America at war! (1941–) – Part 5

Woman, 45, held after trysts with Nazi prisoner


Joan Barry called to witness stand

Black market talk called gossip by OPA

Official’s statement arouses senators

German gold to be problem for diplomats

Will be in custody of Army until peace

Japs threaten big attacks

GUAM (UP) – Radio Tokyo said today that Japan was determined to send its “whole fleet and whole air force” into action to halt the American offensive in the Ryukyus.

What the broadcast failed to say, however, was that U.S. warships and planes have already destroyed or damaged more than 25 Jap warships and 2,000 aircraft sent against them in the past month.

4 million starving civilians with Nazis in Holland trap

By Helen Kirkpatrick


Big Nazi factory found in cliff

Plant along Weser hidden from air
By Clinton B. Conger, United Press staff writer

Flier who bombed Yamato sees ship burn from sea

Lieutenant rescued after spending four hours on raft in midst of Jap task force
By Mac R. Johnson, United Press staff writer

ABOARD ADM. TURNER’S FLAGSHIP, Okinawa – A young Navy pilot parachuted from his burning plane into the middle of the doomed Jap task force off Kyushu Saturday. He watched from the water for four hours while the Japs tried futilely to save their 40,000-ton battleship Yamato.

The pilot, Lt. (j.g.) William Ernest Delaney of Detroit was rescued under the cover of smoke from the burning Yamato by a twin-engined Navy patrol bomber piloted by Lt. James R. Young of Central City, Kentucky, while a second bomber circled the area to divert any enemy fire.

Four hits on Yamato

Lt. Delaney told newsmen today that he scored four direct hits on the super-battleship with 500-pound bombs from 1,400 feet, but the resulting explosions set his dive bomber afire.

He said:

There was a loud explosion under the fuselage. Then the cockpit filled with smoke and fumes. One wing was on fire.

I was afraid the plane would explode and ordered my crew (runner and radioman) to jump. They bailed out five miles southwest of the Jap task force. I watched their parachutes open. Then I jumped.

Warships circle him

Lt. Delaney said he landed in the water in the middle of the enemy task force and inflated his life raft. Enemy warships circled him wildly. He stayed out of the raft most of the time so it would be more difficult for the Japanese to detect him.

Once a Jap destroyer approached within 400 yards of the raft, but pulled away when the crew apparently decided the raft was empty.

“At first, I was so cold and tired when the Jap ‘can’ approached, I thought of giving myself up,” Lt. Delaney said. “But I decided they might only shoot me, so I stayed behind the raft.”

Yamato dead in water

Lt. Delaney said the Yamato was dead in the water and never did change its position in relation to him, indicating that both he and the battleship were drifting in the same direction at the same time.

He said:

I saw planes of our second main wave attack the enemy force about 2 p.m. At least one more bomb hit was scored on the Yamato, because I saw a huge pillar of black smoke go up from her.

Over on the horizon, there was a terrific flash and explosion. I guess that was a Jap destroyer blowing up.

Lt. Delaney saw another destroyer approach close enough to throw a line to the Yamato, but it pulled away when the second wave of planes appeared.

Plane spots raft

One of the planes spotted Lt. Delaney’s raft and dropped dye to mark the position. Lt. Young and Lt. Richard L. Simms of Atlanta, Georgia, piloting another patrol plane, spotted the marker.

Lt. Simms said:

The Yamato was enveloped in clouds of black smoke. We flew over the area at 100 feet and saw hundreds of Jap survivors from the sunken ships clinging to bits of wreckage. They didn’t have boats or rafts.

Young went down to pick up Delaney while I circled the remaining Jap ships to keep their attention.

Lts. Simms and Young both returned to their base. The patrol planes sent out to relieve them could find no trace of the Yamato, which had sunk in the meantime. Two cruisers and three destroyers were also sunk in the air-naval battle and two more left burning.

It was Lts. Young and Simms who spotted the enemy task force early Saturday. Their radio message brought swarms of carrier planes.

Col. Palmer: Yanks flying huge amounts of gas to front

400 miles by air to supply Patton
By Col. Frederick Palmer, North American Newspaper Alliance

Bitter battle in Heilbronn makes city another Cassino

German stand indicates fortress may be part of Nazis’ last redoubt in south
By Eleanor Packard, United Press staff writer

Liberated Yanks return to U.S.

Bombers blast 12 Jap ships in China Sea

Yanks compress Jap pockets on Luzon

Negro soldiers overseas praised

Many go to front as volunteers

Monahan: Rousing Oklahoma arrives at Nixon

Touring cast dances, sings and cavorts with gusty enthusiasm
By Kaspar Monahan

Editorial: Steady jobs, steady pay

Editorial: This won’t do

Editorial: One defense department

Edson: Dinner for Jones, corn for friends, house for Morses

By Peter Edson

Ferguson: Business career

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson

Background of news –
Shift from war jobs?

By Bertram Benedict

2,150 U.S. planes attack airfields

Night raiders pound Berlin and Kiel

Doctor’s life as laborer revealed after his death

Physician, who once practice in Harrisburg, worked as bricklayer at Sharon, Pennsylvania


Fewer mines closed, but losses higher

Small pits reopen, others again idle