Movie Makers (Jan-May 1928)

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Thotographed by Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson with a Dallmeyer Telephoto Len : This Telephoto Lens gives "close-ups" at 200 feeti Made Specially for FILMO At some time on any trip you will wish for a Telephoto Lens, and if you have one, it will give a brand new z;est to picture taking. So many views that are now too far off to photograph at all, will become the subjects of fascinating "close-ups", when you give your Filmo this telescopic eye. Not only for nature studies but for views across valleys, from mountain tops, of the distant shore from aboard ship or of shy children from a distance, you need a Dallmeyer Telephoto Lens to complete the enjoyment and usefulness of your Filmo. DALLMEYER. TELEPHOTO LENSES 4 inch $80.00 6 inch $95.00 This lens will fill the frame at 130 feet distance. Camera can be held in hands. This lens will fill the frame at 200 feet. A tripod must be used for good results. At Your Dealer or By Mail With Full Guarantee HERBERT & HUESGEN CO. Sole United States Distributors 18 EAST 42nd STREET — {near Grand Central) — NEW YORK Seventy Don Bennett is an authority on amateur cinematography associated with the Educational Division of the Stanley Advertising Co., New York City. Jane Budden, whose satiric pen has frequently enlivened these pages, is an author residing in Dedham, Massachussets. Raymond L. Ditmars is a distinguished scientist and cinematographer as well as Curator of Mammals and Reptiles of New York Zoological Park. Ross F. George is a national authority on lettering and titling, inventor of the Speedball Pens and author of the Speedball Text-Books, living in Seattle, Washington. Marion Norris Gleason is Director of the Rochester Community Players, Rochester, New York, author of a book of home scenarios soon to be published, and was director of the famous amateur photoplay, Fly Low Jack and the Game. E. G. Lutz is author of "Animated Cartoons, How They Are Made, Their Origin and Development," "The Motion-Picture Cameraman," "Practical Pictorial Composition, a Guide to the Appreciation of Pictures" and other works. His home is in Dumont, New Jersey. W. T. McCarthy is an architect of Brooklyn, N. Y., and an advanced amateur cinematographer whose practical suggestions are always of great aid to fellow amateurs. K. L. Noone, as well as being an author of delightful fantasies, is also the very practical and successful Advertising Manager of Amateur Movie Makers. Arthur Newton Pack is President of the American Nature Association, and Associate Editor of Nature Magazine. His residence is Princeton, New Jersey. Edna MacDonald Serrem of Raritan Arsenal, Raritan, New Jersey, reports that she was born in the Army and has always lived in the Army, traveling with it over much of the world. Her hobby is writing. Barclay H. Warburton, Jr., of New York and Philadelphia, is one of the country's most skilled amateur cinematographers, and contributing to the advance of the motion picture is one of his major interests. He assisted Allan Dwan in the direction of East Side, West Side.