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Show POINTS ON KEEPING WELL L'r. L i id,iioi R. Green, IMilor of "Health. HOW VL Sl'L.VD J THIRD A -- OF OLR LIVES 'T1!! -- n ilm il 1,.::-- . .i i1 in. i: o: Hip Van :.r. .. I:i - a. ;ov n li.ij. o! ii:r In i -- !: s !.a -- i;lil Pel .iii- lluil m i ,r M lui.Ic p.iil licre are il.Peivm kuiilx of It mux i,- - sound, i.ninokoii and reli t lung, or ii may ne liiiul and broken. Icatiug us in tlie morn.iig Tlie measure weary mid miro-lf- d of tlie value of sleep is l lie extent lo which it refreshes u, repnii'H the wear and tear of ilic day and starts us out in tin- - morn.iig as simug and vigorous as ve were llie day Peforo. If you were Paying a Pair in wPieli you wore going to k lor tinny yours, youd Pe sure and cot a romioriaPle one. wouldn't you: No mailer Imw handsome a Pcd may lie, !f n ii's a poor Ped. So mill'll for tin- - Pi'il. llie sleep I low nlioiil llie sleeper? The lloriiial wliea Peilli.ue liy per-oeomes sliolild Pe nPle lo lie do all close his eyos and nlniosl This - ilic way This is sleep. n..y savages sleep. Bat we are not aiiiin.d- - or hiiii-- j We Pino limi a day full pie savages. of worries, trials and ,:i:v- -. Many of us, liisieml of forming llie IniPil of sleeping. Pave formed tin- - Pali, of liol We lake mir trouble to liv'd sleeping. with iis. in Ped. That Don't Iralisael lui-iis as rmillsli iis il woiiPl lie to sleep at your work Pein-!iIs Another enuse of laek of fresh air. No one ean sleep soundly and reslfully in an atmosphere from wliieli most of :he oxygen lias been Iniriieil up Py stoves, fiirnaei-- anil lamps, (ipeu tl.e wlndous wide enough t to give you of iiiiiil.mr air. Bettor tun mill'll than inn If tills makes the room eoM, pm on iinotliinr blanket. If llie euld eiHin-- up through Iho iimllress, enver tin- springs with 11 tl.e draft Is II layer of newspapers. too strong move tlie Ped or put n siris-- in front of tin- window. Bill Im sure that you eiin't slay for eight luuirs In ii fluse, room, uml gol really resied. Mm-l- i has Peeii said iiliniit tlie effect of digest lull nil sleeping. Hero we are on iineerlain ground. The avwill sleep Pest If several erage Pours elapse Pel ween siipinTtline mill Petit imc. Some people sleep If a glass or warm milk Is taken at Ped! imo, This Is largely u mutter of personal luiliil. Whatever you do, dmi'l lake drugs to make you sleep. Taking medleliie e 10 make you sleep Is like taking for a headache. Any drug which Is powerful enough to slop n liead-nepis powerful enough to do harm. A coinfoi'laPli' bed, a emd, well ventilated room, u ipilet evening, a trun- , u mimi juM sleep will come, as It sl,iili, easily ami iintui-nll- , But sleep. ' I SAY BAYER ASPIRIN Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Headache Toothache Colds Iain Neuralgia Neuritis . nt Aiptrla la th n. i lo--- iiiiim-iliali-l- unl-ina- u- - I ne . s jili-n- y- s - By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN EFORMERS and othera have been vociferous In denunciation of our Inter-national Isolation," financially and politically. Recent doings In and elsewhere ubroud, however, would seem to Indicate that with them It la now largely a case of Othello's occupation's gone." lint they need not cease from repining over our world relations. The subject of International marriages should ulford them enat least purtlal outlet for pent-u- p ergies. Really, you know, when It comes to International marriages the situation is exactly the reverse of splendid Isolation." It's really quite awful the way our fine American women are marrying titles abroad and deserting the "Lund of the free and the home of the brave to say nothing of the millions of good American dollars that go with them. i course, there's nothing new about these inarrlnges. Theyve been going on for s lung time. novel readers will All middle-ageremember when the subject was new nnd exotle Himigh to set Henry Junies wiggling and twisting through one of his subtle and Intricate studies of international life and clinracter. In fact, Jennie Jemme, horn In Brooklyn, who revolutionized the Brlti.-- h Men of the American woman, married Lord Randolph Churchill away back In 1874. At that time the American woman looked upon In Knglnnd, as on the continent, as a strange creature, with habits and manners something between a red Indian and a Gaiety girl. There wna only one type. One waa Just like the next. Her dollars were her only recommendation. She waa looked iiiion aa a dangerous person, to he avoided. Jennie Jerome, however, had wealth, aoclul pool-Hoeducation and brains and her vivid brunette tamt.i- wus a sensation In that day of the blond. She iun over the Marllmroughs, captivated lam-do- n a ud became an acknowledged social lender. Laler, ns the widow of Ilaiuly" and the mol lutr "'Vi any" (IVInaton Churchill) the beciime a Polltlrnl and literary power. In HUM she married r8H. George Cornwallis-Wes- t and her power grew nthrr than diminished. Tills remarkable woman cetuln-- ii her remarkable beauty retunrkubly. At 'he marriage of her son when she was nearly t'tyhair was still raven bluek und she wns !hl hy the London newspapers to have appeared lo he Mu, hiiitor of the bride and to have been the JJ1'1 beautiful woman In llie great throng In St. Margaret's ehureli, Westminster. 11 mi odd thing that right now, fifty years "irr !., next most famous American woman of all II, '''c American brides should lie so iierslstent- 'y In II, e s person-,:,- s on higli-ulimelight that ia lirltnlns public nffulrs. This American s of course Lady Art or, the first woman ' a seal In tho British parliament. And her is n romance no less. She wns Nancy She wns tbs I.anghonie of Virginia. widow i.f KniH-r- t Gould Show when In lik'd she . Jlll'rr',l l Lord Astor, son of William Waldorf of the founder of the Astor ii'ily. who hecamo an expatriate and received a 1,1 i;i'kIii nd for bis donations to royal char- Itles Oer-man- y d s - lo-- r la-at- p As-"f- fttisiiein Vanderbilt also married a Churchill the niiuii duke of Marlborough. They are now J1nited. She la the daughter of the late LVanderbilt and her mother la now Mrs. - There are many point from which these uiiematloiuil marriagi-- s are to be regarded. One cannot indict ull these American women who marry foreign titles any more than one can indict a whole nation. For It la evident thut some are real love matches. Not always does a fortune go with the bride. Social position has been the heart's desire of women, everywhere and nlwuys. and marrying the right kind of title abroad Is a short cut to It. Besides, young women are often In love with love, the philosophers agree. So the myth of the "splendid Kuro-pealover" appeals to them, rather than the "good American husband. On the ether hand there are International mar rlnges where It looks to the average American as If the holder of the title were after money entirely and ns If the American women did not gat d their money's worth. Anyway, It Is a bargnln. We get nothing In return for a fortune and a citizen. There is, to he sure, an occasional exception by way of emphasis. We did not lose a citizen anil may linre gained one when Miss Cornelia VnmlerMlt, only child of the late Georgs W. Vanderbilt, recently married Hon. John Francis Amherst Cecil, third son of Lord Wllllutn Cecil. Her fathers will provided that In order to Inherit his estate at Blit more, X. C., she must ulwnyi maintain her resilience In the Culled Slate. Mr. Cecil resigned from the British diplomatic service nnd Is assisting In the management of the estate, one of the show places of the country. Up to the lime of the World war intennitlonal marriages were on the Increase. An Incomplete list of the more noteworthy In n 101-- almanac totals about 250. Many of them entised u sensation in their day. The aftermath of others still finds its way to the first page of the newspapers for example, the marriage of Anna Gould to Count Bonl do Castellane and Inter to the I Mike do lrinee do Sagan, nnd that of Mary Victoria Lelter of Chicago to Lord Curzon, now carl of Kedleston. During the war the business International marriages fell olT. After the war came the Inilux of French brides with their soldier husbands not ninny fortunes there, one Imagines. Now the business Is booming again. They do say that (he 40 presentations at the Court of'St. James Ibis year through the American embassy would Iiiivo been GOO bad all the applications by Anierlcnn women been gran ted. Anyway, 1124 has already broken ull records with Its long list of Internal ionnl marriages. Gossips of two continents arc still talking nliout the first Inlemiillonal marriage of 1024 thut of Mary Milllcent Rogers of New York, twenty, grunddiiughter of the lule H. II. Rogers of Standard (Ml fame nnd heiress to something like $ well proteeted. In Jnnnury she married Count Ludwig Sal m von Hoogsirntcn, about forty, one-side- of hu AU'itrlnn noble house. The count nnd Ills lirlde were married In (lie municipal building. New York, nnd look her imrents. Col. and Mrs. Henry II. Rogers, entirely liy surprise. They weni to Burls. In April her father went to Kuroim and returned with the countess. The raunt did not come, as he hud pressing tennis engagements In Berlin nnd Vienna. The gossips Intimate that her father nmiiifeed matters so that till count may tennis abroad. be able to devote ull of bin tlme-tAn example of an International marriage which o apparently iifTords little ground for carping Is that Ylggo of Denmark and Miss Eleanor Margaret Green of New York last June. The bride Is s granddaughter of Abram S. Hewitt, once mayor of New York, und a of I'etcr Cooper, the philanthropist. Her title Is Her Royal Highness I'rlncess Kleanor of Denmark, countess of Rosenlwrg. There Is no great amount of money on cither side. It Is stated that 1'rlnce Ylggo was obliged to waive hII rights of succession to the Danish throne of King Christian X, both for himself nnd his heirs. When Mrs. Jacob Wendell of New York (nnd Hertfordshire, Knglnnd) recently announced tbs engagement of her second daughter, Philippa, to Randolph Algernon Ronald 8tewnrt, twelfth earl of Galloway, another glimpse was given of the realm of pure romance, where American dollars of 1'rlnce oil)-cl- - i where she could live cheaply. She also lived quietand the two titled suitors hud to come to the country home to do their courting. Rich? Yes, Indeed; both carls are very wealthy. And oh, the family traditions that go with their titles I For the brides of the House of Carnarvon Hull Iho ghost of always have to face at Lady Chesterfield, an ancestress of the time of Charles II who visits them in tho night and wnrus them against the wiles of no n. And the brides of the house of Giilloway always receive one visit from that ancestress wln wns no less than tho bride of Laininerniiiur, fumed In song nnd glory. The glory of the innrrlago of Ava Allro Muriel Aster to Prince Serge Ilnionovllch Olmlenskl No- leditfskl MeletskI shuinos She Is the great-gregranddaughter of tie original John .Ineoii ), Astor with a for".:ne of ten or fifteen millions, nnd n relative by marriage of Lady Aslor. He Is u penniless lueiiilier of an old Russian famly ined-lelu- o j ; ' THE VALUE OF PAIN TM.N is not evil. some good but mistaken people declare. On the eoniraiy. pain is the salvation of life. If iIiitc were no pain, wif would none of - le alive. Pain is tlie red light on the track of life. Ii Is a dan-gisignal, ii i llie warning which the body gives of dung"!' ahead. is ihc lowest known The amoi-hform of animal life. It is sfmpiy a It gets Mie of pl'oi,iaMII. I it. If its hy food is uiTered to all anex'ha. It will -- Tlti'll itself Iowan tin food. If is pm liefer" il. ii will draw I mi's, in back. Too bad we haven't as much -I'li'c as the aliei.'ha. L j (17(53-1848- ily. Budly wounded In ii- ill" World war. he wag nursed back to licnllh by Mie widowed ITinccsg Buriat inska, daughter of (Vur Alexander II ly Id second (and morganatic) wife, Catherine Dolgnr-uklie married her. A!t r the revolution In Bus slit they went lo London, wh.-rPrincess Uholeu-went oil the roneert stage ! -- uppirt them. She lust spring got a divorce from him in charging "neglect. Intiddiiy and nnnsuppart." Soon after her mother d.rd. an estate of about $:io,U0d,0(iO wliieli v.as beyond the Prince's l. nlU'-i'ilh- I kl : traW mark Lumbago Rheumatism Accept only Payer package which contains proven directions. Handy Bayer" boxes of 12 tablet A 10 doUIi1! of 21 and 100 Druggist. f Barer Maaufaetara ut UuaaaowIcacUteaUr Paper Makers Complain of Scarcity of Rag aC BallcjUcadd Substitute for Claes I'heiiileul product wliieli resembles glass and I'uii he used for many of llie same purposes has lieeii produced In Germany. It call he rnlleil, bored, polished or rut and does not have the ii'iiili'iiey of glass to splinter. Because of this iimlliy It has been recommended for tlie glass panes of iiutoinubllcs. optical liistrmiiciiia, ornaments, und tollel articles. Fritz l'ollak, the Inven-lo- r, arrived at this product by condensing riirtuindde and tlieocnrbamlda with formuldehyde. Amides are Simple, nitrogenous Mitmlnnres reluted to proteins. A It seems like harking hack to early days tlmt tin niaiiiifaeturers of high grade papers have cullcil uii Secretary Hoover of (be (ominenv depart infill lo alii them in procuring a reserve stock of rags. Snnie of the mills Inul less than n week's supply on hull' when they made the request, and none of tliem hail liny eonsiilerahle stock. Ill llie days follow Ing the Revolution paper iiuiniifai'lnrers advert iseil III tho new simpers urging Imiisew Ives to save their tags that they might linro ii Millii'lc in supply for their Use. This was before the discovery that pilH'r I'oliltl lie lnade from wood fillip, says the Brnekton Times. In the early days of paper making toiiilmwerc rilled and tlie wrappings of luiiiiindr were fi'iivcrlcd Into pnier. For ninny years most of the rag stock for paper mills laid mine from aeritss the sen. Smyru.i was llie great shipping point, ami Ihoiisauds of Ions were seiil here every year. Iiuc perhaps to the prevailing povIs sending less Ilian half erty, the usual iiiiioiiiu of rags. I'rohiildy the people are still wearing I hem. I Halls Catarrh Sure Relief FOR a INDIGESTION OII INWGESTKJ , 6 ncisi Bell-an- s ELL-AR9-S 25 AND 754 PACKAGES The New-Ric- EVERYWHERE h Mayor Ilylnii, of New York, said at a dinner lu New York: Our new-ricmultimillionaires art Treatment, both The naive way they local and Internal, and ha been uccew-fu- l very umuslng. In the treatment of Catarrh for over display their weulth reminds me of little Willie. forty years. Sold by all druggists. Little Willie was wenrlng his first F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio pair of pants fur the first time. As lie played In Ills father's law office Altitude and the Blood another luwycr dropped In. The two I r. Joseph ol tlie lawyers talked sway together, but not laboratory of Cambridge uni- a word iiliout the new punts wus suld: i, Willie stood this as long as he versity, Knglnnd, has found that the retl jilgmenl of the Mood, could. Then lie said In a careless und In iiiaintlty as one ascends Indifferent way: in higher altitudes, lie tells of an 'There's three pairs o' pants In Kliglisli scientist, the liemogloliln coii-litills room. of whose Idiioil was slightly normal at sea level. lie ascended to Cerro de Pasco In the Amies, 14.2UO feet above sen level. Four days later it had I'li'ivast'd more than 2 per cent. Fourteen days later It hud gone up I was suffering Tacoma, Wash. from feminine weakness and had s more than IS per cent. bad cough. I Medicine Rill-cro- h pliys-lougi',- 'i lieino-Llnbit- lie-lo- Are You Weak? Appetite Gone? Cuticura Soothes Itching Scalp. retiring gently rub spots of dandruff and Itching with Cuticura Ointment. Next morning shampoo with Cuticura Reap and hot water. Make them your everyday toilet preparations and have a clear skin and soft, white hands. Advertisement. On reiieh. Nothing daunted, the p:'ir turned unuind and married Alice Astor. The fortune of the second Princess Obolenski eomes from her father, John Jacob Astor IV (lSdl 1912), who went down with the TIIiiiiIc. Her uioiher was Ava Isiwle Willing of Philadelphia, who Is now I. roly Rihhlestlule, tlie wife of nn eeeentrle Briton who Is seventy and owns 4.N00 nens. The father and mother of Alice were divorced in Hu. ller father then married and INSISTI , ' so weak got that I could not do my work, lost flesh and had no desire for food. Dr. Fierce Favorite Pr- and Medical Discovery acted upon my entire ay stem in such a way that I began to mend and was soap on my Mrs. Bessie U. Ronald, feet again. 3726 Last G St. All dealers. Tablets and liquid. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids Hotel. Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg. escription Golden Adobe Bricks ' d Adobe" Is u name applied to hill the other day with wliieli to liuy bricks made from nny sultablo some shirts and B. V. I Vs for myself, material which hardens on exposure nnd she came home with a lint und to the sun. Often such bricks are llioes for herself.'' made of turf und straw. This material cun he used In very dry climates Ciuiteiiimi'iit Is wisdom. only. sun-drie- Mailelelii Force, who Is now Mrs. W. K. Dick and tho mother of John Jacob Astor . Mnlhllde Oxer's marriage in 1923, which set tlie intcniiillonnl gossips ilii'tering, links the Standard (Ml und Harvester millions. Muthllde Is the daughter of Harold F. McCormlek nnd Sirs. Kditli RoekefellL-- r McCormick nnd tin; gninildiiugliter of Her parents have been John D. divorced nnl MeConuli'k is imw the husband of Giinnn Wulsku-I)- e a Polish woman wlm-- e heiinty, inarrlnges and iiritnu donna aspiration- - huve Interested two continents for several years. Muthllde, at sixteen, vv It Ii her liulr down her back, announced that she was going to marry .Max proiirielor of a nge wus variously riding school in Zurich, slated to be between for t three and fifty seven Anil uiHrry him sin- - did. Her mother years. Her father innile her never gave her eon-cAnd now Mnthtidv wait till she was eighteen. User has a daughter, pivsimiahlr heiress to untold MeConuIck mid Roekefeller millions. Mrs. William It. Leeds, widow of the "Tln-I'latKing.' Is said to have attained higher foreign rank thnn nny other American woman. In 1920 she married 1rinre Christopher, brother of King Constuntine of Greece. George II Is now king and 1rlneess Anastasia, who was originally Nannie May Stewurt of Cleveland, Ohio, died Inst year. Her son, Willlnm B. Leeds, at nineteen married Princess Ksenls of Russia In 1921. She Is a dmigh ter of a sister of the Inte King Constuntine. Youny Ieds, who presutuulily retains much of the Leeds fortune. Is still nn American citizen and says hi Intends to llva In America. products that should have hei-- east out. You may have overtaxed your eyes. Whalever the enuse, yon know ii' load hurls and you want It that stooped. So von go to llie medicine closet alld gel "Ut your favorite headache tablet, pill "r powder. You don't know what's in it or how It works, hut you know that if you lake enough of It. tile hf.idai'he will slop. An eiiunliy way would he to have soaie one hit you on the head of lead pipe. That with a pii-'- e hut il might the hi'.idai-he- . j . : So i, at re.'' ".!y it vvi'l will take power11:1 enough wiii.oui removing i! to hurt "puhir "heuiluiT.e Mac kind of may stop (he pain, practically all of them depressants. What would you think of a railroad engineer who got olT his engine and smashed the led light with a That's what you are doing whet, you kill the lii'iuhii'lie with drugs. A lieadaelie Is a warning to you tlmt you are doing or haye done something wliieli your body protests against. Find out what it Is and stop doing It. Don't smash the danger signal with a club. eoal-Tlii'- e - ' i ; MOTHER Fletchers is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared Infants in arms and Children all ages. Cas-tor- ia To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven direction nj carh package. Physicians everywhere recommend foci it |