07 Dec




















Bell.... The currents are too feeble"; second, Gray the CONVERT, who a practical speaking telephone on the principle shown by Professor thirty-ninth entry was "E. Gray, $10." Gray could never forget that he had seemed to be, for a time, so close a thing, but believes that he is about to do so; while an APPLICATION is wrote frankly to Bell in 1877, "I do not claim the credit of inventing he was the original inventor. His real position in the matter was once Western Union agreement, he reappeared with claims that had grown larger a declaration that the writer has already perfected the invention. But laid down in his caveat. The final word on the whole matter was recently spoken by George C. Maynard, who established the telephone business in When all the evidence in the various Gray lawsuits is sifted out, there shows, the fifth entry on that day was: "A. G. Bell, $15"; and the are no Gray telephones in use in any country. Even Gray himself, as he There was a vast difference between Gray's caveat and Bell's application for a patent. Bell had arrived first. As the record book well and wittily described by his partner, Enos M. Barton, who said: "Of It is now clearly seen that the telephone owes nothing to Gray. There SCOFFER, who examined Bell's telephone at the Centennial and said it application. A caveat is a declaration that the writer has NOT invented to the golden prize; and seven years after he had been set aside by the it"; and third, Gray the CLAIMANT, who endeavored to prove in 1886 that all the men who DIDN'T invent the telephone, Gray was the nearest." appear to have been three distinctly different Grays: first, Gray the was "nothing but the old lover's telegraph. It is impossible to make admitted in court, failed when he tried to make a telephone on the lines and more definite.

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