Echoes from the Alps 1925
An Aesop's Fables short.
An Aesop's Fables short.
An Aesop’s Film Fables cartoon.
A film by Walter Mittelholzer, shot during a flight from Zurich to Teheran he made on business in 1924 for the Junkers factories, a German manufacturer of planes and motors.
Abitia traveled the western coast of the State of Sonora filming films "that graphically show the industrial potential of our country, or rather, the opportunities it offers, its material resources, or simply the beauty of its landscapes as an attraction of A few days before, he was in the town of Cajeme and others in the Yaqui region, where he took interesting views of those agricultural fields, of the very modern implements that are used in the cultivation of the lands and of scenes in which the activity that farmers carry out by plowing the plots or gathering their crops ".
Silent live-action visualization of the poem with some animation.
Touches on hygiene. Bathe regularly, sleep with the windows open, and tells about the reproductive system.
Three Weeks in Paris is a 1925 silent movie from Warner Bros. starring Matt Moore and Dorothy Devore. No copies are known to survive.
A 1925 film.
Schools, businesses and other locations in Kansas City, MO; Boley, OK; Tulsa, OK; Taft, OK; Muskogee, OK.
National Baptist Convention in Kansas City, MO; streets in Chicago, IL; backwaters in Madison, IA.
Ministers and various other people in Nashville, TN; Beaumont,TX.
Directed by N. Scerbakov.
"The Pathe Sound Magazine presents An All-British Talking Cartoon - Little Bruin - The Talking Teddie." "Episode one --" A broken down building stands on a hill with a sign "Misery Farm" outside. The cartoon is drawn by Joe Noble.
An Aesop's Fables with flying fish and flying hot dogs....
We see the animator's hand as he draws Jerry (Sid Griffiths?). Jerry is cycling along but the artist hasn't drawn him a bike. Speech bubble comes out: "- Mr. Artist! What about the bike?" A bike is drawn in. Jerry carries on cycling. There is moving landscape behind him. Suddenly a fire engine starts bringing up the rear. Jerry cycles along looking scared. The fire engine chases Jerry.
U.S. Government surveyor John Field suspects Nanette, the adopted daughter of Cavalry-Major Webb, of being a spy and disclosing government secrets to the Sioux tribe, in their war against the whites. The Sioux attack and Field sees Nanette talking to an Indian, Eagle Wing during the attack. Field and Eagle Wing fight and the latter is killed. Field brings his body to the fort and Major Webb sees that it is long-lost black-sheep son who has turned renegade. Nanette then tells Field that she has been giving Eagle Wing money to keep him quiet and not disgracing her benefactor. Major Webb then reveals, in flashback, that Nanette is not a Sioux but a white girl kidnapped by the Sioux as an infant. Field then asks Nanette to marry him.