WOOitLID) EVENTS Prfnce Hupctt Daflp I5cius Thursday, August 11, 1949. ft I-'.': - i I ,,M . r.-l' !. 4 X, r i n 1 SS ITS BIRDMEN A last-minute briefing by his i one of the 13 reserve navai pnuis on me nying jrse a' " v "... the air Tiir.c tlim-conum aircraii are a training be fliiiiy aii"---"'"- - j val air branch. Tnry are aavanceo. trainers acs- MAN SAVES SHARK FROM DROWNING Definitely not a thing for amateurs, ls the job being undertaken by Diver Floyd Adams ln the Oceanarium at Marine Studios, Marineland, Fla. He ts in trie process of reviving a giant tiger shark, by walking it. H water is not forced through the shark's gills in this manner, it will drown. TOOK 40 YEARS, BUT HE DID IT! After fishing for 40 years, Cal Johnson of Minneapolis hit the jackpot and . caught a record - breaking ;7Vz-p3und muskie on Cou-deray lake, 10 miles south of Hayward, Wise. Johnson is shown with the 60'i-inch fish. Preyiously the record fish caught was a 58-inches weighing slightly under 65 pounds. tlie change-over from sianaarn trainer to nrst- ,,1-i.tf lu T lout Vflrna riinntntiham Witt. Hi L,it I"1''!-"1 15 ..-wv. vw.t vuiiuiiiaaiii, ifTiir inti) ami on tnP wings s his instructor Llcu-Wouds. R C.N. of West Vancouver. .:S'sJ A" . r r 't TV " j'H'y i i'tjfttr ."ST s1. -... Z" X..' - ife. i 7 . -: f J' ... ''.r x - ' ; -i v '' ' - -"-- -." 1 1 ( s, . , .- :. ' i i " ' " k-. 4. AIR PAGEANT BRINGS OUT SOME ODD PLANES Ace flyers from U.S., France, Holland and Britain were among the attractions at the International Air l-agtant held at Gatwick airport, England. Glider di' plays, performances by the la lust type of aircraft, and aerobatic demonstrations were features of the pageant. Here, M;ss Betty Skelton, U.S. feminine international aerobatics champion, who gave displays at the naerant. chats with Karl Montide, pilot of the "Wee Bee," smallest piloted plane, who is strapped to the aircraft before taking off. T m '"''ii-sr S EGG-BEATER The world's first amnhiM,.i tor hehoopri-rs-prov.dinB floats for waur ami nd nas been develoued for thp lis air f,.rp .h W for ronunfrcai operation by the Civil Aero. auon. Here you see the landlnu Bear In use on t. At top th copter Is taking off after a routine rlJ"ny. Brim- thp U'hnole or. l w IU. me cockpit Is the hydraulic rpsene hnist. Thn FLOOD CONTROL IN DELHI The monsoons have started- in Delhi, the capital of India. Heavy downpours havg cooled dqwn the temperature, but with this advantage they have brought more hardships and problems for homeless refugees, who sare living in camps and makeshift homes in and around the cjty. Roofed accommodation is being built for these unfbrturtate people, but until it is ready they have to struggle against the forces of nature to keep their shelters and worldly possessions from destruction: Here inmates of ttie flooded camps are wock-ing hard to make outlets for the flood waters. if sine of the fuM latje indicate the location of the n rcsruett Injtirod may be transported. 4 1 oJ ' life l-i- ! - J r-t ' y. HEAD OF G.S.U. THANKS DOCKERS Harry Davis, president of the Canadian Seamen's union, who flew from Marseilles to address the striking British dock-workers, is shown speaking to the men at mass meeting in London's Victoria Park. The British dockworkers returned to work after Davis accepted terms of settlement on behaif of the C.S.U. and .thanked dockworkers for their support. CHALK RIVER ATOMIC ENERGY PLANT MAY PRODUCE A-BOMBS FOR CANADA-David E. Lilienthrd, left, chairman of the U.S. atomic energy commission; Louis Johnston, centre, defence secretary; and Dean Acheson, secretary of state, confer before going into a closed-door meeting with the congressional atomic committee on the subject of atom bomb secrets. President Truman's assurance to Congress that U.S. techniques ln making A-bombs will no be shared with Britain and Canada, leaves the Dominion in the position of having to make the bombs herself. A : ' iZSf M ft M YOUNGSTERS TRADE IDEAS IN JAPAN A growing exchange. s of ideas among youngsters of the U.S. and Japan has resulti-f, from the association between the young ot the old and the nsw world in Japan since the occupation.. U.S. children are rapidly picking up the favorite amusements of their oriental playmate jj and Japanese youngsters are learning to play ballskip rope, arii, m even master the tongue-twisting slang of most small-fry Amen-cans. Little girls' are the same the world over, and here three of ( the 1.700 children of U.S. occupation forces in Tokyo are cap-' tivate'd with the kimonos of Atsuko Hirano, a Japanese playmate who is fitting Mary Jo with one. v!Tl-nGAME "UNTER AND VRAN. TOO-- Tairtcen- t -nici Elaine MincsmKh. of JWton. Ohio, ls ghow ln npr el nxim looking !r her collection " OI lne" arm, v, C . ha, "I"'' "I' hcre ' WUh her h"r in Wo aGV "'i1' TtTQ R(-)YAL HIGHNESS SURRENDERS UNCONITIONALLY-Like a big tomcat., Leo, the lion at Regent's Park zoo, Loudon, Eng.,' just lies limply on his back in complete surrender to 1 England's heat wave. Aa and T nW maWn Wan for h for next February.