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"One cf tt\Q Famous Five' * MMWA 'Use your car, | se] jr^fi passenger or com- I JM1 mercial, more and j rjjJ^ more to relieve , TrrJ I the transportation 5 JJJ pressure on the < III II Nation's railroads I and merchants.' " 1 |H deliverv scrvier, " ^ SLJT| tAMUEL P. COLT Nov. 12. 1917 CO fSfiKat, liPiipSSSw? l< li.'lil'lll p ./t-TS"-' j i Hi t?<* I i iiij i iTr: L:: i?* i T:,' i\>' ^-V ?rVt j 11;! A. Complete Stock o She?They refused to cash a check for me this morning because they said the account was overdrawn. Now I'd really like to know what is the good of having a federal reserve hoard, anyway.?Life. Bavaria has produced a motion piclure film predicting incidents of her mad King Lud wig's erratic career in rj. the actual scenes of their enactment M] and incidentally made Ludwig a "movi0" S'ar _____ i? We must raise more or we may have to eat less. n Pays 25c a Month ; for Perfect Health u For 15 years, E. A. Little, Bessemer. Ah. has paid l!"c a mor.th to keep in per- t< feet health. Bead what he says: "i ip-ito to ix't ! my m l -m im-nt > ? Orniwr l.ivcr ^ ltr>i'iil.tV>r. 1 Jir?vo n? t ii>' <1 any <'i\er mwln uio for f.fwn ><-nrs, ? >i '\v il i* llu? ?? ?% r r aii i-tit < mplaim'*. fin.! \\ I rur?" mi? - no ? f i ; 1 iron l ? a 4 kn un. W! . n 1 f - t . i .. .1 to t?ko > .:r 1 tean -?r I r ' r tl.H ; . . fn.l.'ii 1 r<i?? >. . w .< I.'D IR It I V 111-.' n. ill ? M tllfJT IIIV " it t.y ilm rr. i i > otic I ?v >i muutli an t wmilJ nut bo without lfir.ui>- inc." Granger 1 Liver f Regulator ; is strictly vegctablo, non-nlcol.o!ic preparation, and is highly recommended for sick I headache, indigestion, biliousness and all stomach and liver complaints. Your druggist can supply you?2.r>o a h -x. ^ Granger Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Teaa. QUICK LOANS. 4 < Money to loan upon county or city j eal estate. Loan may be had for from one to twenty years. 39-tf Barron & Barron. t Dr. Virgil R. Hawkins DENTIST OFHT.K UPSTAIRS IN |Tn;nn C f TKR ni'ii.DiNu union, o. \j? TRY Dr. M. D. Hueit's' ALL-HEALING LINIMENT For Aches and Pains. It Never Fails. Ask Your Friends For Sale at the PALMETTO DRUG CO. P^Help the Rail Help the u J uo'.n^ jr^\n vt*? y paoocii^vi vi ' >re to help relieve the pressure on tf rcr the railroads are strained to t in and merchandise. The one way to keep your autom 'vice day ancl night is to be sure th ie tires. United States 'Usco' Tread is not ic,*ent, aiways-ready tire, ?it is the tire of long mileage?of 1< (? the t:re of masterful anti-skid ser Put United States 'Usco' Treads mparisons. yrifted Stats: bSy* 'Chain' ? , -7-. w^-iw Are Good Tit I'niir.f irrs Tubes an.! Accessories //.fl'ori/i ynJ ll'ear That Male i uitrd .S7< mmMMlmM 'V > " :t'I ?IK<jf. >y-} Tnlifr*'-' ':^;;'?!Srorol n;. 1; H 1 I llilii II; I li JUlilllllMliiii-\ f United States Tires Carried irtillery of Greater Value p",1! On European War Fronts ermans Have Greatly Increased this an<' itranch Since Ileeinning of Hos- thes tilities how C?-in< French Front, October 00.? (Corre- havt londence of the Associated Press) lii-ii he Kntente armies have not beeon G< one in recogni/.ig the greater value likin artillery as compared with infantry war, i the method of warfare in opera- char on on all the European front.-) since 0f ^ re cessation of the war i>f move- stan lent at the end of 1014. of n A glance at the strength of the calil ernian tield artillery branch at the so polling of hostilities shows that it 4-in lien consisted of 042 batteries. At T resent it is composed of 2.000 bat- a di cries at least. As the batteries now Gov ontain only four pieces instead of witl ix as at the beginning of tiie war, use ho calculation of the power of tie nior .rtilllery in the field must '<o based to 1 n the number of guns rather than can hat of batteries. Whereas in 101 1 he German army possessed only Pro !,8.r)2 field guns it now disposes of r\ 5,000 if the minimum figure of 2,< h) ])ra latteries with which it was furnished con it the end of 1010 is taken as the tha jasis of calculation. These field artillery batteries are 01 i:.nj?i ,.i il V 1UUU lllvU l<? U UIMVIO tliv/ou tu lll'-vl ivith the 77-centimetre cannon (the 1-inch) and those armed with light I 1-inch howitzers. The German H-inch of ?anno nhas been much improved and ofTi its range greatly increased since 1914. Gf As to the German heavy artillery, pC] the increase in the number of pieces Th has been even grater in proportion En than that of the field artillery. In th< peace-time the German Empire had be organized twenty-four regiments of j)0 heavy artillery. Each regiment was Y( composed of two battalions of four batteries, and each battery was armed j)< with four guns, thus totalling 7<>S y( heavy guns. ]a As soon as the army had been mob- i(ll ilized in 1914 the German military nr authorities established new heavy av- os tillery formations. Soon each artill- ch ery regiment of the regular army had attached to it a reserve regiment consisting of four batteries of skilled gunners .also a batalion of four batteries formed from among the third reservists or landstrum. When the arsenals and shell factories later had reached a higher level of production of guns and ammunition further batteries were formed from among Humeri of the Ersatz reserve. Since the first year of the war large numbers of the recruits of the younger classes which have been called out for service have been sent to the artillery branch. By the end of 191 fi the number of heavy batteries had been multiplied more than five times and in the course of 1^17 further additions rrindo to the total. Of the German big guns, 25 per rent, are long-range cannon and the remaiing 75 per cent howitzers. The most numerous of their long- r G< 1* we; roads inc Merchants H commercial, more and le nation's railroads, an< I . 1 ne limit today to move hoi ovc lobile ready for your cor iat you have depend- or,l tha only the dependable, , mu aw ?nileage cost, cor vice. tr'( . old on your car?make nri tor sis res ho Alto Tirra for Motor ! Truclta, Motor nni @S Cycles. BicyeUs. 1 ' and Aeroplanta I i-x-f All the Sterling r,E itei T'res Supreme hei | {I by J. L. Bolton ^hi th< are 4-inch, 1 1-2-inch, 5-inch *? 5-inch; but they possess also cries of 8.7-inch, 0.7-inch, 11-inch 15-inch long-range guns, although 301 e are very few in number. Their *jf itzers are for the most part of L*b calibre; but besides these they in line batteries of 11-inch, , ich .tikJ 17-inch howitzers. l" mnany had not developed any ipr for mountain pruns l>efore this ^ , but she has been forced to X01 ipre Tier views by the development.,-^? he fipditintr, in the Vos^es, for ince, and now has twenty batteries ^ lountain-pruns, six pieces of 3-inch jan ire rapid-fire to a battery, and al-lre1 , fi r lias formed several batteries of ch mountain howitzers. rench artillery as well has been . evelopment of this war, and the ^I( man army is now well provided ? li weapons of various kinds for in the advanced lines. Its trench ^ tars ran pre in calibre from 3 inches ar 10 inches. Finally, the small trench m non of 1 1-2-inch, 2-inch and 2 1-2 calibre have become very numus in all sectors of th"e line. w 'he personnel of the prunerry ^ nch of the German army has beie nearly as (treat in numbers as t of the infantry. w ? . w )jective of Zeppelin Raid f Very Small Town * .ondon, Nov. 15.?Correspondence n the Associated Press)?A German ^ icial communique mentions as one " the objectives of the recent Zep- ^ lin raid, the town of Mapleton. a ere are only three Mapletons in n inland, and none of them could hy ^ ? furthest stretch of the imagination a described as a town of military imrtance. The largest of the trio, in f >rkshire, has a population of only 1 0. The other two, one in West ^ rbyshire and the other in West >rkshire, have 200 and 17.r> popu- 1 lion respectively. The only public lildintrs in any of the three towns * e the local churches, and the small- ( t. of the Mapletons has not even a * ureh. ... article noon to appear In thin paper. Uned and highly endorsed hy former United States Senators and Members of Congress, wfll-known physicians! and former Public Health officials. I Ask your doctor or druggist about It, | Milhous Druf* Co.., Peoples Driitf Store, Clymph's Pharmacy, Palmetto Drug Co., Some people are proud of their >ast because it is past. erman Regulations to Conserve Clothing mber of Yards for Women's Dresses Limited^?Rules and Regulations Growing Stricter 3erne, Switzerland, October 30.? srrespondence of tThe Associated ted Press)?To conserve the dilishing supply of clothing in Gerny, the German government has josed regulations requiring that, all articles of linen or personal ir to be purchased, three similar rn articles must be returned. This reases the scope and rigor of the thing cards introduced less than a ir ago. Fhe r?gulaT1on applies to cotton rkintrc clnvps rollers t_nlilo linen I cloth materials foY various housed purposes. For every suit or ' srcoat two well worn one in pood idition must be surrendered. The y articles of ordinary wear or use it arev cxemptd from card regulan are wooden shoes and silk things, dore than a year apo there was ch talk in Germany of reducinp the isumption of cloth by inducing pa>tic minded women to return to the but fashionable tipht skirt. The ?= ximum quantity of material, in me- mm s, which should be used for a dress s even stipulated. The economy s not successfully accomplished, vever. for the German women, ugh they shortened their skirts r?reciaM>,) w?re them wide and full, ^ow, ill ere f orb*,"" there is pending a j id specification limiting the num of yards of cloth which may be roted to any garment of given prortions?depending upon the size of ? prospective wearer. And if the arer needs linen and other par- a nts than outer c'othes, she must a n in three corresponding, worn- I ajkioces of lingerie. \ M strict rules and regulations If e growing st rioter each month *d naturally to an increased ? , of deception and countless at- j ^ by those who possess stocks of j I ipr to evade the cant system Iflling at abnormally high prices those who cannot procure cards. W latest reports from Berlin tell of |JSarrest of a woman who was found liave concealed a stock of 1500 fen pairs of stockings. These she s peddling in little cafes and re ts where there was a minimum rigor of her discovery and at utterly proportionate prices. [Tie Ferrets" Name Given Certain British Battalion Behind British Lines in France, Nonber 15.?Correspondence of The sociate<V Press. There is a certain ive battalion in the British army lich is known throughout the length d breath of the line as "The Fer;S." Tho nickname was given them, . st of all because of their success dealing with the rat nuisance in eir section of the line, and the so*.- i ?r who had most lo do with comtting tho rats is known from Dun- u rk to St. Quentin as 4lO. (J. Rats," e initial being the regular British my abbreviation for "officer comanding." ^ The rats were probably worse in = lis battalion's section of the line last hi inter than anywhere else in Flan- hi ?rs, and many were tffh devices tried re raist the little enemy. Traps of all n< !nds were tried. Bat. devonrinir does b. rere brought up, but in vain. A cat hi ith a tremendous reputation in the U rench villages was purchased and did fs rell at first, killing four rats in ri venty-four hours and intimidating lany others. Thereupon ihe bat ilion made much of the victorious an nal, to its undoing, for it adapted iself as if by instinct to the life of regimental pet, that it, it ate as nueh as it could of the men's raions, took the warmest corner availblc, and quit work. Finally the battalion staff had a i War Council, and dispatched one of ts number to I*>ndon to bring back hree or four good ferrets. In the trenches, the ferrets were in object of great interest. Private rhomas Merryfield emerged from objcurity and was assigned to take *harge of the newcomers. From that lay forward he was known to the army as O. C. Rats. He took his duties seriously, and immediately went into action against the little enemy that had been stealing rood on the tables, running over officer's faces at night, chewing even the laces from men's hoots. The ferrets and their "O. C." put up some great hunts. There were moments of great excitement when the rats bolted wholesale before the new attack and were clubbed to death in the trench by the enthusiastic men. There were also moments of l>7eathless anxiety, when one of the precious ferrets emerged from" a bolt hole somewhere below the barbed wire and was reported steering for the German trenches. One day Merryfield won the censtire of the authorities and the enthusiastic approval and praise of his comrades by retrieving a lost ferret from No-Man's Land in daylight and under fire. Tattle by little the art of rat \ An Ambition and i J 'Y'lIK needs of the South are identic f I of the Southern Railway: the (rowtb and J the upbuilding of the other. Jf J The Southern Railway aaka no farora?ne ./1 , accorded to others. ,1 3 The ambition of the Southern Railway C< V) J unity of interest that is born of co-operation b f the railroads; to see perfected that fair and frank ( ' ment of railroads which invites the confide I 1 agencies| to realize that liberality of treatmen V f' to obtain the additional capital needed for the ao \/ enlarged facilities incident to the demand for li , servicet and, finally*-* To take Its niche In the body politic of t r othrr rrrat Industries, with no more, but with ( rights and erjual opportunities. V^ ' 44 The Southern Serves tl It Is Our 1 To please the particular hous forts are directed to the i meats and vegetables the mar your wants. We are always juicy beef steak is our "long 2 E. R. GODSHALI PHONE 52 SERVICE in lit used as an Ambulance, for delive ons. Especially adapted for long distar here within thirty miles of Union FltEl BAILEY UNDER ifTice Phone 106 jnting was learned by the whole D ittalion. Men became wise in fer;t lore, cunning in interpreting the jises of an underground struggle jtween the antagonists. The rats ave ever since given thaC section of le battle zone a wide F>erth and the f. . . Vlt ime of the winter's successful antiat offensive is known to all the army. nn I Women! 111 ?1H Here 1b a message to | ft T I suffering women, from III r. I Mrs. W. T. Price, of I 1} g : Public, Ky.: "I suf- IB ti 3 fered with painful...", I B st W I gho writes. "I got down w Ei with a weakness In my y y baclc arul limbs...I IIs' I felt helpless and dls- I B tl couraged...I bad about I B I given up hopes of ever B B I B being well again, when B k| hi ill A friend Insisted I [JWI] t iaU Take U*11 J HARnill unuuui, The Woman's Tonic j I began Cardnl. In Ef ^ 9 A short while I saw a I EE marked difference... I I grew stronger right a ^ along, and It cured me. I s U I am stouter than I IV h m have been in years." gj H 1 If you suffer, you can ra Sj B m appreciate what It | 1 2 |g means to be strong and ?? P P well. Thousands of wo- Efj ^ rl W men glvo Cardui the R |J I credit for their good kg I health. It should help I S you. Try CardnL At all < 9 I druggist.': 75-73 v i Record j y. al with the needa ? \ aucceaa of one mauu { \ J ! \ J) > (pedal prlrllere i 1/ J S smpany It to tee I bat ' etween the public and J ~ policy in the a>?nipe- , """V nee of rovernmental i J t which will enable It I j (juisitior of better and ' JL incrcaacd and better J 1 he South alonralde of J i equal libertiea, equal y io South." p) \ Delight iekeeper. Our best efnarketing of the best ket affords. Phone us "on the job." Tender, suit." :S MARKET CAR rinj? Caskets and on Funeral ocealce calls. We deliver Caskets any2 OF CHARGE. (TAKING CO. Residence Phone 88 utch Laborer Go Into C nV m nnir oilv tA Wnri \IVI IliailJ 1/U1IJ t\/ TT Vlll At Higher Wages Amsterdam, Netherlands, October .?In many districts on the Dutch rman borderline, there is a steady tflow every morning of Dutch worken, women and girls across the ontier. They go out for the day to ark at high wages in German faeries just over the Germa nside. In e evening, a return tide sets in of ingry crowds, for the Dutch factory inds find eager purchasers for the ntents of their dinner pails. Despite careful watching by the utch frontier guards and police ma ons, attempts (at smuggling conantly occur. Five hundred persons ere convicted of smuggling at the nail frontier town of Heerenberg in iree weeks. RUB-MY-TISM Will cure Rheumatism, Neu-> algia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Old Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Eczema, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, jsed internally or externally. 25c There are exceptions to alJ rules, 'he fellow who says he knows what e is talking about isn't always misakne.?Claude Callan in the Fort Vorth Star-Telegram. IF YOU ire troubled with dandruff, itching calp, and your hair coming out, we isk you to try JBe/iiM) JIVsEEEiar HAIR TONIC >n our guarantee that it will give fou relief and satisfaction or money refunded. Sold only by us, 50c and M OO. Glymph's Pharmacy, Union, S. pi U. /