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Full Associated Press Leased Wire Day Service The Key West Citsen For 47 Years Devoted to the Interests of Key West VOLUME XLVII. No. 147 BERNARDO DUGGAN, MISSING — AVIATOR, HAS BEEN LOCATED ARGENTINE SPORTSMAN AND COMPANIONS AR- RIVE SAFELY AT VI-| GIA, BRAZIL (By Associated Presse) 21.— Saturday evening was one of the | KEY WEST, FLORIDA, MOND.Y¥, JUNE 21, 1926 PRICE FIVE CENTS CABARET AT CORAL ISLES CASINO SATURDAY NIGHT BRILLIANT EVENT thee te ceee s ws The Cabaret, put on as an open- | ~ ing event by Coral Isles Casino | NOISE * * * (From Miami Herald) BUENOS AIRES, June notable affairs’ of the summer sea- ‘SAYS ADVERTISING | GREAT FACTOR IN BUSINESS | SIR HENRY W. THORNTON | GIVES ADDRESS AT AN-| NUAL CONVENTION OF AS-| SOCIATED CLUBS (Ry Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA, June 21.—; “Through their tireless efforts and continuous fight for truth in| « advertising,” Sir Henry W. Thorn-| Busy JOYOUS CRIES CHANGE T0 SCREAMS OF HORROR WHEN BOAT CAPSIZES IN RIVER Beautiful Church Wedding ‘YOUTH LOSES BALANCE IN DANCING CHARLES- Having been missing for seven son, about two hundred people|s sa +e snes es ess © s\ton, president of the Canadian No-| Takes Place Last Evening, TON; FIVE DROWN iN days on a seaplane flight from New having attended, and the TORBAGE” | In many ways Miniol in growing | tional Railways, told the annual) ACCIDENT York to Buenos Aires, Bernardo|™ent has since been receiving /t> he a more staid and civilized| convention of the Associated Ad-! | | jeonstant congratulations and com-| city. We are none of us, of course, | vertising Clubs of the World to-j Dr. John McLean, at 77, found that ‘nis duties as pastor of the McLean Duggan, wealthy Argentine sports- man, and his companions have or- rived at Vigia, Brazil, safe and well. | In flying from Peramaribo, a) week ago Sunday, they passed over Cayenne, [French Guinea, and after this, all trace was lost! of them until yestercay when news was received that they had been landed at Vigia Sundsy night from # fishing boat, which picked them | wp after they had descended in rough weather at the Island of Maraca off the Brazilian const. | The plane had run short of gas! “org to buffeting bad weather One fishing boat took the aviators board, while enother towed the, plane to the island of Maraca, 300! miles north of Vigia and a short rendered by Pat Murphy, member |tion stopped for any reason distance from the mouth of the! Amazon River. The “voyage from Maraca’ to | Vigia consumed six days owing to! was forced to respond to an en-| Who needlessly blows his horn con-| For three days, the cove with a similar song, to guitar | ttibuces to the city noises an ele-| headwinds. boat was out of sight of land. | CEASES T0 BE AN AMERICAN OLIVER WALLOP WILL SIT IN HOUSE OF LORDS (My Asancinted Preae) NEW YORK, June 21.—Oliver Henry Wallop, long a Wyoming rancher, ‘s to cease to be an American citizen. Instead, as Earl of Portsmouth, he will sit im the House of Lords. Arriving from London yesterday he an- nounced he had changed his mind. A-year ago when he inherited the title upon the death of his elder brother, he said he did not intend to give up his American citizen- ship. Now, he has decided it is his duty (o his sons and family tradi- tion live at Whitchurch, Hampshire, and take his seat in the House of Lords. tion of his Bri ish citinzenship is contingent only upon: five years residence in that country, and the oath of allegiance to the King, since he was born a Briton. He is now 64 years old. “I shall be very sorry to away,” he suid. “The years of my life have been spent in Wyoming. The earl was one of six English men who went to Wyoming in 1883. What is now his 5,000 acre horse ranch In Little yon, near Sheridan, was then wild land of hills and sage. SOoSeeeeoorusesersoeeees AMUSEMENTS Seeesecocoesocaseseeeeee MONROE THEATRE TODAY—Buck Jones Fighting Buckaroo.” “Rin Tin Tin.” TOMORROW “Money Comedy, “Page Me.” to The restora- go happies’ ose Can a in “The Comedy, Talks.” SAN CARLOS THEATRE TODA Y — Harry Cordray’# Musical Comedy and Mc ture. function. The casino, which is literally at jpliments upon the success of this! bsolutely civilized, and when we| day that its members had donei | say Miami is becoming more civ jand recognized !breviated headgear served to lend chines should ‘an air of burlesque, peculiarly | slower gait, so that they would not |#propos in a city where the Span- be so noisy as they are at pres- \is rapidly adjusting iiself to the deed an ideal spot for dancing Sat-| growth and ue assimilation of a any new people. urday ‘Syeniy ee z | But there are still many things open-air dance floor, its broad to do before we can make life ab. balcony overlooking the sea, and | solutely comfortable and easy in its myriad lights, softened into a' the city. | ought to receive attention is the 2 | amount of noise that it seems some oriental lanterns. The moon hung} people think necessary to enable above the Gulf like a giant lan-| them to get along. Miami is altogether too noisy with its spaciou colorful glow by the use of gay tern, itself, tinging the landscape} M t noi with silvery brightness and making | * city, even if we are building a shimmering path across the|/@rgely and rapidly and even if water that was indeseribably beau-| ¥€ have not solved all the prob- tiful. | lems incident to s*reet traffic. Tne interior of the casino | % i hacdl ibl f was effeetively decorated with! Pe eee romeun ec): OF COURSE, |to eliminate the loud chatter of howls of roses and fern, and the | 4. pneumatic riveters that make attractive color-scheme, coral-rose | life i i t and tin, was emphasized in all the| co Simos: wnendurable in the furnishing: ..,.,| that are being constructed. No + A nine-piece orchestra furnished | means have ever been devised that music, which was the ultimate| would lessen the nerve-racking word in dance-tempo. Features of | noises incident to construction, the musical program were songs | and we would not have construc- of a musical-comedy company now! whatever. showing at the San Carlos Theatre,| But there are a lot of noises that _ |and known as “The Ukelele King.” | could be and should -be eliminated. | “HOME THIS A. = Automobile drivers are among Mr. Murphy entranced all. with his) The driver rendition of a ukelele number and| the worst offenders, eccompaniment. Jack Walden, | ment that is particularly annoying. known alteady to the frequenters There is seldom occasion for the of Coral Isles Casino as “Red | "se of the horn. It is an emer- by his fellow-or-| ®°"CY instrument and should be crestramen as its Jeading comedien, |") in emergencies only. appeared in Spanish chawl and,,. 'hen the. driver who operates “sombrero” and with typical g |his machine with the cut-ou. open ture executed the latest conception of the Charleston. His mastery! 4, of\ its intricate figures and 8Y™-| and the grinding of the gears and nastical steps was especially good, | the noise of the wheels and all that and his gay shawl and rather ab- ought to indicate that those ma- be operated at a perated without an open muffler, ish influence is the dominating ent. one. | ‘Trucks, heavily loaded with iron The use of serpent'nes, fantastic | and steel, ought to be compelled caps and striped horns, served to, to use some sort of padding for lend a carnival note to the dance, | their loads that would eliminate a bringing to mind the cabarets of | particularly aggravating kind of northern cities where one may , 20lSe. “shake a wicked foot” between| And so on through quite a I'st courses until the wee sma’ hours.|°f no'se-producing instrumentali ruit punch and cakes were | ties that could be modified or abol- rved throughout the evening, the | hed. Among the things that: a particular obnoxious offender. | Perhaps the huge truck cannot be! punch bowl being arranged upon’, There is a solid reason for at- a table at the head of the dance fldor and there dancers were re- tempting to maintain as little noise as possible in the city in the effect noise has upon the nerves of the people. Life at best is strenuous and many men and women wear out before their time because of the high iension at which they are compelled to live. Noise adds to that tension and aside from the comfort that a quiet city would afford, is the ques.ion of health and longer life for all. if people who produce the noise would have consideration for those that live about them much of the vexatious things that occur every day should be eliminated and life would be happier and freer than it now is. freshed by this cooling beverage, which was served by two maids to facilitate that detail of hospitality. Among those noted at this fune- tion were Capt. and Mrs. Me- Neely, commandant of the 7th Naval District; Capt. and Mrs Lindsley, and others of the local Naval Station, their uniforms lending # military air to the,other-. wise informal atmosphere; Sena- tor and Mrs. W. M. Malone, Judge and Mrs. Jefferson B. Browne, Mr, and Mrs, Thos. Gato, Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian Cabrera, Mr. Mal- lory and Dr. and Mrs. Gwynne were among those who entertained parties st this affair. The Pirates Clnb attended the cabaret in a bedy, about twenty members of this organization being present STUDENTS LEAVE ON EXPEDITION (My Associated Press) NEWPORT, R. L, June 21.— edventurous college students, all of well known fami- lies, left school books behind and faced the open sea today in a fifty foot schooner that had its prow pointed for Plymouth, Eng- land. The vers This event was an innovation with regard to one detail of its conduction, and that was the ab- senee of non-eligibles. The casino was policed both inside and out, the usual gathering of out- siders who appear ai and aimest every- thing of a semi-public nature Key Wes children in sccompanied by small taking were thus effective 1 is equipped with radio and carries provisions for eight weeks. They expect to make Ply- mouth in a month. up available eating space ly eliminated, and the affair was, to a certain It is the intention of the management to protect its patrons from contact with those who may not be de- sirable, and its firm purpose to maintain it as a place where one for relaxation and recrea- secure he knowledge that and o ft of the extent, exclusive for its splendid initial entertain- ment, and has every reason te be lieve, from the many remarks made at the opening, that they continue to secure the en patronage f may tio it will be The of the people « m casino West was the recipient of much praise! Ps A nal any other fact 4 | ized we simply mean that the city| gore: ten any, omer Scionite ee | tablish in the business world ihe! |the threshold of the ocean, was in| conditions brought about by rapid| faith of the buyer in the honest; purpose of the seller. Proper ad-, | vertising in. its introductory as- pect, the speaker said, was the! foundaiion of a successful busi-| ness. | Delegates to the convention got | down to business today and en-| tered discussions and conferences which will last until Thursday.| Delegates numbering several | thousand and coming from all! parts of this coun‘ry, Canada, Eu-| rope and as far away as Australia, | are here. | An elaborate entertainment} program has been arranged. It | includ 3 a mammoth pageant,) | vicinity of the many new buildings | SCheduled for tonight, containing) Strand treatres, announces that} ‘every phase of adveriisin, | bell ringing to sky writing. C.A.SAUNDERS ig from | PASSES AWAY AT | FUNERAL SERVICES TO BE HELD THIS AFTERNOON AT ; 5 O'CLOCK FROM LOPEZ CHAPEL Claude A. Saunders, age 46 years, died at 2 o'clock this morn- ing at his home, rear of 724 Flem-{ ing street. { The funeral service will be held! at 5 o'clock this afternoon in the Lopez chapel, and Rev. Eldridge, pastor of the Congregational church, will be the officiating min- ister. Interment will be made in the city cemetery under the di- rection of G. Frank Saw | Lopez undertaking parlo’ The deceased is survived by his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth A. Saun- ders, and three sisters, Mrs. P. A. Day and Mrs. Blanche E. Thomp- son, of Miama, and Mrs. Fernando Gato of this city. Until last Saturday morning Mr. | Saunders was in perfect health. He was then suddenly stricken with paralysis and from that time continued to sink rapidly un il he breathed his last at an early hour this morning, He was a native of Key West and a cigarmaker by trade. In order to acquaint the people of Key West v the desirability of Coral Isles Casino as a summer rendezvous for dancing and bathing the manage- ment has decided to charge a small fee for dancing instead of a cover charge. forms of recreation within eligible for entry at the Casino. KEEP MISS GRACE BAKER. WEDS PAUL ARCHER; | CEREMONY PERFORM. ED BY REV. ELDRIDGE. | | 1 \ nission in Winnipeg, Man., librarian | of Wesley College and archivest cf | ‘he Methodist church in Canada, | lidn’t keep him busy enough. So he | fegan studying law, and has just won an LL. B. degree from the Uni. | versity of Manitoba. | In the presence of a large num- ber of relatives and friends, the | nuptials of Miss Grace Baker, MONROE THEATRE 10 BE RENOVATED daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley | JUAN CARBONELL, OWNER OF/30n of Mr. and Mr. R. Milton! Archer were solemnized last PLACE, MAKES AN- tight in the First Congregational | NOUNCEMENT |church by Rev. A. F. Eldridge, | pastor. H ‘The church was prettily deco- and|‘ated for the event, the chancel | and altar being banked with | quantities of white lilies and bride | Juan Carbonell, Strand theatres, announces that owner | roses against a background of lace gommencing with tomorrow the| ferns. Above the organ music rack pictures will be shown regularly ai | extended a bank of pink roses and the Strand, while the Monroe will/ferns. Ae + | Preceeding the arrival of the undergo complete renovation, re-| | ° § . P bridal party-Mrs. Harry Curry | pairs and Paprovements So 2 |sang, “O Promise Me,” the’ organ | through the week the Strand will accompaniment played by Mrs. row be. the, wontet of at ractio for | Frank, H. Ladd, organis' : i mio HE ENAP Ale ir ok fay) Proniptly at ranted Hear dd ‘Sufday ‘the Monroe ‘will be|the bridal party arrived at the open also, just as .he Strand used/ church. The bridegroom and_ his to be, in order to accommodate attendants entered by one door the increased week-end patronage. | yhile the bride and.her maids en- | Mr. Carbonell says the pictures) toyed by the other and met at the to be shown at the Strand this ¢ | chancel. j week are all head-liners, such as! Miss Margaret Curtis, maid of “y ony a : Money Talks,” for Tuesday: ithe |honor wore a gown of orchid ednesday; “Hands Up, : anys Prijerepe de chine trimmed with rhursday; The Devil's Cireus,’’| bands of Flemish Ince. She car- Friday and Saturday, and the : ried an arm bouquet of white “Ancient. Highwa sunday. At the Monroe, rday, will| ‘ses and ferns. he “Watch Your Wife,” and on) M Mary Sunday, the “Cowboy Muketeers.” | bridesmaid, was go in peach A synops's of each. of these blow crepe de chine h trim- wonderful pictures will appear in| mings of love bird green. She cor- The Citizen on the days of their|ried an arm bouquet of pink roses presentation at the Strand in the|and maiden hair ferns. evening. By keeping up with The bride entered on the arm them and then attending the show,!of her father who gave her in a beiter understanding of the pic-| marriage. She was lovely in her ture is obtained and the story so! vedding gown of white baronet prettily illustrated by the picture satin, the only trimming being a more appreciated. lace bertha which fell in a jabot e to the waist line. Her silk tulle MANY ASSEMBLE AT ‘veil, worn in cap style was held in " y position by a coronet of orange CHICAGO MEETING position Ds a ae siee (Ry Associated Press) : : CHICAGO, June 21.—-Twelve/gold brooch, this latter having brothers and s* including aj been by her great grand hichop, two priests end a nun, met grandmother Lonis ne s Pinder, a string of lustrous pearls and a worn and succes- sters, mother Cleans Up Bonner Greene commissioner at Fort Towson. Okla. to succeed hér hushand, she notified moonshiners and bootle; ers that bonds and sen tences on Hq@nor cases would be the maximum. By ng her first 30 days in office Fhe hag fived up to her word too. When Mrs Hazel sas named U here as pilgrims to the congress. One of the brothers is the Rt. Rev Patrick Barry, Bishop of St. ely on their wedding day ower bouquet of stephanotis lossoms and white ribbons com- oleted the ensemble The bridegroom Franklin Archer rer Augustine, Fla., the oldest Cath- olic diocese in the new world. EMENT was attended end Joseph The ring ceremony was cfter which Rev. Eldridge ented the couple to those Fe ent who showered them with ongratulations end best for their future years. Mrs. Ladd played L swedding for a and was accompanied by “urtis on the saxaphone. Mr. and Mrs. Archer will be home to their friends tonight at heir home, 592 Margaret All Metal pres wishes nengren’s music recessional Kimbod! h street . Which should put these the reach of all who are COOL AT THE Coral Isles Casino SOUTH BATHING DANCING SHORE SALADS SANDWICHES ICE CREAM Thomas Slade ts trying + a new all-metal Cirleibie co: rovernment exper Los Anceles COLD DRINKS Dances 10 Cents Each the chief NEWS ON PROPERTY VETERANS MEET IN ATLANTA, GA., FOR CONVENTION MORE THAN FIVE THOUSAND DISABLED MEMBERS AS- SEMBLE fOR EVENT TO- DAY (Ry Associated Press) ATLANTA, June 21.—Atlanta today official threw open her doors in welcome to more than 5,000 d'sabled American veterans who have been arriving for the past two daya on every train, and by other conveyances, for the sixth annual convention of their or- who were from of the United Sta included such personages as ( John R. MeQuigg, national com- mander of the American Legion, who addressed ihe convention to d General Frank B. Hines, di- retor of the veterans’ bureau, John H. Mahan, national commander of the disabled American veterans of the World War, and on down the line to the happy buck private in the rear ranka The Georgia capital was adorn ed in festive garb for ‘he formal pening of the convention. Featuring today’s program was the annual appearance this morn ing of Mme. Schumann-Heink, 68 Id oF whose two ere k illed a member of the German with (he Americar force At it o'clock Mme J her program at how with “Taps.” wreaths were being tombs of at Arlington London, es of veterans were enter a barbecue at Lakewood aknown soldiers National Cemetery, on meeting the barbe band ing we display was t tonight en RECEIVED CALMLY ims DOORN, Ansocinted Fre: Holland, June the proposal , 21- te con Schumann-Heink |“ (Ry Associated Press) SAULT ST. MARIE, \June 21.—The Mich., joyous cries of lyouth which encouraged Arthur Tessier as he demonstrated his championship Charleston steps in a row boat, were changed to screams of horror when the j dancer, losing his balance and up- | setting the boat, was drowned with Mary's lad, | five in St. Only companions |viver yesterday. one ‘Isaac Jonviceur, 15 years old, was |eaved, although spectators im- | mediately manned boats and went to the rescue. | Three | ranging in age from 13 to 15, all St. girls and four boys, residents of Canadian Sault | Marie, across the river, set out in {the row boat after they had at- boat dance tended an excursion Swnday afternoon. Tessier, who won the junior Charlestoo St. had been showing en admiring audience of the dance contest in Canadian Sault - Maris recentl: several of the steps which won him the prize and when one youth sug rested he repeat his performance in the small boat, he ented. While the others stamped their fest, sang and applauded, Tessicr danced, but at the foot of the rapids, onlookers from the shore raw him topple and failing to re keel cain his balance, the fall into whirling waters. Tessier's evpsized the boat. The five others d with him before hel; arrived. The bodi isappea had not been recot-rsd early today. INDIANS START ANOTHER CAMP (By Aw ieted Breas) CROW AGENCY, Mont., June 21.—After » lepse of fifty ye the Sev-nth and Cheyenne Indians avaloy acd the ar encamped on the hills the valley of the Little Big Hor Today they friendship and to renew that met in a re pl he p of peace has remained ur ken for many Jun they tle ears. On met here in b the fin the World War, — On Thursd this we 1emorate the fift Horn, per engagement They red of will do alike who ‘Money Talks” is the title of Rupert Hughes’ latest hit. A story of the glorification of the | Almighty Doller, what it « and buy beauty, brains honor. MONROE THEATRE TOMORROW