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Show A . 0,j ix,?'-p-i- Jy " 21, 1S31 MAGNA TIMEO. . soul . . . eh, gentlemen . gentlemen . . But by this time the gentlemen, between emotion and tobacco Juice, were having such difficulty with tbelr Adams apples as to make a wholesale strangling seem Inert-tabl. The beautiful flexible voice went on, tbe bands wove their enchantment. the eyea held yon in their spell. Tbe pompous figure of little Pat Leary shrank, dwindled, disappeared before tbelr minds eye. The harlot Dixie Lee, In her black, became a woman romantic, piteous, appealing. Sabra Cravat, her pencil flying over her paper, J thought grimly: It isnt true. Dont believe him. El la wrong. He has alwaya been wrong. For fifteen yeara .be baa alwaya been wrong. Dont believe him. I shall have to print this How lovely hla voice Is. its like a knife In my heart I mustnt look at hla eyes. Hla hands what wa that he aald 1 most keep my mind on . , . music on her erring I ought soul oh, my love to hats him . . . I do hate him. . . . It waa finished. Yancey walked to hla seat sat as before, tha great buffalo head lowered, tha Uds closed over the compelling eyea. the beautiful bands folded, relaxed. The good men and troe of tbe Jury filed solemnly out through the crowd that made way for them. As solemnly they crossed the . dusty road and repaired to a draw at tbe roadside, where they squatted on andr bits of rock or board as came to .band. Solemnly, briefly, end with otter disregard of Its legal aspect, they discussed the esse If tbelr Inarticulate monosyllables could . be termed discussion. Tbe courtroom throng, scattering for refreshment, had barely time to down Its drink before tha jnry stamped heavily across tbe road and into tha noisome courtroom. . . find the defendant, Dixie Lee, not guilty," mftftmTTrvtTrf liiAAliiiilAAAlAA , marron Ul e. By , Edna Ferber rt' PirrtM kl Um TSfl Imlct D riiYwrrfiYrfirm lAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Ze f ; EDAX ORIA AFTER IX -- Continued 1- Shonor, gentlemen of the 1 am the first to bow to ent Recognition where .loo Is due this, gentlemen !r been my way. May L ofore I begin my poor plea nae of this lady, my client aspect fully call your atten-- i that whleb. In my bumble k, baa never before been d, much less duplicated, In jole of tbe Southwest Turn jre to the figure which has so y and so deservedly held attention. Gaze once more .dm. Regard blm welL Tou ot look upon his like again. ,enttemen, in my opinion thin person, Ur. Patrick Leary, only man In the Oklahoma iry In tbe Indian territory e whole of the brilliant and ms Southwest nay, 1 may go so far as to say the only I In this magnificent country, United States of America I of B It actually can be aald that able to strut sitting down." ,e puffed little figure in the f collapsed, then bounded to feet, redfaced, gesticulating. honor! I object 1 c at the rest was lost In the roar of the delighted crowd, - , "o It, Yancey!" hats the stuff, Cimarron 1" re was what they had come Doggone, there was nobody t Such I the Built How onn- - Beir -- . gt-;i- CHAPTER X ren today, though more than a er of a century has gone by, re still are people tn Oklahoma k have kept a copy, typed neatly from records made by hand, the speech made that day by icey Cravat In defense of tbe n woman, Dixie Lee. Yancey vets Plea for a Fallen V omit called; and never was more sentimental, windy, and utterly moving. The Jig words hokum and bunk were then In use, but even had they n they never would have been filled, by that appreciative crowd, least, to the flowery and Impaa-meoratory of the Southwest iver Tongue, Yancey Cravat ' Cheap, melodramatic, gorgeous (passioned. A quart of whisky In tn, an enthralled audience bend him i a white-face- d woman with oeioss eyes to spur him on; tbe hie wronged and righteous ll sounding in his ears nev-- ) imself. in his hey-dea more brilliant a more rformance, a honor! gentlemen of the Too have heard frith what tbe prosecution has referred lns of this woman, as If her on was of her own prefer , A dreadful a vicious a re-picture baa been painted ju of her life and surround- Tell me tell me do yon y think that she willingly en d a life so repellent so hor A . gentlemen I no I This girl was !No, luxury, such refine of us have known. Just as the young girt was bud-tntwomanhood, cruel fate ed all this from her, bereft f her dear ones, took from ne by one, with a terrible and t rapidity, those upon whom ad come to look for love and ort And then. In that moment .arkest terror and loneliness, e ena of onr sex, gentlemen. A f In sheeps clothing. A fiend tha guise of a human. False unites. Lie Deceit so palpable i ,t It wonld have deceived no one t a young girl as Innocent as re, as starry eyed as wag this mum you now see white and rmhllng before you. One of our x tfraa the author of her ruin, ore to blame than she. Wnat uld be more pathetic than'the ectacle she presents T An Immor-,soul tn ruin. A moment ago yon eard her reviled. In tbe lowest rms a man can employ toward a oman, for tha depths to which he baa sunk, for the company abe reps, for the life she leads. Yet here can she go that her Bin does tt pursue her? You would drive hr out But where? Gentlemen, )e very promises of God are doted her. Who was It said. Com nto mo all ye that are heavy (den, and I will give you rest he is Indeed heavy laden, this ampled flower of the South, but f at thla Instant she were to kneel own before us nil and confess her edeemer, where la the church that y onld receive her. where the that would take her In Our rx wrecked her once pure life. Her wn sex shrink from her as from I pestilence. Society has. reared a relentless walls against her. nly In tbe friendly shelter of the av can her betrayed and broken 'art ever find the Redeemers romlsed rest The gentleman ho so eloquently spoke before me tld yon of her assumed names, of cr sins, of her habits. Hs never, or all hit eloquence, told yon of sr aorrowa. her agonies, her hopes, er despair. But I could tell you. 1 could ten you of the desperate ay the red letter day tn the ban-,ie- r of the greet Oklahoma Conn-trwhen she tried to wtn s home for herself where she could live In - When the decency and qnleL . remembered-voiceof father and s, mother and sisters and brothers fall like mnete on her errtn enrs . . . who snail tell what thla heavy heart, sinful though It may seem to you and to me . . . understanding, pity, help, like mnslr on her errins d ted 0X0 bol- - uzo an on ... ... him.' rod IIAGNA. UTAH V- o WAS as though ITwhole Oklahoma Osage and the country now stopped and took a deep breath. Well It might Just ahead of it all uhknown, waited years of such clangor and strife as .would make the past years seem uneventful In comparison. Ever since the day of the Run, more than fifteen year ago, it bad bsen racing helter-skeltedevil take the hindmost ; shooting Into the air, prancing and yelping ont of sheer fttallty and A mans country It seemed to be, ruled by men for men. Tbe women allowed them to think aa The word feminism was 'unknown to the Sabra Cravats, the Mrs. Wyatts, the Mrs. Hefners, the Turket and Folsom and Sipes. Prim, good women and together by tbelr goodness and by their common resolve to tame the wilderness. Tbelr power was tha more tremendous because they did not know they had It They never once said, daring those fifteen years, We women will do this. We women will change rethat Quietly, Indomitably, lentlessly, without even a furtive glance of understanding exchanged between them, but secure In their common knowledge of the sentimental American male, they went ahead with their plant from the come home had Yancey war a hero. Spanlah-America- n Other men from Osage bad been In the Philippines. One had even died there (dysentery and ptomaine from tb bad tinned beef). But Yancey waa the town's Rough Rider. He had charged up 8an Juan hUI with Roosevelt Osage, know Ing Yancey and. never having aeen Roosevelt assumed that Yancey Cravat the Southwest Cimarron had led the way. an In either hand, the great bnffalb head lowthe ered with such menace that . enemy had. fled In terroK' His return has beet the occa- sion for snch a celebration as tbe town bad never known and never wonld know again, they assured r, Met-dame- s j 1 r i i n? H 5 4 2 nirt . Mr. Cravat Ha says leave It to you, went-o- Hea ut Yancey did a good deal of going moat out Sabra, after all, still did of tha work of tha paper without having the satisfaction of dictating Its policy. A linotype machine, that talented Iron monster, now chattered and chlttered and clanked In the composing room of tho Wigwam. It was tha first of Its kind In tha Oklahoma country. Sabra was proud of tho linotype machine, for It had been her five yeara at the head of the Wigwam that had made It possible. It was ha who had gone out after Job printing contracts; who had educated the local merchants to tha value of advertising. Certainly Yancey, prancing and prating, had never given a thought to these substantial foundations on which tha entire business success of the paper rested. They tow got ont with ease the dally Wigwam for the Osage townspeople and the weekly for country subscribers. Five yeara had gone by six years since Yanceys return. Yet, strangely enough. Sabra never had a feeling of security. She never forgot wbat he bad said about Wichita. Almost Ova years In ona place, Thats tb longest stretch Ive ever done, honey." Five years. And this was well Into tbo sixth. Ho had plunged head first Into tha statehood fight. Into tbe Indian tern ritory situation. Tho faction was bitterly opposed to the plan for combining the Indian territory under the single state - of Oklahoma. Tbelr slogan was Tha White Mans State for the White Man." ' Who brought the Indian hero to tbe Oklahoma country in tha first place". shouted Yancey in the. editorial columns of the Wigwam. "White men. They bounded them from Missouri to Arkansas, from Arkansas to southern Kansas, then to northern Kansas, to northern Oklahoma, to southern Oklahoma. Yon white men sold them tb piece of arid and barren land on which they now Uva In squalor and misery. It Isnt fit for a white man to live on, or tha Indians wouldnt be living on it now. Deprived of tbelr tribal laws, deprived of their tribal rites, herded together In stockades like wild animals, robbed, cheated, kicked, bounded from place to place, jve them the protection of the country that has taken their country away from them. Give them at least the right to become citizens of .tha state of Oklahoma. He was obsessed by it Ha traveled to Washington tn the hope of lobbying for It - Roosevelt was characteristically cordial to bis old Washington campaign comrade, ladles were captivated by tha flowery speeches of thla romantic, thla story-booswaggerer out of tbe anti-India- k Southwest , It was rumored on good authority that ha waa to be appointed tbe next governbr of the Oklahoma territory. Oh, Yancey," Sabra aald, "do be careful Governor of this terrl toryt It wonld mean so much. It would help dm In tho future. Donna, toa - Their father a governor." She thought, Perhaps aU that lva gone through In the last ten years will bo worth It, now. Perhaps It waa this. Hell settle down . . , Mamma cant aay now , . . and all the Yenablea and the Vlana and tbe Goforths and: the Greenwoods. She bad had to endure tbelr pity, even from a distance, all these years. ' Tbe rumor took on substance. My husband, Yancey Cravat, governor of tbe territory of Oklahoma. And it then, when statehood came, must tn the next few. years, perhaps governor of the state of Oklahoma. Why not I , At which point Yancey blasted any possibility, of his appointment to tho governorship by burling a red-ho- t editorial Into the columns of the Wigwam. Tbe gist of it was that the hundreds of thousands of Indians now living on re vattona tha United States throughout should be allowed to live where Tha they pleased, at liberty. whites of the Oklahoma territory and tha Indian territory, with an Indian population of about one hundred and twenty thousand of various tribes Poncas, Cherokeea, Chickasaw. Creeks, Oaeges. Comanchea, Kaws, Choctaws, Seminole, and a score of ot hero-re- ad. emitted a roar of rage, and brandishing the paper ran screaming Into tbe streets, cursing tbo name of Yancey Cravat. Mach that ho wrote waa true, perhaps. Yet the plight ef the Indian was not aa pitiable as Yancey painted II He cast over them the glamor of bis own romantic nature. The truth was that they themselves cared little except a few of their tribal leaden, more Intelligent than the rest They hnnted e little, fished, slept visited from tribe to tribe, the Poncas visiting the Oaages, the Osage the Poncas gossiping, eating, holding powwows Sabra picked np tb proof aheet of tbe editorial, still drmp from the press and walked Into Yanceys office. Her face was while, ... Klo-wa- -- coro-lunlt- y tlon waa forgiven, tha rumors about him forgotten or allowed to subside, at least -- Again the editorial columns ot the Oklahoma Wigwam blazed with hyperbola, U was hard for Sabra to tako eecond place (or to appear to take eeond place) to tbe office ot tb Wigwam. She had so long ruled there alone. Her word bad been law to the wavering Jesse Rickey end to tbo worshiping Cliff Means. And now to say, Youd better ask Honor, Gentlemen of the Jury. I Am the First to Bow to Achievement Your each other, between' drinks, until the day when statehood ahonld come to the territory. He returned a captain, unwounded, but thin and yellow, with the livery look that confirmed the storiee one bad beard of putrid food, typhoid, and mosquitoes more deadcountry, ly. In this than bnllets or cannon. Poisoned and enfeebled though he was, hla return seemed to energize the mule little town. Wher ever he might be he lived In a awlri of events that drew Into It eddy all thut came within III radius HI. Yiineeyf HI. Hint I He shed the khaki arid the cocked hat and actually appeared again In tb familiar white sombrero. Prince Ahert. and high heeled boot. Osare breathed a sigh of .satisfaction. Ill derellc - dye-enter- y semi-tropic- Tv forgiven you many, many ten things, God know. In tho last for yon never I'll forgive years. this. Never. Yea, you will, honey. Never la long time. Not while IM maybe. But some day, a long tlma from now though not o very long, back maybe youll be able to turn to tha old files of tho Oklahoma Wigwam and lift thla editorial of mine right out of It won for word, and run It as your own."-Neve- r . , . Donna . . , G lives I cant Uve my children for them, Sabra honey. Theyve got to Uve their own. I bellevo wbat I believe. Thla town la rotten tho territory tha whole country. Rotten." Youre a fine one to say what Is or Isnt rotten. You with your whisky end your Indians and your Our Pet Peeve re i4. It waa written by James R, 21 They Chewed Tobacco and Spat So doe Women. I despise you. every one in the town In the tew ritory." A prophet la not without honor save in hla own country and In hla own home.". A trifle sonorously. She never realty knew whether he bad done this thing with the very purpose of making hla governorship Impossible, It was like him. Curiously enough, the editorial while It madde&d tha white population of the territory, gained tbe paper many readers, Tha Wigwam Osage blossomed. It prospered. was no longer a camp; it was a town. It began to build schools, , churches, halls Sol Levys store tha Levy Mew cantlle company bad two waxen ladles In the window, tbelr features only slightly affected by tba burning aoutbwest sun. Yancey boomed Levy for mayor of Osage, but be never bad a chance It was remarkable bow tbo Oklahoma Wigwam persisted, though tta position In mom pnblle questions was violently unpopular. Perhaps It, like Yancey, had a vitality and a charm that no one could withstand. Although Sol Levy was still tba town Jew, respected, prosperous the town had never quite absorbed this oriental A citizen of years standing, ho still was a stranger. Ha mingled little with hla fellow townsmen outside business hours He was shy of the town women thoogb tbo women of the town found blm kindly, passionate, and generous Tha business men liked blm. They pnt him on committees Occasionally Sabra or some other woman who knew him well enough would say, half playfully, half seriously, Wby dont A nice felyon get married, Sol low like you. Youd make soma girl happy." Sometimes be thought vaguely of going to Wichita or Kansas City or even Chicago to meet some nice Jewish girl there, but be never did. It never entered his bead to marry,, a gentile. Between him and Yancey there existed a deep sympathy and unYancey campaigned derstanding. for 8o! Levy In the mayoralty race could be If a thing so called a race. The Wigwam extolled blm. Why, the very Wear snorted the redoubtable virago, Mrs Tracy Wyatt, whose husband was the opA Jew for posing candidate. mayor of Osage I Theyll be having an Indian mayor next Mr. Wyatts folks are real Americana They helped settle Arkansas And a for me, why. I can trace my ancestry right back .to William Whipple, who was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence." Sol Levy never had a chance for public honor. He, In fad did practically nothing to further his own possible election. He seemed to regard tha whole matter with a remoteness slightly tinged with Ironic hnmor. Yancey dropped Into Sols store to bring him this latest pronouncement of the bristling Mrs Lights of New York Thera Is a New Tork woman of wealth and position who never has had a high regard for regulations of tho order which appear to her a bit atnpld and unnecessary. Up to recent times of conns men have made laws and women have made customs' and tha fact Is that the average woman, being' really much nor independent of tbonght than any mao, la governed mainly by her own sense of the fitness of things rather than by any legal cods That may not bt clear to you, bat 1 know wbat I mean. At any rats for various reasons thla woman had not been abroad In rather a long Urns bat decided to spend a season In Europe. She discovered that aba bad to obtain a passport Used to special consideration, she did not see why she had to take out such a document, abe being a nice person whom any country should bo glad to entertain, and, if aha did have to taka It ont she didnt see why there waa so much red tap to bo unraveled. Finally aba got tbe passport and showed It to her husband. Hs being a mas was considerably startled when he looked tt over. i , This picture is yon, all right? ha said, but they must have made a mistake. The description doesnt fit yon tn tbe leas Y onr eyes foe exampls are light bins Tls describe them aa hazel." v "Yes" said bis wife calmly. ' "I alwaya have wanted hazel eyes "What baa that got to do with said tho mas "Your eyes era t Itr bins "Dont bo silly." said hla wlfs "When they Insisted upon my describing myself, I tbonght of Just how I had always wished to look, so I Just pretended 1 looked that way. Its a very good description." When last sees tba husband looked aa if ha were about to hava apoplexy. Custom officer have told me that women are much more successful smugglers than men, because man, tba poor goop, trying to bring to more than tho permitted number one-side- d Wyatt - of Independence P ' "Tell wrote the ancestors one her of my Fella name Ten Commandments of Moses? Yancey, roaring with langbter, used this In tbe Wigwam, and It naturally helped as much as anything to defeat the already defeated candldats Tha town went by Indians cowboys np from Texas plainsmen, ranchers' They still squatted at the curb, as la tbo early days They chewed tobacco and spat The big sombrero persisted, and even tho boots and spars s Thera waa talk of paving eL avenue, but this did not Youre going to run this Ya- come for years Tbe town acta ncey" ally boasted a waterworks The Yes Wigwam office still aty on never be of tho fIouH governor but It now occur I the en, tire house. Two year I er territory," a Never." return they had 1 1M to ,00c 2t'hw fce build a borne on Klhckl there actually wl with.P122Wher proof In her hand so that now alnMmr cb yeara I4 k mu-kistood out. whits I I rro bk ooNTiurzi I3 "Declaration Sol exclaimed,. thoughtfully. Paw-bosk- Paw-busk- a, Yan-(cey- ts Mc- Carthy in collaboration with John By WALTER Rutherford, tho latter name being TRUMBULL nom de plume. It ta a history of the alto of tha old Waldorf, now occupied by tba Empire State of cigars or tha remains of what building,' and of thoM persons who-we- re identified In one way or anhe was not able to drink on tbo boat, usually Is thinking about tha other with the famous hotd. law and looks as guilty aa If someLe Roy P. Ward ta tha architect body had Just caught him robbing a hen roost, while tb little woman, of tho new King's County hospital being firmly of tha opinion that It and Kenny brothers era tha brick Is right and proper for her to bring contractors Frank Kenny ta aa la anything she desires looks aa old Notre Dame man and a number d of tha South Bend football players tranquil and ' innocent aa a fawn. work for him during tbe vacation r r months to keep tn shape for grid-Iro- n work to the autumn. - One ot . There Is In New York a very tall Is the father of John foremen hla la fela artist whose chum Uttle low. Tho two are Inveterate prac- Law, former Notr Dame star. tical Jokers and the things they Forty-fourt- h can think np era weird in the exstreet and Sixth avetreme. It was these two who nue has become a crowded corner bought a park bench, got a bill ot of Manhattan. Just above there on sals for It. carried U around tba the avenue are a lot of employ On the comer, park, and almost drova a desk ser- ment agencies geant to apoplexy the fourth time they are excavating for a new a patrolman brought them tn. Re- building. Crowds of tha unem--. cently they hava evolved a fiew ployed aland arouBd and watch the. stunC They board a subway as team shovels at work. ... protended strangers Tha Uttle tel low goes Into ona car and tha big It has become dangerous fellow gets a seat In tha car ahead. to alt around with ready friends. A your After tha train has started the tit- lot of them appear to hava sue When enmbid to an educational complex. tle fellow walks .forward. ha gets to whera tb big fellow la They want yon to play spelling seated, ha stops takes ont hla games ona of these games where handkerchief, pats one hand on tho somebody mentions a letter, and big fellows bead, presses tha hand- tha next one adds a letter, and so kerchief firmly against bis nose on around tha loom until somebody with tha other hand, and, tn tba completes the word. When yon kindly tone of a parent addressing complete a word, you drop oul ln a child, says; the first place, certain of my friends "Blowr hava that I keep my spellTha big fellow trumpets after ing tocharged my wife's mac, and In tba which tba little fellow pats tbe second placs I don? like spelling handkerchief ' back In hla pocket games and never did. And, if they and continues through the train. don't start a spelling game, they, leaving hla companion calm, but tha begin on definitions Thats Jnat as other passengers la a state of some bad. Who cares about tho differperturbation. ence between biennial and blannn-a- lt . And, by ths way, jshat does A book entitled "Peacock Alley" moiety" mean la soon to be published by Harper's. (A, mi Ball ByadtcaU.) WND Ssrvtos, Two Sisters, 65 and 58, Meet for First Time Seminole, Okie. Two sisters, one eighty-fiv- e and tbe other born to Russia, met for the first time to their lives half way around the world from their birthplace. The older of tbe two staters Mrs Mary Fromhoff of SL Joseph. Mo married at an early age and moved from her native hamlet to northern Russia to tbe Black sea region. The older sister never returned to the J -northern village. The younger sister, Mrs Jolla Shannon, San Antonio, Texas was bora to tbe same little Russian town after the older sister bad moved away. Tha younger sister was married In her native village and 83 yeara ago moved to America. Ten years later Mrs Fromhoff and ber husband emigrated to America. Two sons of Mrs. Fromhoff, chants hers arranged for tho re. union. fifty-eigh- t, ' big-eye- , . Indians Revive Ancient Games Vi both hands to the front, Passing ' the Stick, a brings tightly clinched, and folds hla arms Sport Peculiar to Tribe Reno, Nev. Ptctnreaquo gatherings of Flute and Washoe Indians have been congregating of late on the outskirts of Carson City to e tho ancient Indian game1 of "passing the stick. Drawn by the colorful scene, hundreds of palefaces visit the Indian villages every day to witness tbe game. "Passing the stick" la a guessing game peculiar to tne residents of Nevada. A stick about three Inches long and of the diameter of a pencil Is used. Hie contestants form two parallel tines, about three feet from each other with fifteen to twenty Indian back on a side. Tbe leader of each side Is In the center of the line and the players kneel and fold their arm over heir chests. Like "Button, Button. Agreement ta made as to tba aide starting tbo contest The leader of tha side taking the offense placet the tiny stick in hla right hand, then conceal both hands behind hla hark and rapidly changes tha trophy from hand to band. Finally be ,ie-vlv- . stoically. The opposing players then guess In which band the stick reposes, tha first call deciding tbe Issue. seven or eight braves will call out the winning band, or full to guess correctly. Should the first guess prove right the stick changes Idea, and the leader of the oppo nenta has an opportunity to demon- -' strate hla shuffling abilities. From time to time other Indians among, the players arq given the honor of holding the vital stick and endeavoring to outguess the other side. Tha Indian aptly termed poker face." since his expression remain the same and he (dvea no bint aa to the sticks whereabouts. Oft-tim- es . f Big Gambling Gama. Points are scored on the basis of correct guesses, and durlRR an afternoon considerable money changes hands Blankets, saddles, bridles, and even horses are won or lost During the time toe game la. In progress the Indiana keep up an " Incessant chant. The tribal musician accompanies this chant by beating on the.t tomtom. Tbe tomtom used here la an ordinary washtnb of the sheet metal variety, bottom np on tbe ground. A tick with not rhea shout an Inch apart Is held tn the musician's band, ' one end resting on the tub. A second stick la rolled up and down the together with the use of a revolv- notched stick. The sound created ing abutter, a- film turning three Is weird and barbarous. meters a second produced 2.4O0 pictures, the luminous Impressions beGovernor Found Driver ing recorded at one of a second. Had Plenty of Time Tha pictures were those of a Austin! Texas. Gov. Ross Sterlarge fly to action and also some small birds to flight, taken at close ling tells this one with a chuckle: I had been vlsting the Imperial range When the Dima were shown In reduced speed U was possible to prison farm, near Houston. They measure tbe wing stroke of the fly furnished tne with a car and an efas 90 a second. Tbe movements ficient driver to return to Houston. of the birds were observed In tbe ",If tt will not make yon too moat minute detsIL late, I wfsh yon would drive me on The Invention Contributes valu- to the Bay (Sterlings summer -- able aid to scientific documentary home). I aald." fllm work and win be especially CertalDly, air." used In aeronautic research. Here"You will hava enough time" tofore only 2T0 views were obtain"Oh, yea sir, I have seven year. able a second. Tie has since been paroled. a. Speed Camera Sets World Record 2,003 to 3,003 Pictures a Second! Its Capacity. - Paris.- - Tha French Academy of Science viewed tho worlds fastest photography when an Invention was whleb recently , demonstrated showed moving pictures taken at 2,000 exposures a second. Tbe photographic Invention waa Introduced by M. dArsonvsl one of tha members of tbo Institute, and was the Invention of Professors Hngnenard and Magnan. Tba . cinematographic machine, which waa not greatly different from an ordinary camera, showed clear pictures at a speed varying from 2.000 to S.200 a second. B) a special process to exposure, J i' -- 4. |