made of ruffled organza a In matching pink, finished with binding of the taffeta. A narrow pale blue velvet ribbon Is tied about the e- Schiaparelll's "eel gray" has been adopted by the shoe world. Fashion mongers believe that It will be the high style shoe gray of fall and winter. It will make a shoe that can be worn with all other lighter tones of gray, with navy, red and even with black or brown. A prob leni thus has been solved for the boot maker. Another important kid leather shoe color Is to be "taupe" for fall. As its name Indicates It Is the shade of the little field mole, a brown with Just sufficient gray to conform to the gray --"cue. Predictions for he future Include a new "faun brown" as splendid for It should harmonize combinations. well with all the browns on the fash-Iobill of fare, and It Is very smart combined with black kid In the latest half and half type of shoe. s For modish there is nothing prettier than the party frock made of either silk or cotton net, especially now that net Is so smartly In fashion. For the gown shown here (to the right) the designer chooses fine silk net In a lovely pale green. Rows of satin folds In matching green make an effective trimming. A lovely rose shading from pink to deep red posed at the waistline sounds Just enough of a sophisticated note to satisfy the aspiring young modern who is wearing It . 1933, Western Newspaper Union. hat has come out on the Paris boulevards, evidemiv to replace Chechia. It consists' of nothing more than a square piece of knitted or crocheted fabric or string done In s fish net weave the corner? of which are stitched In a rounded manner so that when the envelope.' as It were, is opened and the head In serted. the hat fits like a cap and the "ears" stand nn stiffly at each corner now-dea- d F, and Salt Lake City Directory Used Pipe, Fittings &VaIvet Newly threaded and coupled for alt purpoia. Monsey Iron and Metal Co. - Salt Lakt City, , 700 So. Srd West CRISMON & NICHOLS ASSAYERS AND CHEMISTS 8. Office and Laboratory Temple1708.St., Halt Lka I'ltjr, utis. Box Mailingenvelope and surnisnea on request. V 1 r. a pria Salt Lake City's fewest Hotel JUIN1 Ithe toll; are let fmel loo oo f fin's HOTEL PARIS STYLES L 1 ens By CHF.lt E NICHOLAS fines TEMPLE SQUARE of fl d "a this I Batb 200 T3e 200 Rooms my t Radio connection in every too RATES FROM 1.50 Just oppotile Mormon Tattrtck ERNEST C. ROSSITEMr Vi v i PILES from Pwttrf BUnd R Bleeding, Itching or from Wf Pile sufferers can now get relief first treatment by using O.R.Pile Permanent Wave or Curls Now Attained in Comfort the waving process, and read a book or go ahead with your knitting You aren't "attached" to any electricity. A clean odorless vapor Is applied to your hair, and In lw?s time than you'd think It possible, you have a lovely head of curls. of 375 degrees most scalloped dishes made of cooled food and covered with crumbs tifc a moderate oven to heat the tout thoroughly and to brown the cnmibt sub-deb- n Many a girl who started life as an ugly duckling is an attractive woman today. Modern science has given her many charms that nature failed to pro vide. Take curly hair, for Instance. Today It's as easy to transform straight hair Into a mass of natural looking curls as It Is to keep your nails trim. With the new machine less method of permanent waving, you can sit hack comfortably throughout a temperature I wrist LATEST SHOE COLOR new Use of rabbits to dairy cow feeds st the United Stages Department of Agriculture speeds up results to a rate nearly ten times that when cattle re used. If you study the dressmaking details rufclosely you will notice that the fles for the little chiffon frock are headput together with wee shirred the of softness the accent which ings "EEL GRAY" TONE IS Crocheted Fabrics Are Being Employed on Hats Historically, butter from cow's milk A Chippewa potato Is a new variety, being developed by the Department of but Agriculture. It Is ypllow-fleshetastes like a white potato. it 2 Agricultural Notes Is quite modern. tj? - ' de'-r- seven-h- eaded First of all. the first aid to cook is a good stove, wtiu-i- , . Testment that brings inierwt " form of success. If u,;s s ..... n has an oven rei!iiit..,. the baking question much all standard reciiH-- s c,w ,ave ' lng temperatures attach! if Etove has no regulator, au oren n moiueter Is the next fact Is a good pie. of hruiJ! equipment to have on haD,l "7 case, as it enables y.,u to check oven regulator, which may be t out of accuracy sometimes, do not have either of thehold aids you may estimate Z temperature successfully win, e' perienee. A slow oven, according to estw. Is from 275 to 3.10 degrees F. A hot oven Is from Iimj r-" np. For starting the cooking of am, for starting the baking of potato for fish, for biscuits, for popoVeri for pastry, a hot oven is in order For baking butter cakes, i erute oven. 375 degrees F., u chosw, for angel and sponge cakes, 1 oven. 325 degrees F., which I a lirtl hotter oven than was formerly nj ior mew canes, r.xperiment shon that 325 degrees is the best chniA. For cookies, depending upon fi recipe, 375 to 425 degrees F. Is on ly indicated with the exception kisses or merinnw, macaroons, which need a very slow oven, Son JTn degrees F. For meats and potatoes the te perature is lowered after 15 minm. to a moderate oven, 350 to 3ft grees f. for fruit and custard pit; It Is lowered after 15 minutes. Almost everything else demand! i moderate oven. Custards and Mof. fles baked In pans of hot water few eas;' Tork Stat Kw WNU Almost any sort of farm produce which Is used for food can be sold at the w ayside market Fruit Is well adaptBy Prut W. C. Hoppr, CoiU of Ariculllir. RANGE OF OVFY HEATJNBAKLNG BRWfe M'llMIIHIWiM y.vX Ointmen Q.R. (Quick Belief) PlteOj: ment is a new reme dj treatment or Pe s matter how long affllcteo, give satisiacww - anteed to or money reruuaeu. . fViio nile . Before placing - r , . ment on the anj test 1 was put to the mild and severe wondernw( ing to produce - j I Just off the steamer are these two Schlaparelll models. Their simple. conservative styling gives them distinction. Interest also centers about the materials of which they are fashioned, for fabrics are always Important In this versatile coutourler's collections. The evening gown Is made at a bright blue lacquered net which Is not only wonderfully good looking for summer wear, but Is Ideally cool. The clever handling of a single'broad strap over one shoulder with a tiny cape sleeve over the other Is Intriguing. The sports dress is of white artificial canvas, a new material which has created a sensation. The belt Is f brown and white lastex ribbon. ca. ra trnilDiea do not experiment. et. foun gst aoes wi below ana fill out the blank It to Q. R. OINTMENT M j Kill, i tfi, M tali. it. .. "niyn O. R. Co., Gentlemen: Inclosed nd$1-V,ftOrder for One mailed Ointment to be w"?";' Name WhiL for Evening White In tailored cut Is promobid as usual for summer wear, and white styles for evening. Onefrotiiy outstanding Is of organza with six graduated ruffles which begin st the knees and fall to the floor. i P. O. Adores. n On conditions that 'res"satisfied with am to receive money returning tune tory. f (0i K :or am |