The handbook of kinematography, the history, theory, and practice of motion photography and projection (1911)

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I 4 4 HANDBOOK OF KINE MA TOGRAPH Y. 'far exceeds that of many a projector of more complex model. Were we operating in any inaccessible part of the globe, such, for instance, as a desert or a country village, we would not hesitate to plump for such a simple machine as the Warwick, in preference to most of the highly expensive and intricate M.C. patterns which now so largely hold the field for cinema and music hall work. The Warwick bioscope is shown in fig. 108. FIG. 109. NEW CENTURY KALEE PROJECTOR.