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Show Till: SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH it " ri,rl! Kef IN r very front Yrl l was smly sboui ago lhat WrfliVil married ibe ri-- )rr l Vlea-otth- ml f Mr Carnarvon Inna died. Hricr M fr Pyramui and (thr ThUbe Baa 'irthilpf, lha art of f of King fame, who fiat Nw the Wt-ilrl- Mn-Troml- ,11. DEAR taka a siunidly, "Writ, why I lrj rider yuar Aunt Hunan "Lady Jane Gray la't 4 he belter for Nr wuriiag-eie- fil than Handing Hailed all day." "Igb! All ahee III for U rrowhatlt I wouldn't he sera oa her," (Uriix-t- r flung hack. Of otiirw, If you winter show off" began Aunt Wm-i"I Only not to he a scare-rrowKara broke In, tears running ebreka. mrr her mans "It routes of bring an tfaughier. ft--nl forget ihall" Aunt Hunan Mid. heed up. rye flanking. "T IwM f try Handing from un der A t'nd of nemrlty debt your graudfalher had put on hliw. Id he a thing like that" Im young." Hart "I I ranll naked pUri-Uy- d"M .M r.. B, le $40,-000,0- er great-grandso- father cornea" "He wont ever comet He must be dead," Sara cried, flinging hersetf upon aunts breast. "lie will come living or dead," (1703-1848- ), L I n. P kJlMT M fr one-side- I I 8n-sa- n Vegeta- ble Compound And begin taking it U hna stopped three beulng-dww- a Hns and other Led footbaa and ing helped me in every wsv. I so have tmteh fal'ti the Vegetable .orr pound that 1 keep It on hand ail of the time and recommend It whenever have the opportunity. Mrs- - LEWIS luxbu:r, tharcet, Verrooot, ering rhi-ri-he- where she could live cheaply. She also lived quiet ly and the two titled suitors bad to come to the country home to do their courting. Rich? Yes, Indeed; both earls are very wealthy. And oh, the family traditions that go with their titles I For the brides of, the House of Carnarvon always have to face at Bretby Hall the ghost of Lady Chesterfield, an ancestress of the time ef Charles II who visits them In the night and warns them against the wiles of men. And the brides of the house of Galloway always receive one visit from that ancestress who was no less than the bride of Lammermoor, famed In song and story. The story of the marriage of Ava Alice Muriel Astor to Prince Serge Platonovitch Obolenski Meletsk! shames fiction. She Is the great-grea- t granddaughter of the original John Jacob Astor with a fortune of ten or fifteen millions, and a relative by marriage of Lady Astor. He Is a penniless member of an old Russian family. Badly wounded in the World war, be was nursed back to health by the widowed Princess Bariatlnska, daughter of Czar Alexander H by his second (and morganatic) wife, Catherine Dolgor-uklie married her. After the revolution in Russia they went to London, where Princess Obolenski went on the concert stage to support them. She got a divorce from him in London last spring, charging "neglect. Infidelity and nonsupport." Soon after her mother died, leaving an estate of about $30,000,000 which was beyond the Princes reach. Nothing dannted, the prince turned around and married Alice Astor. The fortune of the second Princess Obolenski comes from her father, John Jacob Astor IV (1804-1912- ), who went down with the Titanic. Her mother was Ava Lowle Willing of Philadelphia, who is now Lady Rlbblesdale, the wife of an eccentric Briton who is seventy and owns 4,800 acres. The father and mother of Alice were divorced In 1909. Her father then married Madelein Force, who is now Mrs. W. EL Dick and the mother of John Jacob Astor V. Mathilda Oaeris marriage in 1923, which set the international gossips fluttering, links the Standard Oil and Harvester millions. Mathllde is the daughter of Harold F. McCormick and Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick and the granddaughter of John D. Rockefeller. Her parents have been divorced and McCormick is now the husband of Ganna Walska-D- e a Polish woman whose beauty, marriages and prima donna asplrationa have interested two continents for several years. Mathllde, at sixteen, with her hair down her back, announced that she was going to marry Max Oser, proprietor of a riding school In Zurich, whose age was variously stated to be between forty-thre- e and fifty seven jears. And marry him she did. Her mother never gave her consent Her father made her wait till she was eighteen. And now Mathllde Oser has a daughter, presumably heiress to untold McCormick and Rockefeller millions. Mrs. William B. Leeds, widow of the "Tin-Plat- e King, is said to have attained higher foreign rank than any other American woman. In 1920 she married Prince Christopher, brother of King Constantine of Greece. George II Is now king and Princess Anastasia, who was originally Nonnle May Stewart of Cleveland. Ohio, died last year. Her son, William B. Leeds, at nineteen married Princess Ksenia of Russia In 1921. She Is a daughter of a sister of the late King Constantine. Young Leeds, who presumably retains much of the Leeds fortune, is still an American citizen and says b intends to live In America. JuiiUm'a hnrt any thing. Aunt Hunan swallowed Something bard la her tbroal. hhe loved this ell she quirk -- liver rhlld dearty, bad found her a trial all the lea year d she bad her. "Su-akeep her Mfe. Hiea atl thats left me," her brother bad Mid when be bade them good by. Three months bad stripped bint of everything. Ills wife. ht twin nil had hero ena, Ihrlr grandparent InHantly killed In a motor strident, leaving him a burden of debts and grief (tint ought lo have crushed blot utterly. Terribly shaken, he bad somehow lived through It, keeping bla bend unturned. "I shall come bark living or dead," were his last words. A motor horn sounded Impatiently outside. Hare darted to find out Its meaning. In a minute she was hack, white, breathless, saying brokenly: "I cant helleve It but but my Great-ancJulian bne come to take ma away for good." "Yon ar willing to go with him," Aunt Busan shot at her, "after he baa waited so long?" Rare nodded. "You wont blame ma, my annta afler you see their car-e- nd clothes!" "But yon are your mothers daughter," Susan said with a hard breath. "Be sure I wont lay n straw In the way of your going. Only when your ber sew an advertisement in the l" -- I. Belmont, pretl dent of the National Woman's party. There are many viewpoints from which these international marriages are to be regarded. One cannot Indict all these American women who marry foreign titles any more than one can Indict a whole nation. For it Is evident that some are real love matches. Not always docs a fortune go with the bride. Sodal position has been the hearts desire of women, everywhere and always, and marrying the right kind of title abroad Is a short cut to !L Besides, young women are often "in love with love," the phtloe-opher- s agree. So the myth of the "splendid Euro-Na- n lover" appeals to them, rather than the "good American husband. On the other hand there are International marJOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN riages where It looks to the average American as If the holder of the title were after money enEFORMERS and others have been v clferon In denunciation of our Inter tirely and as If the American women did not get d national "isolation," financially and their moneys worth. Anyway, It la a Recent doings In Oer bargain. We get nothing In return for a fortune politically. and a citizen. There la, to be sure, an occasional many and elsewhere abroad, however, would seem to Indicate that with them exception by way of emphasis. We did not lose a citizen and may have gained one when Miss It Is now largely a case of Othellei Cornelia Vanderbilt, only child of the late George occupations gone." But they need not cease from repining over our W. Vanderbilt, recently married Hon. John Francis world relations. The subject of InterAmherst Cecil, third son of Lord William CeclL national marriages should afford them tier fathers will provided that In order to Inherit his estate at Blltmore, N. d, she mast always at least partial outlet for pent-u- p enmaintain her residence in the United States. Mr. ergies. Cecil resigned from the British diplomatic service Really, you know, when It comes to International marriages the situaand Is assisting In the management of the estate, one of the show places of the country. tion Is exactly the reverse of "splendid Isolation." American Its really quite awful the way our fine Up to the time of the World war International women are marrying titles abroad and deserting marriages were on the Increase. An Incomplete the "Land of the free and the home of the brave" list of the more noteworthy In a 1914 almanae toto say nothing of the millions of good American tals about 250. Many of them cansed a sensation dollars that go with them. in their day. The aftermath of others still finds Of course, theres nothing new about these Inits way to the first page of the newspapers for ternational marriages. They've been going on for example, the marriage of Anna Gould to Count novel readers will a long time. All middle-age- d Bonl de Castellaoe and later to the Duke de remember when the subject was new and exotic Prince de Sagan, and that of enough to set Ilenry James wiggling and twisting Mary Victoria Letter of Chicago to Lord Curzon, now earl of Kedleston. through one of his subtle and Intricate studies of International life and character. In fact, Jennie During the war the business International marJerome, born In Brooklyn, who revolutionized the riages fell off, After the war came the Influx of British Idea of the American woman, married French brides with their soldier husbands not Lord Randolph Churchill away back In 1874. many fortunes there, one imagines. At that time the American woman was looked Now the business is booming again. They do upon in England, as on the continent, as a strange say that the 40 presentations at the Court of St James this year through the American embassy creature, with habits and manners something be- -. tween a red Indian and a Gaiety girl. There was would have been 000 bad all the applications by American women been granted. Anyway, 1924 has only one type. One was just like the next Her dollars were her only recommendation. She was already broken all records with its long list of Inlooked upon as a dangerous person, to be avoided. ternational marriages. Jennie Jerome, however, had wealth, social posiGossips of two continents are still talking about the first International marriage of 1924 that of tion, education and brains and her vivid brunette ' Mary Mllllcent Rogers of New York, twenty, beauty was a sensation In that day of the blond. She won over the Marlboroughs, captivated Longranddaughter of the late H. H. Rogers of Standdon and became an acknowledged social leader. ard Oil fame and heiress to something like In January she married well protected. Later, as the widow of Randy" and the mother Count Ludwig Salm von Hoogstraten, about forty, of Winny" (Winston Churchill) she became a of an Austrian noble house. The count and his political and literary power. In 1900 she married and her power grew bride were married In the municipal buUdlng, New Capt. George Cornwallis-Wes-t York, and took her parents, CoL and Mrs. Henry rather than diminished. This remarkable woman H. Rogers, entirely by surprise. They went to retained her remarkable beauty remarkably. At Paris. In April her father went to Europe and the marriage of her son when she was. nearly returned with the countess. The count did not sixty her hair was still raven black and she was said by the London newspapers to have appeared come, as he had pressing tennis engagements in Berlin and Vienna. The gossips Intimate that her to be the jnnlor of the bride and to have been the most beautiful woman in the great throng In St father arranged matters so that the count may be able to devote all of his time to tennis abroad. St. Margarets church, Westminster. An example of an International marriage which Its an odd thing that right now, fifty years apparently affords little ground for earping is that later, the next most famous American woman of of Prince Vlggo of Denmark and Miss Eleanor all these American brides should be so persistentMargaret Green of New York last June. The personly In the limelight that beats on high-u- p bride Is a granddaughter of Abram S. Hewitt, ages in Britains public affairs. This American once mayor of New York, and a woman Is of course Lady Astor, the first woman of Peter Cooper, the philanthropist. . Her offto take a scat In the British parliament. And her icial title Is Her Royal Highness Princess Eleanor career is a romance no less. She was Niincy of Denmark, countess of Rosenborg. There is no Witcher Langhorne of Virginia. She wns tne great amount of money on either side. It Is stated widow of Robert Gould Shaw when in 1900 she that Prince Vlggo was obliged to waive all rights married Lord Astor, son of William Waldorf Assuccession to the Danish throne of King Chrisof A tor n of the founder of the tor, tian X, both for himself and his heirs. family, who became an expatriate and received a When Mrs. Jacob Wendell of New York (and title In England for bis donations to royal charHertfordshire, England) recently announced the ities. engagement of her second daughter, Philippa, to Consueio Vanderbilt also married a Churchill Randolph Algernon Ronald Stewart, twelfth earl the ninth duke of Marlborough. They are now Wilof Galloway, another glimpse was given of the late of the separated. . She is the daughter, realm of pure romance, where American dollars liam EL Vanderbilt ,and her mother la now Mrs. run-dow- . ry proud-rememb- Pu-V-u- ! Uh I could tUnnmwa sighed llvMV dril O. 1L way So Writ $ of SUrea Vt Coacereloi Lydia E VetUlI Co rupees (1 fhnrea. Vermont I was wreak And Ud a tired fading and tearing 'down ! tH-- gf (a old Ih ill every; By MARTHA WILLIAMS l Tort TliHr luotlirr la if Itta tVariilngion and fainlllra iif Virginia. Vbu llirlf father died lira Wendell, at liti a bam and two daughters la bring up, ha4 an Inretn of a pi proilmafrty IlS.mO, Mi avtil lu llertfxrdahlrw HELPED HER I I I t VSBfSiSiSt&XSi 17 me what E. sinter good Lydia u rink hams Vegetable Compound dotng her, so 1 tried it. And from the third IwtUe I was well and everyone thourht I looked better. 1 am glad to help others regain their health, and you mag tun me teettmoniaL Mann, JUrr-HANRC4 Greene Ava, Brooklyn. N. Y. Y'U must believe that A medicine that haa helped other eruoca Will help K. foa. You should trg it. lying Down to Fly To llo luxuriiMuljr ou soft ruHilini and thus pilot )mr own small air machine I the latest ly In serial poa-lblll- filgltt. Tiny slr-rar- s are to be tested are being designed and In flight. In whtrh the with wing on either narrow body, Just one oree-pou- t, side, accommodate lying prene. Tht will enable the tiny engln to drive the machine more swiftly through the air than rewould be pomlbte with ths sistance set up If a body was provided big enough for the pilot le assume the ordinary alttlng position. Perfect comfort will. It Is claimed, be sasured by a sofa-ilreclining frame. On this tht pilot, enclosed In his miniature marhlne, will lie face downward, looking outwards through a front window or aldewajrg and downwards through other little windows. k Get Back Your Health! Ar yon dragging around df after day with S dull bacWarht? Ar yoa Interrupted ; "and he will know I turd sad lam moroiDK subject to did all I could for you." headache, dirnr apella and sharp, slabSnra went quickly, but not before bing painat Then there' surely someAunt Susan had spoken with the rich thing wrong. Trobaby it's kidney weakness! Don't wait for more Knkin. They were of the fairest surface, Get back your out kidney trouble. eagerly gracious, insisting that shortly health and keep it. For quick relief get she must come and pay them a long Doan' $ Pillt, a stimulant diureti to the kidner. They have helped t visit, but she distrusted them. and ahould help you. A$k your Sara wrote dally all through the neighbor I. first week, then the letters slackened, but Aunt Susan did not wonder. One A Utah Case of the letters made Annt Susan start Chaa. M. Hansen. Richfield, violently It mentioned the nnme of Utah, aaya: "My the man whose treachery had caused back hurt with a her brother's ruin. He had been youngheavy, gnawing At forty-fiv- e ish then say thirty-five- . ache and I had Sarlnesca would tempt him mightily, catches of pain through the email with her fresh untouchedness, her elfin of It. My kidneys charm. But when Jim, her brother, acted too freely and the secretions came back the next day, Joy drove all colwere ored In paeenge. I felthighly else from her mind for a week. Aged, tired out I used Doans Pills and they corweather-beaten- , smiling rarely, speak rected the trouble. Ing little, he seemed content to bathe himself In her devotion. Saras absence grieved him. but not bitterly. STIMULANT DIURETIC TO TOE KIDNEYS She Is young and starved for pleasCo MIg. Cham. Budalo, N. Y. ure," he said. "Let her take her fill." Sister Susan asked no questions, It was enough for her to have him back, alive and sound. "You shall hear everything after I am rested, he had said at first coming. With Itching Rashes A month from his coming they sat across In June moonlight Suddenly the narrow lawn came running figures Soep, Ointment, Tataim mW eerynttein Rem plea man and woman hand In band and free of Oitltvt UWrtttriia Dpi M, Mai 4m, Hua pnnting for breath. Ten yards off the girl called tremulously: "Oh, Aunt Su san, Aunt Susan I Ive come back home! If it is my home still. "Your hojne always, Aunt Susan said shakily. "Enough that you are here you need not tell why. But I must! Sara cried, dropping haarlem oil has been a worldthe man's hand. "You see I marwide remedy for kidney, liver and ried or else I couldnt ever have got bladder disorders, rheumatism, away. Then nil in a huddle came the whole story. Those In authority bad lumbago arid uric acid conditions. tried to coax h?r into marrying Judge Tanner. When she had refused flatly, they had iocked her up, telling her marriage was the door to freedom. But young Deerlng, the private secretary, had come to her help it had comet internal troubles, stimulate vital been love at first sight between them he had got a license and a magisorgana. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. trate, with them scrambled up a ladder to her barred window they had joined hands through the bars, beeu L. D. S. College duly married, and got away under school or crriciENCY AD commercial branches. Catalog frac. threat of the law. "And I came SA.I.T LAKE CITY. UTAH straight to you I shall never go away SO N. Main St. a head Sara her said, lifting again, RUB YOUR EYES? little. All through the recital It had Use Dr. Thompson's Eyewater. or been burled In her aunts lap. As her 1166 Bnj roar druggist's Hirer. Troy mTY. Booklet. eye caught her fathers face, she flung herself upon his breast. A long minute of silence then Jim YOU CANT CUT OUT had to explain a bit. Uncle Julian A Bog Spavin or Thorocghpla It and Judge Tanner, appeared, had but you can clean them off found out that he was coming home promptly with enormously rich due in two months, hence their haste. He bad beaten them, thanks to young Deerlng, who was his close friend, ret to spy upon the pair. and you work the horse "And you did even better than I hoped, same time. Does sot blister Billy, said Sir. James Graham Joyousor remove the bait. $2.50 ly. "I meant to have yoa for a per bottle, delivered. Will all along, but didnt dream you tell you mors if you write. youngsters would get the drop on me. Book 4 A free. "Alls well that ends well, Billy anff.f. TOUNthc. 519 Lreu SL, SymifeU. Km. swered and none gainsaid him. how-san- d eon-atant- ly DOANS Foster-Milbw- Dont Suffer UseCuticura FOE OVEE 200 YEARS -- Business son-la-la- ' |