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Show t THRPTNHflAIVTRmXKTTN TtTNCHAM CANYON. TTTAH TW-v- . Somber 27. 1928 Tailored Day Costume of Transparent Velvet hi! ifif Here Is a farming tailored day costume of t"sparent velvet which seems certain'0 be popular with th fashionable n"13" 'or her fall ward-robe. " j ......m'.wAV.' ..jj.v.vy.jjjy v.y.w ; rf t r --Jr. ,u f , An Oasis In Kingdom of Hedjax. as to try unsuccessfully to destroy tin dome over the tomb of Mohammed at Medina. Before his denth Wahub converted to his simplified faith a powerful sheik of central Arabia, Mohammed Ibn Saoud. He became both the religious and political head of Wahahlsm; and he, too, took a leaf from the funda-mental tenchlngs of Mohammed and began spreading his faith by the sword. Iraq, one of the areas threatened, is the modern name for the traditional Onrdeti of Eden historically known as Mesopotamia. The cradle of civiliza-tion. In the belief of many archeolo-glst- s and historians. Is this very vnl-le- y of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers Iraq and Its King. Iraij lies between the Arablun des-ert oil one side and the Persian up-lands on the other. West lies the French Mandate of Syria; north the Kurdish highlands of Turkey. The IVrsIan gulf forms a corridor 1,(KXI miles giving Iraq a waterway to the open Indian ocean. Dates from "the flarden" come to New York by way of this corridor. Within Iraq llvo S.fcK).-00- people, a slim population for soli which once supported more people per arte than does densely populated . fireat Brltnln has made her Meso potamlan mandate the Arab Kingdom of Iraq ruled by a Mohammedan prince, the son of the former king of Iledjna. King Fel.al reigns where Babylonians, Assyrians, Clmldenns Persians, Greeks, Itomans and Sara-cens ruled successively for 'six ren tiirles. Of the three principal cities. Mo-- ul the oil town, seems safely beyond reach of the Bedouins. Bagdad In ihe (Fropared by the National deorraptila Society, Washington, D. C.) a ItAIUA bus become the scene A of one of the world's latest threats of war. In the past . few years the desert Bedouins. (Under the leadership of the sultan of iNeJd, have gained control of all en-;U-Arabia, as well as Mecca with Its jstate of Uedjaz, Aslr, and large areas 'of eastern and southern Arabia. N w ;thcy are threatening to push their op-erations northward Into Iraq and northwestward into Trans-Jordan- . The .seriousness of the latter threats lies In the fact that Iraq and Trans-Jo- r dan are both mandates of Great Brit- - !ln. Between thcyn lies Syria, a man-date of France. Arubln has been figuring in world affairs since the curtain rose on the i first act In history, and yet It has ,'large areas about which we kt.ow I practically nothing. Because of the 'huge bulk of Asia, its numerous s are somewhat dwarfed, and lone may fall Into the error of classing Arabia with peninsulas nearer home, .such as Florida. But 60 Florida would ;be lost in this greut Asian projection; it is, in fact, a third as large as United States. Tremendous desert wastes are not alone responsible for the fact that the olitBlde world la Ignorant of the Nejd .In the heart of Arubla. That country .If the area over which the Nejdian nomads roam niajr be called a country has one of the most effective exclu-sion laws known : the exclusion law of ,'the sword. These people do not care to go Into the ontslde world, and they want no visits from Western traders diplomats, military experts, or mis-sionaries especially ml.sslonnries. They are blood-thirst- y fanatics on the subject of religious simplicity. As Wnhahls they are nerhnps better center of the vnlley, comes by its po-sition of capital honestly.' Basra. In the Fur South, is the end of what was to have been the Berlin-Bagda- d rail way. The sultan of Nejd seems to he causing history to repent Itself. T,!'ie after time city ways have softened city conquerors until a new barbaric horde swept over them. City Arabs have taken readily to civilization's ways. They work In Ice and cotton cloth factories; upon public works and engineering projects. . Much agricultural land has been re-claimed by irrigation In nn effort to revive the luxuriant Garden of Eden. Dates from the date palm are the chief product. Wheat, barley and rice are also grown. Experiments looking toward cotton growing have been pro-moted. Vegetables and flowers thrive in the protecting shade of palm fronds. Trans-Jorda- n Full of Nomads. Trans-Jorda- the other threateaed region, lies in the northwestern comer of Arabia adjoining Palestine. Per-haps It will bring the newly Independ-ent but very old country closer to realize that Its cnpltal, now Amman was once Philadelphia the of the half dozen or more Philadelphia!! gieit and small, that are to be found in ttti postal guides. But It was only a mere matter of twenty-od- d centuries Hgo that the city took the name Philadel-phia from Its new lord. Ptolemy I i It had existed as Rabbath Amman, chief city of the Ammonites almost from the days .of Lot. fiom whom the Ammonites are said to hnve sprung. It was after a victorious hat-ti-with these same people of Amman that Jephthah. according to the nihil cal story, returned to the fatal meet Ing with bis daughter. When Trans-Jorda- n Is described as stretching from the Jordan and the Dead sea toward the Interior of Arabia one Is likely to call up the picture of a hopeless desert. But much of 'he region Is steppe land, a high plain supporting some flocks and even capa-ble of tillage. Nomadism has lung held the region In Its grip, however, and It Is as a sort of "chief of no-mads" that Abdullah Ibn Hussein finds it necessary to rule. He holds his "court'" not in a palace but In a group of tents which he moves with the seasons. Amman Is not Inaccessible. Five hours by automobile over reasonably good roads through the sizzling valley of the Jordan suffice for the trip from Jerusalem to the capital. The Jor- - dan forms the boundary line and across It Is an Iron bridge. Amman Is only about thirty miles from the river, and as the crow flies Is hardly more than than sixty miles from Jeru-salem. The Hedjuz railway, connect-ing Damascus and Medina, runs through the town. known to the world than ns Nejdlans, for the former name they owe to their religious associations. V Blue laws have never taken on so deep a tinge of blue as In the land of , tbe Wahabis. Tji drink or even to i smoke tobacco Is not merely a derelic-tion in their strict code; it Is a capital offense. It Is equally an offense, ac-cording to their views, to use rich rugs and fine vessels In mosques, and they have made 'niona, than one effort to Invade Mecca Itself to reduce the holy places there to Wahabl simplic-ity. They even look upon other Mo-hammedans not of their sect as unbe-lievers unworthy of life. i Their Capital a Forbidden City. ; The capital of the Nejd, Rlad, where was born the movement that threat ens to embrace all Arabia, baa been more truly a forbidden city than Lhusn. The only Westerner known to have visited It In recent years was an American physician, smuggled In that h might save the life of a chieftain, and It Is believed that ven this er-rand of mercy would not have saved him from summary execution save for a little group of defenders who for a brief time stretched their standards Afier the World war Great Britain paid the ruler of the Nejd a huge sub sidy $100,000 a year, an "honorarium" four times as great as the salary im? allowance of the President of trie I'nlted States The young sultan rcok the, cash and let his followers go about their forays pretty much as they waited, with the result that Great Britain had to spend much more than the subsidy 'defending the kings of Uedjaz. Trans-Jorda- anil Iraq against Incursions. Since t he sultan of Nejd became king of Uedjaz and ruler of most of Arabia, the movement has been, much too great for a subsidy to affect, and now Great Britain has found It neces-sary to mobilize nrmored cars and air-planes at the head of the Persian iuif , to protect Iraq. - Ibn Sand, the'suitnn of Nejd and king of Uedjaz. has combined his politi-cal nnd military drive for a unified Arabia with a revival of Wahahlsm. The Wahabl sect was founded early In the Eighteenth ceutury by Abd el Wnhab. who might be termed the Cart-wrigh- t of Mohammedanism, for he was essentially a Moslem Puritan seeking to turn his fnlth back to what he considered its simple fundamen tats. Feeling that Mohammedanism should be uncompromisingly mono-theistic, he was particularly disturbed by the tendency to worship Mohum-- " med, who claimed !0 be only a mortal, as well as Allah. He also found his Invoking Moslem saints and preached against this practice. After Wahab died his fanatical con-verts wrecked the elaborate tomb of Moslem teachers and even went ao tar OKe KITCHEN CABINET Q. 1921. Watrn Newspaper Union.) There ain't no un In growlln' An all th time: When muslc'i ringing everywhere And everything'! a rhyme. Just keep on emlling cheerfully If hope Is nearly gone, And bristle up and grit your teeth An' keep on keepln' on." APPETIZING DISHES Here la a dial) which If one likes highly .so'iponed food, especially gar-lic, will be greatly eu- - Joyed : S i6oned Spaghet.l. Cook three cloves of garlic In four tablespoon-ful- s of olive oil add one cupful of dried mush-rooms that have been soaked In water until soft, add the water to the garlic, the mush- - rooms, and four table-spoonfu- ls of butter. To this add two cupfuls of stewed veal, two cup-ful- s of tomatoes, a bn-- leaf, one-ha-lf teaspoon ful of thyme, with salt and pepper to taste. Simmer for two hours, stirring occasionally. Cook one and one-hal- f cupfuls of spaghetti In salted water until tender, blanch and drain. Put a layer of spaghetti In a buttered hnklng dish, add a layer of meat and gravy, continue until all Is used. Bake In a moderate oven twenty minutes. Cornish Pasty. Prepare a good baking powder biscuit dough, roll out and line a large pie tin.' Tut Into the lined pie tin a layer of diced beef steak with plenty of the suet for fat; If that Is lacking add butter, sprinkle with salt and pepper and cover with a layer of thinly sliced potatoes and a thin layer of parboiled and sliced rutabagas, now a sliced onion or two and season well. Put on the cover of dough with a vent to allow the steam to escape. I teaspoonful or two of water may be added to aid In the Hist cooking. Bake for an hour or nn-ti- l the vegetables are well done, e from the oven and wrap In a hea-- cloth to steam the crust before serving. This makes a fine one dish meal. Good White Cake. Take the whites f three eggs beaten stiff, udd one cupful of sugar, two-third- s of a cu. ful of pastry flour sifted with three teasooonfuls of hnklnu powder. Cream otie-hn- l' enpful of butter, add the sugar, when well cre.tmed add the milk and flour alternately, and lastly fold In the egg while. Flavor to suit the tasN Bananas. This delicious fruit Is good served as a fritter, broiled with steak or chops, served ns a salad, baked In butter and lemon Julee. served In nn ice or other frozen dish, a dessert, slh-e-with breakfast food, as a cake tilling, cooked In custard, or used a n topping for custard pie. It will be dllticult to find a fruit with sufh a repertoire. Alexandria Salad. Line salud plates with crisp leaves of lettuce, cut two bananas Into balls, add four halls of cottage cheese rolled In chopped wal-nuts. Serve with French dressing. Banana and Data Salad. Wash and dry one-hal- f pound of dates, dry In the oven a few minutes, then remove seeds and cut Into quarters. Cut three bananas into slices and squeeze .over them the juice of a half a lemon, add the dates nnd four tablepoonfuls of salad oil. Mis lightly and serve on let-tuce. Banana Ensemble Salad. Fill molds of lemon and grapefruit sections aod unmold them on a ring of ripe ban-- . ana slices, sprinkle with chopped nuts and arranged on lettuce. Serve with cream mayonnaise dressing. This will serve us a dessert or as a salad Dressing. Beat two egg yolks, add one-hal- f cupful of sugar creamed with two tablespoonfuls of butter two tublespoonfuls of vinegar, one table-spoonfu- l of lemon Juice, one t'ible spoonful of olive oil, one-hu- tea spoonful of mustard, one teaspoonful of salt, oiie-fourt- b teaspimnful of pap-rika. Cook In a double boiler until thick, stirring constantly, cool and 'idd one-fourt- h of a cupful of whipped cream Pour over salad and serve Banana Fluff. Cut one-hal-t pound of inarshinnllows Into small pieces Whip one cupful of heavy cream, a! one teaspoonful of vanilla and one eighth teaspoonful of salt. Stir'ln tbe luarshmallnws with one-hal-f cupfo1 of sugar, and we cupful of broken nut meats. Set on Ice am!-- chili several hours.' Just before serving; fold, in one cupful of mashed banana 'pulp.' Serve "wlrh berrips or im Ice cream. fIxed Fruit Sad. Take one-ha- if cupfnl each of shredded pineapple, chopped nut meats, orange pulp, grape-fruit pulp, halved maraschino c!er rles. nnd one and one-hal- f cupfuls ot sliced bananas. Mix and chill. Serve with ' . Apples Stuffsd With Banana Wash and core six apples. Put one-ha- lf a baflana Into each cavity, wh'ch has been dusted with sugar and cin-namon. Bake in a hot oven. Serve wlrii sugar and cream. Bananaa With Broiled Chops. Cook the chops until nearly done then on top of each put f.vo slices ot banana and finish cooking. Turn each piece of banana once. Remove the chops and bananaa to a serving dish. New Silhouettes in Fall Models Late Fashions Accentuate Broader Outline; Puffs, Panels, Flounces. Although there Is a general trend towards a broader silhouette, It Is Just ns Important to dress your type. There Is a tendency to depart almost entirely from a straight line and In-troduce broader lines with puffs, pan-els, flounces and plaits. However, the wise person will always suit the gen-eral mode to her own individual pur-poses. There is a strong movement on In Paris to adapt the new fashions to Individual needs sartoriully. In generul effect, the sports theme Is being replaced with a subtle and genuinely feminine outline. Although the slendernes--s of pust seasons will not be abundoned, the entire trend is toward a figure with delicate curves. The fashion of the moment Is to em-phasize these curves but In no wise encourage a heaviness of figure. The feminine movement Is stressed with both draped and fluttering movements, and It Is wise to heed the call of fashion. But there have always been certain types whose lines are best ex-hibited In a pons theme, and these : til -- v ft- - " I f - 1 ' ' ff 8 j ' S rirr 'ti Cream Flat Crepe With Accordior Plaited. Flounced Skirt j persons will wisely heed a stralglii silhouette with Just a few of the vi riatlons of the fall season to pw nounce them new. Loretta Young, like all the film pla-yers In Hollywood, bus seen the han-dwriting on the wull and has selerted her new costumes with un eye to tern Inlne charms. in her newest Him Miss Young wears a simple but charm-ing frock of cream flat crepe which has an accordlon-plnlted- . flounced skirt. It has a wide belt and i nov el treatment In organdie collars and cuffs In which cherry red ribbon end embroidery lend a smart note. The new sleeves are puffed at the cuffs. Hu I 4 NURSES know, and doctors hava declared there's nothing quite liks Bayer Aspirin for all sorts of aches and pains, but be sure it is genuina Bayer; that name must be on tho package, and on every tablet Bayer is genuine, and the word genuine in red is on every box. You can't go wrong if you will just look at the box j Biyer Msnnfietara I Monoteetleteldeiter of BaUeylleaeUI l To Cml a Burn h Use Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh ) Money back foe fintbottktf not nltod. AH daalen. HELPED DOB MIDDLE AGE f Woman Took Lydla E. Pink-- f ham's Vegetable Compound ? I,: Denver, Colo. "I have, taken six ' bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-- ' I w I table Compound ot. and will ta!;9 I more. I am tak-if- w 4 it as a tonia ' - to6 help me XJrtvy through the I )$r Change of Li.'a j rT!f and 1 am tellir-!- ;VfJ many of my , ' oT S"4VT! friends to take it " 4 ' ' f found noth- - t xL tirk ing before tins to f m m niany bnj feelings at night that I could not sleep and for two years I could nol po down town because I wnj afraid of falling. My mother took the Vege-table Compound yearo ago with good results and now 1 am taking it dur- -' ing the Change of Life and reeirt-toien- d it." Mas. T. A. Mn.i rat, 1G11 Adams Street, Denver, Colorado. W. N. U, Salt Lake City, No. 33 -- 1928. Discussion Went On, but Vtse Man Slept "Sleep," said the pessimist, "Is but a foretaste of death that fllvlne nepenthe for which wa poor mortals yearn." "Sleep," said the chemist, "13 causel by eucb an accumulation of toxins that all organic activity must be suspended or minimized pending their elimination through chemical change." "Sleep!" said the poet, fervently. "Ah, poppy and mandragora and all the drowsy sirups" "Sleep," said the business man, "If I can get a good solid eight hours of It, makes me show up at the 0-- desk feeling like a er flghting-coc- k I" "Sleep," said the philosopher, "Is a phenomenon which" The wise man sat In the corner and said nothing. He was taking a llttla nap. I.os Angeles Times. On Faring Children roflCRIB to COLLEGE ; ComBtSml d EJlton of "CHILDREN, XvHaawtaa foe PARENTS" Nursttf schools otter a way of pro-viding very Dest eure au1 train- - log fori" little children. Giwour home laughing volcea and duncl ft Make It a place where your friends, your busbund's friends, and our children's friends like to couwl are reluctant to leave. The socW of others is especially neces-unr- j io the growth and development of uu people. They must have frieoiis, and If the little spot which tfMy have learned to regard as home lit home In the real sense, nuturally tie will bring their associates to It Is yours a home o; Just a house? study of music, when property Is the best of uiiud trainers. the following faculties !The Invention, memory, thought, accuracy, concise concentration of mind, oroud mental grusp, ability to com-pare und auulyze. To these may be added, patieuce, self-contro- l, refined feelitigs, cultured tuste. Imagination, acute sensibilities, and most essential of all, that llrm. ess ot will necessary to overcome dlilicultles and to sur mount crises on the instant. The amount of allowance given a child Mio-tl- be determined by the child's age und Individual needs. The child's training is furthered by keep-ing accounts, provided .h se are made to be a help and not a burdensome task. An adequate breakfast for both children and adults Includes milk, fruit, either stewed oi fresh; hot cereal, bread stuff, and fat in some form, either In bacon, cream or egg yolk. Parents often lessen their children's respect by carelessness of one kind or aitot her; carelessness in personal appearance, carelessnebe where cour-tesy Is Involved, carelessness about dignity. A man's or woman's truthful-ness, fulrnesu and Jignity are subject to daily examination in the close In-timacy of the home and very young children show an astonishing capacity to read theli parents Judge them. See that your children form the ex-cellent habit of drinking a glass of water immediately on rising every day. A school child's aversion to a night-ly warm bath for cleanliness and a coni shower In the mnr-ln- g for stim-ulation can be overcome If a parent stands his ground and Insists that that daily heullhful custom shall be observed without exception. t. 192. by Children, the Magazine lot Parents) Old-Fashion- Father Judge Ben U. Lindsey, the champion of modern youth, said at a dinner In Denver: "But of course youth Isn't always In the right. An father complained to his duushter that ha didn't like the daring way she dressed. "'Oh, dn't you? said the girl, and she blew a choking cloud o cigarette , smoke Into the old man's face. 'Weil, ' dad. let ne tell you this I dress to please myself.' " 'But It takes,' he protested, couch-ing and waving the smoke nwuy 'hut It takes so darn little to please you.' Hen's Long Service A twenty-four-jear-ol- d hen. believed to have set a record for longevity for chickens, recently died at the farm of Charles Witfhey, of Beaver Valley, Pa. The hen had been the property ' of Wltchey all her life and laid eg;:3 until about two months before death. In recent years the hen had been rath-er feeble and lost her sense of bal-ance, but continued laying. Consolidated Operations ' At Worcester, Mass., snys the Bos-ton Globe, three generations of Fred Halsteads lost their tonsils within the space of 45 minutes. Fred llal-tead- , fifty-seve- his son, Fred, Jr.. twenty-nin- e, and his grandson, Fred III. Mir and one-hal- were the three who mnde a family event of what nii;;ht have liecii. scattered incidents. : Velvet Jacket Suit Is , in Fashion Limelight Velvet jacket suits are prominent in the fashion picture not only be-cause of their new rich colors, bottle green, lipstick red, sapphire und rich brown, us well as plaids comb in In a these shades, but because tliey very amusingly duplicate the uew peplum silhouette of t lie frocks, having a cir-cular peplum attached to the bottom of the Jacket Just below the leiillier belt, which encircles the low waist. With the peplum attached to the Jacket, the skirt has no other duty .than to remain plain and wrapped, though It does sometimes have a deep clicular flounce bordering It, so Hint, with the Jacket on. the effect Is that of a velvet dress with fljt fur collar and cuffs and with two circular tiers mak-ing up the skirt. Another unusual feature of these Jacket suits Is the general adoption of a gay sweater Wiia.se- - to'.be worn under the Jacket. In most cases this is really an ordinary, If extraordinarily vivid, sweater, but In other cases It Is a creation of brnrsiN lame or cut velvet made to resemble a. sweater blouse as nearly as possible. Do little boys "play horse" pi,? more, or do they generally play "ilr- - j engine?" The pnlnstaking man doesn't always j suffer the most pain. ' ! Crepe de Chine Used in Gowns for Formal Wear Crepe de chine Is gradually re-e- s ttihlislilng itself u n dressy material. One large house uses it for evening dresses again. - One of the most successful' models l unusually long ne back with a panel that has considerable fullness. The two front panels are much shorter. The waist is Moused and Is finished In front with a brllUimt buckle. Jeweled shoulder strap? are strongly Indicated for winter evening gowns Tbey will he of j;de. crystal, rubies, emeralds and sjipjibires. Girls Now Let It Grow, -- Say Hair Net Magnates 'The Chinese hairnet Industry, that accurate barometer of the bobbed hair situation throughout the world, is once more moving toward prosperity. Hair- - net magnates throughout Central and fystern t'hlna are breathing eusler and saying that the worst Is over. Their export figures show a steady increase in shipments to all western countries. These figures, they say. never lie. The' fad among women their hair short, which spread starvation and bankruptcy In parts of China., they say is definitely on the wane. Nt-- York Is the largest buyer ot hairnets In the world and orders are Shantung province is the center of the Chinese Industry. It has remained a home trade, controlled by women and girls, who weave th nets and send them to central depots tor Inspection and hl?menu Printed Silk Lingerie Most exquisitely made Is lingerie ot printed silk tlu has a pattern of dell' cute pink rospj with blue leaven. of p!,,, gtik and bindings ol the same add much elegance t ibis linger!, |