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- PAGE FOUR INDEPENDENTS IN DUNN HOLD CELEBRATION Barbecue Attracts Many People at Gathering Held at Dunn Center T. G. NELSON WELCOMED Dunn Center, NX, D.. Noy. 7.—Dunn county Independent held a barbecue in celebration of the election of the Independent candidate urday af- ternoon and evéning, took the Icome to Theodore G-! § of the Indenpendent Association, and Independent! manager. Mr. Nelson formeriy lived in Dunn county. Two bands were on deck, the Kill- deer orches' nd the Dunn Wintel band, The ‘of the bige steer to be founc in the neighbo: had been going on since the previous night and 965 people were served at the barbec The auditorium was crowded when the indoor program was_ started shortly after one o-clock with Alfred 0. Nelson acting as chairman in the! absence of Bill Connolly who was! prevented by a business engagement fronr taking charge until the evening.| program commenced, i Get ‘Together, $i After a few Myrtha selections by the uple of solos by, Mis: of Halliday, At-j torney T. F, Murtha, of D was introducéd as the first s Mr. Murtha gave a short review of} the recent political history of the state complimented the voters of the | stale on their decision in the recall; election but declared that there was now no time for gloating enemies. Dakota could be served only by. ev- eryhody hands. The new had no ay grind. Attorney W Burnett, of Dicki son, endorsed Mr. Murtha’s state-| ments as to the political outlook and | urged diversified farming. The pro- gram was followed by the barbecue; donated by Bill Connoll. ho wagered | that if the Independents won he would roast the biggest steer in the neigh-! borhood in front of the local league | organ, Mr. Nelson arrived on the 8:10) train and was welcomed gathering with the band playing. | waiting automobile took: him to the auditorium. Mr. Nelson said in part: Conduct of Campaign “Tam glad that I can say truth-| fully that as campaign manager for the Independent forces 1 have not counselled or permitted any person-| abuse or attack upon the personal. character of an opponent.” The fight has been hitter and no doubt things | have been said that would have been} left unsaid in calmer moments, but) gener speaking it has been al clean fight from our side, and as Tj his evening look back I see nothing | at could have been gained’ by delving | into personalities, | utural in any: campaign that | acts) of public “ofticia must come in for apalysis, attention: min any and every politi-| ina recall | any other, s veatally natural that public ry,to defeat or at} tify their acts. The result s, of course, a controversy which} must be settled Ay the voters. “Such controvi has’ settled ut the polls. We who torious hwWe nothing to gloat over. We have no. axes to grind, but we want. the co-operation of all -the.peo- ple in the statégo make North Dako- ta the best state in the American union. We have had troublesome 2 are looking towards a bet- . If every man and worfian ite will do their public duty 1 for a square deal for ev- ure going to come out on oon. have elected a set of state 0! who havg the best interests -of the state at heart. Give them a fair chance before you eae judg- ment, and then I have no fear for, the outcome.” ABLETO DO HER WORK After Long Suffering Mrs, Sieferi | — Was Restored to Health by | Lydia £.Pinkham’s Vegetabls | Compound dl] salty il, am now able fo do my work mend the Vegetable Compou al. s oe W. Fourth | Street, Potisville, P: __ Theeveryd fay life of many housew! nal struggle with wea There is nothing more w ind -of ho re pain. ing than the ceaseless bone and muscle ache, and nerves alion edge. Tf you are one of these women ao not | suffer for four or five. years 2s Mrs. Siefert did, but profit by her expericnee and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkhan mi 's Vegetable Compound. 1 1 ’ ‘aver MR. AND MRS. GEORGE McKEAN, AS eer are Q RRIAG! NSE, AND AS | , The best interests of North CE ae TO BACH OTHER, i with any man, ‘married or single, a3 getting together and jaining| By NEA Service. Los Angeles, N administration, he said,! couple in California i | George McKean, who won out in love's iN-| oddest lottery. She was, working in a mail order house four years ago. He ordered handkerchiefs. She put a note in athe box, asking a! him to write. He did. ' gagement. by the} But. by pre-arrangement, ‘A; masked, They didn’t unmask till one minute i before the marriage—which wag per-| the |formed publicly’ before jin a dance pavilion. ec seveinch Aluminum TEM MUO CUCM UUUU UML LL WIN IN =e a Mr. and Mrs. lotter they were 5,000 persons | ses, they Have better flavored foods : and SAVE in fuel costs To get the best results from the-“ Wear-Ever” Fry Pan: Sra-Add food and let it cook. Po: NOT increase flame in ai fort to hurry cooking. ook for Prices on all ‘‘Wear-Ever’’ utensils have been reduce LOVE LOTTERY!” “' American © girl. “She was the gir] of my dreams,” —The happiest Said McKean afterward. ! “He looked alittle older than 1} thought he would,” said the bride. | “But he had just the kindly face } had expected.” “Anyhow, alw: agreed, love's 1 and we're each satis- fied with what we've drawn.” Baiecality by mail. En- FORCE OF IMPULSE) They met for the first time when He ai at pen apcivine for their marriage license. BY WINONA WILCOX do not always or very often move according ‘to: their re put here—or | 000 w orkers. stincts and impul- re forced to detour from the moral route \they expected to follow papers a Human _ beings own free will. operties of “Wear-Ever” alumi- ’ fear-Ever’” utensils heat, quickly ls prepared the “Wear-E: and have a better favor than E Letedpioripriy num are such th: and evenly. Hence, food are cooked more tniform! -foods prepared in ordinary utensils. The “Wear-Ever” Fry Pan is:made of hayd, “hick! cold. rolled, sheet aluminum. temperature with a Heated, it tail SR REDUCED fiaae, ‘This SAVES FUEL d, at the same time, as$urea quicker, more thorough cooking of foods. «Remember, a: 3 bait isa ai = and, at WASTE of fuel when you use “Wear-E SPECIAL’ OFFER—Seven-inch fWear-Ever” Fry Pan for 49c For a limited fees only, the regular $1.10 “Wear-Ever” will be sold by local dealers for 49c. , Aluminum Fry. Pan Get your fry pan today. Fry Pan Regular Price—35c Cover Special Price—19c THE ALUMINUM COOKING UTENSIL COMPANY New Kensington, Pa. Uf these pans are not obt. sti ated Cte Ea. Nee Kenenaton Paes and cover to The Aluminum Cooking and they Twill be oer ‘sent to you postpaid. ’ Get the “‘Wear-Ever’’ Fry Pan at any of these stores LOWAS HARDWARE C0... Main Street. son, N. D.— est & Jamestown, N. D.—Kirk. & Allen,. Jamestown Hdwe Co. & Mandan, N. D.-~Rovig Skjod:Co. vale City, N. D.—The. Fair. , 0. J. de Lendrecie Co. j [ Look for the store with the *‘Wear-Ever”” Window: : Display | 7 | hy, (the ungressed strength of, thoir emotions, If they knew, a. little more about thesaeemotions, they would be ‘some- | What ‘ prepared to face ; their unseen enémies. » “I have erred and thé realization | breaks my heart," writes a girl. | “Working in my father’s office, 1} fell in-Jove with a man who has a| Public Health Nursing departmeat of and tamliy, + "I drifted into this feeling. When discoered it, I tried to conceal it, thought, I had succeeded when, | | without warning, he took me in hisi ; arms and Kissed me. “I am .30 years old. I awakened | | to what real love might mean to me. ; | did not know before. ; “A few days later he kissed me} ‘ again and 1 yielded willingly. “I have never-been at my desk since. _ Have’ ‘never | entered” my father’s place: of. business. “The man’ wrote me a letter of apology. +I. replied that it was .as8 | much my fault as his and that ‘T'felt humbled and) ashamed when = 1| | thought of his wife. She is a sweet | Uttle thing. | «\“How shall I judge myself? What { Shall I do? © + “I want to explain that when this | _bappened J was: in the clutches of ‘an uncontrollable emotion, something | 1 cannot define. |. “Everybody respects me, no one ' would dare hint:that I ever have slip- | ped or stumbled like some of the | foolish virgins I know. I m sorry— ! sorry—? the letter runs through sev= ; eral more. similar paragraphs. ; It ig printed becaitse it is. whole- ; Some reading. Conscience never goes ! ous of fashion. - | ‘This confegsion betrays the com- ! plex nature ‘of the sensitive wellbred Her inhibition haé ! always ruled her until she arrived at maturity when they overwhelined her to her amazement’ and humiliation, Her remorse must be a confusing | revelation to girls of ‘a conspecuous ; modern type. The embraces to which ; she succumbed, and the remorse which | ensued doubtless seem rather abused to many a girl who accepts spooning | thé expected feature of a moment's ; isolation. 1 We rise on_ stepping stones of our dead ‘selves ‘to higher things, says the poet. But nobody can rise far | if he or she keeps turning around + and looking backward. i It_would seem wise Yor the young ; Woman to stop repending, ‘and to go Her kind requires to work ‘again. but one lesson. The Brazil nut’tree does not begin to. bear fruit until it is about 50 years vl Canada’s fishing industry gives em- ployment -tovbetween 80,000 and 100.- ‘New York State has 203 daily news- while;Delaware has only three. from d, ie. SSetnrdes. pooper 1921 $1. 10 way Co., New Kensington, Pe. and fight | 7 |ADVENTURE! BY RUTH AGNES ABELING. Washington, Nov. <.—"We're’ attll ; Dioneering.” ‘The deep, vital voice belonged to | Miss Elizabeth G. Fox; head of the ‘the Red Cross, “‘But/there is no woman's work that gives more opportunity. for orig- inality than‘ public health nursing. When you finish something in connec: jHlon with it, you feel thal it is all jyours. = “It has been all your cork and your effort—even if the Fesult does belong ito somebody’else!” It was a gener- ;ons smile which followed, sémething like her generous. spirit. chapters which are doing’ county {public health work,” Fox. “That means we have, 1,300 | people fad corrected the physical de-. H fects of‘ 400.000 children last year. in, a child whom we examine in | school, we: get in touch with the mother. If it is some simple thing which @ little. home attention and} hygiene will correct, we tell them, and ft. it is something of a more serious! sician. “ “But no matter which it. is,” said Miss Fox, “once we find a fault, we! watch the child and Keep informet until it is quite well. “Why, even the little toothbrush driils which my girls”—it’s here way. of-referring to her nurses—‘conduct, | do-worlds of good. The children I Fn! the motion, they get the habit of it— and you know most things’ are habie| with children—so when they're home they want to clean thelf teeth and! take care of them.” The mode of travel arranged for the nurses in making the rounds of! their counties is usually by Ford, which they drive themselves. But oc-! casionally it, becomes an entirely original thing. One nurse, during a) flood in the, who is stationed, in-‘Alaska;..¥ | 1. “We. have about 1,200 Red Cross; continued | Miss | é stWualeree the fault is that we find! Pature, we advise the care'of a Poy {| { ' nurses who took: care of one ‘million| ‘ aoe crossed a riverim a basket: oni|'-- & pulley, while Miss)"Aghes’ Hollen 72 miles to get from one place to an: other where she was needed. adventure,” sald Miss Fox. -“Iv’s avtife which isn’t without its] Upset, Aci \ Plenty of it in Health | Work! ASPIRIN Name “Bayer?” on Genuine ‘ : 2 . MISS BLIZABLTH FOX Marrieges in the United States this year are’ estimated a at 1,500,000. Redness Ot th the Red Sea’ Is due to masses of certain kind of seaweed... Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on: tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre- ‘scribed by physicigns for twenty-on9 years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bay- r package for Colds, Headache, Neu- talgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Tooth- ache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin"boxés of twelve Bayer Tablets of Sgpirin cost few cents. Druggiste ae @ell larger packages. Aspirin Is ‘trade mark of Bayér Manufacture * * Monoaceticacideste of Salicylica- a. ‘| ‘The tobacco of eastern, Macedonia used’ to bring Turkey an annual.rev- enue of $2,000,000. Half a million working people die annually. Cutting the hair’ short used to be a-punishable offense in France. For Constipated Bowelés Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, Bilious Liver when "you have. Dizzy Colds, Biliousness, Stomach e nictst. cathartic-laxative:in the empty your :- your liver and bowels Headache, Tndigestion, is-candy-Ilke “Cascarets.” One or. two tonight will bowels completely by morning, and you will feel splendid. “They work’ while you sleep.” Cas- carets never stir you up or gripe like Or! Salts, Pills, ‘Calomel, or Oil and they cost omly ten cents a box. love Cascarets too. ‘Children par EINE EET ET ETE MET ETE LE AE ’ RECHARGE— REN TALS— DELIVERY— 1. 7? eT PNG ES OIMGING 6-volt Battery . 12-volt Battery .... 18 or 24-volt Battery. . : , ‘ Development Charge, (charging, discharge and recharging), EXC aes okies Per calendar day. . Minimum charge ... (Deposit required on all rentals to strangers.) Calling for, \ REINSULATING— _' 6-volt Battery... 12-volt Battery ..... 18 or 24-volt Battery... (Includes recharge, separators, acid, labor; but no rubber goods, plates or wood case—no extra charge made for labor of installing these new parts, g except in case where new positive plates are installed. A charge of $1.50 ‘for labor of burning’ on plates is made.) DISMANTELING—All types .<.:. (This charge is made when battery is taken out of shop without recharge or repair after having been dismantled.) WET STORAGE— (Delivery included) — | . | -6-volt:Battery, $1.50 1st month, each_addi- tional ok fraction thereof: > 12-volt: Battery, $200 Ist month, “each addi. tional month or fraction thereof. 18 or 24-volt. Battery, $2.50 1st month, each additional month or fraction thereof, pony Charge—Two months’ rate.) CTO ‘Take Care of Battery DRY STORAGE—( Delivery included)— 6-volt Battery . 12-volt Battery - 18 or 24-volt Battery...» _ Willard Service Station | 408 Broadway. or delivering, per trip..... ' Pores ere Cn) \ STORAGE WITHDRAWAL NOTICE—Dry Storage— \ 10. days’ notice. : > KAN SN BS DO WX A BE 25 00 APA WOW Woe We We Sire Wd Wore re TP We eet . $11.00" el $12.50 eee es $16.50 ww evans ier \en ey ¢.$1.00 .$1.50 . $2.00 Tiwe Swe Yee Sw