* DON'T FENCE ME IN â€" I DON'T UKE IT FROM SMALLEST TO LARGEST Barbed wire fence causes only slight delay to this Yank infantryman, as reinforcements move up across muddy, snow-covered country-side in the Bastogne sector. Infantrymen shown here ar« part of General Patton's Third Army forces which relieved th« enemy-surrounded Belgian city. VIMY . . . CANADIAN FRONT UNE . . . 1917 _ Posing before a Cornell elementary air force trainer and a Lancaster wing these workers at Fleet Aircraft, Fort Erie, have just been presented with pins as five and tenryear veterans. They have seen their plant turn QUt hundreds upon hundreds of trim little Cornells on which R.C.A.F. airmen havs received their first flight training. The Cornell is the smallest plane used by our air forces in Canada. Now they're working on the great Lan:aster program, helping to build the largest bomber built in the British Empire. 1 > L SWEDES' NEW PLANE HAS LOTS OF 'PUSH' Hon. John Bracken, (fourth from left) and his party are seen here in the official Canadian front line of 1817 on Vimy Ridge, where Canadians of a quarter of a century ago covered themselves with glory. Notice old fashioned Jand bag reinforced trench. WINTER ON THE GREAT LAKES Radiophoto above, from Stockholm, is the first photo received in this country of the Swedish Air Forces's newest fighter plane, which is a radical departure from conventional types. A low- wing twin-boom model with retractable tricycle landing gear, it gives the pilot greater visibility by having the motor at his back. It is a "piisher" type, with propeller at rear between tail booms. KEEPS ON EDGE 1 ^ *â- A- »- A- If you think it's cold, look at icy fingers formed on deck of new 5090-ton Coast Guard ice breaker Machinaw. Bundled up in heavy clothes, chief boatswain's mate examines ice formations as vessel heads for port after trial run through heavy winter weather on Lake Huron. ' KEEPING COMMUNICATIONS OPEN IN BELGIUM Ben Rockiin, Chicago's one-man commando knife factory, proudly displays one of his eight-inch, double-edged "Jap stickers," He estimates that he has turned out 6000 of them, from salvaged steel, since the war began. ^^ ^d' ENVOY TO TURKEY „|.„.„.,..,„„ > M. -i V %â- I r ft Lines of communication must be kept open day and night in modem warfai-e rcgaidless of shell fire or weather and the p'.-.oto- graph on the left shows a post-hole digger in action drilling holes for telephone poles. At right Canadian signalmen are seen stringing telephone wire to a mafll control pole. 'They are Lome Foster, Port Hope, Ont; John Welsh, BowmsiiTiUe, Ont., and Ken Ney, Stratford. The/ â- •rve with a Caiudiaa Railwsjr aad Tetsgraph Company ol the Canadian Arnqr in Belgium. Edwin C. Wilson above, 51-year- old career diplomat, has been named U. S. ambassador to Turkey by President Roosevelt. One time ambassador to Panama, he has been serving in the State Depart- ment Office of Special Political Affairs. WHY LO IS LOW Even Lo, the poor wooden In- dian above, who serves a San Francisco tobacco store, feels the pin..';:, ^^i tiie cigaret short- age. But apparently he atill can get cigars. REW.y?D PROMISED if you serve Maxwell House Coffee to your family to- night. They'll just love you for it! Comes in an All Purpose Grind which suits any type of coffee maker. hang on • • • Suffering from a cold? Want fast relief? An Instaniine tablet, takes with a glass of water, usually acta quickly to relieve the discomfort tliat comes witli a cold. And, you'll find tliat prescription-type Instantine's help doesn't end here, because tliis specially-compounded, triple-action medicine is designed to work these ways in fighting cold misery. 1. Eases pain and discomfort. 2. Prolongs relief from discom- fort. 3. Offsets "depressed feeling." Gives mild, stimulating "lift."! Try Instantine to relieva. pain of rhaimaltsm, neuralgia, neuritis, or the discomfort of headache, too. You'll find its action prompt, effective. AH drugstores. 12 tablets 25fi. ' ^slantine product of The Bayer Co.^ UdL ^•••iN : y wi.^