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Show . : 1 S. - . I ... . I if aHHMap I :-: ' vJ : THE TORPEDO AIRPLANE Among many new devices which the armistice prevented the Royal Air Force from putting into use against the enemy was the torpedo aeroplane. It is considered to be of even greater potential value than the submarine, and would doubtless have proved astonishingly efficient. II Top photo shows a torpedo in flight after being launched and before , ' entering the water The bottom photo shows the splash made by a tor- ' pedo on hitting the water. ! , i k 4 i i" m ! 1 J M;r : ''I lfe 'jlr i 1 ---' .iff i - : - ' WAS MEANT FOR AMERICANS All along their line of retreat the German forces had planted land mines. Under the armistice terms the location of all these mines was made known to the forces of occupation, which undertook to see that they were exploded harmlessly I I 1 I BETWEEN PEACE TALKS A photo of Premier David Lloyd George, taken on the famous golf links in France, showing him playing a game of golf after the morning session of the Peace Conference. w itt I. , -v : ! ' WITH THE AMERICAN TROOPS IN FIUME Up the steep hillsides of Fiume wind a column of Americans, newly arrived as part of the Allied Army of Occupation in Austria-Hungary. These Yanks, who fought in Italy upon the Piave now find themselves on the other side of the Adriatic Sea. Since November 11th the city has been occupied by troops of the Allies. The Hungarian Governor was driven out by representatives of the new Jugo-Slav nation, who occupied the Royal Palace until Italian and American forces took it over in the name of the Allies The photograph shows troops of the third Battalion of the 332rd U S. Infantry. f , I i 1 WHEN THE NIPPON TROOPS RETURNED A scene in Hibiya Park, Tokyo, when the Japanese troops returned from the battlcfront. Mayor Tajiri is seen making the address of welcome. ': ,, .. :- -. v - v ' ' . 't-ii ' ewrmtHt pneu iuuitotiho ibvicc. n y. ' A FAMILIAR BIT OF FRENCH SCENERY Varenncs Argonne, once the prettiest town in this section, but now a mass of ruins. The Americans drove out the Germans at the beginning of the Argonne drive. ; ' ' i I "rain muiTiiTiao cvlCt. M V. "AU REVOIR" Members of the 319th Infantry, 80th Division, A. E. F., saying good-bye to their venerable "Parrame." VARIOUS TYPES OF GERMAN BOMBS AND GRENADES CAPTURED BY THE AMERICANS i y i "CANADA'S GOLGOTHA" THE CRUCIFIXION OF A 1 CANADIAN SOLDIER 1 "A memorial to those Canadians who willingly gave their most 1 beloved for the honor of 1 he Ha and the upholding of trcedom. Justice, and Right." The most tragic record in the Canadian War Memorials J Exhibition, "Canada's Golgotha," a sculpture group by Captain Lerwent Wood, A. R. A., showing the crucifixion of a Canadian trooper by the Hun. It will be housed in a special building at Ottowa. along with Q another recording Canada's war effort at home. 1 . 1 :. ... F f 1 Kl i I ; 1 -' : ! . -rr 1 I ; CHAMPION LEONARD TO TOUR THE FAR EAST AND EUROPE Benny Leonard, according to an announcement made by his manager in New York, will make a two years' tour of Australia. India. China. France and England to start in the near future. Leonard is to receive $104,000 for the tour. Photo shows Champion Lconaid in the centr' after enjoying a dip with champion shimmer Elionsky and one of his trainers. , - - : . -I J - - - -J I 1 1 1 . - ' - J j ALLIED SOLDIERS HELPING TO REBUILD Members of the Allied forces now making roads and filling up trenches after the signing of ihs armwf16 Huge forces are now doing this sort of work in all of the devastated sections. |