Zurich Herald, 1947-02-20, Page 51%. ( /nl.••':,'in IF.M1M wxVi. �:%
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PICT
+:11orld Bank Boss
LE
Y
A ROYAL GOODBYE
OF WEE
Washington sources report that
,'Tolin 3. McCloy, noted New
York tax attorney and former
assistant secretary of war, wilt
accept presidency of the $10,-
000,000,000 World Bank. lie sue-
, ;reeds, in the tax-free, $30,000-a-
' year job, Eugene Meyer, who
resigned in December.
TO NETHERLANDS
The English Royal family bids goodbye to friends and relatives at- London's WaterlooPo
Station
as
Mhry
eave on the first leg of their journey to Africa. King George (in naval cap) kisses
ie
ouise. Princess Elizabeth (center in light colored hat) says goodbye to Princess Alice and Queest
lizabetb (right, le Light hat and coat) kisses Lady ]Patricia Ramsay. Princess
Margaret Rose is at extreme left,
A VETERAN PREPARES FOR THE LAST VOYAGE
LY
WS
HE'S IN THE MONEY
George Fazio, of Los Angeles, holding the Seagram Gold Cup after
winning ,the. Canadian Open last July in an. 18 -hole playoff for the
highest honors of Canadian golf. He's been doing all right since,
A compilation of his winnings shows that in the last few months
he has earned more than $5,000 in prize money.
SIAMESE TWINS ARE CHINESE
Zierman B. Baruch, currently U.S.
ambassador to Portugal, has been
ed ambassador to the Nether -
i=
ids. He is a brother of famed
, hite House adviser Bernard M.
Baruch.
RARE SCENE
Sold for $46,000, the hulk of the USS Oklahoma is shown at naval anchorage, Pearl Harbor, being
fitted for the last voyage. When ready, the ship will end up on the scrap heap at Moore Drydock,'
Oakland, Calif. The Oklahoma was sunk in the first 10 minutes of the Jap attack on Pearl Harbor
in 1941 and was raised in 1943, but since the n has lain idle, stripped of once -mighty guns.
CANADIENS BEAT TORONTO 2-0
Seldom have you seen a picture
showing Betty Hutton, explosive
°bombshell' songstress, in such re-
pose. Betty quieted down so she
end husband, Ted Briskin, could
get in on first picture taken of their
daughter, 2 -month- old Lindsay
Diana Briskin.
ATOMIC HIKER
The six -month-old Siamese twins, pictured above with an uniden-
tified woman, were brought to a Shanghai hospital for medical treat-
ment by Chinese parents who refused to identify themselves. The
babies appear normal except for the spinal cartilege that links them.
But when one sleeps, the othe.• is awake and when one cries the
other smiles.
HER FUTURE CAREER—AGRICULTURALIST
Bill Durnan seems to be completely unconcerned, almost prayful, as he holds a puck he just stopped
off a close slut from Bill Eaiuicki, who in turn gets and engages in a wood massage with Glen Har-
mon (8), Gravelle (20) and Roger Leger watch the proceedings,
4 Pi
Nearly a World Record
Bearded, and looking like anything
but the top-flight scientist he is,
Ache Earler, former atomic bomb
cheinict with Manhattan Project,
pos::s in St. Joseph, Mo., while
hitchhiking from Mishawaka, . Ind.,
dio San Francisco to do research
*fork at the University of Cali-
fornia.
;net short of a world record is this 311/2 -pound rainbow trout,
Ought by E. A. Kirkpatrick of d'uliaetta, Id, at Pend Oreille Lake,
World record is 32 pound.% se.t 3n 1649 at the scone lake.
A RIG JOB
Breaking land in the Peace Rivet
district is no mean chore as cam
be seen in this photo. Ray Webber
:is plowing clown thick silver willow
which grows luxuriantly in that
part of the country.
One of the interesting features of the Algoma Calf Club exhibition,
was the showing of Wilogene Suddaby's prize-winning Hereford
calf. 'Wilogene, who is 15 years old, hails from Portlock, Ontario,
and ha been a member of the calf club for the past four years.
Just now she is attending school in Sault Ste. Marie and she piano
to enter an agricultural college later on.