Show YANKEE AIRMEN BOMB THE HUNS ST. ST MIHIEL VICTORY DUE IN PART TO THE SKILL OF AMERICAN AMERIC N AVIATORS Swoop Down Into Woodland Roads Attacking Transport Trains Flying Flying Fly Fly- ing ing as Low as Forty Feet From Ground to Reach Quarry With the Army In France Magnificent cent work of the American aviators under most difficult weather conditions condi must not be forgotten in telling the story of the St. St Mihiel victory To them was entrusted every kind of mission mission mis mis- sion slim which falls to a flying mans man's lot but the task in which they dis distinguished distinguished dis- dis themselves most perhaps I yas was harassing the enemy's withdrawal fr from m th the de deepest p st part the salient fA rA A careful study had bad been made of oft t the e roads by which the German transport transport trans trans- port must move and th these se observations observations turn out to be strikingly accurate accurate accurate ate showing that the Germans had thought out quite as carefully as the Americans the exact spot which would remain op open n longest This was the gap gnp between VIgneulles and court with St. St Benoit as the center It thus happened that the American airmen airmen air air- men found the transport trains exactly where they Expected to find them and their attempts to enforce delay were m most st daring Owing to the weather conditions the ceiling to use the time airmans airman's technical term was little more than a thousand feet high and the dense rain occasIonally occasionally occasionally made everything Invisible afew a afew a afew few yards away but not one ono of the the selected roads was left f The aviators sw swooped down ow into the woodland roads flying g only forty feet from the ground to make sure of th their their- lr targets Lorry after lorry was wrecked and wagon teams team torn to pieces by dropped bombs or orr machine gun fire |