Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1941 — Page 8
' PAGE 8 Photography—
HERE IS CHEAP
Halloween on Circle Wi
PHOTO TRAINING
Newcomers to Photography |
Can Get ‘Feel’ With Ground Celluloid.
Newcomers to photography
who |
i
May be working with a simple cam- |
€ra not having any
ground-glass |
back ought to know of the virtues |
of ground celluloid. Get a piece at almost any
cam-/|
era store) and cut a strip to fit the!
back of your camera snugly. remove the camera back. shove
Then |
in|
the celluloid and study the image |
produced. Focus your chjects, near and far, at
camera on
various | various |
— THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES °
ns Art Prize At Clty Boll—
ALL BOARDS ASK EXTRA GAS TAX
$350,000 May Cause Lively | Argument Between City Departments.
By RICHARD LEWIS
The allocation of the $350,000 additional gasoline tax revenue the City will receive on the basis of the new gas tax distribution promjses some excitement at City Hall. Department heads already are wondering how the money is going to be passed around. And since every department claims it needs money desperately, the competition is expected to be lively. City Coneroller James E. Deery said he believes some of the addi-
HOOSIER GOINGS ON
PEPPER PEEPERS
Elwood Lays Trap for Prowlers: Gold "Rush" Sweeps 10 Counties,
THERE HAVE BEEN REPORTS of a good many peeping toms at Elwood lately and the chief of police is going to do something
about it. He's
sider a peppered patient a peeper suspect and call police.
® 5 un
ALL THAT glitters is not gold. And nothing, not even gold, glitters so much as the eyes of the boys who think there is pay gold in Indiana. As of now, we hear, there are gold hunters in Gibson, Martin, Pike, Morgan, Brown, Monroe, Warrick, Perry and Crawford counties.
arming all prowl cars with two shotguns. police are supposed to pepper the peepers. peppered peeper will eventually seek medical aid for the pepper. he’s asking the doctors to con-
The chief figured a And
exploring Lost River, Orange County's underground waterway, for all that silver the Indians are supposed to have stored there against a rainy day outside. And there are rumors of organizing search parties for an immense cache of gold which other Indians, specialists in gold, are said to have collected and buried. In other words, ladies and gentlemen, spring is near and if
| { |
With these the |
TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1941 °
going, grab a pan and get in on that gold rush.
H ” "
NEW HARMONY, Ind, once the site of a famous co-operative colony, will hold an auction soon. Among the items to be auctionec off are scores of pieces of merchandise, donated by merchants, and a large assortment of haircuts and shaves, to be donated by barbers. Also, chickens will be auctioned off.
» ” oy At Muncie, a 10-year-old boy
{ was applying for a bicycle license
at police headquarters and was
asked and answered all the routine questions required by the application form. Then the questioned, without looking up or changing pace asked: “Married or single.” The boy changed no pace either as he replied in the same sober tone: “Single. I don't like girls. Seems like everytime I get one she shows up with some one
lens openings, to see the variation in depth of field. If possible, do! this trick with some one who has a camera different from yours, with.
Moreover,
tional gas tax revenue will be made there is talk about | you don't like the way things are available to the City this spring, = although, he said, this is not defi- ![ possible, a different length lens, | nite. At any rate, everybody wants it.
: Ey 7 n oh
i the depth of field, | id + any 8 nn Jit | kL WW A Rr h J bi | L hil
All the charts in the world won't | The Works Board could lay out | - | fi ~ bed =
give the feel of photography half | the entire extra appropriation for | as quickly as this contact with real | SE i ot ety. Boar could Ba ul Wn
: spend most of it, if not all, se " |traffic improvement. The If vou look closely, you may find yourself in this prize winning oil peintingtiial is, if you attend | Board could use the entire iy in costume the Halloween celebrations on the Circle. Those demonstrations inspired Henrik Mayer, the ba build a new bridge. artist, and the picture was awarded second prize of $100 of the National Academy of Design's 115th ane | lr prove Sopdronting Sia which opened last week in New York City. Mr. Mayer is assistant director and instruc= {cate the money, but for what purPreviously the picture was exhibited in the | pose. In all likelihood, this task will S. and Canada. | be given to the City Council. Under the old distribution, Indianapolis received about $650,000
gas tax. Under the new system, | about $1,000,000 is supposed to be | forthcoming.
There already has been one minor
disagreement on gas tax. The Park Board complained because Mr. | Deery took a $10,000 balance away
ferent conditions, even though the | ¥ » = runner's rate of speed remains sbgis the Sais : Bell Club to Elect lexposure bulletin (Form 732P),| | from the Park Department which A photographic education, all ' TY which has valuable information on! had been saved from 1940 operaNY. E ol > ra Club, a few cents. | The Bell Tele) ona Ck : C || fash, flood and color photography Taxpayer uss. to Prevent] tions. It wasn't fair, the Board said, En =» {of Indianapolis wil hog its nse exposure. The bulletin lists Rel 37 |inasmuch as the department had . . lelection meeting April 8 at the old | popular films, with complete expo- elease 0 rigid econ- | Local Resident Wins | Washington Exchange Bldg, 40th|sure tables for use in flash or oc 3 ,000 Held Edward Glore of 433 S. Rural St.|St. and Central Ave. nennhent (SOFk_ WAL betweshsthealons shi By State 17 Years. has been awarded first prize in|officers are R. W. Faulkner, presi- | fr 3 the wb oo a th " oe Modern Woodmen of America’s na- | dent; J. B. Watson, vice president, | om cam sive Raa arg A suit filed in —_ - PIES ar€ Room 2 threatened today to prevent Otto F. Schlensker from collecting the $37.000 he has fought for 17 years to obtain from the State of
mace jest 4x5 Speed Graphic, CREDIT MAY BE LL a cc 5 { Indiana. The plaintiff in the suit, filed by
NEW LIGHTWEIGHT Dale Rafferty, a Greenfield |
Praised by dentists and patrons, Fahrenheit (20 degrees centigrade) | (lawyer, is John D. Johnson, as a these dainty translucent den- for developing Agfa films and papers.| taxpayer. He asks that the State be tal plates are becoming more Heretofore, developing temperatures enjoined from paying Mr. Schlensker popular each day. They have have been 65 degrees Fahrenheit Se money appropriated to him by 8 un » (with films, 70 degrees Fahrenheit the 1941 Legislature. ' aw with papers. This will clear up| The suit alleges that the Legis- | KY s the Limit on Tax Rate There was a good deal of specu-
i i TE ii m i 3 : ; “ iy i I :
il Jeb!
x MN
4
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life | The image on the celluloid also gives an idea of light contrasts The bright parts show up clearly on the celluloid, while the dimmer | areas, which may yet seem quite | bright to the eye, fall away decid-! edly. And that is the way, more| or less, they will behave on the] film. | Try this, too! Have someone run! . around rapidly, near the camera,| tional amateur photographic farther away, straight toward the|test for March. | urer, camera, galloping at right angles.| His photo, “Light and Shadow, y 8
See what a difference there is in| Will be published in the April issue | the speed of the image under dif-| of The Modern Woodmen. |New Flash Diets
garry AR 0% ST :
nual exhibitiion, tor in advanced painting at the John Herron Art School. Golden Gate Exposition in San Francisco and was on tour in the U,
con- and B. T. Loeffler, secretary reas.)
The Wabash Photolamp Corp..| { Brooklyn, N, Y., has issued its new]
for
| saved the money by v
Terms It a Credit
Mr. Deery replied that gas tax| money does not become a blank | check when allocated to a depart-| ment, but merely a credit on which the department may draw for one year. After that, any money left over reverts to the general fund. | Bui, the Controller added to soften the blow, if the department finds it needs the money, he will recommend that the Council reappropriatea the amount needed.
Superior Court
Temperatures Changed
Agfa Ansco, after some experi‘mentation, has adopted a new tem- Ww. perature standard of 68 degrees
so many advantages over the old-style plates, They are lightweight, vet durable and com- § confusion caused by the two tem-|lature is in conflict with the fortable. Come in and get our } peratures. | judiciary of the State, because on!lation on Administration's reason prices. Ee ——— Ne March 29, 1928, the Indiana Ap-|for seeking repeal of statutory tax DANES TO PROTEST |pellate Court denied Mr. Schlensk- | rate limits for divisions of city gov- | LIMA, Peru, March 18 (U. P.).—|er's claim against the State. | ernment. Before the Assembly abol- |
[ruled it could not be touched and | orgered. to do everything humanly possible to save you money, Schlensker, State Treasurer James |Knight to remove the limitations Victor occasionally makes such offers as this Pepperell package. Here you have known high quality goods at a price that represents a very big savings. Open your account
Wednesday or Thursday, find out that IT PAYS TO TRADE AT THE VICTOR.
Pleasant Naxolinevtiin or Rf 6.08.000.00 SRN : |The Danish consul said today that) The money was appropriated to|ished the limits, the City was not } ; he would present a formal note|ny, Schlensker after he had given | permitted to make rates exceeding | fa . ] from nis Government to the For-|the State a check for $50,000 for|fiXed amounts, | ATC INE T 3 TEE pl [El eign Ores hte prossting Lu. |good faith, when he was doing busi- | The purpose of these limitations | 8 | 7 sitioning by Peru o e anish | was to discourage any thought of R00) 13 BLD GC. lcargo steamer Irland. Top ih we sue Sons po I wou | excessive municipal taxation. f When : —ra . - J an 8IWaY| the Assembly convened, the City | The State Poard of Accounts | Administration feared a general re- | ; assessment of property might be . the Supreme Court ruled it was a| If this happened, it was feared A “gift” and that it could not be paid|that assessed valuation in Indian{back without a special law. | apolis would sink so low that the Superior Judge Herbert E. Spencer | maximum tax levies would not raise " hy 5 . refused to hear the case and sent | the minimum funds to keep the City n oe in it 0 [H it to General Term, which meets | operating (roughly, $3,000,000). early in April | Hence, a bill was drafted by Defendants in the suit are Mr. Corporation Counsel Edward H. N. Givens, and State Auditor Rich- |Just in case, The re-assessment was ard T. James. Ross Teckemeyer, | not Snare as far as the City ; | chief deputy audito y | is concerned, the sky is now the | > Shs Seyi) augyion, sid he had] mit for Tex lovee, The COAT with Plenty of “*Reach-Room™ | suit.
“BLOUSED BACK SUCCESS
Styled in Navy or Black Twill
vi # #2 =»
Square Mapped |
OUSTER SUIT BEGUN M The Safety Board's chamber has | | een adorned by a brand-new map |
Indianapolis’ downtown Mile
* Wednesday and Torres
AGAINST TRUSTEE =:
VINCENNES, Ind, March (U. P.).—Proceedings to impeach | I. Grant Beesley, trustee of Vinjcennes Township, were under way in Knox Circuit Court today before
18}
Square area, showing the amount | | of parking space available. The map reaches from the wains- | coting to the ceiling and is the work | | of George Rooker, Plan Commission | secretary-engineer. Total number of curb lineal feet. |
Truly a fashion success, the bloused back coat appears again in this Spring's better
coats!
It fits beautifully, gives ample
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79
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Special Judge Frank Gilkison. | 176, . Beesley also faces five Grand| Total feet available for Jury indictments for the 139,207. misuse of township poor The figuring for the map was | | funds. | done last year by the Police De-| In the opening hearing yesterday | partment when parking meters were | the chief witness was Byron | P€ing discussed. The map would be | | Nickels, State Board of Accounts |the master plan for any downtown |field examiner, whose audit of | Parking plan, including meters, that
| township books first led to an in- | might be adopted. | vestigation. { But even just as a map, it looks The defense succeeded in having | VerY impressive, the Board of Accounts report | Advertisement
| thrown out as evidence. | 0 EN WANTED
| Gilkison, however, did admit | sworn statement by Beesley acknowledging certain irregularities to examiners. 38 to 52 years old. Women who are cross, restless, NERVOUS—who suf fer hot flashes, dizziness—— caused by this period in a woman's life—to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Pinkham'’s is famous for relieving distressing symptoms due to this functional disturbance. WORTH TRYING!
freedom of action and expresses the fine quality of workmanship and materials with which it is made! Misses’ sizes 12 to 20.
parking | alleged |» relief
‘10?
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NEW HOLIDAY APPROVED | WASHINGTON, March 18 (U.| P.) —The House has unanimously approved a joint resolution author- | izing the President to make Oct.| 11 a holiday commemorating the | |death of Brig. Gen. Casimar Pulas- | ki, Polish officer who aided the] | American Revolutionary Army.
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