Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1941 — Page 2

TIDY OF COLOR

HELPS PICTURES)

‘Shots May Be 0. K., But “If Something Lacks, =>“Try Eye Squint.

- ‘When a fan gets a nice camera and masters thé operation of all th doodads, and either buys a lig meter or gets the hang of exposure

by brute strength, he still sometimes isn’t getting what he wants. His shots are okay, technically,

but the pictures aren’t so hot.

‘There may. be something te this business of having a “feel” for pici ture taking but you'll never know if 4 you don’t get started right. Many an individusl has startled the world by getting the hang of something new ‘quite ‘suddenly after going along for years as a dud. Yet the “feel” was there all the time.

Try a Blue Glass © One of the first things to study

£ : #0 develop picture sense is masses—

+ « of lights and darks. If you want to, «buy a blue viewing glass. That sort © of knocks down colors into a gloomy monotone and makes you see pattern, masses, contours, better than you can when you see them in their Natural colors. Maybe it ‘makes you feel a little gilly to squint through a blue viewing glass, especially if some kibitzers of the life-in-the-raw school are around. In that case, close down °_gidur eyes as narrow as possible, tilt §our head back and peek at things through your lashes. But that'll make you look silly, too. If you have to be dignified, photography isn’t the place for you.

Put Tree Against Sky

‘ The red barn, or a bay horse against. a background of trees will fool you into’ thinking you have two different tgnes until you see “the Phe works as a dark mass. Good pictures usually have very subtly proportioned and nicely placed areas or hunks of lights and darks. They will ‘not be speckled around, like #pots on a coach dog, but will form Big substantial patterns. _ This doesn’t go for high key and low key shots, of course, but stay away from them until you get more practice, anyway. Learn to - trust the tree backed by a hill, ahd ramble around to one side until it comes against the sky. “Observe this, too, in paintings. Pirst thing ‘you know your pictures begin to have better pattern. » » ®

Note Trend to Color

The héavy trend to color by" amd-

. tur photographers is reflectéd in

the latest pictures of film rental li-

* praries. A new supplement to the

Bell & Howell Filmsound Library brings the total titles in the “Our - Colorful World” series to 37 single reels. These include five on National Parks, one on Indian life, and one on Puerto Rico. There also is a series of nine new reels on wild life. Parlier listings include some 20 reels

: on travels in Mexico, Canada, Cen:) -

tral America, Africa and the South Seas. : 3 : : , Kodak Issues: New Book Eastman has {ssued a’ new Kodak

Data Book, with ‘scads of informa-| -

. tion on the making of Kodachrome ~ and black and white. slides. - The book includes recommenda-

tions on films and plates for ‘slide 3

making, making Kodaslilles, meth-

ods of printing films and plates, de-}

.. weloping technique, information: on}

tinting, toning, finishing slides} ° masking and binding, storage. and} °

projection, and the making of enlarged display transparencies. -

ENEMIES OF LIQUOR

WINNING, YORK SAYS |

Thefight against the liquor trafic pr is beifig steadily won -as the truth}

still the Army is taking de making privates of them, Dr. Wil. fred H. Robinson, Afnerican Dental: Association president, said here 810m

day. Dr. Robinson is 5: ‘guest.’ here. or the. Indiana’ State Dental -Associa~--tion ‘and the assistants’. association,

which began their 84th “annual” “CON= vention at the Claypool Hotel. The convention will end Wednesday.

that his association is co-operating -

will eventually be corrected. “But in the meantime,” he said,

knowledge and skill at dentistry can not be used: either: An the Army or civilian life. © fos

Dentist Per 1250 ; Soldiers

“We have made some progress in straightening this out, but it is not enough. Now, if a dentist is drafted into the Army as:a private he can : apply for a commission. But: hé then must. serve a year fromthe date. on which the commission is granted. “This situation comes up because the army has filled its dental corps. The army now has a dentist for about every 1250 soldiers. Even so, the law says that the dental corps in the army could- be large enough to provide a dentist for every 500 soldiers. “There aren’t enough dentists’ in civil life now. There are only 72, 000 dentists in the nation of 130,000,000 people. It’s important to the defense effort that the steel worker and the defense industry worker be kept healthy so that -he can work. The association holds no brief for the individual, but it does believe that the dental skill he possesses should be used in a way that it will benefit the country most, and surely that isn’t carrying a gun or Yigzing a ditch as an army private.”

Lesson in Words

- Dr. Robinson explained that- the army’s medical corps is not yet fully manned so that drafted doctors are not having the same trouble. as drafted dentists. After a morning spent attending scientific clinics, the exhibits and lecturers, the dentists this noon were addressed. by Elmer Wheeler, New York, head of the Tested Selling Institute. Mr, Wheeler bothers himself professionally about "which words sell things and which don’t. For ihstance, he is sure he knows how to arrest a ‘citizen so that the citizen will not be annoye . He told the den

i

3

becomeés known shout, its character}

d life, L

~ Yeaguye, declared in an address . Saturday at South Bend. = Speaking before the General Conference of the United Brethren Church, Mr. York asserted that the people of the United States have awakened to the fact that they havé been misled and that instead

of having 170,000 saloons as before

_¢ prohibition, we: now have 500,000 pisces ‘which are more vicious and ‘damaging than the old-type saloon

‘ NURSING CLASS TO MEET * A Red Cross home hygiene and

x ‘nursing class will meet for the first].

time at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the "Northeast Community Center, 30th and LaSalle ‘Sts. Mrs. Carl. F. amar, organizer of the group, will

{ Nationally Advertised Permanents *2;)

Shampoo & : Fingerwave 50¢ Beauty

Ruby Lee aaien”

7 Ave, Fy % aS 8 P. M. LNo Roos. Necessary.

its demaralizing effects ‘anf. a E! York, superin-} : :- tendent of the Indiana Anti-Saloon|

I [V]:] i

FURNITURE —CO.—

CLEA FE

RT . BEDROOM SUITE

Dr. Robinson said in an interview 100 per..cent with .the Army and ¢ that he expects: current difficulties i}

“they are taking dentists and turn- : ing them’ ifito privates where their §

Nafic onal Head ‘of Dentists Protests Against Skilled Men Into Army Privates| 0

31 others. Are -

|It anchored seven "miles off the

As the 84th annual convention of the Indiana State Dental Associa‘tion got under way at the Claypool Hotel today, these prominent men in the dental field conferred. Left to right they are Dr. R. N. Douglas, president-elect of the state association; Dr. Wilfred Robinson, Amer-. ican Dental Association president, and Dr. B. K. Westfall, retiring

state association president.

would watch what they said and how they said it, patients would be considerably better pleased after a session in the dentist's chair, even though théy have been hurt. “Don’t use the horror words— blood clot, scraping, drilling. If you have to refer to those conditions use pleasanter words. ! “Feature relief. A patient in dental trouble wants relief. He wants it now, too, and painlessly. Don’t ask a patient if he wants work to begin on a tooth at once. Ask him which tooth he wants work to be begun on. “If the dentist knows that a certain operation—that’s a word, by ‘the way, which never should be used —is going to hurt the patient, he should warn him. He should not deceive the patient, because then when the hurting part is over and the dentist says so, the patient does not believe him.” About that arresting painlessly. Mr. Wheeler, who is an honorary chief of the Indianapolis Police Department, says go about it this way: “The arresting officer should, when he approaches the motorist, tell him immediately what law he is violating. Then he’ should ask for the driver’s license. And, while he. is making out the ticket, he should notice something about the car and praise it—maybe the radio, or the

ists that if they Loreen job.”

°

EVA MORGAN DIES WEEK AFTER MATE

Just a week after the death of her husband, Mrs. Eva Morgan died yesterday at the home of her son, Hubert Morgan, at 3726 Creston Dr. Mrs. Morgan was 72 last Friday. She and her husband, who was John N. Morgan, had celebrated their 53d wedding anniversary in April, Mrs. Morgan had lived here 27 years. She was born in Trimble County, Kentucky, and came to Indiana 44 years ago. She was a member of the Broadway Baptist Church at 22d St. and Broadway. Survivors are five daughters, Mrs. Mattie Hinton, Mis. Mrs. Anna Williams, Mrs. Mary Koepper ‘and Mrs. Sarah Cavaness; another son, Thomas Morgan, and a sister, Mrs. Anna McAllister, all of Indianapolis. % Funeral services will be at 1 p. m. Wednesday at the J. C. Wilson Fu-

neral Home. Burial will be in Wash- |

ington Park Cemetery.

FLOATING STORE RESCUED GROVE, Okla. (U. P.).-——A crew of neighbors wearing hip boots . rescued C. M. Rebman’s filling station

and general store after it had floated off into Grand Lake.

IN THE

; lished today that seven of the 38 men,” women atid children aboard tHe pleasure boat: ‘Nightingale when, “|1t exploded off the coast yesterday, [couldn't swim and decided to take

.|buretor of one. There was an ex-

Lucy Ryker,’

“ Rescli “Whi e on ‘Outing off “South Carolina.

‘LTrTLE RIVER, S.C, May 1 WU. P)—A" coroner's" “jury -estub-

Soi 3,

their chances aboard the ship. They

were lost. ‘The 31 others survive. The Nightingale, 61 feet long, propelled by two gasoline motors, was chartered by a bottling ‘company giving an outing to its. employees.

coast so ‘the holidayers could fish. The motors wouldn’t start. The crew was tinkering with the car-

plosion, followed at once by a second one of even greater force as the gasoline :tank ‘containing. 120 gallons went up. The fishing boat Cadet was maneuvering in to take the Nightingale in tow and the Edward was in sight. Apparently the seven thought one or the other would take them off. The sea was too rough, however, but the 31 others were picked up from life rings and bits of wreckage to which they had been clinging. | The . survivors included Capt. ‘Douglas Sabiston and Don Mintz, his engineer. These men were the crew. The dead were E. R. Griffin and George R. Barfield Jr., Rocky Mount, N. C, and T. W. Cotharan, Shelton Lefler, GG. A, Barber and

fhe: Wars sigh ‘sewer pending. Ro 2 of complaints that some {lots had.

The cot 1plaint was made by: several ownirs of unplatted: “land “in the Wari eigh and" ple districts ‘vhich are served Ry he sewer. «A: majority. of : 40 property - ywners who ab “be-. fore ‘the Board at a hedfing. of.

not’ prote “the rates, however. Assess ent, rates proposed by the Board af dcted 1400 property own-

ers in \Varfleigh, Broad Ripple,

Meridian: Kessler Terrace and Arden Addition. The as sessmenis were scaled on

the ~sewe '. The proposed. assess= ments fo: ots abutting the sewer ‘was $164 per 100 square feet: - Charge: levied against lots “Biot abutting but Indirectly. sefved hy. the sewe: was $1.14 for the same area, whi e properties in Arden -Addition. wliere local sewers will be connectec to the Warfleigh drain ‘were asse sed 65 cents for the same area; Works Board members said that the assessments were computed to cover the entire cost of the Warfleigh drain and a lateral sewer running: under White River connecting vith Arden Addition. ' The

Leen assessed higher than, thetr-valy ation for taxing purposes.

the asses smeht this morfing did an initial = assessment .on lateral

-/drains and therefore would be

the basis of proximity of the lots to

»i| His “widow, and ‘another son, Nell,

total cost was $100,307. Roll ¥ vinted and ELM R DAVIS STUDIO:

Mr. Barber’s sons, Guy Jr., 20, and Jerry, 18, all of Salisbury, N. C.

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City- EB gineer ‘M. &. Johnson said r [that abiitting lots would pay the entire assessment for sewage service in tlie charges for the Warfleigh drain since these lots would be Lhooked up directly with the sewer by a local connection.

where a lateral sewer would be needed to hook into. the Warfleigh drain eventually would be assessed about the same as the abutting lots when the additional cost of lateral sewers is computed. Arden property already has stood

assessed only for secondary use of the Warfleigh main sewer.

‘FILM STAR'S FATHER DIES

HOLLYWOOD, May 19 (U. P.).— John E. Reagan, 56, father of film actor. Ronald Reagan, died at his home yesterday of a ljeart ailment.

survive. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Reagan were in Atlantic City, and were hurrying back by train for the funeral, which-probably will be held Thursday.

Property. not abutting the sewer

Md, May 16 (U.P. —Frederick-M, Sackett, former U. S.

| Senator from Kentucky and U. S. ‘| Ambassador to , died of | heart disease here yesterday. .

“A tele Roca Cleanser i in wash. | ing’ water makes clothes snow- * white without the work or wear of hard rubbing. 1000, ,000 home

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oe Iv whitens clothes YR

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