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GANDHI MARCHES IN PROXY —A poster image of Mahatma Gandhi is marched through Bom- bay streets as sympathizers mark the beginning of the sixth month of the Indian leader’s imprison- ment. —— YOUNGEST QUEEN—Eula Faye Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. Williams of Altus, Okla., although only 35 months old, is a queen. Her title comes from having been adjudged 99.3 per cent perfect at state fair con- test, NEW SOVIET ENVOY—Leo M. Khinchuk is the new Russian am- bassador to Germany, He was a professional revolutionist during the czarist regime. & FIRST BIRTHDAY—The infant Princess Taka-no-Miya Kazuko, youngest child of the Emperor and Empress of Japan, is photo- graphed on her first birthday. SHOOTING STAR SHOOTS TOO CLOSE—Lawrence Swank, 17, of Crawfordsville, Ind., points to hole in his automobile caused by a fragment of a meteor that missed him by inches. ? Wrd ik MACHINE AGE IN RUSSIA, TOO—Soviet women are seen at work in an electrical machinery plant in Moscow, Russia. This particular plant has announced completion of its production program for the second year of the five-year program, finishing 19 days ahead of schedule and exceeding by 1,700 its quota of motors. / LY Zal WITH HER MAGAZINE—Miss Bess Robbins White, editor of the World Call, largest missionary magazine in the world, is snapped — at the national convention of the GIVE 'EM A HAND—Members of the University of Southern California Trojan band initiate their Disciples of Christ in Washing- new musicians in Los Angeles by “giving the little boys a big hand.” Director Harold Roberts is at left. ton, D. C. MAKE. NEW GRAVE FOR SUNKEN SHIP—This unusual photo is an aerial view of 50,000 tons of dynamite being exploded at the entrance to New York harbor, off Staten Island, in effort to blow the wreck of the sunken steamer Victoria into a hole so deep that it would no longer be a menace to navigation. — AN CONTENTS T{{E COW NOW—Brooke John, who used to delight , Broadway with his banjo as a star of revues, now uses his instru- ment to content his cow on his farm near Washington, D. C, Shown with Mr. John are Mrs. John and their children, Brooke, Jr., John and Sonny Jim, WOULD SAVE MANY LIVES—Dr. Yandell Henderson, professor of applied physiology at Yale university, has invented a resuscita- tion device consisting of oxygen and carbon dioxide that can be used in all cases where air is the greatest factor in the saving of life. Professor Henderson believes that between 25,000 and 50,000 chil- dren who annually die at birth or in the first two or three weeks can be saved if the same method of resuscitation now used by fire- men, swimming instructors and hospitals is followed. TO TOP OFF HER CAREER— Miss May Mott-Smith, who hds achieved fame as an explorer, art+ ist, author, sculptor and jewelry designer, plans to penetrate the wilds of interior Brazil. JOINS HUSBAND—Mrs. Theo-' dore Roosevelt, wife of the gover- nor general of Porto Rico, sails to rejoin her husband. PHOTOGRAPHS HUMAN STOMACH—A strange camers, invented in Vienna, Austria, which photographs the interior of human stom- ach, is demonstrated in Chicago by Dr. John Falenks, its inventor. The camera is called a gastro photor and is used while attached to a stomach pump. oy | )