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The Sylvan Lake News 1942-01-07 - 1944-12-20
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Date
1944-12-13
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BLUE COVER Pure white Free Burning 1s Different preciated — Well-Run Ontario Town + afternoon in Oxf steady, misty rain srything wet, yet left farm fiel ped off the bus id to the hotel eps often, in these ify them when his 1 latch. If the latch r rattles, so, too, do n you will woo Mor- abble of endless con- ramping of many feet. of doc a awake: or eeper had never beer e had chosen another rent here. The latch e, the door flowed cushioned stop. The restful. The lady at quiet and efficient 3a reservation fer me stairs were carpeted ected by a rubber-like ew what I would find j the door. ‘The room neat and clean. Every its place, The lights to give light w to be needed. There side the bed—a better itch than under a pil 1s a place ta put your to prop the window ash tray contained nor ashes. The Gid- new, a half-moroc only saints slept | used it yself: “Here n who has slept in a ie owned one. T wi aid of all hotelkeepers.” is a hote ¥ CIVILIANS States 3rd Army re . quantity of capturec of Metz. The booty - reserve of the German included 159 tons of tons of frozen corn, 50 ir, another batch of 150 big stores of miscel- d goods and quantities Ca) 1 ae What should I lookforwhen buy- ing a hog starter 7 supplement to mix with m farm grains? Look for ““Miracle’’ Sow and Starter Sup- plement. The name ““Miracle’’ ps youthatevery lient in the bag en scientifically | for food value. ‘Miracle’? Sow Starter Supple- with your farm s for the best THE NEWS Reserve Army — Will Continue Ss" | After The War Siseoescs20" LETTERS ALL ALIKE Members Of rliament Swamped With Mail From British Columbia OTTAW Mail boxes of membe 1 on members to “adop OTTAWA.—Canada’s home guard) tecHnocracy’s program of all f ree rm f 100,000 part-time | 8nd one for all Boney eas ontinue to play the| military conscription” as the firs! me important role which it per-|SteP toward “total conseriptt : Fee RSy ve before the war men, machines, material and mor a feariey ; ahundantly fup Sith national service from all anc filled during the anxious days of this Prefits te none war,” the House of Commoris was 4 The letters are reaching individual nl members at the rate of 50 to 100 a Navy Minister’ Macdonald, acting|@#% 8nd one member estimated « Gefen. minister in the house, gave tot#t of 10.000 had reached the par this reply to a question by lament buildings. 7 ome Graydon, Progressive Conse’ free as letters addressed to members house lender, Mr. Graydon wanted a St Ottawa are eligible for free car loarecnt statement of govern- "8° ment poliey in regard to the future of the reserve army TAVINGEORS GE Macdonald explained that the OTTAWA,—The Dominion bureau reserve army was the modern name Of statist ported its official cost of the pre-war non-permanent active ofliving index, calculuted on the basis militia which “is the framework of that 193: equals 100, advanced our national military organization in from 118.6 at Oct, 2 (o 118.9 at Now: peace-time.” 1 for a wartime increase of 18 per He continued: cent ( ‘TL is our present policy to ensure aan the continuation in the post-war TO UNITE FORCES f period of this framework which will! LONDON. Spanish Republican. t then become again the major portion] teader Juan Negrin has broken # long | C of our military forces. The men who silence to announce the opening of a s have gone from these reserve units ‘ogtam to unite anti-Franco fore: and who now fill the ranks of the) and outside of Spain. SYLVAN AKT ALBERTA Promoted Lieut. imoted from acting ra appointed as special assis ‘ol. Lawrence Edmund Mé Cooey 48, Ottawa, who has been pro- of major and to the hief of the general staff. He suc weds Coy. H. L. ently appointed o the minister Sol, MeCoor Cam military of 4 a neron, O.B-E., re secretary national defen permanent oldier and resides at Ottawa, Ont Buy War Savings Stamps regul mobilized active units will return, and to the extent that the reserve army is kept alive, they and their units will find their military family bess ae association maintained so that there) 2 : will be no break in the continuity of service and tradition of ch regi- ment.” SUPPLY OF WHEAT Estimates Show Australia Harvested Smallest Crop In 25 Years OTTAWA.—The Dominion bureau of statislics said few significant de-| yelopments he aken place during the last month in the production of supply pictures of the four principal wheat exporting countries—Canada, the United States Australia and Argentina The Australian crop, imated prior to the beginning of harvesting operations at about 50,000,000 bushel s proved to be the smallest crop, 2 25 ye Wheat stocks at the end of October were down to 89,000- 000 bushels with the estimated re- for stock feed in quiremen’ as pastur tion = c Private estimates of the ne Argentina crop have been in the neighborhood ef 200,000 000 bushels, which promises te add from 90,000.- marshal and has been appointed supren ran the aid of bincculars, in Italy. General Alexander Visits ne Allied A recent photograph of Gen. Sir Harold Alexander who is now mimander in the Troops n theatre of war. Here Gen. Alexander studies enemy positions with 600 to 100,000,000 bushels to Argen- tina’s exportable surplus. Argent: estimated the wheat “surplus” at mid-November at 159 000,000 bushels The United States has added a record crop to an above-avera arry-over and although her pros- pective disappearance is also high, it may be possible to export up to 100, 000,000 bushels of wheat In 1944-45 without materially reducing the carry-over of 315,000 000 bushels held at June 30, 1944 | Canada’s surplus over and above domestic requirements {s consider- ably larger than that of any of the} other three principal wheat exporting countries. Total available supplies of wheat in Canada, after probable domestic requirements have been de- ducted, exceed 648,000,000 bushels for the current crop year. URGES REFORMS Duke Of Windsor Asks Bahamas Legislature To Reconsider Decision NASSAU, Bahamas._The Duke of #Windsor re-opened the Bahamas leg- {slature after a two-weeks recess, In a brief crisp speech the duke told the house assembly he was giv- ing them another chance to consider 1 ballot, labor and social legisla- tion which they rejected at the last session. He said that his insistence on the necessity of certain funda- mental changes “in your outlook is| weeks of attacks by left wing groups. prompted s y my est in the colony my desire th yoursely sec! welfare and by a conference with all party heads. C you shall not find general of the realm, has begun discuss’ es unprepared to fact is the world’s leading pro-| Italian troops in compan’ ducer of sweet potatoes Premier Of Italy Resig ns Premier Ivanoe Bonomi of Italy, and his cabinet resigned following two Corporation, sald in an Interview say that the w Y The 71-year-old Bonomi who suc-|that provincial agricultural depart- extend ncere inter-| ceeded Marshal Badoglio after the fall of Rome last June, resigned after ments in the western provinces have possibi crown Prince Umberto, Meutenant: ions with par! y leaders on formation W | of a new government. Count Carlo Sforza, minister without portfolio to the conditions of a fast-changing world.’ Bonomi government, is widely mentioned as the next premier, = from Rome shows: Crown Prince Humbert (right) salutes as he reviewed | ing capacity of only 600 pounds and age, Gen. Eisenhower said, was that with (left to right) Count Sforza, new ex-premier |its low mileage rate for gasoline con-| tire wear in the theatre ham exceeded | Bonomi and an unidentified British officer. field Mediter- Photo radioed | farm work because of ita low tow GIANT LINER Boat Convert Into ‘Troopship | No Food For coco! "hoc oun German People sumo meses <|From The Allies 1 ir " 10 ! } i in Esquimalt the 1 ! 1 ngugiir't 1 i Th orched etreating Gert orve The big liner cum astral y rep hordships of th c night atte unsport risoners of ; ( tin proc war ut-dominion. To the thou i Bee anemiitersit und ts who refitted ber i The Allied armed forces will iz recor big ship was know SE MRSNATEGPER ‘i t QE" and no one was | ne eo mation sald to mention her real name SE RSE A Ua EEL? mg the thousands of workers - A e ae Sait lore Haut remondalientasts means prevent the Nazis from driving away thelr tle as the were men from every section of Car = Allied armies advance. ‘They must ada. Each worker wore cut a pait lei : do everything in ower to 1 of shoes tramping the seemingly end=| 1) °°" Ae ee Ere Ase teak inde itp te erie oars ui eal productio Thousands of bunks were built in|! He Gen. Eisenhower warned that “the any place that accommodate | Rata ; : Crain i's ninate theatres ta, bebes of the German people to avoid swimming pool, reading and lounge |Scomamic collapse after the dete rooms, cocktail bars and = Juxury aro Ue rSra enone ou ee Baia 1 ant tent of Ger opposition to Nazi apartments, all became sleep! ; seat s i rooms fe soldiers packed into ters PIERS 50: COSEEO YS SUR n HGRerey Aw s hefore the German natural reso! Allied as the orders te prolong a the Allie 1 und to infl bu oceupation “As 1 obeys the N futile resistanc he glamorous w seottings, br: RCORLE erman army caded wall coverings and tesselated floors of the ocean que continued. LA ed disapy ‘ as the work HY Secunia toltea Ee > furniture was stored away on shel tered ¢ and went with the ship en her ¢ heayy material dar many. ‘The suffering multiply themselves eople Itself ¢ to tran ge upon Ger- and hardships going voyage—probably thus created wil if the G the ustralla fter the job was finished the rr pl Queen Elizabeth continued nameless eters on her wartime duties to carry count less fighting men of the United Na tlons, includi ousands of Cana- GERMAN BOMBERS jans, from heme ports to their = ations Curtailed Owing To ‘The Lack Of Fuel us with the y ROME. Germany is suff OIL SANDS a drastic fuel short 18 a result of ‘Allied bembing attacks on lier Make Progress In Extraction Of Oi pogneries that some German From Mineral Sands training centres have been closed dover | TORONTO. Progress is being and the enemy's bomber force has nade with experimentations in the be actioally abandoned,” Lt. -Ge ction of oi! from the mineral Mediterranean air force sands of Alberta, N. E. Tanner, min said of lands and mines in the prav- sid’ the Ploesti off field ince of Alberta, told a gathering of in Romania was the bloodiest air bat- investment dealers, stock brokers and tlefield of the war.” with the Ameri- developers here. cans losing 390 bombers and 10 times Tanner reviewed the develop- that number of fliers, but he dectared m in the various oil fields and it was worth the cost pointed out that while production in When the attacles pb he said the Turner Valley reached its peak the Germans were getting 26.000 tons i was now on the decline, of petrolenm products daily from the promise of more than stl field: ward the end pro- up the deel Explora- duction was cut to 2,000 tons were now proceeding on a of which N were al large scale in a half dozen fields, and ovt or mall portion to the north Abasand Oils Limited at MeM id Oil Limited further perth, y actively tackling the 7 IN FULL COMMAND pblemt (Gh se Report Says Himmler Keeping Hitler at Out Of Py Affairs minister, that a ton of sand contained LONDO: dications have see about one barrel of oil Oa a aay : out of Germany that Heinrich Hiram ler, No, 1 Nazi during the o 0 | OUTLOOK BRIGHTER »pparent cctipse of Acoit Hitler, has reached some sort of political-mili- ing the oil fr ed, said the the sar s ext Civilian Clothes For British People tery truce with Germany's np-in-arms Given First Grade Priority generals, One consideration in the reported LONDON. — The clothing outlook on ee for 1945 in Britain is brighter tude wan sid it that Himmler der cover and would keep Hit make him keep his hands off militery affairs. Reports said Himmler was keeping Hitler in w amounted almost to confinement by over-emphasizing his poor health and filling bim with fear cf another attempt on his life if he came out of hiding. SERIOUS SHORTAGE General Eisenhower Says American | Army Vehicles Are Needing Tires PARIS —American armies fighting along the German border face a tire for any year of t war, fe the housewife and all the memt her family. Civilian clothes have bee given first grade priority and work ers released by the ministry of air craft production and the ministry of supply are in many cases, being directed to the textile and clothing industries. It {s hoped that by mid- summer when the new clothing ration books are tssued It may be possible to increase the coupon allowance. NOT SUITABLE Jeep As Farm Implement Has Been shortage s¢ Rejected In West fip/ dD) par cer VANCOUVER.—J. P. Gledhill of py early February Toronto, chief of the consumers’ declared goods division of the War Assets. “I am not exaggerating when T will be needlessly J unless we can extract every mile from our tires and use rejected the Canadian type jeep a8 & them only as we find it necessary to possible post-war farm {mplement. do so.” Gen, Eisenhower advised his The Mark 1 Jeep is unsuitable for officers and men in a letter. ‘The reason for the impending |sumption, Mr. Gledhill sald. tes. 2698 all pre-combat estim:
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Image 1394 (1944-12-13), from microfilm reel 1394, (CU11125603). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.