"* * _ In8talled l589 and Still Intact! The picture above shows a pipe-head on one of the outer walls of Windsor Castle, one of King George's homes. It was installed, along with gutters, leaders and spouts, in 1589. For more than three centuries the rains that beat upon this anoient royal residence have been carried olli by these lead pipes?and they are still intact! Lead is still used in the same way, but its most important use today is in the form of white-lead for paint, i White-lead is made by corroding pure metallic lead a..J mixing it with linseed oil. We sell white-lead of the highest quality under the name and trademark of Dutch Boy White-Lead for both interior and exterior use. Any color you wish can be obtained. Our line of paints, varnishes, brushes, etc. is complete ?our prices are right. Now is the time to paint and varnish?"Save the Surface and You Save All." Come to our decorating department for suggestions and estimates?no obligation. HEADQUARTERS FOR PAINTING NEEDS * IKE UNION HARDWARE COMPANY WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 8 W. Main St. UNION, S. C. Phones 33-34 200 NEW STRAWS \ AT 200 NEW DOLLARS S "V LESS THAN THEY ARE WORTH! ^ Not a Sale?nor is it a sell! ^ It's a choice?not a chance at 200 of the spankingest, swaggerest, jauntiest new Straw Hats?not only in this city but in the world?and no matter where vou cm on a ^ 0_ ? vacation?you won't have to vacate for anyone on the Veranda. All sizes?but not enough hats to last this month out. j $1.50 $2.50 $3.00 \ f WATCH YOUR HAT! Take - a Look at Our Windows. \ J. Cohen Co. HOUSE OF SATISFACTION. SUMMER CAMPS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS IN THE MOUNTAINS OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA REACHED VIA ? SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM I Accommodations reasonable and every feature of amusement and education available. Write or call on R. C. COTNER, District Passe?ger Agent, Spartanburg, S. C. Japan has a "Yellow Menace" as of the California question the Japan well as California and other Pacific eae find- it difficult to handle this mat coast states. During and after the ter as the cases are considered identi war boom, Japanese employers im- cel. ported coolies and operatives fron? 1 * Korea and China to work in their tex- European royalty as a rule has al tile mills, mines and smelters. Now banned May weddings. Th the native Japanese workers consider one notable exception in recent year the presence of this alien labor a that of the King of Spain an, i grievance and their attitude toward Ena of Batteaberg, and th these invaders is the .ante as the "?*' bride and bridegroom narrow!: attitude of white labor on the Pacific r "T" , " T " ' coast toward the Japanese. Because returning front the cere **. V 0* * 'f Economy Home Makes Plea Rhoda is dead and buried. We asked i!.rough the papers if some one 4tdn't feel like giving ua another mule, but no one showed up with a mile to give us. Lots of mules are for sale around here, but people paid a big price for them, and they expect as much for them a? they paid. So we went to a mule dealer and purchased a mule cheaper than we could get one locally. Of course we did not have the money, so we were forced to get one of our friends to fix a paper so that we could discount it at the bank and get it. We received six applications last week that we do not consider in our class, so we do not count them, but seven came from Rock Hill that are in our class. Three children whose mother has been dead for some time, their father had an application in the T. B. Sanitarium of Columbia through his physician, who got notice to have him report at the sanitarium Saturday, the 3rd. This sick father with two preachers came to see about getting his children in the Home. The superintendent was away. The preachers with the sick father's appeal was more than Mrs. Spaulding could resist, so she consented for them to leave the chilCroft. of Rock Hill shogb ka%h dren. Ask Rev. T. A. Snider and Rev. J. D. Croft of Rock Hill if it is your duty to help care for these children. Four more children of Rock Hill, whose mother is dead, their father works in the mill and says he is willing1 to pay all that he can on their upkeep, which is only about half what it will cost us to keep them. The doctor says that the three older children are in good physical condition, but that the one year old baby has the Eczematous Rash all over her body which he thinks is caused by faulty diet. He makes the statement that he believes the child would soon be in a healthy condition with a well| balanced diet and plenty of cow's milk. Ask Dr. W. E. Simpson, Rock Hill, if this child needs The Economy Home. But Dr. J. N. Nesbitt, our president, says that we can not take Infunts until we get running water in our cottages. You can not properly care for infant babies without modern equipped buildings. We would gladly take every needy child and especially such babies as this one. But our ability is measured by your contribution. Will you, dear reader, hear the cries of these helpless motherless babies? "What shall then your answer be?" J. H. Spaulding, Supt. The Economy Home, Kings Creek, S. C. Eastern National Forests Enlarged by New Purchase Washington, D. C., June 7.?Additions of 100,930acres to the eastern national forests in Pennsylvania, New J^pgl^d^M^M^e southern Appalachians narc^Kbeen authorized by the National Forest Reservation Commission, which also recdmtnended that the director of the budget be asked to include in the 1924 estimates an item of CO AAA AAA 4.V. - * '1 * f?,vw,vvA/ iur me lunner purcnase ot | lands under the Weeks law. The average cost of the lands authorized for purchase will be $3.23 an acre. Close to three-fourths of the total area, or 74,025 acres, Is in northwestern Pennsylvania; 12,796 acres ore in Virginia, 3,613 acres in Arkansas, 1,804 in Alabama, 1,027 in North Carolina, 631 in South Carolina, and 398 acres in Unicoi County, Teitn. In Carroll County, N. H., 1,697 acres and in Oxford County, Me., 87 acres are added to the White Mountain National Forest. Except in Pennsylvania these purchases merely increase existing National Forests and are largely to consolidate the government's holdings, but in the Keystone state the purchases are the first ever authorized and constitute the initial step in building up a new eastern national forest, on the headwaters of the Allegheny river. The lands lie in Warren, Elk, Forest and McKean counties, and the commission plans to carry the purchases to over 100,000 acres this year "There is now in the United States," says W. W. Ashe, secretary of the commission, "about 80 million acres of land tnat are burned or cut over and are unproductive. The rapidly diminishing supply of timber and the influence of much of this land upon floods r lake it necessary for the go*er*;nteiit ' to acquire such idle land as rapidly as possible and put it to work growing trees." General Strike on Eaat Indian Railway Settled Calcutta, June 7.?The general strike on the East Indian railway, after dragging on for more than two months, has Anally come to an end. The strikers have accepted the offer made recently by the agent of the railway, and are resuming work at practically all points along the line. The conciliation between the railway officials and the workers has been faciliated by the efforts of F. C. Andrews, who acted as a mediator. Mr. Andrews is an Englishman, formerly engaged in missionary work. , He now wears Indian clothing and has made himself prombient in up*holding the Indians in their efforts to obtain complete home rule. News of the ending of the strike has come as a great relief, for its . continuance was proving distressing p in many ways, s I Fire' stands third as a cause for acg cidental deaths in the United State. ^ Every time the carp breathes it ft moves 4,386 bones and muscles. Snbscrlho to Thtf-tMlM TIAmk r?be?mse^e??iE?ai i ?! League of Foreign Born Voters Makes Suggestion New York, June 7.?The League of Foreign Bom Voters has Suggested a standardized celebration of Independence Day, which calls fdr holding of a "Civil Court of Honor" in every city and hamlet in the country, featuring a pageant illustrative of epochs in American history. The League maintains* that the immigrant is confused by the' waving of hags and conglomeration of sound that greets him on the . Fourth of July, and that no organittd attempt to interpret to him the meaning of the day is made. Parades are suggested to give a true conception of the cultural contribution of the foreign-born citizens. There should be floats or tableaux depicting in panorama the eras of Discovery, Exploration, Colonization, Signing of the Declaration of Independence, Birth of tha. . American Flag, Winning of the. West, Freedom for the Slaves, Industrial Growth of the Nation and Atneriea and the World War. The Boy Scouts of America have volunteered personally to invite new citizens to be guests of the community. Speeches should be directed to practical ends, the league believes, tending to hasten the speaking of English and the reading of American newspapers, and to encourage the native born to show real neighborliness by ceasing the use of offensive nicicnames. Distribution of flags and a message from the President, with proclamations by the governors and mayors also were urged, with the suggestion that motion pictures depleting the progress of American democracy and slides containing quotations from the addresses of famous Americans be introduced. Tea Market Outlook Is Optimistic Calcutta, June 7.?That the interference with labor troubles and nationalists movement? have made with the tea industry in India is not irreparable, was the opinion expressed by the majority of the delegates at the annual meeting of the Indian Tea Association recently held here. In spite of tt)e excessive stocks now on hand and the continuance of labor difficulties, most of the tea growers and exporters are viewing the market outlook with considerable optimism. The chairman of the association, in his address, condemned the government for allowing the non-co-operation movement to develop as it has, rather than dealing with it1 in its infancy. In speaking of the labor situation he said: 'The majority of estates are at present short of labor. I considei that our policy should as hitherto be directed towards the settlement and contentment of our labor, and their well-being must continue to receive as in the past our most sympathetic consideration. I doubt if any industry does more for its labor than the tea industry, and if our labor is left alone by unscrupulous agitators I personally have no fear for the future of the industry, and in our prosperity lies the well-being of our labor." The Indian tea industry received a great blow in the loss of Kussia as a market for cheap grades of tea. Hitherto English and American buy^ ers have been satisfied with only the finest grades. Indian tea interests have sent agents to America, seeking to create a market for cheap tea. Archaeology Has Its Dramatic Moments Chicago, 111., June 9 (By the Associated Press).?Archaeology has its dramatic moments. The "ancestry of Byzantine painting" hitherto considerably obscure was discovered while hostile forces were closing in upon the investigators in Syria, and all investigations were completed in a single day prior to the shifting of the pro tecting British lines, according to a report by Prof. J. H. Breasted of the University of Chicago which is about to be presented to the French Academy of Science. Contents of this report have just been made known for the first time in this country in art interview given by Prof. Breasted to the Associated Press. The investigation was made, accord-ing to Prof. Breasted, under his di recuon alter tne return oi the Mesopotamian expedition of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago and its arrival at Baghdad late in April, 1920. The British civil authorities at this time asked Prof. Breasted' and his party to ascend the Euphrates to a ruined Roman fortress at Sali-I hiyah, on an informal archaeological1 expedition on their behalf. The Chicago scholar welcomed the commission, hut asked that he might first complete some researches in Persia. He was secretly iiiformed that delay would make the Euphrates mission impossible, as the British were prepar ing^to withdraw their line* 6n the upper Euphrates afrnoat 100 miles down the riter. It developed that while the British forces had occupied the retired fortress, Capt. M. C. Murphy had discovered in a chapel in the ruin Some wall paintings evidently of ancient origin. This discovery was communicated to the authorities through Lieut. Got. G. Leachmair. Miss Gertrude Beit, whom Prof. Breast## described as an intrepid explorer ami archaeologist, was Consulted, and suggested that ? ' "** v '-S A M Evei STR fifteen Prof. Breasted be sent to the fortress. Accordingly he set out with his party and arrived on the scene the day be-1 fore the withdrawal of the Biytish mil- i itary frontier. "Ours was the first western expedi-1 tion," said Prof. Breasted, "to cross1 the new Arab state from Baghdad to the Mediterranean after it was pro-1 claimed. The fortress of Salihiyah was difficult of access even when it was within British lines, and it is un> likely that another expedition will soon penetrate into this remote and inhospitable region." On the way to Salihiyah the party j was entertained at the British camp, J and Lieut. Col. Leachman cleared out ] his office to make room for the archaeologists' five field beds. The chapel of the fortress was decided by the investigators to have been the temple not only of Rumun legionaries but likewise of some Oriental cult. This appeared from tincharacter of the paintings, some of which had to be uncovered by clearing rubbish which had accumulated in the ruin. One of the paintings appeared to show a local Oriental family at worship, another showed a group of Roman soldiers worshipping , before images of the deified emperors. The Oriental personages portrayed had hands upraised in a gesture recognized as one employed in Eastern religious rites; among them was a gorgeously dressed women thought to be a local rules such as Zenobia, the, famous queen who defied Rome. Tinname inscribed beneath her figure re-1 sembled in form that of Zenobia, who -ruled Palmyra only 100 miles away. "We cannot even conjecture," said Prof. Breasted, "the nature of her relations to the Roman power which is commemorated in the other group." Necklaces terminating in lotus flowers were among the devices figuring in the Oriental group. "That we have in these wall scenes an example of the mostly lost ancestry of Byzantine painting is evident," said Prof. Breasted, "from comparison t of them with the early mosaics surviving at Ravenna. This ruined Roman fortress at Salihiyah has thus furnished a new and unparallelled exaninle nf the transition from ilncaili-nt orientalized Hellenistic art to the By zantine art from which reviving Eu-1 rope inherited so much." The party concluded that the probable date of the paintings was the third century, "when East and Wcs*. met in Syria." It was noted that the face which the British officers had described as the best painted was, by I the time the scholars arrived, scratched and defaced by some desert iconoclas, possibly a prowling Arub. Cotton Industry Surpasses Pre-War Output Warsaw, June 8.?Official figures published recently by the Polish Min ioii)r ui iiauc ttuu ^uuiiiicitc icvcai the fact that the cotton industry in Lodz during the first three months of 1922 surpassed the pre-war output. Export to Western Europe, the Ministry's report shows, is on the increase, due largely to the importation of American raw materials. Lodz is the largest cotton manufacturing center in Continental Europe, and second only to Manchester, England, in factory facilities. Nearly half the 7,600,000 inhabitants of Belgium are savings-bank depositors. The depositors have an vrerftge credit of 427 francs. ' ''V \ V " *' '* ; -V ' <. - ' _ ' ovie Star in :y Package ollers a | Noi [N(ffTCE I To the Public! we beg to inform the public in general, and our friends in particular, that we have opened i in temporary quarters next i door to McMillan's barber shop. i new, fresh goods are arriving i daily. remember, everything is i sold absolutely for cash. you b s/ ve money by doing business i with us. { 1 MlllllBinv [niinntt Iiviuiiiiid/ - muucii Clothing Company The New Way Cash Store I ^Slrd | THE UNIVERSAL CAR I HEALTHI PLEASURE? I MORE BUSINESS-g THAT'S wiiai a FORD CAR mean to YOU and YOURS. You can own a BRAND NEW FORD at ONCE and PAY AS YOU USE IT. ASK US HOW. j JULIAN W. LIPSCOMB The Man who Always has any Part for a Ford or Fordson 1 JONESVILLE, S. C. 1 ~ 4 ??., "*'91 . : . .MS