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Najran Abar Hima site. If you're a lover of those kinds of carvings, go in KSA, you do not even have to search, they are everywhere on many old areas! And local people respect them, so they are very well preserved.

 

© Eric Lafforgue

www.ericlafforgue.com

keep on writing Inok !

Experimenting.

 

I'm planning on doing a series of night photography (not all with light writing), but got to Cable Bay much later than I wanted to tonight. So these are practice shots... I will eventually do the work on film with my Hassy.

ready to start the graphic project

Fábrica da Pólvora

Barcarena, Portugal

 

www.cm-oeiras.pt/amunicipal/OeirasDiverte/Cultura/Museu/c...

 

20110219_500D_IMG_1493_Barcarena

Public Domain: Studio handbook lettering over 250 pages, lettering, design and layouts, new alphabets

 

archive.org/details/studio00welo

The Blue Shingle

DUNES HI-WAY

FAMOUS - ORIGINAL

BARBECUE

KUMBACK SAUCE

3 MILES WEST OF MICHIGAN CITY, IND.

 

COMPLETE LINE OF

WINES & LIQUORS

TOURISTS CABINS

 

Source Type: Matchcover

Publisher, Printer, Photographer: Unknown

Collection: Steven R. Shook

Remark: The Blue Shingle Barbecue operated near Tremont, Indiana, from 1930 to the early 1950s. The following newspaper article concerning the murder of an employee of The Blue Shingle Inn was published on May 26, 1961, in The Vidette-Messenger, Valparaiso, Porter County, Indiana [page 1, columns 1 and 2, and page 7, columns 3, 4, and 5]:

 

'Blue Shingle Murder' of 1931 Is All But Forgotten

By THE STROLLER

 

Porter County's "Blue Shingle Murder" in 1931 was called "the crime of its time," but today it is a forgotten incident.

 

Here is the story as revealed by an informant.

 

The victim was a middle aged man known as Harry Schumell, or Jerry Shumal. He was a short-order cook, waiter, and general factotum in several Porter county restaurants and taverns. [Note: The victim's name was Harry M. Schmuhl]

 

During the summer of 1931 he was working for James Pollard, who owned a place on Dunes' Highway called "The Blue Shingle."

 

On Sept. 15, during the mid-afternoon doldrums, an inconspicuous Ford card bearing an Indiana license drove up at the Inn. It contained three rather commonplace men and a young blond woman, attired in a smart, tailored pongree suit and a floppy wide brimmed straw hat.

 

Stop At Inn

 

It was too late in the season for Indiana women to be still wearing such mid-summer attire. Besides that, it was a goods and style that had been in vogue a year or so before.

 

Stopping at the Blue Shingle Inn, the girl surreptitiously got out and peered into the window, then returned to the car with a report of some kind. Then all four got out and went into the dining room and ordered sandwiches and coffee.

 

When Jerry Shumal, the lone employee in the place returned with a tray, the three men leveled pistols at him, and shot simultaneously. Then they coolly departed. Intentionally or otherwise, one of the pistols, a revolver type of .32 calibre, was left on the floor beside the victim.

 

The quartette -- or at least the three men -- gathered up sandwiches, stopped momentarily to pour themselves a quick cup of coffee, and piled back into the car, and returned westward munching their sandwiches as they traveled.

 

Finds Wounded Man

 

A few minutes later a random customer entered the place, and found the injured man struggling to crawl across the blood-saturated floor, toward the telephone. The stranger attempted to ask the victim a question or two, but got only a mumbled response, "Three men, three guns, three shots, Louisville, sheriff . . . ."

 

So the stranger called the Michigan City police station for an ambulance and officers. Then he quietly departed. For some reason he was not inclined to be questioned by officers nor interviewed by newspapermen.

 

The Michigan City police car and the ambulance arrived in a short time, and for the first time the other roadside stands and lunch counters learned that there had been a shooting. The victim, Jerry Shumal, died in the ambulance.

 

Abruptly the officers realized they were in Porter county. They called Sheriff Burney Maxwell, who came to the scene at once. Jointly the officers made an investigation. The assumed that the injured man had done the telephoning, for the blood marks on the floor showed how he had dragged himself to the phone shelf.

 

Get Description

 

It was from a nearby roadside stand that they got a description of the Ford car and its occupants, and of its hurried departure. After going over the description in detail the officers agreed that this was not a gangster killing -- for those individuals were always too well dressed, and always traveled in a Cadillac or other expensive car. This had been a more or less rustic outfit.

 

No one ever further identified Jerry Shumal. He left no papers, and there was nothing to indicate his family. He was buried in the charity section of the Michigan City cemetery. [Harry M. Schmuhl is buried in Greenwood Cemetery. Cemetery records indicate that he died at the age of 29 years.]

 

For several weeks the case attracted widespread attention. Inquiries in Chicago led to the vague information that a young woman of th officer's description had bought a ticket someplace in the south, via the Illinois Central about Sept. 16.

 

The car used by the murderers had been stolen in Gary and was later found abandoned in the South Shore parking lot. Evidently the three men immediately separated, for there was no trace of any three-man group hanging around Gary.

 

Perfect Alibi

 

For a time the owners of the Blue Shingle Inn was sought. But when he was finally located he had a perfect alibi. He had been in jail at Sycamore, Ind., on a bootlegging charge, from a day before the murder to some 10 days afterwards.

 

I don't suppose anyone at the time ever figured that he had deliberately courted arrest and had engineered his own incarceration, to make an airtight alibi -- but that is exactly what he did. He had been tipped off that his employee was going to be bumped off at a certain day and time -- and he was warned not to put the victim wise or in any way warn him of his impending death.

 

Maybe you wonder how I know so much. Well that's simple. I happened to be the stranger who discovered Shumal's condition and phoned the Michigan City police. It just happened that I knew Pollard and had stopped in to see him.

 

It was two or three years later that Pollard told me what he knew of the story. It wasn't much of a tale. This man known as Shumal was a Louisville "executioner" for a mob down there. He was doing the Barber trade, organizing them and boosting their rates, and taking a weekly rake-off. One shop operated by the brother of the 'tall man' in the trio of murderers, refused to sign up, and Shumal shot him down.

 

Sees Shooting

 

Those Kentucky families don't do much complaining to the police, but they are determined feudists. The beauty-shop operator in the back of the shop had seen Shumal enter and shoot the barber.

 

A cousin, an uncle, and the brother, accompanied by the girl, came to Porter county to 'get' Shumal -- whose name by the way, had been Senigall. He worked in Valparaiso and Michigan City for perhaps five years.

 

From what I can gather this search had been going on all this time.

 

On Nov. 18 The Vidette-Messenger printed this final report on the case: "County officials have received word back from the factory the gun and the three shells found on the floor of the Blue Shingle Inn at the time of the Shumal killing. The factory experts say positively that three different weapons were used."

 

Just why one pistol was left on the floor beside the victim is a matter of mystery, continued the informant. But to me the answer is simple: That gun was probably the one the "executioner" had used to kill the Louisville barber.

 

Well, that's the story. It may or may not be the correct one. But it's the best one of the several that were attached to the killing -- the story of the Blue Shingle Murder.

 

[Note: "The Stroller," author of this newspaper column, was William O. Wallace. William was born November 13, 1888, in Kentucky, and died October 17, 1962. He and his wife, Eugenia, died of carbon monoxide poisoning in their garage in Liberty Township, Porter County, Indiana; both are buried in Rosehill Cemetery in Chicago. William was a printer, teacher, and columnist, writing over 700 columns concerning Porter County history for The Vidette-Messenger. It is known that many of the columns that Mr. Wallace wrote contained embellished "facts," as well as outright speculation. The accuracy of the column transcribed above is unknown.]

 

------

 

The following new item appeared in the May 19, 1927, issue of The Chesterton Tribune

 

LOCAL-SOCIAL-PERSONAL

James H. Powers, proprietor of the Blue Stand barbecue, in the Pines, on the West Dunes highway, left Saturday by automobile for Popular Bluffs, Mo., where his wife and daughter, Gloria, have been making their home since last March. Since the terrible storm the middle of last week, which took such a heavy toll of life, Mr. Powers has been unable to get in tough with the family. Letters and telegrams have failed to obtain information. The district in which Mrs. Powers was living was the hardest hit by the storm. Authorities have not been able to check up on the actual list of dead and missing persons.

 

Source:

The Chesterton Tribune, Chesterton, Porter County, Indiana; May 19, 1927; Volume 44, Number 10, Page 5, Column 4. Column titled "Local-Social-Personal."

 

Copyright 2014. Some rights reserved. The associated text may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of Steven R. Shook.

Paris, January 2012.

Eight owls, one a cross dresser

So, you might know about my whole Dark Beyond thing. Its pretty bad so far, I'm just making it up as I go along haha

 

So I've started re-writing the script and will publish the video on YouTube soon.

 

I haven't finished writing, but I need voices for the following:

 

John Blake/Batman (American)

Dr Victor Fries/ Mr. Freeze (Me)

The boss (Mob Boss) (American)

Commissioner Gordon (Like DKT but older sounding)

More soon :)

Todos los derechos reservados, cualquier reproducción digital debe citar la fuente. Prohibida la reproducción total o parcial sin permiso.

My husband of 7 years made me a list of all of the things he loves about me <3

Does anyone know what the writing at the bottom says?

"Paper is versatile and malleable. From napkins to origami, it's all around. Make a photo of something made of paper."

  

Keio University is a private, comprehensive higher education institution located on six campuses spread across the Greater Tokyo area. It offers an environment of academic and research excellence in a wide range of fields, and includes a university hospital. Founded in 1858, it is Japan’s first modern institution of higher learning, and over the last century and a half it has established itself as a leader in Japan through its continued commitment to education, research and medicine.

 

Keio has its origins in the school of Western learning established by Yukichi Fukuzawa, a school which soon evolved into a major center of learning. As a highly respected educator and intellectual, Fukuzawa was one of the pioneers of modern Japan. He aspired for Keio to become a model and leader of society, stressing the importance of learning that is based on jitsugaku, or “science”. In today’s changing world, Keio upholds its founder’s spirit of science as it continues to fulfill his aspiration.

I don't allow Hannah playing pens or pencils since I think it is very danger to get hurt (when in my childhood, I almost make my cousin blind due to playing pens)....

But when she grows up and start learning in school, I try to loose my rule and let her use pens, pencils or crayon when adults are here, wish she understand my intention....

 

Camera for the photo : Sony NEX-7

Lens for the photo : Sony E 35mm f/1.8 OSS

Autor: Society of Gentlemen

  

Descripción bibliográfica: A new and complete dictionary of arts and sciences : comprehending all the branches of useful knowledge, ... Illustrated with above three hundred copper-plates, ... The whole extracted from the best authors in all languages / By a society of gentlemen. - The second edition, with many additions, and other improvements. - London : printed for W. Owen, 1763-64. - 4 v. (1064,1061-3506 p.), il.: lám. ; 8º

 

Notas: Grab. calc. representando a Minerva: "S. Wale invt. et delin., C. Grignion sculp."

 

Localización: fama.us.es/record=b2656185~S5*spi

  

Vea la ilustración en su contexto

Terry came over and finished the sign writing yesterday and what a lovely job he has done.

We had to wait a week for him to return and do the black shadow work which really sets the writing off.

Notice the period tax disc and the 'C' licence in the window.

Now that you don't have to display a current tax disc, you can now put a period one in the window which is a nice touch.

Business card prop from the TV show Suits. If you're wondering, that address puts it in the East River. They actually shoot in Toronto. I know, I'm blowing your mind.

I'm hoping that someone may be able to make something of this writing.

My postcard series for Surface Research with the theme, “Wish You Were Here”. See the rest of the series on my Tumblr.

The trips of the sun Re through the sky.These daily travels from west to east and from east to west are made aboard a boat upon which the sun embark.

There was nothing to write with or on in my room last night. At 4 AM I used lipstick on the mirror to write a note about a marvelously interesting dream I did not want to forget.

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