526 
SCOUTING FOR GIRLS 
7. What position in relation to the sun should a photographer 
take when exposing a film? 
8. Should a shutter be operated slowly? If so, why? 
9. What causes buildings in a picture to look as if they were falling? 
10. What precautions should be taken when reloading a camera and 
taking out an exposed film? 
11. What is an enlargement? How is it made? 
12 . What are the results of under exposure and over exposure? 
13. What are the results of failing to take the proper camera dis- 
tance, having improper light and allowing the camera to move? 
14. If there is more than one method of exposing a film what deter- 
mines the method to be used? 
REFERENCES: 
“How to Make Good Pictures/' Eastman Kodak Company. 
“The Photo Miniature/' such numbers as appear to be needed* 
“Nature and the Camera,'' A. R. Dugmore, Doubleday. 
“Photography for Young People/' T. Jenks, Stokes. 
“Why My Photographs Are Bad/' C. M. Taylor, Jacobs. 
1. Tell four things that must be considered when choosing a camp 
site. 
2 . Know how to use a saw, an axe, a hatchet. 
3. Know how to select and fell a tree for building or fuel purposes. 
Know a fork and sapling and their uses. 
4. Build or help three others to build a shack suitable for four 
occupants. 
5. Make a latrine, an incinerator, a cache. 
6. Make a fire place for heating and cooking purposes and cook a 
simple meal over it. 
7. Know how to tell the directions of the wind. 
8. Know how to mark a trail. 
9. Tell what to do to make water safe for drinking if there is any 
question as to its purity. 
REFERENCES : 
“Camping and Woodcraft,'' Horace Kephart, Macmillan. 
“On The Trail/' E. Beard, Scribner. 
“Vacation Camps For Girls/' Jeannette Marks, D. Appleton. 
The Girl Scout's Camp, Pub. by Nat. Hdqrs. Girl Scouts. 
SYMBOL— AXES 
PIONEER*** 
PICK AND SHOVEL 
ROCK TAPPER 
SYMBOL— 
1 
Collect and correctly identify ten rocks found among the glacial 
boulders. 
