Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 November 1941 — Page 8

“Jimmy Will Enjoy It and

Is Notas Expensive as You Might Think.

By TIM TIPPETT This is a tip to the mothers and dads who may be wondering what _to buy Jimmy for Christmas. Why not start him out on photography? He'll get a lot of fun ‘out of it, so

"will you and it’s not as expensive

a proposition :as you may think.

“Of course some mothers: may:

think that he will smash the camera through carelessness, or that he will

make an awful mess around the house, ‘and that “all that junk” will

be a storage: problem.

In the first place don’t buy an expensive camera. Start him off with a box camera, using size 120 or 116 film. Preferably 120. It is cheaper, more tanks will fit it, but it is big enough so you can: ge contact prints large enough to be some good. .

Needs Few Supplies

All he needs then is a developing tank, a bottle of developer, a bottle of hypo, a red’ bulb, three trays, a couple of squeegee tins, some paper, and a printing frame. They will all go in one rather small drawer. A little contact printing box is better than the frame, but that can come later, They cost from about $5 on up. Let him shoot just one roll a week. Work with him at the start, to show him the tidy way to work. Believe it- or not but it’s a quieter hobby than that of carpentry, playing the ukulele or some such interest. If you start your son out on photography yeu may be surprised at the subjects he snaps because he is interested in them. Children are sof, Ihartic ate and reserved. His pic-|10 ‘prove to you how wide his interests really are. #2 2 J Add suggestion for Christmas: A plastic darkroom light is made of the popular methyl methacrylate resin. Enough coloring matter is|¢, introduced into the material while being made to give it the proper spectral transmission required and with the adequate amount of diffusing material. The filters are made in green, for panchromatic materials, and red for orthochromatic plates and films. tA friend of ours just the other informed us that he has at last olved the developer-mixing prob-

“Jem—he uses an egg-beater.

“Well,” we said, “yes and then again no,” which is our favorite answer to anything we’re not sure of. It just seems that this method while doing a good job mixing no doubt, would probably fill the solution with air bubbles which would oxidize your chemicals and the bubbles would probably still be in the soup when ne © We are going to stick :to the old paddie-stir ethed for awhile anyOW, :

publican Club will hold a card party

snapped on infra red film with a red filter, 25th of a second exposure at F:8. The film was Eastman. Note the absence of smoke and fog and of distance haze. All three factors were there when the shot was made but the

A close examination of this view, taken east from the Merchants Bank Building, readily shows why infra red film is used

so. extensively in military phos tography. The Picture was

WASHINGTON TWP.

film and filter ignored them, pick- , ing up sharp details for several ' miles. No visible light was recorded on the film for only infra red could pass the filter. Infra red film costs only slightly mare than ordinary film and is fairly

Oslo Telephone Book Keeps

CLUB: PLANS PARTY| Royal Numbers, Despite Nazis|

i - The Washington Township Re By DAVID M. NICHOL

at.8 p. m. Monday in the clubroom, Conyrie & "Tus Chicago Dally pe Ta - 61st St. and College Ave. BERN, Nov. 20—Oslo’s new teleMrs. Fred W. Myers,’chairman of | ng book apparently is destined social activities, announced the fol- to become a collector's item accordTickets: Bh. @. Shaw, [ine So an t in the Bemer chairman; Mesdames Charles JKel- | L2sWacht, providing any copies of logg, ~Keneth 'Dotterer, Charles|ihe first edition survive. ‘ J. e Riddle, R. M, How-| Five thousand copies of the newly ar ey W. Johnson Jr, Thea printed directory had been distribTicknor, Sarah Wager, Marion Ab- uted when German officials discovered that it still listed the tele-

bett, Jane Pegg and Claude Matphone number of exiled King Haa-

thews. : Table arrangements: Mrs, Vera kon’s aide and also that of the ad‘jutant to Crown Prince Olaf, as

Cones, chairman; Mrs, Charles M. Dawson and Mrs. Roy Stebbing. Spesial arrangements: Mrs, G. F. Kleder, chairman; Mrs. O, P. Ren- | Well chen, Mrs. Harry O. Chamberlin, |phones in royal quarters, the Bern Gane, Das. Wiliams Besos Mo paper ss x m n, S ; - William F. Elliott and Mrs. John| 1c, distributed copies were im Niblack. mediately recalled and it was at Candy: . Mrs. George Arnold,|first planned to reprint the entire chairman; Mrs. Frank Dilling, Mrs. | edition. Josie Hall, Mrs. Arthur Hutto, .|be too costly and long drawn out. Pauline Defibaugh, Mrs, R. A.|Finally, the account declares,’it was Glaubke, Mrs. Edith Schloot, Mrs. decided to cut out each of the ofJohn Bowen, Mrs. R. E. Doriot, Mrs. | fending pages and paste in newly Helen McGeehan and Mrs. Wilbur| printed single sheets. Royse. ; The process has not yet ‘been Refreshments: Mrs. = Herbert | completed and Oslo is still using Krauch, chairman; Emily Engle, |the April, 1940, directory anteLulu Dugan, Madison Talbott, John |dating the invasion with | such Colwell, anomolies as these, according to the Mr, and Mrs. Paul Tegarden will|account: be host and hostess for the party. | Pro-Nazi leader Maj. Vikdun

as a number of other tele-{:

The process was found to

Quisling’s newspaper, Pritt: Folk, 1s| not listed and one calls the numPer of the Arbeiterbladef, formerly the chief organ of the Norwegian) Labor - Party; the newly founded “Culture” has the number of the former Labor Party’s central office, while the technical office of

'| sue, a survey. by the

easy to handle. Infra red lamps are on the market. Strictly: a blackout flash, the bulbs emit only

a soft red glow so with film and:

bulb you can snap shots in come plete darkness and with no one

the wiser,

1k hl

the National Samling (Quisling’s}|

party) is quartered in and still listed as the central bureau of the dissolved Conservative Party. Likewise the book includes all

members of the former Government. ‘and royal household.

S. SIDERS TO DISCUSS MOVING OF MANUAL

South Siders will meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow at .the South Side Community Center, 1233 Shelby St. to discuss ‘the: proposal to move Manual Training High School to a new and more desirable location. South Side parents, teachers and the general public are invited.

Opinions Api Apart.

NEW YORK; Nov. 20 (U. P).—|& Federal ‘laws both uphold and outlaw closed shops and * Sours de [be t - \ ons -are at variance: ne he, ¢ elechrio n he of research e “man whirred ong, past hambers |

Century Fund, a. privates ir which fellow workers

clauses in labor - e top. the Ratway Labor Act bars ioe Wo figelg, ar “man’ ri | Sloe Shop y forbidding vompul-| t trains that dafly takes theminers out of the pits Lak the end of sahil, But this time

| Qifterett different because among the fund’s ay director, ‘said | its passengers were the men of an-

about one-third of the employees! e, industries work: under Thwarted by pickets from enter-

ing their own “opening,” the dus- the miners of Red Lion—had by auto to Grindstone, where they 34| hopped a cage down into the mines and backtracked under ground to their own pits four miles away. From 4,000,000 to 6,000,000 work-| “It's peaceful down there,” one of ers in the 10 industries are union|the miners grinned after he had members, representing about 40 per|stepped off the cage at the end of cent, of the country’s total union|the day. “No picketing there”

‘membership, the report said. Only the 53,000 miners involved|chuckled. “Boy, will they be mad!”

-| per cent of their employees in closed or union shops,

“Guess we showed ’em,” another for information leading to

[capacity

it 104 by The e_ Chicago, Dal!

the “man trip” at the |

© isabotage on railroads and fact in the Paris area.and with crops afire, : Paris police, however, med have missed one of the a certain Gilbert Brustlein, whose description appears in all the Dems: ; papers here. : An “adequate reward” is promised : his cape ents ofe

ture. Among the in

in the current strike situation do! For “they”<a band of roving pickets|fered is liberation of a war prison . not work under: union 8 Shep clauses, | from other mines jn this Western er of the informants choice, : A

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