fif **'jV & 1A St. i jjafc-rijjj**'.**-*{* sky"*. VIOLA DAHA PLAYS FABB GEISETTE Viola Dana, the versatile and win some Metrojtar, will be seen in a role of p%#jrand attraction in "The Parisian digress" which will be shown at the Rex theatre on Thurs day. She plays the character of Peanne, a child of the gutter, who is com pelled by a young Apache to dance for his gains in the cafes of the Par isian Latin Quarter. From this life of the slums she is suddenly trans planted to the luxurious ana fastid ious home of titled aristocrats, where she rightly belongs by birth. A romance of rare charm is added to the many adventures which go to make this play one of unusual value and entertainment. The clever cast supporting Miss Dana are Darrell FOBS, Henry Kol ker, Edward Connelly, .Clarissa Sel wynne, Louis D'Arclay, Paul Weigel, Mitzi Goodstadt and Maree Beaudet. Herbert Blache directed the play and 4jhe production was made under the personal supervision of Maxwell Kar Ser, director general. JLANCHE SWEET KIDNAPS fv MAiJIHHEv^iTLM |v Blanche Sweet comes i to the Grand theatre today and tomorrow tin her newest Jesse*-Hanmfeo.nrIjta~ he feature. "The Dead'ier Sex" is [the title of the film,' the story of t^which revolves about a modern Am erican girl who* kidnaps her money [grabbing business enemy and takes him to Main woods wherehthe 1 hundredthe thousande dollars In cas he has in his pockets won't even buy mosquito netting. Miss Sweet is given excellent sup port by Mahlon Hamilton as the man who wanted nothing that money could buy Winter Hall as her father Russell Simpson as the mountain guide Roy Laidlaw as* her .right hand man of affairs, and Boris, Kar loft" as a French-Canadian t-pper.. Baynard Veiller,. author-.of "The Thirteenth Chair" and "Within the Law," is the author of "The Dead lier Sex,"' which has been given' thetriumplto. capable direction of Robert Thorn-, by, who directed Miss Sweet's,earli er success, "Fighting Cresay."' VAUDEVILLE AT GRAND EVERY SATTTEDAY The Circuit of Western Vaudeville which was recently started, and whirl* was sm'spended temporarily, is once more in wording Qrder. and ASKS F0R mmGRANT LABOR ON WESTERN FARMS Newlabor York^An appea grant1 s'ff formimmi- to solve'thel far help problem has .been made to Frederic A Wcllls, Commissioner of Imml- r-*T^3in ^t the Port ot jiew York, by /n-V.p(inn. snecial, immigration in spector at St. Louis, oh behalf of the weei^ern states. Mr. Dunn called per sonally on Commissioner Wallis at KH^gsHnd. "Tt ^pems a pity." said Mr. Dunn, "thaK there is no provision of the law which might turn the tide of injmi- --stiPT' from the cities to the coun try. There is a dis+ressinsr need of farm hands. Not a day passes but I receive requests from 'whua. ers asking for help and seeking to fln,d out if there is not some way by which labor can be turned into field*. "The lure of high wages and high life combined with shorter hours has turned the stream of labor, away from the rural districts, even though 70 cents an hour is being paid for har vesters." :l \K SUR3UHSH JOURNALIST HAS ARRIVED IN AMERICA Dr Helmer Key, editor In chief of 1 thet"Svenska }j a^ JEW IN KANSAS ffi4. 5*1 Dagbladt," one of th infuentia journals of Swedene has arrived in this country. Dr. 1,1 Key formerly was a professor of the history of literature in the Dniver Ifr. aity of Upsala. He was the origin- Sj,' ator of the Swedish American Foun Wf dation. ^WARDED FAMOUS PRiZE Solomon Lefschets, professor of f' *ts mathematics at the University' of. Kansas and a leader of Jewish in terests at Lawrence, Kan., has re cently been awarded the famous Bdr 4lin prize. This prize is offered by .4- NEWS OF THE THEAf RES WARWICK HEBE TOKOBBOW The feature photoplay at tto ElaP (Wednesday and Thursday will^Pg (The Fourteenth Man.^, one pfjithe Tery latest releases by Easnaiaant, starring Rolbert Warwick, '.two short subjects, Paramount Magaslne. end a Travelogue, /with' the special music each evening, offers excellent entertainment at the Elko for tomorT Tom and Thursday. EVIL EUMOB STAETED A beautiful young- girl, she mar ried a rich man older than herself. "Because she loved him. Then young man came to live with them. Bvll rumors started' spreading. When Jove and scandal clashed, (hen came conflict. ,,:,_.' Thai's the situation -in: "The "World and His Wife," the..highly dra matic photoplay showing last times at the Elko,theatre tonlgbt.- It's a flaming romancd of ld Spa'in', ftch in dash and color. Cosmopolitan Pro ductions, the makers of "Humores- que," produced the picture, and Alma Bubnft is the featured player. Mon tagu "Love, Pedro de iCofdoba," and Gaston Glass are also in the cast. It's a Paramount 'Artcraft picture, presented at the Elko witb a charm ing musical accompaniment. The main feature is preceded by a short oomedy entitled "Mixed Drinks." uwi|h"various A*' commencihgrwith Saturday, July 31, Vaudeville ^wiU.4wvhown regularly afternoon and..evening, on Saturdays only at the -GrafiH .theatre. The first four shows, were of ex cellent quality, real vaudeville, with .high class entertainers'SwbOe' sal aries each day amounted to quite a neat. gum. With the resuming of the showing at the Grand, every in dication .'points toward an exception ally good bill for the first night. Hewitt Sisters are a clever and good looking pair, one!a toe dancer and the other an Oriental and Hula Hula artist. Billy Nickols is oe of the best known blackface comedy mimics in the state today.. And Evans and Corelli have several, harmony num bers that. they, mix in with a cleyer line of talk.' Reed Brothers in anacrobatic nov elty will close the bill,'which follows the regular picture program. ,v "LES MISERABLES" AT REX TODAY AND WEDNESDAY William Farnum regards hjs Jean Valjean,* In "Les Mdserables," which will be shown at the' Rex theatre be ginning today as the greatest achieve ment of his career. It is indeed a superb piece of character work, on the highest histrionic level, etching a Valjean who lives' forever after in, memory. Whistles blew, bells rang, and people cheered, when William Far num was bom. The newspapers printed pictures of the American flag, and all over the country orators made speeches. Throughout the length and breadth of the.United States every one, rejoiced. It was the Fourth of July, 1876. The celebration was particularly glorious in Farnum's birthplace. Al most in the shadow of Bunker Hill Monument, the new baby came into, the world. He gave occasion to double rejoicing in the household of "Dusty" Farnum, his father, a famous player of the day. After a few years in Boston, Wil liam's family moved to *Bucksport, Mo.' There the young man learned two thingsthe usual education ac corded children, and music. He be came leading cornetist in the Bucks port band. Later, William returned to Boston. His father, who had a stock company there, gave his son an engagement when he was only fourteen years old. His theatrical education, thus 'begun, was continued through Jp hundred minor roles in all the plays of Shakes peare. The schooling was severe* but thorough. ,William..Farnum played for five or six .years the fanJouVWcto has' scored so mahy "The Broken Law," "The ful Adventure,'? the French Academy of Science every twd years for a mathematical treatise solving an orieinal problem and is open to competitiors the world over. Professor Lefschets is the first Ameri can to be awarded the prize. LITHUANIAN ARTIST EXHIBITS *T CHTtAGO The Lithuanian artist, John Silelka, was awarded one of the prizes at the twenty-fourth annual exhibition of the Chietgo*institute of Art. He ex hibited ia portrait of a Lithuanian woman author. He is said to be the first pf t^he American Lithuanian art ists to take part in an exhibit of.the Chicago Institute. -BE PRETTY! TORN GRAY HAIR DARK Try Grandmother's Old Favor* ite Recipe of Safe Tea and Sulphur Almost everyone know that. Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound* ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streak ed or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture* was to make it at home, which is mussy and trou blesome. Nowaways, by asking at any drug:.store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get. a large bottle of this famous old recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients, at a small cost Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that yon darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. Yon dampen a sponge or soft jtxrash with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand. at a tints by morning the gray hair disappears, and after an other application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. oc stars in class^ ical repertoire. Then he organized his own company, and began road work. In Cleveland and Buffalo he established the William Farnum stock company, He acquired his own the atre in 'New York City, played for. thirty, weeks, and gave a run of twenty classical dramas in that time. Farnum's greatest fame- began when he was starredi "Ben Hur/' the stupendous drama which refuses to die. Thereafter he played in "Vir- g3U^us,?^fhe Little Rebel," and "The Prince of India," as wejl as a dozen lejjs important dramas. ^iHamFox^nally signed Mr. Far num 'as a screen star, and began the Long Series "of pictures in which- awkwar Wonder" A Gilde Fool, "A Tale of Two Cities," "The Man Hunter," "The Last of the Duanes," "Wings of the Morning," "The Jungle Trail,"' "Wolves of the Night," and this masterpiece, "Les Miserables" in which he has made a motion, pic ture classic Jfrom a classic of liter ature. THE BEMID.fr DAILY PIONEER tCopyrlgmV IMS, by JMBW Morgan.) JAMES MONROE 176ft(April 28) Jamas Hfonroe born In Westmoreland county, Va. 1776Graduated William and Mary. Entered the amy. 1782In the legislature. 178848In the Continental congress. 1787In the legislature, f* 1788In the stats constitutional convention. $? 17S04I the senate. 17844Minister to Franea.. 1788-1802Governor of Vfrfllnla. 1803-8In the diplomatle serv ice. 1808.10In the legislature:' 1811Governor. i 1811.17Secretary of state. X T^TO OTHER president, with the ex- XN caption of John QulncyAdams, has served the country asjlong as James Monroe and, without "exception, none--has had an official ^eAplrJeace so varied. *J* From 1776, when he was srvigbrous,, sfx-foot, broexhouldened raw-boned boy^oif eighteen, and left William and" Mary's college to' enter"'thlTltevblu^ tloh, Monroe remainedrtnl Summer Boarders Arrive ,-.r. Five Minute ChaU on Our Presidents By JAMES MORGAN ttas"public service untH 1825, when he retired from the White- House a wrinkled. There hef care bent, impoverished old man. In those 49 years, he bad been.A minor military oftcer under Wasnin peatedly a member of the lei a member of the 'Continental and of the national senate) ernor of Virginia minister to France, England and Spain secretary of state and war at the same time and. finally president for two terms. Without wealth or family Influence, with a slow, commonplace 'qlnd, with no giftsd as a speaker a-modest Psence andwith plaln unpol These include "Samson," manners, this very ordinary man plodded up the ladder of ambition to its^topmost rung. How? By sheer force of his rugged, courageous, in- James Honroe. dustrlous, honest, loyal character i triumph of the bemejy virtues. Although he failed In soma of his most Important tasks, Monroe's fall* ures were forgiven because they we honest mistakes. The ridicule and tht it upon nun by the most ilsode of bis ttndramatlc burted forever a man monl^irwitat and less sucata, This remarkable scene was enacted on the highly theatrical stage of/the national convention at Paris directly after the Reign of Terror and the fall ef Bobesplerre, when France was the outcast among nations.,, At that mo ment, Monroe appeal^) aT. the envoy of the only sister republic and, to let all the world see th^ the B^i^i^on had at least one friend left-AeaflB, the president of the nve9tf^'melo dramatically folded the rustle Virgin ian In his arms. After two years,, he was recalled for his seal, and came home In a rage of Indignation. Passing by the gate of MjTOltf Vernon-without paytng hlw re- *"& spects ta Washington, he paid them instead Mn 500 pages which he pub lished in defense of himself and in de nunciation of the. administration. Nev-4 ertheless, the discredited diplomat was sent, to Paris agala by President- Jef- ferson in a few years, when he came away covered with success, and with the treaty for.the purchase of Louisi ana under his arm by a fitting prelude to the Monroe doctrine, 20 years later There is a most interesting, souve nir of Monroe in Paris. Like Madi son, he had fallen In love while a member of congress and had married Elisabeth Kortrlght of New York. Two children having been born to them, oqe of the girls was placed in the fa mous French school of Mme. Campan, where she formed a friendship with Hortenee Beauharnals that outlasted the many vicissitudes of Josephine's daughter. __ Recently the notable figures in the court of the first consul of Malmal son were modeled and grouped about Napoleon for a celebrated wax works show In Paris. In that brilliant galaxy of monarchs and dukes yet to be. Eliza Monroe, In girlish prettlness, Is seen again by the side of the future queen of Holland and the destined mother of Napoleon DX FIVE COUNTIES TAKE PART IN HELD DEMONSTRATIONS Marshfleld, Wis., July 27.Re- markable .grain production'- through .foil treatment was shown farmers of 'Wisconsin at the state experimental .station here today. Feeding experi ments and"fertttiee tr-ialBr:also,are to be dehtbnstrfited *W ftte^farmers. Five counties are participating in the field demonstrations'. WOMAN IS MADE? OFFICEJANAGER The Rusk Radiator Co., Fargo, N. D. has a new office manager a woman, Miss Almeda JIaFleur. "Why not?" asks F. L. Wat kink, Pres., Dakota Business Col lege, Fargo, N. D.,of which school Miss LaFluer is a graduate. "W constantly get more calls for trained help than we can supply, both men and women. W expect to be called on for 1000 or more students during the coming school year." Join the 1000 Club and "Follow the ucec55f ul.'' Fall term Sept. 1. Write F. L. Watkins, Prcs., 806 Front St.. Fartro. N. D. rWhen sssBSBsmsBseaBseaBBSsasBSBSSBBM Folks Quit Coffee because of cost to health orpurse,fhej naturally drink INSTANT POSTUM "Theresa Reason so well, 1^ The 1 wine of a"thou- I sand delights. I .'''"'V:'' j|w- Tbsy ahrsji ran sssMsnh they vbsbtolotsJy'tbr**WU dfsi. Mess oTS *Z to TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 1*, 1920 vwar*MnF+fMMMwvw*t+*jwjwjwff****++*+JWJWi FIND .'::f HOLLISTER'S ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA a great Laxative^mild, pleasant, certain-r-so thoroly cleansing aiid purifying that CONSTIPATION disappears, and when your CONSTIPATION goes-your COMPLEXION improvesyou work bettereat betterfeel better. Give it a thoro trial and you will recommend it to all your: women* friends. 35c a package. Tea or Tablets. BARKER'S DRUC STORE -^s PURE BUTTER IS NOt EXPENSIVE Compare the present prfce oft butter with the price of meat Compare the prices' of the same two items as they were four years ago. Meat has increased nearly JtOO per cent, butter less than lOQ per cent. Uie more butter and less meat and reduce the H. C. L.you'll be healtibier, too. v-j'tf. Nothing can equal the delicious, appetizing flavor of butter. Nothing can equal the health-giving qualities of butter. It con- tains the valuable substance known as "Vitamines," obtainable only in genuine butter and other dairy products. Always ask your dealer for x....v CHIEF BRAND BU1TLR MADE BY BEMIDJI CREAMEiRY COMPANY BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA YouJustTry It most be plain to any sensible per on who reaUses tms, that the stomach,' liver and bowele must work in harmony If dlgibstlve troubles are to'be avoided- or overoome. This fact alsoi explains whr ^sufferers from lndlffest|on, an aufler more or less from heaov achi^bulousness aadcoostlpa- If you are one of the many un fortunate persons who cannot eat without, suffering afterward, If. you are constipated, have bilious spuls, headaches, coated tongue, bad breath, variable appetite, ar .nervous, losing energy and feel your health' supping away, take this advice and get a box of TNstureV Remedy (NR Tablets) riant today and start taking it Give it a trial for'a week or two Get your organs of di gestion, assimilation and elimination working in harmony andwatch your trouble disappear. NR does it or money back. OneDoy'sTtt Prove* NR Beat The-stomach only partly digests the food we eat. The .process :1: mushed In the Intestines, where the food Is mixed with bile from the ttver. A and just see how much better yon feel. See how quickly your slucsiah. bowels will become as regular aa clock work, how your coated tongue-' clears up and your good, old-time ap petite returns. See how:'' splendidur your food wiU digest and how youir energy, "pep" and "ginger-" revive. Just try ft. You take no risk: whatever for Natnre'a Remedy (NR Tablets) Is only 25o, a. box.. enough to last twenty-flve days, amtCie^.f must help and benefit you to your- entire satls&sctlon, money returned. CITY DRUG STORE ?-l\ TONIGHT^- Xm* se'ssfc-SSfj "bafld ~~Jr*mmk.*or:vkmd say floor eassWats saTebs'e*w^s*fc abes, Graea, Oskens MsJksskssv Office For Bi6 BasineM and Little^ lsesngttetodaywe everkettag sjonsi ef OP AOasslOmce scanty, Alined your bucmea moat impreasvt tuned for yesri became sO added ADGF ADaed ror in besnty, ki economy, in iffirisecy^Eoaip yoor oflke win Of nfinf tysmm, card isdeass, asfe* sbslnisis, eat'. PIONEER STATIONERY HOUSE -MiiMIDJI, JONN. DAILYHONEER WANTASS BRING RESULTS 10 %'..'.*vi*'itdrl wm W&:- mm tan ill1 'iW*-:1: 1 ,4 j7, -or Kvo mlflion"boxes are used''every?: year,one minion KR Tablets are token by. ailing people every day that's the best proof of Its merlei. Nature's Remedy is .the best and safest thing you can' take for bilious ness, constipation, indigestion and similar complaints. It is sold, guar' anteed and .recommended by your druggist VK'!.'. .V-... J^# ^:&& **v. tbsywilgissjSst mat cts at Defective