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Page 31 text:
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Exposed By the Multi-Ray . T eight o'clock on the evening of September 20, 1925, Ralph My- ers picked up his ,French gram- mar from the table where he had thrown it upon his arrival from school that afternoon, and, whistling cheerily, descended the short flight of stairs leading to the cellar of his home and to his laboratory, with the intention of spending a quiet hour or two in study- ing and experimenting, as was his cus- tom. As he pressed the concealed switch which released the magnetic lock on the iron door of the sound and fire-proof la- boratory, he little dreamed that he was embarking upon an adventure which was destined to result in the clearing up of one of the most baffling mysteries in the annals of the New York police force. , As the massive door slowly swung open, he entered and clapped his hands sharply. Immediately there burst forth a diiused glow, closely resembling day- light, revealing a small, low-posted room, with asbestos-covered walls and ceiling. Mounted upon the walls, and so located as to obtain the greatest effi- ciency combined with ease of operation, were slate switch-panels at one end of the room was a large alternator, directly connected through frictionclutcheswith a gas engine on one side :and an electric motor on the otherg wires leading into pipes buried beneath the cement floor, reappeared at the opposite end of the room, and were connected with an in- tricate mass of switches, reostats and meters, installed upon a large control board. From this switch board other wires led to a table beneath it, upon which were many queer looking instruments, -audion bulbs, rotary spark-gaps, geis- sler tubes and variable condensers-all of special xdesign to permit the use of 'high-frequency alternating current. The combining of this electrical ap- paratus was an invention of Ralph's, upon which the twenty-year-old boy had expended much timeuand money. He called it the Multi-Ray, and even in its experimental form it wasvery suc- cessful. With this apparatus he was able to see and to converse with persons who might be a hundred miles away, and to whom he was invisible, without their having to use any form of instruments. , Thus, he was able to attend the thea- tre in the city, twenty-five miles away, or to chat with' his chum next door, without leaving his own house.
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Page 30 text:
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CLASS OF 1916, DEXTER HIGH SCHOOL Dow SES Bri bbott A ell OW R S Ellm Sevey .2 'Z 5 U atch H H. Wilder CI Iv' s-4 N E -J-3 4-7 GJ 5 OJ V1 Pa cu ,-4 'a PQ -G' 4-I D O E ?z CD 5 P-i Turner Hosivard Twombly L. Hatch Hall R. Waymouth Shaw
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Page 32 text:
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.,:mr-I .15 H -'ff 1 vw 30 THE SIGNET Small wonder, then, that Ralph's bo- som swelled with pardonable pride, as hecrossed the room, glanced at the ther- mometer and hydroscope and making such adjustments of the ozone and oxy- gen supply and of the Ventilating fans as seemed necessary, seated himself before the Multi-Ray control-panel. He pressed a button. With a crack the oil switch in the motor cir- cuit closed, and slowly at first but with ever increasing speed, the powerful mo- tor ran up to synchronism. Soon the whir of the generator settled into a steady hum, and Ralph, starting one of the rotary gaps, switched on the high- frequency current from the alternators. The instantaneous appearance of a stream of sparks at the rapidly revol- ving gap was accompanied by the for- mation of a violet flame in a three-foot Geissler which was mounted upon the table with a ball and socket joint. Tilting the tube to an angle of about thirty degrees, Ralph slowly turned it upon its axis and gazing intently into the crystal fluoroscope, was soon watch- ing a squad of militiamen who were practicing with fencing foils at their ar- mory in the neighboring city. Becoming tired of this exhibition of swordsmanship, Ralph changed the di- rection of the HTHYH and picking up his French teacher, who was reading be- fore an open fireplace in her home, he switched on another battery of spark gaps and audions, put on his head-set and breast transmitter, and asked her a question concerning his next day's lesson. She readily gave the desired information and after thanking her, he swung the ray slowly toward the north without shutting off the telephonic ap- paratus, occasionally laughing heartily at the strange variety of sounds picked up. Here an opera singer was enter- taining a company of friends in her drawing room, with the latest popular songs, there a politician was harrangu- ing a crowd of working meng a baby was crying in one room through which the marvelous invisible ray chanced to pass and inanother, a youth and maiden were pledging eternal fidelity to each other. Suddenly as the ray swept the section of the city known as the Brownstone district, there came a sound in the 'phones like that of a human voice screaming with pain. Startled, Ralph quickly adjusted the instruments until the sound was loudest, and saw with surprise that he was surveying the in- terior of the mansion of one of the city's most prominent electrical en- gineers. Focusing the ray, by adjusting a condenser, Ralph carefully searched the large building, and at length came to a small room in the upper story. Here was evidently the source of the sound, in the shape of a huge Telsa transform- er having its terminals connected with two wire grids,-suspended from the ceil- ing by means of porcelain insulators of the air dielectric type. Between these grids which were aboutfive feet apart, roared a bright green arc. A young man was seated near the transformer reading. 'As Ralph watch- ed, he laid aside his book, glanced at the clock on the wall, and commenced to pace the floor with short, nervous steps. . That chap seems to be expecting someone or something, thought Ralph, I wonder what's up ?
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