IS YOUR HEALTH "" GRADUALLY SUPPING? Interesting Experience of a Texas Lady Who Declares That if More Women Knew About Cardni They Would Be Spared Much Sickness and Worry. Navasota, Texas.—Mrs. W. M. Peden, of this place, relates the following interest ing account of how she recovered her strength, having realized that she was actually losing her health: "Health is the greatest thing In the world, and when you feel that gradually slipping away from you, you certainly sit up and take notice. That is what 1 did some time ago when I found myself in a very nervous, run-down condition of health. I was so tired and felt so lifeless 1 could hardly go at all. "I was Just no account for 1 would get a bucket of water and would (eel so weak I would have to set it down before I felt like I could lift it to the shelf. In this condition, of course, to do even my housework was a task almost im possible to accomplish. •'1 was . . . nervous and easily upset. HIS WAGES ONE CENT A YEAR £arly Carrier of Mail» Certainly Not In the Business for Purpoes of Making Money. Maurice Proctor, a man of weaitn, was so anxious for his coach to bear . the distinguishing "U. S. Mall" of the postui service that he made ab solutely certain, when a service line wus established between Mineral Point i (where he lived) and Dodgevllle, la., be would be the lucky one allotted tl>e honor. There were 20 competitors and each turned sick with disgust when they henrd of the bid of tho wealthier •mu, guys an early volume of the Strand Magazine. It was tho custom then to ask prospective employees to bid for the Job, as contractors bid now. Proc tor bid 1 cent. Which Is to say, be vol unteered to do the Job for a remunera tion of 1 cent a year In wages. livery day, rain or shine, he twice carried the mall between the two cities, proud of the "U. S. Mall" on the side of his coach. At the end of the year his enthusiasm had not worn olt, so he renewed his contract, agreeing to do the work at the same rate for four more years—ln all, for 4 cents. The 'government considered him flnnnclally responsible for this amount, and gave •llm the Job. The 4 cents were paid to him In four annual Installments. His pay for the first year came In the form of a postal warrant signal by the secretary of the treasury and made out to the order of the currier, Maurice Proctor. It was In payment for his services, and the amount was 1 cent. Needless to say, It was con sidered as a grea{ curiosity, so the carrier sold It ut once for S3O. BUNGALOWS BUILT BY BIRDS Are Not Used as Nests, but Seemingly Only Constructed as a Matter of Decoration. ' Arbor-like bungalows are built by Australian bower birds. These bunga lows ore decorated by the birds with flowers and other bright objects. Sometimes one bird will move a flower placed In position by a fellow. The result Is > free light, for none of the birds will tolerute Interference or criticism. \ There are several different kinds of bungalows, an f each Is built by a va ; rlety of the bower bird. These struc tures have nothing whatever to do with the birds' nests. There If a gar den In front of the bungalow, and great attention Is paid to keeping this . fresh. Some of the birds prefer shells as a garden decoration; others use gaily-colored beetles and other In- E sects, while one bird lays" out a lawn f jkf moss, which It decorates with all i f nds of odds and ends. As soon as I fcy part of the garden becomes faded, J lie moss, leaves, or flowers are car jjtal to a rubbish heap behlnfl-the bun f' grffow. Dancing displays are given on the lawns, especially at courting time, "when the males adopt all kinds of Queer attitudes and sing songs to at tract the attention of the opposite sex. —————— Cultured Blovaklan People. The inn at Turclansky Sv. Martin In northern central Slovakia is a real •. social center. Here the Inhabitants ?■ of this cultural center of Slovakia as semble for song and gossip. In spite f of the untlqulty of their get-up, the peasants of the region are among the most cultured people In Europe; their little town Is a center of the printing Industry and boasts a most Inter , estlng museum. The women of Slo vakia, although the difficulty In ob taining linens and colored thread with which ta make their embroideries la * now great, still work with the same k ( -sre and reverence for traditional craftsmanship as formerly. Indeed the peasant woman of Detva, Slo vakia, both In the work upon which she Is engaged and the beautiful clothes she wears, would seem to be • living model for her sisters In the neighboring villages. It is In their fc gardens that these women work, sur rounded by their children. I couldn't rest well at night and was . .. just lifeless. "I heard of Cardui and after reading I decided i had 6ome female trouble that I was pulling me down. I seat for Cardui ' and began it . . * "In a very short while after I began the Cardui Home Treatment 1 saw an im provement and it wasn't long until 1 was all right—good appetite, splendid rest, and much stronger so that 1 easily did my house work. "Later 1 took a bottle of Cardui as a tonic. I can recommend Cardui and glad ly do so, for if more women knew, it would save a great deal of worry and sickness." The enthusiastic praise of thousands of other women who have found Cardui helpful should convince you that it Is worth trying. All druggists sell it CAKE SUFFICIENT FOR ARMY Monster Confection That William I of Prussia Bet Before Thirty Thousand Fighting Men. When William 1 of Prussia gave his army a reKulqJn 17110 he let them feast on vegetables and roast beef, and then wash It down with lots of beer and ale, according to William 8. Walsh, who has u taste for compiling curious In formation. When the thirty thousand guest* had almost irnlslied their meal they saw their deiu-ert coming on a dray drawn by eight horses. The dray bore a gigantic cake —said to have been tlie largest cake ever baked. It was twenty-four feet squure and a foot and a half thick. Mixed In the cake were products which would have fed a small village. More than thirty-six bushels of flour were mixed In It; 20U gallons of milk had been used; one ton of butter had made It rich, and one. ton of yeast had made It rise; 0,000 eggs bad been pa tiently broken and beaten Into the bat ter. Tlie result, baked under extreme difficulties, was the big cake, contain ing over 860 cubic feet of the goody. But the thirty thousand guests had filled themselves on roast beef and vegetables and it was Impossible for them to eat all the cake, although It Would have been possible for them to do so had they all been hungry. Obvi ously, so much cake could not be al lowed to go to waste. So the remain der of It was cut up and distributed in nearby villages to the various needy families, who made short work of It Mourning Chevrons on "Bear" Suits. When the Princeton seniors up peared in their "beer" suits last year, with a black mourning brassard on the left sleeve, the Idea was considered very nifty. Hut they've beaten It this spring. The beer suits were broken oul out early this week, and they have three small black chevrohs on the left cuff, each Indicating, six months ol prohibition. The beer suit custom li indigenous to Princeton. Before th« days of Volsteadlsm the suits—plain white "Jumpers" and pantaloons— peared, simultaneously with the hock beer signs, and gnve unique dlstlne lion to the seniors, passing their Inst spring In scholastic trammels. Also, there were some Jolly parties In cer tain cozy corners In the classic sbadei of the collegiate town. And mnyb« there are now—but In corners tlint arc surreptitious pa well as cosy.—Cincin nati Tlnyy^Star. Those Old-Tims Workers. "When I was a boy," said Mr. Curo rox, "I worked 14- hours s day." "No, you didn't," replied Mr. Cas siux Cbex, "My father was keeping the store you worked In. You Just hung around 14 hours a dny because It was n « arm, comfortable place to loaf." HAVE HAIR LIKE "20" It's never too late to get rid of gray in the hair. Thousands have benefitted by this scientific diccov ery. Why dont youT Gray, faded, bedrabbled hair can be changed to a uniform, lustrous, beautiful, dark color, so uatur.il in appeurnce by applying Q-ban Hair Color Restorer. Safe, siraplo gu aranteed harmless—all ready to use—soc a large bottle. Sjlu by Hayes Drug Company and all gooa drug Stores. Try Q-ban Hair Topic, ?-ban Liquid sharrtfloo, Q-ban oiiet Soap, Q-ban Depilatorv. Cfom CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Us* ForOv«r3oY*ars > Always bears ARNOLD BENNETT ON WORDS Repetition Better Than the Use of Bad English, Ik the Contention of Noted Writer. *> ' j " ~ Arnold Bennett hutea half-meanings, and especially he hates Inexact words. He quotes from a London daily ami holds up to ridicule "Tlie King and queen were present at a llrst night In a London theater last evening for the Initial time In their reign." Ills com ments are Instructive, Malcolm Cowley writes In the Literary Bevlew: "It Is quite a first-rate example of had English. The culprit, whose name Is well known to myself and other members of the London literary police force, evideutly thought that It would be Inelegant to use the same word twice In two lines; v so he sub stituted 'lnitial' for 'first' In the second line. • • • Perhaps he had never re flected that words express Ideas, and that therefore If a precise Idea re curs, the precise word for that Idea ought to recur. Uhe Idea expressed by the word 'first' Is precise enough, and no other English word means what first' means. Certainly 'initial' does not mean 'first.' Stlfl, the man meant well. His misfortune was that, hav ing picked up "a good notion without' examining It, he imagined that repe tition was Inelegant In- Itself. Ite|>e tltlon Is only wrong when It Is uninten tional, and when, being horrid to the ear, it Is reasonably and honestly avoidable. On the other hand, repe tition, used with tact nnd courage, may achieve not merely elegance but posi tive brilliance." Here Is Bennett's style both In theory and practice, and the practice agrees with the theory. The passage Is not merely clear, but It Is brilliantly repetitive. The trouble Is that Bennett often goes out of his way to repeat himself. HEARTS AFFECTED BY FEAR Armenian Children Slow.ln Recover ing From Terrors to Which They Were Long Subjected. According to Dr. Mabel Elliott, head of the American Woman's Hospitals, who Is now serving with the Near East Itellef at Isnild, Turkey, a large number of the Armenian children under her care are suffering from en- ] larged hearts or other forms of heart disease, due to tlie constant fear to which they have been prey during the past few years. Belief workers In tlie Near East have long been familiar with the men tal petrifaction due to the terrible ex perience through which these children have passed, most of them having for gotten everything of their past, their names, their homes and their language Included, but this is the first Instance that has been recorded of the effect of fear on their hearts. The cure which Dr. Elliott Is' prac ticing with these children Is a com bination of mental and medical. First of all, they are made to realise that they are entirely out of danger and among friends. Then they are put on a special diet of nourishing foods and certain exercises are prescribed. The results so far have been remarkably successful. Roses for Every Bsctlon. The Department of Agriculture In a rose eone map shows how frosts lim it rose culture In eertalu sections. Tea roses by tills mnp can be grovrti throughout the South and In California, or wherever the frosts are over In March. Hybrid tea roses are safe far ther north to southern Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, lowa, Nebraska, New- Mexico and Ariiona, where the frosts are over In April. Hybrid perpetuals and some hardy specimens can be grown In the northern states where the last frost Is In May, but where frosts occur during tlie summer, as In parts of the northwest, success with outdoor roses Is difficult. This schedule Is based on the suppo sition that roses In tlie districts as signed to them as safe will need no special care In the winter. With win ter coverings of earth, straw and bur lap, many roses will resist frost and cold. Some hybrid tea roses, for ex ample, can be grown In Minnesota and Massachusetts. There are thousands of varieties of roses, and several hundred new ones are produced each year, so that there are roses adaptable to practically ev ery part of the country. All Trus. ' The guest was a smirking, sly sort of man. He hoped to make good with his boat by winning the affectlou of his children. But for some reason seven-year-old Mary did not like htm. Still he persisted and one evening when he entered the house and saw her all bedecked In a new dress, he said meaningly, "Fine feathers make tine birds, I see," and smiled at her father. Mary turned and looked at him and noticed the fur collar on his overcoat. And then a Utile giggle escaped her. "Oh. fine fur makes foxes, too," she returned. But she didn't know why the guest colony. Paraguay's Advanced Ideas. Students In the Paraguayan Institute are to be taught wrestling and fencing. Gymnastics will be given by a corps of professors In the schools and collefes of the republic of Paragvay. The In struction of the greatest number of In habitant | possible In physical exercises will be encouraged by local champion ships, national and International garat.i. «ud by propaaa"d* In favor of physical development through lM> tans and sporting publication* THE ALAMAHOE GLEANER, GRAHAM, H. 0. I MORE THAN MERE BUSINESS Mextern Railroading Ha« Been Lifted to a Sphere Llttlo Short of tho Miraculous. % • A cycle of railroad hlatory has re volved before our very eyes. Three golden spikes (at least) have been hammered In by (at least) three gilded sledges—and rfll within t* span of a little more than half a. century. What Is probably to be the last great "trunk being built by the United States in Alaska. This "government railway" bad Its first spike, a gold one, sledged on April 29, 1917, by Martha White. Another gold spike was driven on that momentous day, May 10, 1860, near Ogden, Utah, when the transcon tinental Union Pacific line was com pleted, uniting beyond question of chance the fortunes of the Atlantic and Pacific sides of the republic. - The gold spike custom (or habit as It came to be with the Irrepressible builders of the continent) began In 1852 to assume significance. For upon Christmas eve, not only the nation's but the world's first "trunk line" was completed at a little forgotten, hamlet near Wheeling, W. Va., Boseby'a Rpck. The romance of railroads! Who that lies him down to slumber In New York Intending and expecting to arise refreshed In Chicago, can dare affirm that railroading 1b a business, a com mercial enterprise I It Is, rather, a miracle an Alladlnlc phantasy!— Christian Science Monitor. LIKE PAGES FROM HISTORY Deeds of Mod«rn Greek* Similar to Those of Their Ancestor* of Many Centuries Ago. Greeks are reported to be cosslng over into Asia Minor to resist the forces of Mustapha Kemai's army and take possession of the territory given them by the trenty of Sevres, un expe dition whl''h recalls the memorable crossing of this people 3,000 years ago, the subsequent siege of Troy, and the story of the wanderings of Aene as, the historic founder of the eurly Roman race* About an hour from the sea, near the Dardanelles, the ruins of the an cient city of Troy stand npon an emi nence looking out over the plains where her Immortal sons fell In her defense. At Its foot the Scamander winds to the sea, says a bulletin from , the Washington headquarters of the National Geographic society. Excavations on the site have re vealed nine cities, built one upon the top of the other in times past The sixth from the bottom of these Is the Troy of which Homer and Virgil sang. * Today there stands little to tell of the might of the former Priam and Paris and the splendor which the beautiful Helen caused to be tumbled Into dust. Saccharin Discovered by Aocldent. Saccharin, 500 times as sweet as sugar, and much in demand during the war, was discovered, according to the Basler Nachrichten, by an In structor In Johns Hopkins university. The story runs as follows: In the summer of 1878 the discov erer, C. Fahlberg by name, was try ing to restore certain organic bodies. At the dinner table at the close of a busy day he noticed that a piece of bread tasted uncommonly sweet. It occurred to him at once that the sweetness came * from his hands, though he had carefully washed them before sitting down to eat He hur ried back to his laboratory and tasted all the glasses he had used In his ex periments. One of them he found exceptionally sweet. He analyzed the remaining drops and found that they were a derivative of benzol. In 1884 he set up an experimental factory for the manufacturing of "saccharin In New York. Polio* File Baby's Picture. Kidnapers are going to have a hard time If they bother Paul Everltt Col lins, three years old, of Denver. He climbed upon the sto6l In front of the camera at the central police station the other day aad was photo graphed. Then be thrust bis fingers Into the recording Ink and impressed his finger prints for the Bertlllon rec ords. lint be Is not a crinflnal. Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Collins, who recently adapted him, were with him, and they asked that these records be made to Insure him against kidnaping. Doth said they feared some one might at« tempt at some time to take him away from them. The records will be filed with the police at the county record er's office, they said. —Rocky Mountain News. Increase In Elk Hard. A good increase from the survivors of the southern Yellowstone or Jack soo Hole elk herd is looked for this year by ofilclals of the bureau of biological survey of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture, In view of the unusually favorable winter Just past Last year's ruins, it Is said, produced a plentiful growth of feed on the ranges, and as a result the elk are reported to be In excellent condition, with the prospect of only normal death rate Instead of a repetition of the mortality of the winter of 1919-20, due to lack at forage and a severe winter. Record for Brown Unlv»rs«ty. Charles E Hughes Is the fourth graduate of Brown university to be come secretary of state of the United Staten. His predecessors, who were Brown men, vera William L. Marty, Kktera Olney and John Hay. SHORN HEADS PLACATED GODS Sea Captain Employed an Ancient Practice and the Threatening x Gale Ceased to Blow. The women prayed, the second mat* cussed and Alex Jacob sen, "the alba tross," swallowed a pint of vodka straight Still the gale blew furious ly. By the Beaufort scale the wind was eleven force, and this In English means a hurricane. All this happened March 10, when the Norwegian-American liner Ber gensfjord was steaming westward on her run from Bergen, says the New Vork Tribune. Ole Bull Is a young navigator, with hard common sense, who worked his way to the captaincy of the steamship Bergensfjord. He had been in storms before, but the one that came up sud denly March 15 was more than a prac tical man could handle. At last an ancient superstition of the sea came to the mind of Captain Bull, and he sent forthwith for the ship's barber. "Hendrlk," he said, "how many shears aud clippers have you Btowed below V "twenty," said the barber. "Bring them up and cut the hair of all my men, beginning here on me. There la a superstition, Hendrlk, which my father used to tell me of. When storms refuse to yield to man 14 pleases much the gods If sallormen part with their shaggy locks. Delilah conquered Samson with the shears and we must use them now." Hendrik brought his clippers forth pnd soon the heads of all the staff were shorn. With the shearing of the hundredth sallorman the wind began to ease. When every man had parted with his lialr the barber called a stew ardess to his chair, but just before Ills clippers touched her head the furidus hurricane went dead. The Bergens fjord arrived here with almost a hair less crew. LATIN IS FOUNDATION t)F ALL Although a Dead Language, Oregon Prcfeaaor Asserta You Find It Wherever You Turn. "Latin Is a living force in dally life and all other studies are In over whelming debt to it," says Prof. F. S. Dunn, dead of the department of Latin in the University of Oregon, in a bulletin which he has written for the Latin teachers In the high schools and colleges of Oregon. "The teacher," he says, "must read English from out the Latin apd Latin from out the English ; must see geome try, biology and physics In Caesar; must conjure legal phrases and doc tor's prescriptions from Cicero's ora tions ; must flash the 'ldyls of the King' and 'Paradise Ixst' and The Faery Queen' across the pages of Vir gil ; must brand every paragraph with the Romance languages and Latin America aud the Philippines; must see Rome In the clock dial, in the 10-cent piece, In a decimal fraction, in the almanac, in the days of the week, in the Sunduy liturgy, In Oregon's seal. In the omnibus bill, In the ulti matum to Turkey, In un aeronaut or a submarine; in Montana or In Ari zona; in Cincinnati or In Olympla; in Lucy or In Gus; In patrimony or mat rimony or alimony, It matters not which, for it is all Latin, anyway, and everywhere you turn." Canada to Dovolop Muaael. Canada Is about to make capital out of a substitute for the oyster which Is found along the Atlantic coast, chiefly in New Brunswick. It is a mussel which Is by no means a new article of diet to the people of Canada. Its delicacy of flavor and high food* value have been much ad vertised since the establishment of government ■ Investigation and experi ment. A survey of the mussel beds of the St. Croix river, which constitutes the boundary between New Bruns wick and Maine, has occupied the at tention of a scientist of the council for three years, and It is expected that this year will see the satisfac tory conclusion of the research. The sea mussel cannot be produced in fresh water, so that there Is no pos sibility of developing an industry in the Great Lakes. It is believed that there are possibilities, however, of the development of fresji-water clams there In the near future. Inner Tubes as Ice-Bags. Ice-bags relieve the feverish patient, but they are not large enough to cool his entire body. An old inner tube will do a much better job, says the Popu lar Science Monthly. JTou cut the tube at the place where the valve Is, remove the valve, tie one end of the tube tightly and fill the tube with Ice. Then tie the other end and you will have .a loog narrow ice bag that may be placed at the side of the patient or eren wrapped around him. Busy Bible Circulators. The 1010 Issues of the American Bible society were 3,752,309 volumes. The sun never sets on the representa tives of this society, which asserts that some one is busy every hour of the day and every day of the year cir culating the Scriptures. This total means that seven volumes were Issued every minute of every hour of every day of the year. Why They're Alike. "Why sre a grasshopper and a grass widow alike?" Diitso." "Both Juasp at the flat flu— Mem 1M Evening Wart*. •Jlhe You Have Alirays Bo tight,' and which ha* been in use for oyer over 30 yean, baa borne the signature of jp - and has been made under his per /^j-y/y: A ~/ a ~ ' sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants *« i Children— against Experiment. _What is 'CASTOR IA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency* "Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aid# the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep* The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend.' GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought ▼HI OINTAUII COMPANY, NIWVONKOtTV, ______ THIN PEOPLE NEED MORE IRON IN THE BLOOD New Form of liquid Iron Feed* the Tissues through die 8100d —Builds Firm Flesh —Fills out the Hollows Appearance! count for s lot in this world, and if you are thin and scrawny and "below weight," you can't help bat feel sensitive and en vious of your neighbor who is plump and sturdy and who looks well nour ished. But there is another side—thin peo ple are usually sick people. The food they eat does not give them the prop er nourishment —or perhaps they are extremely nervous. The blood does not make strength and nerve and flesh as it does in the normal person. It is a remarkable characteristic of Acid Iron Mineral —the new nat ural form of soluble Iron—that it is a Seat flesh builder. Thin people who ke it find after a short time that the hollows are filling out; that the For Sale by All Good Druggists. Burwell&Dunn and John M. Scott &Co., Charlotte,N. C., Distributors. Mr. Junius H. Harden announces that Miss Mary Faucette of the Normal School of Physical Educa tion of Battle Creek, Mich., will instruct the ladies' swimming class at the Har den Park Pool. Term 18 lessons —price per term, $3.00. Apply to Miss Faucette or Piedmont Power & Light Company's office. Mr. Boyd Harden will assist in the general man agement. Merry-Go-Round for small children. Subscribe for The Glaener SI.OO a year—in advance. flesh becomes firm and healthy, that even within so short a space as a single month, a becoming plumpness and soft curved lines of beauty have replaced angles and scrawninesa. And with this increased weight comes a better appetite, more re freshing sleep and a marked increase in in every way. Thin people can take Acid Iron Mineral to improve their appearance, and they will find their health bene fitted at the same time. Physicians say that this power to build new tissues and firm flesh is due to the extraordinary attraction the blood has for this particular combination of iron Druggists refund the purchase price ft you get the result you seek.