The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 28, 1926, Page 7

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BEDNESDAY, JULY 28; 1926. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN” 3 PAGE SEVEN ‘GIRLHOOD TO Seevevoescococercccccccs | MONROE seessesoococcosecccosose:| TOMORROW Many Setbacks Delayed Production of “Moana”: Production of almost every | noteworthy, production in motion | pietare history has been accom-.| panied by numerous obstacles, but it ig probable that no director ever had a more difficult time than did Robert J. Flaherty while making his idyll of the Samoan race, “Moana.” This Paramount picture will be shown at the Mon- | roe Theatre tomorrow. 4 Mt. Plaherty, whose Eskimo pic- ture, “Nanook of the North,” was one of the finest things ever done in cdluloid, spent twenty months | in Samga with his wife, family of | three small children and brother. | Virtually all this time was filled | with heart breaking toil and dis- couregement. Settling themselves on the island of Savaii, a spot far from the spoiling touch of the white man, they chose seven fine native | types to portray the life of a typi- cal Sgmoan family. Seeing the spirit of a vanishing people, they | sttempted to preserve it in a strip of film. But the picture of their dreams was not born without sore After production had been started, and almost a hundred thousand feet of film exposed, through some reaction in the de- veloping, it was found worthless. A tragedy similar to this occurred once before to Flaherty about ve years ago. That was be- fore he had produced “Nanook.” was then that a cigarette burnt what might have been his unborn masterpiece of Eskimo life. in the Samoan home Fiahertys was thick indeed, to solve their South | of photography. Af- tried practically every known method of filming and de- veloping, Flaherty as a last re- violated all formulas of oa aan by using panchromatic =“shooting” directly against mm. The results proved re- and_ the problem, .which.; to turn them back was solved. _ Qnithe last day of Flaherty’s in Safune, another near} almost wrecked a labor | long, hard months spent the hot tropical sun. The and their “baggage, in a t manned by native oars- men, were on their way out be- yond the reef, there to be trans- | ferred tothe island steamer. Of | : sudden, from nowhere: in parti- | tular, eame a huge wave which aimost succeeded in swamping the | craft as it passed over the reef. | The family, baggage, and all the @ases containing the precious film ‘were yery nearly swept overboard. CONSERVATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES | Associated Press) TALLAHASSEE, Fla, July 28. —The appointment of a commit- to draft suitable recommenda- for the passage of uniform measures by the gulf in line with those of Florida featured the meeting of fish and game commissioners of this sec- | tion of the United States, held at | \* CONVENTIONS OPENING * ed TODAY a: * * eee ere ewe e se eeen, SAN FRANCISCO—Kappa Kappa Gamma National Sorority.! PETOSKEY, Mich.—Assoi }tion of Probate Judges of Michi- gan. SMUGGLED DRUG IN SUGAR, | CALCUTTA — Smuggied co- feaine valued at $75,000 was | jfound hidden in a barrel of im- | |ported sugar. | @ | A. fashionably dressede:-young | woman wearing a sleeveless frock } attracted attention in London by B | a row of most realistic buttons <at-| toed on the outer side of each arm. | | Miss Nora Stanton © Blatch,| | granddaughter of the famous suf.| | frage leader, Elizabeth Cady Stan- | ton,. was the first woman ever 'S,” A Warmer Picture eee ee ee ee ee hd . * OF INTEREST TO WOMEN * * * eRe Mrs. Belle Vogel, 32 years old, New Albany, is believed to be the youngest grandmother in Indiana. The Russian Soviet Government has forbidden the purchase and abduction of brides among the Mo- hammedan tribes of the Caucasus and Central Asia. A widow in Sydney, Australia, recently married a man whose ac- quaintance she made when he snatched her purse onthe street and was arrested by the police. Three of the four women who are candidates for public office in Michigan this year desire to suc- ceed their husbands, while the fourth is trying to succeed herself. Miss Ellen L. Buckley, ‘an assis- tant United States attorney, has won.high praise from a Federal court judge in Boston for her dis- play of skill in winning her first contested legal action for the Gov- ernment. Two American women, Mrs. Lucy Dodd Ramberg of Portland, Ore., and Miss Marguerite Walker Jordan of Wytheville, Va., have established a school for American girls in a beautiful old villa at Florence, Italy. In a separation suit in Paris the court decided that “however in- suliing the epithets used by the husband might have been, they were justified by the fact that the wife had her hair shingled without her husband’s permission.” 2 Miss Ethel Langton, the fifteen- year-old daughter bf the keeper of a lighthouse on the Isle of Wight, has been awarded a bronze medal for her courage in keeping the light working for three days during a gale. Her father and mother had gone ashore for sup- plies and the storm prevented them from getting back. The girl kept everything in order, al- though she had nothing to eat but half a loaf of bread, thereby sav- ing many ships and men from dis- astr. Mobile, Ala., according» to Shell Fish Commissioner T. R. Hodges, | who attended the gathering. | The commissioners of the other | gulf stites freely admitted that | was leading in the con- of her natural resources, mer Hodges said, and | Tired, swollen, swea smart, burn, itch and ache. indicated that they were anxious suit by adopting ‘ive measures at the | of their legislatures. | lly all provisions of the ing the size of the | size of fish, closed | seasons, Bnd so forth, were recom- | mended for adoption by the other | golf stated. the | f state, the commissioner | from sore, ‘Licarbo mak | {Gel sood. 30 cents and $1.00. your . : | ‘toes. Ick feet di rt } he woes. Ie Keeps your fect dey sad sore spots. Licarbe Dusting Pewder BSe oF ail druggists & FePeeroroccccecocccosessccooccosoccccccocccsoccs | "THE OVER SEA HOTEL COMPANY Has fecently inaugurated a ne for Weekly roomers, the annex of this popular hotel has been set aside for this at the of loWrates. Room, single, $3.00 per week; double, $5.00 per Hot and cold running water in every room, and the i service and accommodations that cannot be had at &@ Pivate rooming house. Make your reservations by tele- phoné, or call and see the manager. 'w schedule of summer rates following heretofore unheard lected to membership of the Am-| | TODAY’S eee eee ee eee 8 eee «Seventeen years id > jerican Society of Civil Engineers,| MOTHERHOOD Towa Woman Found Lydia E. | Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- i ‘When I was old T had to | stay at home! from school, I! finally hadtogquit | school, I was s0-} } fweak. I suffered -{forabout two! Vinton, low: medicine. Now am_a_ house- keeper with six children, and Ihave taken it before each one | was born. I cannot tell you all the good I have received from it. ‘When I am not as well as can be I take it. I have been doing this for over thirteen years and it always helps me. I-read all of your little books I can get and I tel] everyone I know what the Vegetable Com- pound: does for .me.”—Mrs.. Frank Sellers, 510 7th Avenue, Vinton, Towa. Many girls in the fourth genera- tion are learning. thru their own personal experiences the beneficial effects of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- | | table Compound. Mothers:who took it recommend it to their’ daughters as a dependable medicine, POSITIVE. A good. night’s sleep with an Emerson Fan. july12-tf | ANNIVERSARIES Quits Stage, Makes Fortune in Oil | | e « | 1751—Joseph Habersham, post-| master-general in’ the cabinets of | Washington, Adams and Jeff | born in Savartnah, Ga., Died there, | Nov. 17, 1815. | | 1793—The French garrison sur- | rendered Valenciennes to the allies | under the Duke of York j 1847—George Hyde, the alcalde | of San Francisco, selected the first town council. | 1852—Andrew Jackson Down-| ting, who laid out the public; grounds of Washington, died near | Yonkers, N. Y. Born at Newburg, | N. Y., Oct. 20, 1815. | 1868—Livingstone discovered | Lake Bemba, 150 miles long, lying} near the center of the African con- tinent. | 1888—Thomas Carney, second State governor of Kansas, died at) Leavenworth. Born in Delaware} county, O., Aug. 10, 1824. | | 1895—-Swedish societies in Chi-! cago unveiled a bust of Karl Bell-| man, Sweden’s greatest lyrical) poet. 1914—-The World War was, launched with the Austrian declar- ation of war against Serbia. 1925—-Edgar A. Bancroft, the United States ambassador to Jap- an, died in that country. | | Lela Mae Barnum quit the stag oil lands near Amurillo, Te: Emerson Fans always please—j| vented t keep up the payments on are a source of comfort. july12-tf| i a few years ago und bought undeveloped She had to market a beauty cream she in- and she will be “a millionaire shortly. them—but. now the off is coming In and forget the heat?” years, and last years OVER SEA HOTEL COMPANY Gndoocccccccccccceovccccceeeeecee EMERSON and forget the heat! 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