America at war! (1941–) – Part 4

Ex-partner held in ‘slots’ slaying

World peace unit needed, dean says

OPA increases points on lard and margarine

Cooking oils to ‘cost’ more red tokens, too

Aim of offensive: To link with Reds

Manila Japs wiped out in walled city

Annihilation complete, MacArthur says

LUZON, Philippines (UP) – U.S. troops have completed annihilation of the trapped Jap garrison in South Manila and more than 12,000 enemy bodies have been counted so far, Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced today.

Gen. MacArthur announced, 22 days after his troops first entered Manila, that Maj. Gen. Robert S. Beightler’s 37th Infantry Division and Maj. Gen. Verne D. Mudge’s 1st Cavalry Division had overwhelmed the final enemy positions in the Intramuros, the ancient walled section of the city.

3,000 civilians freed

They released 3,000 civilians whom “the incorrigible enemy” had caught and penned in Intramuros and who had suffered “unbelievable indignities and dangers,” Gen. MacArthur said.

His communiqué added:

This operation and the tremendous and disproportionate losses in men and material sustained during the progress of our advance through Luzon, following the catastrophic defeat in Leyte, dooms Gen. Yamashita’s Philippine campaign and presages the early clearance of the entire archipelago.

Heavy toll on Corregidor

U.S. troops are also levying a mounting toll of the trapped and desperate Jap garrison of Corregidor.

Known enemy dead there total 2,309, Gen. MacArthur’s communiqué said. It is believed several thousand others have been destroyed in Corregidor’s labyrinth of rocky corridors by the blasting and closing of some 132 tunnels.

East and north of Manila, U.S. infantry have scored gains of up to 10 miles against Jap troops drawing into the mountains.

Hitler: War will turn in Germany’s favor by 1945

Fuehrer grimly promises elimination of anyone who falters during struggle
Saturday, February 24, 1945

LONDON, England (UP) – Adolf Hitler, in a speech read by a henchman, said today that the war will turn in Germany’s favor during “1945.”

Der Fuehrer grimly promised the “elimination” of any German who falters during the struggle.

The German radio reported Hitler’s first reported speech since January 30, 1945. The German DNB Agency said it was read for him at a Munich Nazi Party celebration. It was addressed to old party comrades on the 25th anniversary of the forming of a Nazi Party program.

As he had January 30, he made little effort to gloss over the struggle which faces Germany. He said that each German “must throw everything into the balance so as to free our people from this plight.”

Will happen this year

The speech said:

There must be no doubt that National Socialist Germany will carry on the struggle until the historical turning point takes place, and this will happen during the present year.

Hitler said that to preserve the German nation, its people must be ready “to shoulder every sacrifice in order to safeguard this life for the future.”

Working relentlessly

He said:

My own life has only such value as it has for the nation.

Therefore, I am working relentlessly at the reestablishment and consolidation of our fronts for the defensive and the offensive, at the production and employment of old and new weapons, at the stiffening of the spirit of our resistance, and, if necessary, just as in previous times, at the elimination of all wreckers who either do not join in the struggle for the preservation of our nation or who want to oppose it.

Hitler said he was almost sorry that Allied bombers had not wrecked his house at Berchtesgaden, for had such action been carried out, he could have shared this additional burden with his people.

Can’t stand weakness

He said:

I have read these days in the British papers that the enemies intend to destroy my country house. I almost regret that this has not been done, for whatever I call my own is not more valuable than that which my compatriots possess. I shall be happy to share in carrying unto the last, and as far as is humanly possible, every burden that others have to bear.

The only thing I would be unable to bear would be signs of weakness among my people.

Hitler explained that his sense of duty and his present work kept him from delivering his speech in person, the Berlin radio said. He said that only the Nazi Party program had enabled the Germans, to carry on, and added:

Whoever is amazed at the miracle of the present resistance, or even cannot understand it, ought to consider what it means that I, an unknown man without a name, began a struggle for an idea and thus for a conquest of power, likewise against a united world of enemies.

“We all know how difficult the present struggle is,” he said. “Whatever we may lose in this battle bears no comparison to what we would lose were it not crowned by success.”

Americans take new peak in Italy

Attacks on fresh Nazi troops repulsed

Mississippi shipyard hit by walkout

Men demand exactly ‘what we asked for’

Supreme Court may hold key to coal strike

Portal-to-portal ruling due March 5

Editorial: Nationality groups

Editorial: The summit of Suribachi

Capture of Mt. Suribachi by U.S. Marines should cut the American casualty rate in the Battle of Iwo Island – the highest so far in the history of the Pacific warfare. That mountain dominates the five-mile island. Its guns accounted for many of the American killed and wounded.

Now that Suribachi is in our hands, our artillery can pour it on the Japs below. Already their casualties are estimated at double our own.

This improved position on Iwo does not mean, of course, that victory will be easy. The second airfield, and virtually all of the central and northern parts of the island, are still mostly held by the enemy although we have a toehold on the airstrip. Literally every foot of the rocky advance will be contested from well-prepared defenses. There will be few prisoners.

But we at home, who wait and pray, can be thankful that American heroism in the first part of the battle has turned the tide. Because of this, and the foresight of the high command, our forces now apparently have numerical superiority ashore, as well as control of the sea and air. The result is not in doubt.

Editorial: Sense from the censor

‘Like Shangri-La’ –
Monahan experts on Yalta for his youngsters

By Kaspar Monahan

‘Universal Nazi’ is portrayed in powerful Wescott novel

Greek family German victims
By John D. Paulus

Rudy Vallee to rile male tempers again

His singing used to vex the men – now it’s wife-stealing role
By Hazel Hartzog

Barnes: Critic after sea jaunt catches up with new and departed shows

By Howard Barnes

Monahan: Historical notes on two ladies – Empress Catherine and Mae West

By Kaspar Monahan

Shirley, high school senior, eager to go to college

She’s cramming for her exams while continuing as actress
By Maxine Garrison

Favorite of G.I.’s on radio

Lew Parker to clown on MBS
By Si Steinhauser


Rochester ‘windy’ guy

Never runs out of conversation

Loop leaders optimistic –
Baseball waits on manpower bill

By Leo H. Petersen, United Press sports editor