The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 24, 1927, Page 8

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AAs oressieleenn E se reaNt PAGE EIGHT __ MISS DEL RIO IDEAL CHOICE FOR ‘CARMEN’ Beautiful Mexican Girl Has All the Fire*That Goes With Great Romance The girl with the hearl of a wan- | ton, the mind of a child and the soul | of & woman, “Carmen,” at last will be depicted by one who understands the emotions of the famous ¢ ter born from the Prosper Merrime the first time th of the little ¢: flaming e. will be portr real Spanish | beauty, one wl need a vivid imagination to conceive of the pro- verbial passions of Old Seville, for through her veins courses the blood | of “Carmen.” : al ne is Dolores Del Rio, reared in romantic Mexico by parents of Spanish nobility, who will be seen in the title role of the William Fox ersion, titled “Loves of | | | cipitated from her | » of friends in the Mexi-| al to the heights of inter-| i a result of id heretofore | power. | In “What Price Glory” | t we saw his raven haired, nned, sinuous limbec bit of | ne loveliness as the adorable | Charmaine, the most important} attraction of Papa Cognac Pete's | roadside inn behind the battlefront | of France in “What Price Glory,” and in a flash the world acclaimed her as a new start in the filn. firm- ament. She pos: warmth of fe the vivacity, ing, the ¢ the | at- traction, the heauty of face, ; of. fi tractiv figure characteristics, a exotic temperament fit her for the part. None Her Equal The stage has had “Carmens” of the opera in the persons of Geral- dine Farrar, Raquel Meller, Mary Garden, Emma Calve and others of more or less renown, and Theda Bara at the heig’t of her vamping fame portrayed the wild rose of Spain on the ‘en but none equaled the phy:icai “Carmen” as she will be seen in tt ‘orm of Dolores Del Rio. i: Again, as in the other Fox mo- tion pictures, “What Price Glory,” Dorlores is the f il to the amorous wooing of Victory Mcuag!.., the bronze giant with the infectious smile, the devil-may-care spirit and the every youthful recklessness which has won a place in the hearts of pictuze lovers everywhere. “Lovers of Carmen” will open an engagement of three days a‘ the Capitol Theatre tonig! Lambing Experiment Is Under Way at A. C. An experiment to determine the feasibility of breeding ewe lambs to become mothers at 12 to 14 months of 2ge is now_under way at the North Dakota. Experiment. station, according to D. J. Griswold, animal husbandry department, North Da- kota Agricultural college. The Experiment station has se- cured a car load of black face west- ern ewe lambs born in March, which were loaded at Twodot, Mont. These ewe lambs, 246 head, are to be used in the ding experiment, explains Mr. ‘old. The lambs ‘weighed 74 pounds each the day they arrived at the Experiment station at i Fargo. ~ “Does it pay to breed ewe lambs?” is a question in the minds of prac- tical sheepmen today. That is a question the North Dakota Experiment statio. will try to an-| swer definite’ The most ly followed prac- tice is to delay the breeding of young ewes until they are 18 or 19 months of age so that they drop their first lambs when they are about two years old. lambs that are well grown will often breed «t § or 9 months and produce lambs when about one year,old. ,This practice is some- times followed ard the question has been raised whether it may not be more profitable than to carry the roung ewe another year with only hee fleece for income. Half of these 246 western. lambs will be bred to lamb next spring and the other half kept to produce their first lambs when two years old. Careful records will be kept of the growth of the ewes bred young compared with those bred later, of the feed required and of the lambs and wool produced by each group for at least two or three years to see which grovp is more profitable in the long run. While practical sheepmen have their own ideas as to the feasidility of breeding the ewes as lambs, very little experimental work hes been reported along this line, concludes Mr. Griswold. TIMELY WARNING DON’T NEGLECT YOUR COLD A neglected cold may often develop into se- tious illness at this time of the year, Treat your cold now with Father John’s Medicine, relieve . the congestion, d heal the irritated membrane. his splendid food medicine Is new tissue and helps the to throw off the poison-, matter, For over sev- has gees ge i Father John’s Med- been known as the ly builder. No harm- tg in Le peed A Crowds ou y | Francisco KEER> UP WITH THINGS ~— YOUR? GENERATIONS” ALWAYS CONTENT * You? cenePanion'S? ce Yourc at =~ OUR PRESENT DAY GENCRAT Git “Back — ‘ wit O99" NX GLOW MOTHER, — ANDGTILL — Que Generation 15% MOVING RiGHT ALONG — MLE Wiles 70 ‘ er ‘TRIBUNE { —~THERE YOU ARE , MOTHER. AGSOLUTELY GTAGNATING? - PuTrERItc ‘Nt ENDS — WHILE We ARE FULL OF LIFE, ENERGY AND ANOTAEIS “THING, MOTHER, RUS A LOT MORE 13 GET UP AND GO’ To OUR GENERATION THAN THERE IS> WIT YOURS 77 RECENT REVOLT FAKED, SAYS GOMEZ, | CANDIDATE FOR MEXICAN PRESIDENCY Hiding in Mountains From Calles’ Troops, General Ar- nulfo Gomez Sends State- ment Back to the United States by Disguised Courier | DITOR’S NOTE: The Trib- une today presents a remark- able article dealing with recent. events in Mexico. It is a state- ment by Gen. Arnulfo Gomez, until a few weeks ago one of the candidate - opposing Gen. Alvaro Obregon and Gen. Francisco Serrano for the presidency of Mexico. Recently Serrano and some of his friends were ar- rested for alleged revolutionary activity against the Calles gov- ernment and executed. Gomez also has been charged with rev- olutionary activity and Mexican federal troops are seeking him in the mountains in the state of Vera Cruz. From his hiding place, he has written an article for the Trib- une, giving his views on t recent revolution. It brought to New Orleans by courier, Col. Isidora Martinez, who manzged to make his way from Gomez headquarters in the Sierra de, Perote in Vera Cruz, by disguising himself as a mer- chant. Persons who aided Gomez in getting this statement back to the United States have always been considered reliable, and the Tribune prints it because it considers Gom z has a right to place his view of the situation before the American people, just as President Calles has done, a toe BY GENERAL ARNULFO GOMEZ The Calles government has an-| centration of troops for th nounced officially that General Francisco Serrano and a group of his military leaders were captured in the field, heading armed forces against the government, and were executed after a military court-mar- tial at Cuernavaca in the state of Morelos. The American government and the American people have a right to know the truth, and here is the} truth. On my word of honor as an{ officer and a gentleman, I state that I did not enter into any revolution- ary plot with or without General Serrano. Serrano and I were can- didates for the presidency of Mex- ico. We were campaigning against ex-President Alvaro Jbregon’s cam- paign for reclection. Pledged against reelection, Obregon, with the aid of P.esident Calles, was out for that office again, Obregon, traveling through the country on his presidential cam- paign, found that ‘sentiment was! strong against gnj man’s reelection to the office of president. That has; been the feeling in Mexico ever since the days of the late president Por- firio Diaz. It was on such a plat- form of no reelection that Obregon himself rose to the presidency. Obregon found himself the prob- lem of how Yo eliminate the op-| position candidates. On this prob- lem he conferred with President, Calles. Their solution wa: ally simple. If the opposition can- didates could not be eliminated by} ballots, they could by bullets, Ballots and Bullets | So Calles and Obregon worked on| the plzn that was to have been ex- ecuted in the middle of September, and that finally was executed in the first week of October. It was a plot} of assassination, disguised as a mili-| tary necessity because of a revolu- tion that the Calltes-Obregon hench- men th> 1selves fomented in order to have an excuse for these so-called executions, In those assassinations, Serrano and a group of his friends lost their} lives. I escaped only because close friends of mine, though personal In September there is alw con- great national holiday of Mexico. This) year troops were held beyond the usual time. The first workings of the plot de-| veloped when General Eugenio M. tinez, who was the chief militar; ficer in the City of Mexico district, was ordered to have a certain regi-; ment fire volleys in the City of | their story might have held water. Mexico late at night. ‘The officers General Serrano’s Funeral ‘ of this, regiment were strongly sus-| § pected by Calles and Obregon to be in favor of Serrano’s election as president. They were to be executed by other government troops imme- diately after the shooting started.|, Serrano and myself with our groups of political leaders were to be ar- rested and executed that night, and when morning dawned the official government announcement was to have been made that a revolution had broken out that night, that it ished, and that ld others, had had been swiftly c1 Serrano, myself, been exe¢uted after a drumhead court-martial. That would have re- moved the chief opposition to Ob- regon’s reelection, Refused to Carry Out Order But Martinez refused to execute such an order. He was ordered to Surope on a governmental mission. So General Almada was given the secret orders General Martinez had refuse. to carry out, but he, too, re- fused to carry out those orders for a fake revolution. He is now with me. With 3,000 of his men, General Al- mada, foreseeing that Mexi he plunged into revolution © ssassinations he could no! marched out of Mexico down to the Sierra de Perote, in the upper part of the state of Vera Cruz, matched more than 200 miles, passing through a number of garrisoned towns, without a shot being fired at them. 4 Then President Calles and ex- President Obregon knew they must act quickly if they were to remove General Serrano and me. They did act quickly. A squad of soldiers rounded up General Serrano and some 13 of his friends, Another squad started for me. But T had_ been warned and escaped to- ward Vera Cruz, But General Francisco Serrano and his friends were less fortunate. They were rushed secretly under guard to Cuernavaca. There they were shot by a firing squad. Their bodies were brought back to be ex- hibited publicly in the City of Mex- ico, after President Calles had an- nounced that they had ben captured in the field leading armed forces in revolution against the government. And in that public exhibition of the bodies, Calles and Obregon for- got to order their henchmen to strip the, bodies. If this had been done, But the bodies were exhibited in the clothes they were when they were f} shot. General Serrano was clad in a ~ tside the Military Hospital in Mexico City watching the removal to a hearse of the body of General Serrano, who, with thirteen others, was executed as a “rebel” by woolen suit with colored gray stripes, in a white starched linen col- lar with a gay necktie and a big gcarfpin in the necktic, in patent leather shoes. And every member of that group of his friends was dressed in the same civilian fashion. eneral Serrano never led an army with patent leather shoes on his feet. And the men about him, killed when he was killed, were mostly civilians. Newspapermen, brokers, business men, lawyers all dressed as such, The government, I learned, an- nounces that the revolution is crush- ed and I am in flight. I am here in the mountains of the state of And so little is the Cal government in control of this dis- trict, that General Vidal Tenorio and General Tivido Ceballos with their men have been here, open rebels against the Calles-Obregon The revolution will not yet face a pitched battle with the troops of Calles and Obregon. We have not yet the arms and ammunition for such a major campaign, So for a while, out of our headquarters in rra De Perote we will send the Sierra nition the major Claims Mil If the American arms embargo were lifted tomorrow, in a month Calles and Obregon would be in flight, You cannot fight bare- handed against modern rifles and machine guns, against artillery and airplanes equipped with bombs. We of the revolution have close to a million dollars in funds with which we could b y arms, if only the Amer- ican arms embargo were raised. ant Americans to know that can find no situation in their I the national politics that is a parallel to the si situation arising in Mexico when any man dares oppose ning for reelection, and Mr, Hoover: mith were opposing and if President Coolidge sent of the United States regular te capture his opponents in mes, sent them secretly out and had them shot on the pretext tLat they were caught lead- ing an armed revolution in the field, the whole world would shudder in honor at the news. It would be in- credible. Yet that is what has hap- pened this month in Mexico. And 2 *, drastic government cen- hip, has, I believe, prevented the ory from getting out of Mexico. iis a etal At the Movies | (incon canes caaieaeaeiaiaas seals ELTINGE THEATRE Clara Bow, the flaming flapper of the films, was handed another story that fits her with the fidelity of her fashions in “Hula” a vivid, daring romance set against the background of the Hawaiian Isles. “Hula,” at the Eltinge theatre today and Tuesday and Wednesday, WOLDS THAT DEVELOP INTO PNEUMONIA Fersistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble, You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creo- sote that is pleasant to take. Creomul- sion is a new medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits serm growth. Of all known drugs, creosote is rec- ognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent coughs and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is ab- sorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs, Creomulsion is guaranteed satfec. tory in the treatment of istent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respira- tory diseases, and is excellent for build- ing up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if any cough or cold is not relieved after taking at ing to Airections, Ask your druggist. (adv.) VULCANIZING Tires and Tubes, Oil and Grease Auto Accessories Phone 944 « Bismarck Accessory & Tire Co. Next to First Guaranty Bank Highest cash price paid for ‘Hides, Furs & Junk Northern Hide & Fur Co. Temporarily located in Far. Cry. Bldg., 215 So. 9th St. Sam Sloven,-Prop. Box 265 Bismarck, N. Dak. Capital Funeral Parlors 208 Main Ave. Licensed Embalmer Phone—Day cr Night—23 Jos. W. Techymperlin t shielded - set - $49.50. Con- ment, since the revolution of | pj is a tropical story that is unusual in more ways than one. For one thing, the heroine is not a little native girl in a grass skirt who dis- covers:that she is really white in time to marry the handsome son of ‘ine plantation owner in the sixth reel, On_the contrary “Hula” is said to be am authentic, poignant portrayal of a pleasure-mad, care-free, way- ward miss. The tropical backyrougg is only Logileast Armine Von Tempski wrote the story, which is @apidly climbing into the best-seller class because of its sincerity and freedom from the us- ual exaggerated pictures of South Sea life. The heroine is a girl who has been reared in what could almost be de- scribed as luxurious debauch:.y. The gay life of the wealthy white tropic resident, with its recklessness, be- ig her environment almost from irth. How she overcomes this insidious effect to find regeneration and wholesomenes in love is told in stark, stirring fashion. " Clive Brook is featured. Arlette Marchal and Arnold Kent head the supporting cast. PALACE—MANDAN The vaudeville road shoW coming to the Palace theatre, Mandan, for .| Tuesday evening is an entertaining assortment of stage attractions headed by Joe Riley and his “Cali- ——_—_—_——— ioe aod bf eel Low interest” Rate” and Repayment Privilege Bismarck and Mandap P. C. REMINGTON 10314-4th St. Phone 220-W FOR SALE Almost new chevrolet truck. Complete with body, cab and oversize tires, SUPER-SIX MOTORS Hudson-Essex distributors Phone 363 CONFIDENCE integrity and our standard of ethics is fuer widespread throughe | out the city.. The reason is that we ha demonstrated our capacity for sympathetic service. We Understand Webb Bros. MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1927 fornia Sunkist Sincopators,” a six people orchestra playing the new popular numbers as well as classic selections. Individual instruments are also featured in solo and duet num Leslie Hall, “Juggling Conversa- tinalist,” has an interesting act as the opener on the bill. Joe Deming, billed as “an entertaining fellow,” offers comedy talk and songs. _Bernet & Clark appear as come- dian and lady singer. Mr. Bernet is an exceptionally good comedian On the Trail of Allopathic doctors and cause disease. I claim that (poisons) circulating in the not grow on a h immune to germs.” When was supposed to get rid of (the modern little devils). in his lair with a KNIFE. an operation. of medicine, was right. consists of ridding t! AL METHODS of t: y on the Road to Health. or nor inj not operate. Clinic of Dr. or Hitching the Cart Before the Horse These poisons cause death of the cells which then ROT. The germs cause the ROTTING, not the disease itself. You will always find germs in rotting meat. The disease was there in the body before the germs. A germ can- ealthy body. The celebrated Pasteur himself made the statement that “A body in health is cause disease they get “the cart before the horse,” but the disease is there long before there are any germs; the horse is ahead of the cart. Common sense ought to tell you that the removal of parts of the body with a knife will not cure the CAUSE of disease which is a POISON in the blood. How does the poison get there? How, if not through the foods you eat? In ancient times the people believed that disease was due to the invasion of the body by an evil spirit. believed that the only way to get well was to visit a health temple and stay over night and pray to the gods. Then the gods, if they felt so inclined, would cast out the evil spirit or devil and the sick person would get well. Later, the doctors got into the game and they said that the only way to get rid of the evil spirit or devil was to give the patient a dose of bifter, sickening medicine. Now it was impossible for the patient to hold this dose on his stomach, so when he got rid of the medicine he Then, as the practice of medicine got more refined or: less crude, the doctors said that the ancients did not know what they were talking about, but that disease was not due to an evil spirit or devil, but was due to GERMS (another little devil). The mod shooting dope into your system to cast out the germs fied to chase out the modern little devils with dope. To get quicker action they attack the devil germ right new under the sun. The doctors have only gone from a banch of evil spirits to a flock of germs which they claim must be driven out of the body with dope or removed by On the other hand, we ates on ~ le WAS CAUSED BY POISONS TAKEN INTO THE BODY THROUGH BAD AIR, BAD WATER OR BAD FOOD. The CURE is simple, like all things in nature. The cure ent and estal ing Habits. If you will visit our clinic we will put you We do not use ‘Metallic Drugs jections nor dope of any kind. T. M. MacLachlan (Harvard). Rooms 6-8, Lucas Block, Bismarck, N. Dak. State Corn Show, Nov. 2, 3, 4, 5 and is called “the man with the Ben Turpin eyes.” Miss Clark is a pleasing “blues” singer and wears costumes that are most attractive. Morse Brothers close the bill with “Poetry in Motion.” They are two athletes in.a well ai routine of sensational equilibristic tricks, Richard Talmadge will be seen on the screen in a lively story with the scene laid in Mexico where he mixes with bandits, licks the whole darned crew, saves the aA *neverything. It is titled “The Blue Streak.” the Devil Germ claim that GERMS! jisease is caused by humors lood and cells of the body. the doctors say that germs They the devil at the same time. ern doctor is now busy Some doctors are not satis- So you see there is nothing tes, the father tt ALL DISEASE of these poisons by NATUR- blishing Right Liv- We do Model 32 . Model 33 ...... Model 35 43... , L Speaker . E Cone ....: YY tome:e Radio Prices Smashed! _ ATWATER-KENT ANNOUNCES REDUCTIONS Greatly increased production at the world’s largest radio factory has made possible a further sweeping reduction on all models. It is now possible to buy the most popu- lar radio made at a price far below the market. This $ : New Price wrne s 15.00 vis eran 49.00 onane 12,50 zee cer 15.00 sur 24,00 eee: You can now buy the niodel 49, our most popular seller, complete with tubes, speaker, all batteries and aerial kit for $95.05. Monthly payments if desired. Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Bismarck, N; D. TREMENDOUS Price 110.00 Falrs Last Fall’s Price $ 90.00. 150.00 90.00 65.00 16.00 21.00 30.00 70.00 16.00 21.00 30.00 v

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