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bar is Conclave's Busiest Spoti f .m'. ':> aL .-sSPEkIISm >oP, :y y^ : ■• W- ' The bar in the Geological Museum in London, where world economic conference is being held, was enlarged before the conclave, but is being kept busy “when jolly good fellows get together” in conference inter ludes. Delegates from Chile and Bolivia are seen having “just one more.” TROOPS CALLED OUT IN GEORGIA .at i' • V jfi: ;W , | f 'J&%9 ■*'\ jp. %* s ; *ij^HHlfL ll ; r 'V q ; tS : w;o<vfcf\ft«;sw-A 1 Vj '*' > . .. i 3 "• * * ■■■—■■■■—■■■. ■■..*. Climaxing a two months’ quarrel with the state highway commis sion, Gov. Eugene Talmadge of Georgia has declared the state government in Atlanta under martial law. The action was de signed to retrasr $2,000.0 00 in salaries due to highway employes. . Highway officials had obtained an Lindy Home for Child Welfare Childish laughter and the patter of baby feet will once more resound through this house of tragedy, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh, from which their child was kidnaped in March, house and estate of 350 acres on Sourland Mountain, near Hopewe , N. J., is being transformed into an institution for the welfare ot cnii* .dren. The Lindberghs will be trustee*. HIJACKERS shoot boy to death beer hijackers mistook a ! °a ( i of cabbage for beer on a r *i|?hw;iy between London and Ky., and opened fire u P°ri the truck, nine-year-old liobtrt Miracle of Loyall, Ky.» is injunction preventing the gover nor from removing the highway funds from banks to the state treasury. Photos show troops guarding the entrance to the high way building and the governor, right, giving his orders of martial law to Lfndtey Camp, adjutant irenera! of the state. dead from two bullet wound* The boy was riding with the driver, John Hill, who was not hurt. The hijackers fled, thoto shows the truck and the two b»>' let holes in the windshield. —HENDERSON, (N.C.T DAILY DISPATCH, FRIDAY,. JUNE 30, 1938 1 WHEN A PRESIDENT GOES FOR A VACATION CRUISE f " —■—.^____ .■" - • * I : ;,:' . ■. ~':> vs-:, ' :: : ' : S : '' ' > ' \ • • •,.. ' : '‘V ‘‘ ' : - • ’ ' .. ■•• ■■ ' ;:■■ ' ' • | , f < : ’ : : * ’ b * 4 j }u ■ 4 ii§i *? * * : i«ru i— i ;% I, | ! lirsfe* ~1 * < A < ' ' v > v v < : ;:; : i.;: <s? ,.-:~ y°&Sßsgr2^ ':... .„..,„ .... .... • xw : ~. .. . ;.-. **• W-:::- C :. ^ y :rlV » <r-:.^rrr ^".'" President Roosevelt is not cut off entirely from the outside world duiing his vacation cruise i., New England waters. Thi* shows the All Europe is watching dramatic battle of Premier Dollfuss to prevent Nazis from gaining upper hand in Austria and making it a vassal state of the Hitler government in Germany. Dollfuss (arrow), seen with British official who bid him goodbye, hurried back to Vienna from London economic conference, to*order arrest of Alfred Frauenfeld (left), Austrian Nazi leader, after new outrages" of. •:'. Hitlerites, such as the bombing of the Jewish .stora “Hak.” in Vienna, shown h- v What Lindberghs Will See Flying in Greenland Aerial photo of “Greenland’s icy mountains” near coast, made by a previous trail-blazer, shows the ter ritory over which Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh will fly in mapping a new northern mail and na- sender route to Europe. Monster flying boats are being constructed for regular service over tha P b routs, which will extend via Iceland and Denmark. BARGE-LINE TOW OPENS LA KES-TO-GULF WATERWAY Elaborate ceremonies attended the dedication of the Great Lakes to-Gulf waterway in Chicago, as the first barge-line tow fi'om New Orleans to the Windy City made schooner Ambei’jack 11, whose master is the nation’s chief execu tive, heading into Gloucester port (Mass.) and closely followed its appearance in the Chicago t river, above. It marks the link ing of Chicago with 3,300 miles of navigable rivers and the opening of vast markets to the by the coast guard boat Cuya hoga. Other boats carry news papermen, detectives and Stephen Early, president’s secretary. south. At left is Secretary of War George H. delivering the dedication* speech in Chicago; at right, Speaker Henry T. Rainey, a native of Illinois- A Good Gardening j&j Azaleas as House Plants By DEAN HALLIDAY Central I’ress Garden Expert FLOW Est LOVERS who grow azaleas tn their homes are worried frequently because the plants drop thetf buds and leaves. They wonder what carr be done about 1L Azaleas which are grown in the house need a great deal of water, and since they are planted in a soil com posed chiefly of peat moss or leaf mold and sand, they are well drained and can stand frequent watering. If your plant becomes dried out. this might be the cause of its buds and leaves dropping; also, if the air in a house is quite warm, the buds and leaves fall. Azaleas grown in a green house have a fairly cold,, damp at mosphere. and a sudden change to the dry air of a house would be suf ficient to cause the dropping of buds and leaves. This freauentlv hauoens Talking Things Over—But What't WPWM|f» The nature of the “Democratic” conversation that ensued when James J Walker, former mayor of New York (left), and James M. Cox, one-time Presidential nominee, met at the world economic conference in London, wasn’t reported, although Jimmy is over there as reporter. Cox is there as delegate AWARDED DEGREE 72 YEARS LATE Major Mason Just 72 years after he should have received his A. B. degree from the University of Michigan, Major George Mason, 93-year-old Chicago manufacturer, is award ed his diploma by President Alex ander Ruthven. rieht. in Ann Ar- Makes live. Solves Television An invention of Dr. Vladimir K. Zworykin, of the RCA-Victor labora tones, Camden, N. J., ;*hfc iconoscope, which duplicates the human eye is hailed as the development awaited to make television practical for thehoraa ,It was revealed fct the annual convention of the Institute of Radio Engineers. It eliminates all mechanical parts of the televisof such as scanning discs, motors, optical systems, sources of light ariH similar devices, now employed. Dr. Zworykin is shown with one of tWe " artificial — ; | PAGE SEVEN to plants that undergo changes, as it is a protective measure until the p'ants have become accustomed to the new conditions. In order to keep azaleas healthy, they should be placed in a cool room where the air is moist; they need very little direct sunlight In the summer, plunge the pot into the soil outdoors, in some shady place or on the north side of the house. If the ground becomes dry during the sum mer, as it may even in a shady place* be sure to see that the plant has water. In the fail before the weathei becomes cold, bring it into the house so as to accustom it gradually to the air of the house. Keep it growing, and as the flower buds swell, give It plenty of water. With careful treat ment. you should be able to keep your plant for years. The original Kurume azalea is said to be a plant now over 100 years old and still ilourishinsr President Ruthven bor. A senior at Michigan itt 1861, Mason left college to fight for the preservation of the union. By special decree of the univer sity board of regents Mason is now possessor of the degree which should have-been his at 21.