America at war! (1941--) -- Part 2

Völkischer Beobachter (November 3, 1943)

Moskaus kapitalistischer Kumpan ohne Maske –
Roosevelt läßt auf hungernde Bergarbeiter schießen

Große Empörung über das diktatorische Vorgehen des ‚demokratischen‘ Präsidenten

MacArthur verlor bei Finschhafen 2600 Mann –
Landung der Yankees bei Bougainville

The Pittsburgh Press (November 3, 1943)

Mines stay closed, 10 blast furnaces hit

Roosevelt order ignored as UMW awaits word from Lewis

GOP triumphs in New Jersey and New York

Victories hailed as blow at New Deal; gains made elsewhere
By Lyle C. Wilson, United Press staff writer

Nazis retreat toward Rome; line breaking

Yanks drive 3 more miles into defenses; foe’s losses heavy
By Harrison Salisbury, United Press staff writer

Yank armada raids Germany

Greatest U.S. plane fleet hits important target

I DARE SAY —
Save our ears

By Florence Fisher Parry

Allied planes blast Nazis in Yugoslavia


14 wounded soldiers repatriated to U.S.

Simms: Nazi collapse may be caused by home front

Moscow agreements can spur quick German breakdown
By William Philip Simms, Scripps-Howard staff writer

Jap warships driven off by Yank gunners

Enemy effort to interfere in Solomons invasion boomerangs
By Don Caswell, United Press staff writer


Starvation drive waged in Jap-occupied regions

Enemy forces conducting systematic looting as part of war-making tactics
By Bernard Covitt, United Press staff writer

Yank perches atop Fortress

Photographer gets ‘dream shots’ of air raid


Planes get power for altitude war

Pratt & Whitney pioneered two-stage supercharger development

Army rates air-land forces equal; Navy amasses new carrier force

America’s fighting planes, now supreme, must not be frozen, says OWI; design improvements to continue


P-47 scores in two theaters

Wallace warns CIO, farms against looting consumer

Miss America visits city on war bond selling tour

By Maxine Garrison

Stiffer Soviet stand toward Japs indicated

Hull seen in Red signing of parley agreement with Chinese


French forces set to invade

Big army well-equipped with U.S. weapons
By Dana Adams Schmidt, United Press staff writer

Lonely Bougainville beach stained with Marine blood

U.S. forces are 600 yards inland five hours after landing at Empress Augusta Bay
By George E. Jones, United Press staff writer

Hero of Bataan escapes, but how remains secret

Fighter pilot who bombed Japs, then fought on as infantryman, reaches Texas home

In Washington –
Stronger Senate post-war policy statement asked

Growing agitation for inclusion of parts of Moscow Declaration prompts special meeting of committee

Hope Harding Davis doing mother’s story for films

Editorial: The Russell Report