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“ISOBEL: OR THE TRAIL'S END” AT REX THURSDAY AND FRIDAY One of thd most successful. film dramas of -the ‘day, “Isobel; or the Trail's End,” is to be the feature of- Aering at the Rex theater on Thurs- day and will remain at that theater -~ for two days thereafter. Directed by Edwin Carewe, adapted from a fa- mous story by James Oliver Curwood, and |presented by a cast including ‘House Peters and Jane Novak, this rygged romance of the far north has béen the recipient of more praise By metropolitan critics than any oth- er production of the season. REAL HAWAIIAN SINGERS AND PLAYERS AT GRAND TOMORROW There is something about Hawai- fan music which seems to reach out and grasp one’s innermost soul. One almost detects the fragrance of flow- ers as one listens to the dreamy mel- ofies, imagination reaches glorious heights, one is transported far out und away from'the prosaic worka- day realm to the beautiful ‘balmy the raiding posse were killed. Perez was in the cave at the time but had no part in the fighting. When the battle was over he went with the Hatfields dnto federal court where he and the rest were sentenced for life in the federal prison at Atlanta. After serving three years.and fif- teen days Joe Hatfield confessed to.a Catholic priest and ’told the. trué story of the raid and the batfle which; followed. . This * cleared Perez, of course, and when ‘Hatfield ‘was per- suaded to.tell the story to the war- den, the Atlanta newspapers took up the matter at once and President Wilson pardoned Perez. : Perez-in_his lecture with-the"film at the Rex theater tells an‘imierest- ing story of life at ‘Atlanta’federal prison and of the history of the notorious ‘Hatfield clan. He appears in conjunction-with the Rex's regular picture progranmi. DANGEROUS MOMENT STORY OF GREENWICH VILLAGE Greenwich village ‘has served as the background ‘for many a recent shores of Waikiki. with the enchant- ing strains of the sweet Hawaiian music sounding on the still night air, the strumming of ukuleles, the na- tive dancers, the quiet moonlit beach ~-all, combining into & beautiful en- chanting dream. 1 Kohoano's Original Native Ha- walian singers and dancers will ap- pear in-person at tre Grand theater in the afternoon at 2:30 and twice each evening at 7:30 and at 9:15. ,omorrow and Thursday -at the Grand | theater as a special added attraction to “The Gamsters” a six part feature picture starning Marguerite Fisher. As the 'Hawaiians come to Bemidji very highly recommended, and the admission price of 40c is very: low, patrons of the Grand theater have a real musical treat in store for them. “THE:GAMESTERS” AT THE 1 GRAND THEATER WEDNESDAY With Margarita Fisher in the lead-| ing role, and Hayward Mack as the “heavy” you may be sure of some; strong, speedy action in “The Game-| sters,” America’s vivid new photo- drama which comes to the Grand the- ater tomorrow. It is a western drama with the first scenes filmed in a rough Nevada mining camp, ind its denouement is in a fashionable gambling resort which is aptly described as a “gilded hell hole.” Love, revenge and avar-| “fi are the threads interwoven into 4 ‘the action until a woman’s heart| 13 touched by unselfish love---love for| anie man wrich awakened a love for fumanity---and then the beautiful| bubble which the gamesters were about ready to grasp and preserve in triumph, suddenly collapsed. | . “The Gamesters” might be renam-| &d ‘“The Girk Who Was Game,” for Rose, even when she’ plays the rou-| Jette wheel for the last time, to help! w friend in trouble, even when shel Joses'the last thing she had to stake -=-herself-—-never once wavers. It is the sort of a play that will hold the absorbed attention of the audience overy second--and the heroine, the gort of a girl that everyone feels a tremendous' pity ard admiration for. with intento relief when the last scene finds her in the arms of the man who will 'make her ‘‘happy ever after.” A strong cast supporting Margar- ita Fisher includes L. C. Shumway, Haywrad Mack, C. Dempsey Tabler, Joseph Bennett and Evans Kirk. The direction is under George L. Cox. “PARDONED BY PRES. WILSON.” REX TODAY. WEDNESDAY The latest in films—at the Rex theater beginning today. ¥ MOONSHINING Beginning today ‘the Rex the- ater begins the interesting run of a film called *‘Pardoned by President Wilson,” depicting the checkered and | trua career of a member of the Hat-| field clan up in the mountains of| Kentucky, in conjunction with which | a real, practical still, captured in the| mountains will be on display at the theater. The story reads like ‘fiction, but is | historically -correct .Charles Purez, who is here to make personal appear- ances with the film, was adopted by the Hatfield family and spent nine years with that clan, when on Janu- ary 2, 1915, a cave on the Hatfleld| lands in the mountains was raided by “revenuers” and three members of| photoplay, but never has the free and unfettered atmosphere of the Bohe- ‘Washington Square been so faithfully in ‘“The Dangerous Moments,” the Universal screen story starring Car- mel Myers which is showing at the Grand theater tonight only. The dramatic action starts almost immediately -after the initial title. There is a s.ruggle, a mysterious murder, a precipitous flight across the roof tops, and Sylvia finds sanc- tuary in an artist’s studio, fully be- lieving that she has committed the greatest crime. Many situations de- velop, a romance blossoms and bears fruit, angd after an hour of the most stirring incidents, relieved here and comes to an unexpected climax. Miss Myers has never done better work than in her present role, and the acting ‘of Herbert Heyes as the artist, “Smoke’ “Turner as the ami- able Bolshevist, George Rigas as Mov- ros, Lule Warrenton as his mother, and Bonnie Hill as the heiress are above reproach. Marcel de Sano di- rected the production. Episode 6 of the ‘‘Double Adven- ture” will complete the program. A Great Heap of Small Sticks. Grammar being but an Introduction to the understamding of authors, if it be made too long or exquisite to the learner, it In a manper mortifieth his cournge. And by the time he cometh to the most sweet and .pleasant read- ing of old authors, the spark of fer- vent desire of learning Is extinet with the burden of grammar like as a little fire Is soon quenched. 'with. a great heap of small sticks; so that it cao never come’ to the principal logs where 1t should long burn in a great pleasant fire.—Sir Thomas Elyot, “The Governor” (1531). Presidents Who Served Two Terms. The first president to serve eight years was Jefferson, who was fol- “lowed In turn by Madison and Monroe, eight years each. Then came John Quincy Adams, who had one term only. He was followed by Jackson with two, full terms, ending in 1837, Then came a break of 40 years, un§iL1877, before President Grant retire after eight years' occupancy of the. White House, Cleveland served eight years, 1885-89 and 1893:97, but his two terms were interrupted by that of Benjamin Har- rison, 1889-03. Py & Cut Down Gas Bills. Comparatively few people realize that the gas hills may be cut down materially by exercising care in light- ing the gas. Hold a lighted match over the burner, then very slowly turn on the gas. If the gas is-turned on full force before the match is applied, a slight explosion occurs which affects the meter and sends It forward rapidly. -_— The Oldest Science. Axtronomy has the glory of being the oldest of the sclences. It was by watching the spangled heavens that man first got his conception of an crdered universe, and from that the idea of other things governed by law. Carmel Meyers In a throbbing picture of a girl's life in New York’s Famous Greenwich Village. “The Dangerous Moment” If you want to see what a girl’s life really is.among the artists of New York’s famous Greenwich Village colony, you'hnve only to see this rousing picture, which starts with uAb|g> tragedy at the “Black Beetle” and *whirls a young girl into the biggest| drama and romance you ever saw packed into one hour of exci ting entertainment. ALSO SHOWING—Episode 6 of ' “DOUBLE_ADVENTURE” GRAND it Tonight Hear the Famous Hawaiian Musicians and Singers and See the Weird Hula Hula Dance B TOMORROW-—MATINEE & NIGHT mian district adjoining New York's|! transplante;l to the celluloid strip as|: there by natural humor, the story | POINTS BUTTER SHIPPED IN SUMMER Parcel Post Will Prove Entirely Satls- factory If Proper Conditions Are Maintained. s iz s {pgl it oo L' Parcel post shipments: of butter are fikely to be subjected| to conditions, especially, ,during the: summer, which | may cauSe deterforation and injure the {/quality of the*butter. It is highly de- sirable, ‘say specialists’ of the United States /. Department of* Agriculture, that every possible precaution be tak-: en-before shipment. Particularly is%) conditions . affecting Jts g1 and_ condition usually cannot be contrdied’] as easlly ‘as in creameries. Farm- made butter, however, should be mar- keted just as.satisfactorily as cream- ery-made butter when it is properly made and prepared for shipment. It is necessary to maintain proper conditions in the care of the milk and Thicknesses” of .Old Newspa- | pers Should Be Wrapped Around the Butter .Before -Inclosing It in the shl;‘u}i,ng Package. cream and- the making.of butter if a marketable product is to -be produced. Too much importance, it is said, can- not Be given to maintaining cleanly conditions In the stable and In other. places where the milk, cream, or but- ter are produced or kept. for they ab- sorb odors and spoil very quickly. It | is important, too, that these products be kept in a cool place. High temper- atures should always be avoided, as they produce a soft, oily condition of the butter. which is undesirable. In manufacturing butter on the farm or in a factory the buttermilk must be. removed and washed-out, and the proper amount of salt must be incor- porated evenly. Frequently parcel post shipments of farm butter are un-« satisfactory to customers because proper methods were not used in mak- ‘Ing 1t, and the quality and condition of the butter thereby injured before it was shipped. For ‘the satisfaction of customers it Is important that a uni- form- qualitg of butter be produced. Methods WUsed In preparing butter for parcel post shipping depend large 1y upon the local conditions and style of package used. To fnsure .delivery in the best possible state, butter, after being packed, printed and placed in cartons, should be~chilled or hardened thoroughly before it is shipped. One of the most satisfactory ways of preparing butter for shipment is in regular. one-pound prints, the stand- ard print measuring 2% by 2% by 45 inches. Every pound print should be neatly wrapped In regular butter parchment or paper. A second thick- ness of such paper bas been found to add materlally to the*carrylng possi- bility of the butter. Waxed paper may be used for the second wrapping. As a further protection to the print, it should be placed in heavy manila parafin cartons, which may be ob- talned from folding paper-box com- panies, either plain or printed as a stock carton or with a special private brand. Corrugated fiber-board shipping con- talners of various. sizes may be ob- tained for shipplng one-pound :prints of butter. These boxes or containers practically insulate the butter and fur- nish -much protection agalnst heat. Further protection may be obtalned by wrapping the container i ‘stout wrgp- ping paper. The whole should be-tied securely with a strong cord. In tying the twine it should be drawn tightly around the package so as to insure its proper carriage. Some persons ship butter by. parcel post in improyised or home-made con- talners. Clean, discarded, corrugated paperboard cartons are obtained from the grocer, or other merchant at small cost or frequently without any cost at all, It 1s.possible to cut a plece of paper -board In such shape and slze that when It s folded it will form a satisfactory carton, LIKE FEEDING COWS IN DARK Wisconsin Farmer Pralses Cow-Test- Ing Association as Guide-Boand “1i70 to" Better Dairying. “When I bought my farm two years ago there was a herd of scrub ‘cows on It writes a Wisconsin farmer to a fleld agent of the dalry division, “United States Department of Agricul« ture. “I joined the cow-testing assocl atlon, and soon found that my scrub cows were a fallure, so I disposed of them and_bought some purebred and grade Holstein cows. The cow-test- ing assoclation Is a gulde-toard on the way to better dairylng and a big saving in feeds, as one can feed to so much better advantage where the production s known, Trying to feed without records of your cows Is like feeding- in the dark Subscribe for The Dally Ploneer. Eérp"n this true of farm-made butter, becausé }rish goods BOYCOTT IS. STRONGEST . WEAPON OF SINN FEIN By Chas. McCann, (United Press.Staft Correspondent) London, July 26.—Economic war- fare is assuming equal importance in Ireland with the swifter, more spec- tacular battle of arms between Sinn Feiners and _the government’s sol- diers and police. hile_flying. columns of the Irish army | “are.. ambushing ‘throughout the south, the 'Sin! n government is conduct- ng:a silent,Sbut fi'iore effective fight by means of itHe hoycott. Over a year ago, Sinn Fein de- creed a boycott tof. certain Belfast goods because of ‘alleged- discrimina- tion against Catholic ‘workers in the Ulster capital. The boycott = has spread until it covers all northern and commerce and a great deal of English goods. ‘Republican ces been placed on .. all banking inter- course between north and south and northern banks dre feeling the loss, just as northern factories have. Through the boycott many Ulster cloth, biscuit, shoe, tobacco and drug manufacturers have - lost half their |trade, and are trying so far umsuc- cessfully to overcome heavy losses. The boycott has spread to English |goods, which Dail Eireann considers can be supplied by southern Irish firms. Agricultural implements, mar- garine, shoe polish and soap are among the articles boycotted by an order a few. weeks ago. -Many, patri- otic “Shinners” are smoking cigar- ettes manufacturéd in the south, {though most,. including the leaders, have not made this sacrifice. With ‘the convening of the Ulster parliament June 22, Sinn Fein began to tighten what it termed a “band of steel around the six northern counties.” The idea is to isolate the north, and by carrying to its extreme the partition of north and south by the home rule act;.to persuade Ulster that Ireland must be united. Ulstermen ‘confess that the policy has hurt.' While a great deal of Ul- ster’s trade is done outside of Ire- land, many industries, particularly the ones cited, depend almost entire- ly upon southern patronage. Efforts| to avoid the boycott by shipping good to England and Scotland and back again under andther firm’s |name to Ireland have failed, as Sinn Fein always uncovers the evasion| and boycotts the British firm. \ As regards the south’s compliance trouble. A town council will meet and decide upon 'a boycott. Public notices, are izsued to he effect vhat certain goods aré banned. If a shop- keeper fails t6 ‘obey the order promptly, he is served with a notice of which the following is typical: “ I understand that you have re- cently received & consignment of. from Belfast. May I point out to you the degree; of fig Dail (“The Dail” for Dail Eireaniny-the republican gov-| ernment which forbids ‘al dealings| directly or ectly’yrith Belfast firms? W 1:Mease give:bearer an explanation: flnd\flmn guarantee that you will' ceasé trading with these firms?2” % ar | There’ is. neyer any. question as to the effectiveness¥of such ‘a request. Disobedience wounld mean' that the offending -~ shopkeeper’s ,.ptemiseu! would be wreckegdy and that the shop- keeper. himself Might'be killed.! There is one feature of the boy- cott in which evéh the British govern ment officials see hope—the pointing out to Ulster that ‘southern Ireland must be friendly in order that the north be prosperous. Many govern- ment authorities see the only solution in Iretand'in an agreement between north and south. Jud Tunkins. Jud Tunkins says a successful or- ator is a man who can attract as big a crowd as goes to see a ball game and who can say something that will get as much applause as a home rum. M-mg\- W\ That is the expression of de- light by all who have seen our new sgmpl_es in FALL WOOLENS ~ You _\;'st‘.s:oin‘é" .in and si hot . reason: Iy you can ha clothes = 3 MAD! New prices, are - the lowest for ‘many "s?sons. o Give a Look Today! BARNEY’S TOGGERY' " The latest Sinn_ Fein embargo has} with boycott orders, there is little| {95 ' TUESDAY. EVENING, JULY 26, 1921 “ Correspondent s ‘that the pen son who invented the phrase “Say it with flowers” probably noticed that “fioral” 1is largely “oral.”—Boston ‘Transeript. The Economist. An economist, according to the lat- est definition, is a wap who tells you what you should have done with your money after you have done somcthing else with it. & i Hhson Vegetables in Fall Garden, It shbuid: be remembered that prac- | tically all vegetables grown in the’ spring garden can be grown also in | the fall garden, and such ‘vegetables seeds as were left over from dpring" plantings may be used in-the fall. ] No Doubt of Need. i) There jisn't any doubt :about. the need for more and better roals; wiien automobiles and trucks are the only' means of bringing food to your city or town. | 1 ~ . Judge of Liquor| “Since a young man I had a liking for liquor and was considered a pret- ty good judge of it at one time, but constant drinking gave me stomach trouble which became chronic. My stomach would have been a valuable addition to a gas factory. Doctors did not:seem-to relieve me: - One day my druggist got. me. to.try Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, and I am now:as good as new.” : It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal muecus from- the intestinal tract and allays the-inflammation: which ‘causes prac- tically il stomach, liver and intesti- liments, “including: ;appendicitis. ‘dose will conivince or money re- ed... At all druggists..—Adv. | TICE TO CONTRACTORS, PLUMB- ERS AND ELECTRICIANS: Bids will be received by [the under- signed up to and including August 5th, 1921, for the construction, erection and completion of a grand stand on Beltrami | County ricultural association grounds, as per plans and specifications on file at the office of Architect Funk and at the office of the Clark Fole & Tie Com- pany in the city of Bemidjl, Minnesota. Bids will be received for the furnish- ing of the material and for the con- struction, also for the labor and con- struction only. Said building to be completed not later than Septemover 15th, Separate bids may be -submitted for the plumbing and wiring of said build- ing. H The association reserves the right to reject any -or.all bids. Very truly yours, BELTRAMI COUNTY: AGRI'L ASSN. By Hardy M. Clark, president. 77-23-30 . . Harley.Davidson Motorcycles: Bicycles and Supplies: ; GENERAL REPAIR SHOP 311 Sixth St.—Bemidji Auditory Nerves. " The dctlon’ of the ear-is-this. !\ A UNIFICATION OF WORK gound is transmitted from some posi-| . tion, causing a disturbance in the air. 'his disturbance is collected by, the onter ear, passed down the.eonnecting passage, and strikes the n of the drum, causing it to vibrate, “The drum in turn communicates fits vibrations 10 the oval window. Thence they travel to the liquid, of the fnner ear, and the hearing nerve gathers them up and transmits them to the brain. (By United Press) » July 26.—Unification of cl\il"‘bn;\'m:k wn{ be soughc at the first executive board - meeting of Norta Dakota Nonpartisan clubs, Miss Al dyth Ward is secretary. Subscribe for The Datly Ploncer. to’ v ( ; CW: :e,,wett C " Telephone 970—971 Inc. || ~ $5 REWARD Will be paid to the person who locates a suitable house for rent. Reward will be paid when house is in my possession. House must econtain atleast four rooms, and rent must be reasonable. Call Tiller at Pioneer office. REX Thurfiday. and Fnday James Oliver Curwood’s “186 O EL —OR— “THE TRAIL’S END” An alluring, story of the Great Northwest, feutix;'iqg .- HOUSE PETERS RS and a notable cast including + - JANE NOVAK Directed by Edwin Carewé "COMING- The g‘ixp_ei-épggiial ' “The Great Redeemer” =~ COMING—W, “The Bro: ] M. (Bill) Fairbanks in; dway Buckaroo” You'll get Prince Albort is sold in toppy red bags, tidy red tins, handsome pound and half pound tin humidors andinthe pound crystal glass humidor with sponge moistener il CRIMP.CUT ', QNG RURNING PIPE AND. . SIGARETE 108 . ® igut 1921 THIRD STREET + TN . J. Reynolds Tol with a pipe and somewhere P. Al Start fresh ail over again at the beginning! 'Get a Put a pin in here! pipe!—and forget every smoke experience you ever had that spilled the beaus! For a jimmy pipe, packed brimful with Prince Albert, will trim any degree of smokejoy you ever registered! It’s a revelation! Prince Albert can’t bite your tongue or parch your throat. Beth are cut out by our exclusive :patented. process. :*So, just pass‘up'any old idea you may have stored away that you £an’t smoke a pipe! We tell you thatyou can—and just have the time © of your life on every fire-up—if you play Prince Albert . for packing! 4 What P.-A. hands you ina pil-)e it will duplicateina home-made cigarette! ' Gee—but you’ll have alot. of fun rolling ’em with Prince Albert; and, it’s'a cinch because P. A. is crimp cut and stays put! PRINGE ALBERT 5 the national joy smoke