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Show Murray Eagle, Murray, Utah Famous English Chapel Restored Wills His Children to Care of City J3 f Mother Mapped Out Peter's Career Carshalton, Surrey, EnglandTom I'reen, a blacksmith, who died recently, willed his 23 children to the local corporation (city hull). He expressed sorrow In his will that his twenty fourth child had died following a motor uccldent a few years ws HMtoM the day Peter Cray t born, bis mother anllcipnred bis future. At first, that future dealt largely with certified milk, special, 'JUST; II " a V 1 Stf '''.: Utta J' ft This time the Jury again. acquitted her after an hour's de- trial liberation. r.edlam broke loose In the court Men shouted and women room. pressed about the girl, congratulatShe was carried to a ing her. waiting automobile on the shoulders of friends. l '"... , French Memory Wizard Forgets Date of Birth xl. ' I ,,Ml.VJ r 5i Mil A view of Hie beautiful St George's chapel, Windsor, England, which, Their nfier ten years of restoration find repair, has been majesties, 'the king and queen of England, ns well as other members of Hie royal fiimily, attended the opening ceremony. DANCE COSTS T TEN-CEN- Girl Convinces Jury Man Gave Checks to "Make Baby Smile." Sun Francisco. "Tuxl dnnclng." entertainment dime a whirl which nightly draw crowds to dance hulls lu every part of the world. Is considered iiiexiwnslve pleasure by runny, but C. Harold Morehouse, married capitalist, has the opposite that (pinion. Morehouse paid a dime to dance with petite Claru Hanks Nelson, pretty Oakland taxi dancer, one moonlight evening several months nso and started h chain of events tiut cost him $'J7.r."2 In ono lump sum as their climax. As a sequel (here were two spicy trials on charges of grund theft for Mrs. Nelsun mid considerable publicity ns well as domestic Utihappi-lo-s- s fur Mr. Morehouse. Monopolized Her, After that first dance fur a dime il Is Morehouse, alleged, spent l sev-rn- score more fur similar whirls about the finer Willi Mrs. Nelson. were months and '1 or uttered several mi i,ver;igo of three lights ii week during which the Is siiid to h;iw virtu .'pit:ili.M f'liy monopolized die young woman ii ;i dancing partner. A ii tol.cti of his fil lings for be Is nlo alleged ( huvcsliow-Upobcr pahilliiis, liitliy lilt lilul other little gifts, that thoe tilings lover liter wcie to ii courtroom till of eurii.ti find sc.md.il tliirMv I o,,l... tiki. own I,, M,,rchuc, Mrs. f.'cls.,n's l.f.,atnl, Paul, of f'nlif.. was obt.iililng n ill Vfit'i e on tlwrges of desertion ntid . of their oix year old Sen Mid Mrs. NY!-- a was iinnexing a in young I'd Mnte ' iicnev of a priiiiiim-ii- t JSuit Lake !y family. She Cot Her Checks. The story in i.'e- - vx ben More-- I s iiey Utah, with several diamond rings, automobile and a cashier's check for $,",000. "Why. he gave me those checks, and to sny that I stole them Is to brand himself as Injun giver," Mrs. Nelson protested. Nevertheless she was returned to Oakland for trial, for Morehouse wns determined to go grimly through with It, although he Mid he felt that some one had "made a monkey" of hlin. Trial Proves "Scream." The trial, from the standpoint of spectators, was a "scream." Mrs. Nelson said that Morehouse had professed love for her, had showered her with gifis and money, taken her for automobile trips and beeu'ed her to marry him. "lie indorsed those checks and gnve them to me with tne remark: 'Koesn't Hint make my baby smile?' " she swore. "Then when I went Into my bank to deposit I hem he Played outside because-- , be said, he didn't ant hunk ollielnls who knew him to "think he was Santa Claus.'" Klght nfler that. Mrs. Nelson said, she found out Morehouse WHS married nnd a fattier and wns so ".shocked and M untied" tlmt she decided then and there never to see him again. Murehouo reluctantly admitted everything except thnt be had given Mrs. Nelson the rheckR. She bad taken them from his puckels while he caresed her during an automobile ride, be itisistrd. "Show mo bow she caressed you," Invited I.eu Sullivan, uttotney for n new Mrs, Nelson. "Uluiti" gapped Morehouse. "Show us bow she lou-vou," 1 , ., "iiM- lelji - w. iii (,, ( ,. p,,;,.,, , nli)l, iii ir.-tiK back from Mrs. Ne-t-tir.-- c rh.vk $.'T..V.2 ttUng bad i' h be said she taken from s j ... l,i n (I,,, ,f r,,,ISo , ,1,. j lien. bi aM. she " i .1 t r i.wti i,:n,l, nce.iiint ninl ' a 1 iii, cut of lb,- - verv I I I i t i i . 'i !.!' i.ii . t.illtty Mull'hiitlvf. 'HTufi! for r. -- i. d several day ! SVVnlO out S'o w.is nr-- I Prox,, r 1 $27,552 Sullivan persisted. t "Von to know," said the capitalist. "How should I know," wns the attorney's quirk, comeback. "She never lowd nie out ,f SL'T.tM).'' (Mi-h- Girl Gets Ovation. The courtroom, despite the best efforts .f bailiffs and Judi: wns In nn uproar of merriment for minutes. After several hours the Jury wns unable to ogre. . v lieeonlly Mr8, Nelson went to TO GROW LEPROSY GERMS Thousand of Lepra Bacilli to Studied for Secreti by Scientiitt. Waliii:toii. B nltark on ore of the oldest nnd most feared Former Wives Get 80 diseases of mankind, leprosy lu pr.i-- r. ss. Thonswids upun Per Cent of Man's Pay tho,is,,is ,,,,n,Sj. E,,rm, ,,re , Mitwaul r viiiioliy in the lif,. i,f wil H ii, l i n am NtiVii, i oH nine. Itw-imonth ' lull-- ! . o of li p SI.NI iv . inn as n ii ''son f,,r the Milwau I I'" r.iill..;i, lo t!i(. rl.Tk of the 'trull court for the benefit of two ("liacr uiw and trto mm of rbil ili.-Wife N, 2, Martini Ktlt;!b. William In Ol 'e. OlV II, ''!'!;,(' A .'I rot,' t ." I'roljtiiJ f V '1 ej Hie J",, n ColOl f.,rtv rtwi.... ,rP!l, n,,, flimtly wanted klo.w emit bow Willi.,,,! was in nrrcnr. It, ;1.,.t y to ;f N v i.o ihn.rred 1,'iiu In,,Slkin Kn( V2 II S f pi. y otir honor," nai,) iiiinm. 'h : 1 , I ' e.". It 'i"d in. - 1 n - jd,--. Ur frot), roitrN.ni nn,, 'P'd tb, i .v.,n bad ?1r.('tf rr;ir tl,n ( (Jji h,Hn nn uiiUnoun ltor to the be KioHti In order tlmt chetnisisnnd physii inn may ,.rn tin. niot In tiniale secrets of this disease. Scieiitiiir veterans of ntiotlier battle, i ,o nffetoe nu'aii st lul.ercu I, live been called to do bat He, The lll.'dienl reseiil.ll Commit lee of Nutl..tiu Tn!ierculoi beaded by f.r. W'illiatll t'hiiile White or tlip National In lllutp of bealtl, f States pul.lic Lenin, i,p nervlce. nt the re,,eM of (be L.H.iinrd Woo.J Memorial. ,: imdertukeii nn In 'estij.Mil,,,, of (.,,roSv ns llll cxteil slon of n, ttiheiciib.Hi. 'erillS thai Cftlmp (ubercutoM. mid get ms that Alo cntie ineinlier. f ,.,,,. f,imir. htlll . ns tho Kem.sof l.r.-- v nt.-e.l n.tnally Krw t cells of th. bntntin body, the mono O'es. ns the mor common tubercle bacilli, . , roM-iml- i jprs a ;,,. Kneouraping reports como riom In this nnd l;praiirin ri'vv' n""' hurden m"l,m' .,!", "broad nnd rp,rs nncountry Jn-koften .lis Aaron, wi 'btiu-..... ,.. nvo ns in flpparenlly cured, The p tit o value of rbniilinoogrs oil bus been "". orst Wn-e- t here Martlm p.nlMNl snd this snlistimrp In,, been credited with riirnilve powers. l!i otheiR eniu i inrd nw S.ll. M.'i T.U he ib.iwt, Br), , rnnvIncP(, that It lives up Its reputation. r.iimitiebnni. Alu. :,,trt ,r,ln Therefore this new sttnek. The ocro. comptMno,, , ! nf epr,i birtlll thai l limelo 2beenstrntns ?m ;r."i.s;,T'j"cultivated from human """n . f"r to rents win ,t Brown In '",i wmrn lo on (0 . picture cnsin i (P rnn.se, of germs win quantity , fchoW, nKrn to the blcrllng Chemical laboratory - u Paris. Jacques Inaudl, lightning calculator and memory man, Is going to retire because he forgot his own birthday, lie Is known to thousands of American vaudeville fans. For CO years he has toured the Angkor Vat, world, adding up and subtracting and recalling dates and now he has (rrepnrrt by the National Geographic Society. WaahinKtun. D. C.) forgotten to remember the most Imup In the Jnuglcs of French portant date In his own life. some J500 miles "It was my wife who caught me FAH from the doorstep of the world In this, my only mistake In my career as a memory man," Inaudl ns measured In distance, n thousaid to Interviewers. "I have baf- sand years In (lie past as measured fled audiences In every quarter of in time, nnd eons back In the unthe globe, but I was stumped when known as measured In history, Is my wife gave me a knitted tie and Angkor, one of the most puzzling I couldn't think what It was for works ever contrived by the hand of man. until she told me." In his career, Inaudl has tied figTemple nnd town nnd network of ures In knots, so to speak, finding dim and forgotten hhrlnes, It represents a culture that must have been In a (lash the square root of awkward totals, dividing, subtracting, far In advance of anything coeval with it and a power that must have multiplying. "If you write figures for me, I been virtually Irresistible even in find calculations more difficult," he Asia, where men nt arms were says. "Tell them to me Instead, plentiful nnd warfare was a favored business. I find that easier. My memory Rut the culture died and the men Is an audible one, so to speak, not who had built it disappeared, nnd visual." for hundreds of years the forests Me has been round the world many times, adding up sums for of banyan nnd bamboo hid from In his villa at the eyes nnd memory of the world theater audiences. Champlgny he will try and forget what had been a metropolis of o million inhabitants. nil about figures, except when his Two generations ago a French parrot now and again puts a puz-r.land asks for a quick answer. naturalist broke through the wall of Jungle In a search for specimens of tropical life nnd came uion a Bovine in Oregon Sets spectacle such ns the slaves of the Two New World Records lamp might have contrived for lie fore him, In the quivIndependence, Ore. Breaking at Aladdin, one time two world records, one ering silence, rose the five towers for milk, the other for butter fat, of a vast step pyramid, a stone tapestry representative of an art Oolden Chiefs l.ndy May. a purebred Jersey cow owned by I.loyd A. and architecture like nothing else within the ken of mnn. Ilulburt of this city, recently yieldA inouted wnU surrounded It and ed 1!),!'J2 pounds butter fat In nn a cloistered gate um a causeway official production test of SuVi days. that led to lis rocketing staircases; Her milk yield exceeds by almost and. for nil that Jungle growths a ton the existing .Tit. day world record of 1S.047 pounds of Jersey weie close about its lower stage and odd clumps of verdure grew milk production, all nes, established In 1!VJS by Tormentor's Sum y from it, arched roofs. It seemed that life had been In Its shadowy Meg, n cow owned by 11, M. Shergalleries only n moment ngo. The man. Charles City. Iowa. Her butter fat yield breaks the existing temple was virtually Intact. No Trace of Man Except Ruins. world butler fat record of the JerThe nstotd.-hisey breed for mature cows. .'tiG day visitor looked tests, established in l!rJ7 by Poet's about for the nshes of altar fires Mabel Mowat. owned by Karl Han nnd Mood listening for the footticman of I'mthind. Ore. It steps of returning priests. seemed incredible Unit n people could have evolved n civilization Small Zoo Is Kept by such ns that typirted by the great Inmates of State Prison templeut nnd then hnxe vanished with' nny of their neighbors Itnloliih. N. C.-of the Interhenrius of It. esting features nt the state pi id P.ut there were no human beings leiitiary here Is n (.mull 'n. kept In the empty halls, nor was there tra.-by prisoners and Increased fu.m of ii, nn, save In the ruin of time to time by gifts. his works lu the walled city of the At present the zoo Is without nn iiorth. otliclul keeper. Its former attend-nut- . It Is now more tl,;m nltv vears Otto Wood, having escaped for since the stunned eyes of Muht, the fourth time. the naturalist, hoked upon the Wood, serving n murder sentence, tnnztiillcelit of Angkor kept the itoo nnd opemied a little mote than heights sixty years since the commlssiiry for convicts. detective story In the his Several prisoners now act ns zoo gtente--oft the world was iald out with lory keepers. Its million The roo contiiim n nionker. nn the snviintH. stny clews to puzzle Today, with its prin. owl. un niitenter or "Texas Snook-urremains clnssitied nnd ticketclpnl a P.eiir," groundhog, which seled, its Inscriptions translated, nnd dom comes out of Its hole, n variety of rabbits nnd guinea pV. nnd u Its monuments Islifted out of the still the vast nnd Jungle, Angkor box of snakes. silent mystery that it wns In the beginning. TO AID WAR ON DISEASE The world knows more about It now. Splendid nutoiiioblle roads, cut through what was once a thickb.iinb.Mi et of nnd I, now nn end nt Yale university, where Prof. Trent H. Johnson nnd bis associates less Mce Ibid, bring the traveler, on regular schedule nnd with little will niialyirp them Ju- -I ns thev from Sain-m- , personal picked tiibetcle bacilli to chemical at the foot of Asia, to the bnn.i-lopieces with si(irtin2 results. on tb" nL-tn luhorcllloxls verms cb'elliNts of tho AnKkr timnt. In a few hours. Wariv bun found the world's tirt (.oino,,,,,,, dr.ds of visitoi, from nil parts of suimr whl. li kills liibercnlosu nnb the world tire ninl nnd does t,,. out this odd ,,ri ,,!. corner nnd fei ted. They f..t,d fl f C(1. them nttiae.l carrying nwny xvith ri" lining i;erms whatever leporls tliat will ur,. other hundreds. but l,evcrtholes produces the tn' And bercle or cell chimps thumcUT-Istiy. t, weie It not for ih0 f: that these treiiiei,.o, rlkkurni re of the ill Inaltl tnu.h fl they were when were- tlrM bum, defiant of time they nnd Find Original Sermon weather, by th.. Tonlo Sip (ilrent I.nUel, the Incredible t.ilo of tho on Cromwell Death Clvll!7nti..n (hat hunt them nnd viiiiKhed would rank n, It did lu London, tint. -- ,n orlglnnl serMoubot's t;it,. n, n none t.o mon bv nn unknown do. pastor coiiMnicted Injth, Hvered M :s!m on th. ,;',i I'.itl nre (hero nnd deatli r,f Oliver Croinvvell. W hen .tUroverrd In n colt.ith.i, In,f n.i mere shutting of tlM SetentiM-ntilipoo of (hem; Angkor Thorn, n cetitury poliil.al wniicd cliy within who., tneiiop'ol-Itnmons presehled to f il,rnrT nren nt one Hum must have WeMem Ontario by the Into j,di lived tiiom tw.plo than wore to b,. Onxls p.nrrett. found In lb.. liome of A u rum us r Only n small purl of tbo ,.nn the Cutting,, of I hint,, I,, ,j ; nn,j Is dev..tH t fromrtell, A Angkor nt. supremo nr. blleetural trentUfi on d,tohn:v procede rffoil of this slratito culiuie. i..,i Ihe pnrt In which only the ti.st grandiose temple of quotina f.eriptnrp nt gieat ,.,,c,, the group, but one ..f (ho m,t m,,. Klve, sexernl reason, n tiy well ns n "koi undertakltu; bcfmi ,y ptltuo "wns be pelidous man sin.o the rninorstoiio was wnlle.l by H k.hmI peoplf.'' . laid P.ab.-Ithe Tower of The in, known Muilo'r t,,tri Oncovtrcd by Mouhot. romwell's dignity n, Two cenortitioo, ntf 0,0 modern oulsmiidlnc quality. Nevt In merit w.irld bud never heard of Anckor. were bis religion, bis klndno. Ic A dense r.reM splint ncros, ld. I'.' ';"'1,,n' Vnl,,r. his Chios. Fniicli trade wns coiitlned bis diligence In mllitnry prudence r.rcat,i, In the ronM. nnd there wn, no Hon, his love and nfTiihiliiv, n,r tnitllo on the Mekong river mnnner of Ids rtenili snd hi,' The crtn..n Is clowd with m north of Pnompenh for the reiumi that Cntnbodla's rcoiirces, tho nduionlilon to Cronnvellii son Siitne resource. Hint bnd given (his lli.hnrd. who Inter wns to prciuh recioti a wssible Identity n, that he Inckedhls father' Ktrcnct". of lecelid, were (Joldell snd pott en of pollticnJ pcrsuask o. m deeply cari'eted with useless One e 1 c - iU'-crl- re, l. b(.vr pre-ohe- r (r, ,, ,,, f,c f.-- r In Cambodia. verdure as the hidden cities of the North. Pnompenh, the capital of the of Ciimbodla (western Kingdom peninportion of the sula), whs a village of nipa thatch comic-operand bamboo, a metropolis, where a despot ruled In fear of his life over a semisavage, If not completely savage, people. Saigon, the present capital of French enterprise In the F.ast, was just rising from the marshes south of Annam. What might lie hidden In the ninsses of foliage to the north, no one knew. I Miring these troublous times M Mouhot passed up the great river Into Tunle Sap and made his discovery. Archeology, already thrilled by the translation of the Unsetta Stone and the unbelievable bit of detective work which M to the of the Assyrian decipherment cuneiform Inscriptions, turned Its attention at once to this new field. For half a century learned men tolled here unceasingly to prore nt length only what bnd been suspected from the first. Hint a highly Intellectual people had built up In this valley a civilization, and that however Inconceivable experience might show such a thing to be. their marvelous culture had been sunk without a trace. Once, and not so lone ago, the Journey to Angkor could be made only by boat a tedious passage that took five days. Now Easy of Access. Motor transport, more flexible and faster than the typical oriental railroad, has brought the npper readies of the Mekong valley to within n few hours of Saigon: and paddy fields, spreading out ami the old horizons, have beyond pushed the Jungle steadily northIndo-Chines- e a "me this to l.ed iliets and private kind-rg- ar tens, but ns Peter grew into si sturdy boyhood there urns the U till nuestion of what lie was going to make of himself. When he was due t' graduate from an expensive and exclusive prep school bi.s mother went on to It for commencement. Also, to consult about her son with the men who bad been bis guides, pbllos. pliers and presumably friends. Sure I.V. they would have detected in her Peter some bent. Some flair which Indicated the line along which be should be trained. When she put the problem to Instructor, mathematics Peter's thnt gentleman considered a no ment before replying. Then. "For give me. Mrs. Gray," be said gently. "P.ut really your boy hasn't brains enough to run a stop watch. think I don't like Peter. I d. He simply hasn't any brains." Taken rather aback as who wouldn't have been Peter's mother still hoped Hint the boy's i'.iiglisn teacher would offer something more fueou raging. "Has my son any Inclination for er writing or, possibly, poetry?" she began. This time the answer was prompt poenough. "Writing, Madam? etry? That most delicute of the arts? Lord, no'. I like Peter Im Hut there Is nothing of mensely. the artist about him." Mrs. (jray made one more try. "Tell me," she pleaded of Jake Crowley, the athletic coach, "is my hoy good at sports?'' Juke threw back his mnssive head. "Lord love you, Mrs. Gray! Your Peter can't remember the between a hold and a tackle, a home run or a touchdown! Put he makes a fine figure In running pants or plus fours and, gosh, how the girls adore him!" When Peter's mother reached home, she told an Intimate friend that her trip had proved Invaluable Inasmuch as It showed her uninls-takublthat for which her boy was What that whs sh most fitted. neglected to say, hut the friend gathered that Peter future would be shaped accordingly. And so It was. Peter was sent to a fashionable college with plenty of money and a smart wardrobe. I urlng his vacation his mother him lavishly, Includ entertained Ing among other youug buds of the season. Miss Patty C.ale, whose father had recently made a few millions in furs. Peter hud always known Patty, a time when but there had Mrs. Gray thought the C.ales a cut beneath her. Certainly, when home, Peter fairly lived nt the Gale's, and when his Junior prom loomed in the offing, be promptly Invited the who'.e Gale family to It. Mrs. Gray, who had gamely stood the cost of nox, taxis, tiowers. ami what not, was frankly disap.'.itted when nothing evidently came of It. She tried Peter out after the dome Itself when a full nioon. lantern lighted campus, and the sedu.tive waltzes of a metropolitan orchestra might reasonably bo suppose ! to have g"t in H.cir rm.n.Uc work. "Patty is a fine girl, Peter." "Sure is," said Peter cnr.less'y. "iH'serves a good husband." Hut Kighlo. teeie. Got ntV cigarettes? Oil. I forgot jou d'U't smoke!" Mrs. "Peter don't bo horrid!" Gray had learned nothing for bcr pains. She did n.t g, on for her son's . coiiiineu.-eni.TitIt was a great blow when she knew that Peter would .not receive a dipb'tna. He had u ndo a fraternity one of the bct an-had invited Ids mother t. p.nr nt the commencement week tea. Put, although the G.ilc were going eu mass.., Peter's mother stay o I ago. f'V.V Don't botlier I!y T. M. JACKSON simpletest if you mutt conrince jour- try tome orJiiury totxa' io a oil pipe. Note result in ciuli oq tK bottom of jour left thoe. Then try loooe orJirurj tokxeo io your fjvorite pipe. Note oa otner BUT tin g s ment. today. tr.. d. 5fand .IT'S milder Itevotige Is an Inbuilt;, n nl. J s-- Goms J flxXTf is , and colds wear down your strength and vitality pHischee's VA Syrup soothes instantly ends coughs quicktv. j?e v 1V VALJ lief GUARANTEED. . Ac oil druggist PARKERS HAIR BALSAM ixML -- kms lSvsJr.1? stor J II 5"fT lmp.ru . Cior tm mmd f V ronitrrikwwoM'wtvr bur fl and ts Suy H , tJtoJ I Hurl mi Vuris ,lUirR.m by mu et tr-.-i f.-- r "Mix L4 spt-rrc- i r.-- s.-,- ; Jk-- I n- i j j v:;hsv.:4h i ova or.:- - :: vc.it s o'J. 1 h.n c fvn:r Kilc tc cue fvr. Ivforc rv r'rt hi!v j i tv ' j '' l , e 5" figs t.' I.v.'.J L I: Vh.vrsV .':"'Vv::'..! Kv.twc I iJ xv tcr:.! V:ct.iV!c . i 0 Boschee's Syrup wm The name Angkor lias been homo. She was totally unprepared somewhat loosely uplJIed to these ruins. There nre two prlticipnl his bursting In upon her it thij group,: Angkor Vnt, t!,0 temple, ahead of bis cvi ected arrival. "Had to dash t.gl t home b and Angkor Thorn, the town. The word Angkor Is believed to be a Vou, mother!'' bo cried, grahhn g j native corruption of tho Sanskrit I T In bis liruis ul, I .1 so ing h. I Nagar.i, meaning capital. Thorn Is around In spite of herself. 'I mi'i j . ' I'm engaged '" a local word, meaning great or gaged j '.!;iv j "Oh, Peter!" fc.ud M:. grand. Vut W tin nppcll.it Ion d. s by ol c il jj Ignatius n temple and Is g. nerat'y feebly. Then, ' llssocialed with l'.mblhlsiu. hope, "is it I'aM v ' "Patty? M mv no' S.- -' ro.--be. n Wonderful Step Pyramid. s to try married three to.-:Angkor Vnt was the last Imporo ., ! i: mate, but th. tant work of the Khtuers ntnl . N.-- . ,'.e , could graduate. tod iy tho dnest express!,,,, word titu st litiV ili ri of their pecnllnr art. ns a other than Pan. i.itic si:. r I at', i shrine to Hindu gods and nppar-cull- MlHU'" devoted to VLhii, Siva, nnd To this d,i Mis Gr.iy do. !'( j P.ii.hlhri in turn. It has departed n know whet tier 1' ..! il lv-- , distance from long the patent Archshoiil I I laid at o.'," marriage itecture of the Hindus. It is n or not. t ' Surely, if I'. ?, r step pyramid width rises thr.uijli f boon thrown so in.,, h with P.,i:y three cloistered stage, to a group of live tultetliko twer,. of whiih Would not have none lu r.'M.n! lecr I nV the one In tho renter Is dominant. with Patty's putty. An t S'l'. H Mr stlh del. Sister Tin" nren , about quarto.oi would nc-- Me ti ter of n mile and w sur- Gray Ii ol s!. m l ie up with Putty n rounded by inoat and n high h,H-bcr tn'n.l nt Pet. ' A Wall. causewnv crose the j commencement t' it On pici' cii'v tnoat and strike through Kafe bcr sol, W.I filled W is !' i! o' pierced III the middle of the West-ni- i husband I to a i h wall, whence It lead, to tie of tho 1 (list MiikO. he portico lower galleries tucismy neai.'v '.'l Chwicr of l' t H on f.s side. ntid coil. t form et The orlglnnl It 1, the history of Angkor Vnt Il Imir lu nio.'il " itlu.'d ' that hi bchotd.r cim Jud.:.' lll.Hli, lligl't. tl.kics. t.''ltlsl j how blfli trnllv K nnd refers o the hnriu lei 11 i. , of j Tho tower, nre loftier Hum the "M i, I ii n Mir. h b talleM palms of the Jungle, but t!n bitro ir'"j Imd a f'nilh.r ni pH. iitioii. Thr k lifted siill l. lire higher Hiey by ti l no. freipi.'titi.t of pelspit the that form tho most word, however, Interesting part of their design. writtenw "Imir bt.iined." run bv lit CIS. g.'od In the mass, Angkor Is ns luipios-shns tin Pyramids of Pg.pt, "Soni ef th more striking n nn nrtUtic onf.eni-Uthan oi en tho Tn Mahal. Put The nncieut Poiuvlms Mtevcl It is Hot for these attribute, that Unit tlie sun oiuo cntntf down to tho ibue-- l pilgrim would classify It nnd bild t eggs snd earth tho ns Hie most fniciuntiiig pln.o lu PrvMii these went buck ng:iln. the world. men i ' fit tn-e- n Today one may ride for hundreds of miles without seeing nny trees save In far scattered clusters, and It was only jestord::y Unit the tiger nnd elephant walked here, unmolested heritors of the physical kingdom of (be Khmer. Peyon.I u bank of water lilies in the still moat, beyond a cloistered wall that seems to bnvo neither beginning n..r end, the great bulk of Angkor Vnt drives its st..n. wedge Int.. the sky. A pilgrim looks upon it through misty ryes nnd with nn odd constriction of the throat, for there Is only one Angkor Vut. There Is no such monument tn a vanished people anywhere else In the world. The sun Is setting now, nnd the gold has cotno bark to the minarets. The lacework of carved rock Is fragile as cobwc-l- . In the gathering shadow, nnd with the half I'gbt of early evening the central pyramid has taken on nn size. It seems futile to record Its grandeur. One iLh-- not describe nu Angkor. Ho sits and gazes nt It In silence nnd amaze- I and fragrant. Your regular tobacconist has Sir Walter, of course. Try fr ward. I shoe. Finally, Xrj totae Sir Wilur Rilciijli imoLing tobacco in Jay jooj pipe. You won't have to oot it any- where, for youll notice with the very first puff bow much cooler atxi mllcr it U. It itayt io, right down to the last puff in the bowl rich, mellow 1 v.i ! . tor lie :ov.n vt five tur.es v!.v. Al cr tlitcc lv::'. I feel . c:e.tt i;.irro e;v.f.t. I c'J t.ilc the Wvet.iM iw.SutJ vvliencver 1 tuvJ it t. t it pvi' me ntvt'tli t. K a jrsvJ. nuMliet tsi f.in'.;!." V.r P-,- y Vex L V'.'w".. S:nM. S.!cr'iu . MkHu' ) ii. A-v- a 171 . N. V, Salt lake Ci, NW H.X |