The theatre of science; a volume of progress and achievement in the motion picture industry (1914)

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180 Ci)e Ctjeatte CHAPTER IX When a man is practical and honest and works with his head and hands, some measure of success will surely attend him. There are individuals who have these qualifications to which are added the faculty of employing men and money and then the success, measured in results and dollars, becomes stupendous. It is always interesting to look back into the life of such men to discover the earlier indications that always manifest themselves. Take Charles Jourjon, for example. M. Jourjon, head of the Eclair Film Company, with thirty branches and agencies and auxiliary concerns in as many of the large capitals of the world, was for four years president of the Association Generale des Etudiants, the student body of Lycee Charlemagne, a branch of the Paris University. His election v/as always by popular acclaim, the votes coming from 30,000 of his fellow students. Nothing better is needed to reflect organizing ability and enduring popularity. Charles Jourjon is a native of France, where he received his education. He graduated in Paris at the age oT" twenty-four years with the degree of LL.B. He engaged in the practice of law, and served in the army of