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Fl'i.L A'riOlITY IN REFUND. ING or ,1-ErT Is .isiiai .\dinlinistration HRill on Ilefunldingf of .\llIed itl Sent to Coligress. Washington, Jutine ::.--Unresticted aithority for tilt secretay of the I ta-sury ina rcfc uldg tihe approximate ten billion dollars owed by .the allies to this count ry was asked by President lIIarding1 today in tihe ir1st administ ra tion bill sent to congress. The hill. drafted at the treasury de Partinc ut. was forwarded by the presi dent to Chairman of senate aid hou se connn1littees with IIIrgent recoimi ieida tions for elactilent. It was introdutte ed imiediately in the senate by Sena tor Peirose and conilliitee lica rings ordered for next Wc nesday. Complete powers for settling with the allied iations would be vested in Secretary Alellon under the bill. With the tresident's approval, lie would be auithorized to aecetIt the secirities of dehtor or othcr nations ill exchanuge for their notes. The bill also wotld voifer unilimiteld athtority to deft'r payllicit of interest or principal. and to Settle oitstanling clains n.l:n 1 . Il ited State. Annoutilcellent of the administrat ion r--futndiiz lan was made at tlie White lIItse arl a letCt from SOeretary .\Mel lon to the pre idont. outlining the bill, snt i neids for the blaniket powers YeClteSi d. Citiin th:t the tIasury wa.; wiIthot al-hiity to (onVert, re fond orl defer paymnetlt of the allied dbts antd interest, Seeitary M.\ellon said that Ivers coidit1ons re1tuired a -e neral -rant of powers to the treas nry. No 1lan for disposition of the allied uriti :s w.. Liven by Secretary .\el Money at To Build Yo To Pay Off To Improve And You Can Pay It Be A penny held too cl the sun. If you hope t< while you should own at the earth's surface. Opportunity knocks, door. See me and let m W. T. Teleph Sold only give tire at thel1os inhil 30 : NON. Reduction in ali A New Lov Known and H lon. The bill was recevedl by most republican leaders with approval. SonIe deilocrats, however. declared they would 01)1)0 e any grant of un limited powers over the allied debts to tihe seeretary of the treasury and intimllationls of a similar position were giveni by somne republicalns. Total dcbts by countries as shown ill the staIeInInt accomplianying 'ecre tary Idellon's letter were as follows: Great liritain $1,1 038t8. -France $,5,762,930. I ta ly S10i,140 0 olan $1 5I1t Czechoslovakia $91,179,:)27. Serbia $j11 ,139. lRoumania $G,128,41 1. Austria $21,055.70ts. Greece $15.O0,00). IEsthonia $13.99, i. Cuba $9,025,;506. Armenia $11 ,959,17. Ftlainln $9,281I,926. G't via $5,182,2S6. Uithuania $1.,1].627. I Iunry ,5 Strihe En14ded. t N.v York. .WInn 28.---The nation Wide strike of alliliated nut-ine unions cal I la M 1 d I ay as dehIa red AIt an1 ('lid. A recrcillUmn vot' taken by local unions of firemn and sailors lowed I the mnetn in favor of returinig to I work witilout anl areeient 'with te I owner.. The tarine engineets brought their part of the strike to an end recently signed by their national president With the Shipping lloard. I Per Cent u a Home a Mortgage Your Property Lck on the Monthly Plan >se to the eye shuts out > remain on earth for a least a few square feet of but you must open the explain. Moore me 427 by dealers mileage vest cost story K32 ~.oo .SKID styles atnd sizes Price on a onest Product NATION'S RACIAL ('OMPOSITION SIOWN IN CES'S R1EPOR1T U 31llion WhItes, 10) 3Il1Ion Negroes i L'nlied Stltes in 1920. Wasl4ington, June 23.-The racial .omposition of the population of the United States in 1920, as announced tonight by the census bureau, shows ite country to contain 94,822,4l Nwhite pjersons, 10,163,013 negroes, 242.P5il Indians, 111,025 Japanese, t:1 .St; Chi lese and ).I85 others. ThO. Japalese ace exceeds by far the rate of growth n the last ten years of all other class Ws. t'noiicial estimates of the increase i tlt number of Japanese in the 'ni ed States, particularly on the Pacific oast, were borne out in the official ahulation which revealed a rate of axpmzion or 33.1 per cent during the lecade of 1910-20. California absorber (,-90 of the total growth of 8,Sti lapanese in this period. January 1, 920, there were 71.1452 Japanese in 'alifornia. 'I'he remainder of tle in rease was distributed largely in the tales of Washington, where 17,:29 ilake their home: Oregon,. 1.3711, and 'tah, Colorado and Now York, with be ween tw4o and thrce tho uand each. The white population showed only 1 1; ier cent expansion for the de 'adv and the utgro 4.3 1er cent. lUoth :.( Indian and Chinese grollps dwin lled ',.6 per vent and 1:. per cent, 'spectively. The growth in the white lopulatiil was consilerably less than he lat for the previous decade, which vas 22.3 per cent. This decline, the' tatemiont said, was due principally () the mlarked reduclton in immigra ion during the w\orld war. An esti nate based ol tlie excess of bit hs ov *r deaths and on the excess of ini ration over (migration showed a dif vreuce by oray a small fraction of ole ber' ntll from the total whites 411u1imer Lted. The greatest numerical increase ill he white population was shown in the 'ast, nolrth and central division, till Iracing the states of Ohio, Indiana, \liebiian and \isconsin, wher the lccase was :,01 1.:"63. In the South \tlantic and east and west south cen tral portions tile whites showed a o)1miled increaie of ,,.isti, 07. The rate of increase in he negro lopulatioll, which was not percep ibly effected by em1igraItion i el m111 nigration, was, tile lowest on record, iccording to the statement. Evidence of the ilmigration of tile legro to the north and west was round in te ligures showing nearly biree-fourtlhs of the increase In the legro bopulation, or 172,11s of 1I! gailn, in these sections. A 'rowth of onfly I;2,s82 or albolt one urt h, was reported for the south, les1ite that Ni per cent of the total lro race is still below the .lason Dixon lin1e. The pe C ntage increase if the egroes in tile west was .3.1 n1 thet orth 433per cei and inl th.e :0uth 1.11! 11erl Cent. .\chigmn, with MUM5 negr"es, learl ill sttes llI in e lrdnt of licrease, Viith 2-il per cent. Illinlois adi Ohio, lith increalses oIf ,7.1 per clot sho~w(ed ilither eviience ofC the no~lrhwardl no(vemuent of netgro''s. lnnRlvan~~lia's legro0 lpopula tion g rowthl for the( lperiodh ba 6. e cellt. its b lack Iace now .\eve:Unt ill ilumber those of' .iir an:d andl Kenituiiky. I sc .t4 in the InIt~d~ianrae in t he 'n year I'leriodl was robahtti due hit '2' ti Iber-ions ha\ in2 only ;,2iPh ramA of I Iulian blood. Getir ia 1(:13 ul i i 11the Iar1u-1ine )thLer . tat is havIini 1 mil-l tbhan ii I0,ttOn to inlhaiS art':.\is ip. .1;Alabamna, 004.--; South~l ('ar n11,, 7.1,I7; Texas, 7 !.7..::;I. Mibna, 7iit,257; : irinia, t000,417; Ar anlsast, 172,22''; 'iT'IlesscC, a .1,7>, 'lrida, :;29,1s7; P'ennsylvait 2s ', Oh ; Il~~ i, 21 ITp;;; llnoes, ~'i . I \iisoiiri, I17S.2 II; Oanilhoma, I'I'l'Jill a Store Loses to Exlet o(f $50I0. Duncan'R R Store ltobbe'd. Si art an bur g, .1 iun1e 28.-The st ore of b. O. Sloani at Tuic(albau, was ro(bbedl l'iesday Rnight. The party ori iatIes, .who iz'led (open thet? front door, en ered1 and to4ok out the merchlandise' 'altied at over $Sf00. Amnong the goodls itoilenR Were (Ighiteen jiairs of shloes', a ratchl valuled at $~,0; a 38-Cealibr'e smith & Wesson pistol1 valued at $35; bree razors; a man's hat; one car Ilretor, t wo Waterman fountainl pens; >ox of cartridges; fIve diozen pocket cnives; three Ingersol watches; one hlousand cIgarettes; onle dozen's men~f's Iress shirts valued at $30, andi anothe-!r lozen valuled at $12. Thie brands oft ihoest stolen1 inlude~ld the Peters, the Vitte, 10dIncott-Johnson., Among the ihoes were one paIr No. 11 hox calf, me No. 7 1-2, one 'pair No. 10 lingllsh .00, one boy's Enlglish toe No.4,gun nebaf No, 8, Nn. 1.1. No, 7 L-2 No 7, No. 6, No. 4 1-2, English toe. One pai. iatent leather shoes No. 7. The store of o. M. Moore at l)uncan was -burglarized Sunday night and a considerable quantity of automobile supplies stolen. The party or parties entered the store .by clipping the wire stalle of the door with a pair of wire clippers'I'. The robbery 'was not dis covered until Monday afternoon. The rural police are working o' (his case, and with the complete in formation concerning the goods stolen and the sixes of the pairs of shoes taken, expect to be able to land the guilty parties soon. Colds Cause Grip and influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININB Tablets removo the cause. Thero is only one "Bromo Quinine." E. W. GROVE'S alinature on box. 30c. GOODRIC 2( We a a "Vulca City V At City Filling Static 'HE WHO LOOKS BEFORE BUY THE GI You'll get a : that for a lot o1 ment around PRESS ("the \ enough," but e appropriate gr skill of buyin half, of course, It has been said that "it' repair bills the the holes ir bank accoun is equally true "usi ngC Cyp mends the'rip leaky purse." "Build of O "The Wood .E press grows ii be had on dei Buy the grade that pay for high grad grades arc more ap cheaper? But be s1 Because it las the true "tide means doubi Write us for list of FR EE P and no substitutes" from So YOUR U)CA t*.ALriA WIL SlD11 TC o W E N BROS. MARBLE & GRANITE CO. DESIG'NER MANUFACTURERS ERECTORS Dealers in everything for the .eme tery. The largest and best equipped mon umental mills in the Carolinas. GREENWOOD. - S. C. H TIRES REDUCED ) Per Cent iways have your size nd style in stock. .nizing of the Better Kind" ilcanizing Station in Oldest--Strongest--Best HE LEAPS BUILDS OF CYPRESS AND BUILDS FOR KEEPS.'' ,UDE THAT FITS THE JOB pleasant surprise when you find the odd jobs of repairs or replace the farm the lower grades of CY. Vood Eternal") are not only "good xactly the right thing. Getting the ade for the given purpose is half the g. (Economical, too.) The other is insisting on "Cypress, of course." truly ndyu It eat t he F that in a -.It press & You Build But Once" ternal" is your "one best bet." Cy 1 "your own back yard" and can nand in your own lumber yard. itLsthe jol. Why "ll]]1 coA L~I es where lower D r~P propriate--and are to insist on "HE WOD ETERN4AL'' ts practically forever-if you get water" variety--and therefore le money's -worth of hdmber. LANS for farm buildings- buteln the meantime inslst on SCYPR ESS your local lumber dealer-no matter for what purpo you buy. AddressI UTHERN CYPRESS ENG mufacturers' Association / *t* Graham Building, Jackson1vlle,pFla mPVY YOU. IP HE lIASN'T EM~OUGH EVPRESS L.ET JSKNOW AT ONCE.