Men hunting with dogs in the United States. Man gets out of a car at a friend's house where he is picking up his friend to go hunting. His friend comes out of the house. He opens the kennel door and a dog comes out. They get into the car and drive away. The two men with rifles in hand and dogs walking in a field. They are hunting for small game. The hunters, with shotguns in hand, follow the pointer dogs as they point to game.
United States troops leave a building in the United States. Bugler sounds the alarm. Troops come out of a building in uniform. Dry trees with a house in the background. Storm damaged buildings and trees in a residential area.
Farm scene. Man caries a pole on his shoulders. Officials and workers converse with each other on the field. Steam engine and threshing machine arrives on horse drawn wagon carriages. Steam engine operates a threshing pulley machine at barn. Workers put wheat into threshing machine using pitchforks.
Workers work at a farm in the United States. Threshing machine in operation at a farm. Workers leave the barn. Boy feeds pigs in sty. He lifts one of the pigs. Boy slides from the top of a hay stack.
A railroad train approaching from far in the distance, reaching camera position, and passing by as it moves on railway track in the United States. Low view of railway track looking into the distance. Train approaching in the distance.The large black locomotive engine coming into view and approaching at high speed, hauling train cars. The steam locomotive engine sending steam and smoke upwards as the train passes by. Passenger cars going by quickly, coupled to the train.
Views of Cornell University where mechanical engineer, Stanford Moss, conducted research into gas turbines as part of his doctoral thesis work in 1903. Dr. Moss later joined the staff of General Electric Company. During World War I Dr. Moss is called to Washington DC to discuss, with the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics (NACA), development of a turbo supercharger for airplane engines. View of a biplane with turbo supercharger mounted on top of radial engine. Animated diagram illustrating workings of a turbo supercharger. Using a supercharged engine, the U.S. Army Air Services established an altitude record of 36 thousand feet. (The pilot, flying without supplemental oxygen, passes out and doesn't regain consciousness until the airplane has fallen about 30 thousand feet.)