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Standard-Speaker from Hazleton, Pennsylvania • 4

Publication:
Standard-Speakeri
Location:
Hazleton, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

STANDARD-SENTINEL, HAZLETON, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 17, 1944 PAGE 4 Attifn ALBANY, A Thought daily ration of 1,100 calories in I Greece, with a view to eventually Wise and Otherwise ANOTHER FORCE NECESSARY TO MAINTAIN PEACE ihe Court of 15 York's 7 a commercial l1H Standard-Sentinel EataklUhea ISM. rabliia4 Bverj Morelsc Eieepi Misters snd Holiday" St tt Worth Wyostlsg 8U Haileion, Pa. HESBT WALSEB M. B. DBRSHUCK FRANK WAL8EB Owaert ss Piblliiert meny earned Up to could reject reaching 2,000 ca.ories.

The present ea.oric value. of a ration Rome is only 780, but this does not include fruits and vegetables that might reach the market. Yet even such goods would probably not bring the calories to 2,000. When snipping is available, demands of the liberated countries on the United states for food will be much greater. Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death until life.

I came from God, and I'm going back to God, and I won't have any gaps of death in the middle upheld HE5BT WALSER, Hsufflnf Editor a ruling that Jos was not unreasonah A wu ume to seek tion. etti of my me. ueorge Macuonaia, HANDICAPS IN PHILIPPINES Entered at the Post Office at HaaJ too. as second class mall matter. Telephone, Hailetos Mb.

The Standard-Sentinel Is delivered by carrier at 21 cents a week. Mall subscriptions parable In advance, first and second postal tones, 75 per rear, 15.00 tor six months. It 60 tor three months, 90c tor one month. Rates to other postal sones on request Conquest of Philippines, the current major objective in the war against Japan, is complicated by geographic factors. There are more than 3,000 isknds in the Philippine archipelago.

The exact number of these occupied by the Japanese is not known. In spite of Down Memory Lane Remember 'way back When the lads all had Their bummin' shanties Till the coal and iron Caught up with them They smoked long-cut Rolled in newspapers They stole the tobacco From dad's tall, tin can Mother was on their side When the can looked low Dad had a boot-jack, and A goose feather to Oil "the kitchen clock Dad borrowed a dollar Occasionally on the book At the company store, and What a ruckus when ma Had the pass-book balanced Still, we cling to an idea, Them wuz happy days. growing American air strength, it Representatives la the general advertising field: DeLISSEBt ISC. 11 East 44th Street, New Tork City. 180 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Morris Building, Philadelphia.

Penna The Standard-Sentinel Is a member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not other, wise credited In this paper, and also the local news published herein. is impossible to prevent the movement of enemy troops to points where reinforcen'ients may be needed, as in the case of Leyte, where 40,000 fresh Jap troops were moved in to meet the forces of General MacArthur. Attempts to bolster their strength on Leyte, made against desperate odds, indicate the seriousness with which Tokyo views hi WEATHERLY T.Jayrjug TRIGGER II llWViiffl JL FRiNsrkindoa k.j$ LEDERER Q-R iv tux nuts unci amum raHLLii1 VOICE IN Sat. MARINE RAIDERS I HE WIND FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1944 the situation there.

Capture of Leyte by MacArthur's forces will endanger Jap positions in the whole Philippine archipelago, as has been emphasized repeatedly FUTURE WAR NEEDS since the beginning of the campaign. It will be the opening wedge through which attacks will be made on Luion and Mindanao. It will open the way to the port of Manila and make the Jap hold on one of their greatest prizes in the Apparently American farmers need not worry about overproduction for some time. That is the conclusion to be drawn from the recent report of Lieut Col. Ralph W.Olmstead, Deputy War Food Administrator, who has returned froni a two-m nth government mission war hopeless.

FAMOUS SAYINGS Put the potatoes on. It is heartenint to know Ameri to Russia and England to ascertain can forces on Leyte outnumber the their postwar iood needs. Colonel Olmsiead said that Rus ia's food situation is unbelievably Died in Oregon Julius Teske, of Portland, who wife was Miss Cora Hilde-brand, of Alberts died at his home in the northwest on Monday. aniicuit, tiiat the Soviet will re. Japs two to one.

The American advance has been hindered by storms, stubborn resistance by the enemy, and other conditions incident to the fortunes of war. But General MacArthur is going steadily forward in saite of these quire food imports from the United States for at least three years after cne ena of the European war. Rus-ira, he said, will take all the food this country ran supply, and for wnicn snipping space can be found. If the ships were available, he Interpreting The War News said, the Russians could use ten HBeaver Meadows times as much food as they receive at present. The peopl of that First Army attack in Hurtgen forest southeast of Aachen to Roer By XIRKE L.

SIMPSON Associated Press War Analyst) Eugene Jacobs 13 WEST BROAD STREET mond on the east bank of the Meuse it is substantially 40 miles air line. country, he explained, are living on a diet of black bread, boiled po Paced by a two-army American attack at the Aachen breach in the German Siegfried Line, the west Observing Birthdays front is roaring with aggression Miss Leona Zeigler of East Broad street, is observing her action from Holland to the Swiss since everywhere else along the front southward to the Swiss Alps American and French troop3 are pushing forward. Only the British-Canadian Army group center in Holland, poised to strike anew at the Arhem-Emmerich gateway to Northern Germany, and a narrow and long dormant sector south of the Hurtgen forest are inactive. The British end of the line seems likely to blaze into full scale assault at any moment. The Germans have been hoarding manpower, mobile field troops, as well as air power against the day when a full scale Allied attack would fall in the west.

It remains to be seen within days or even iSnaatmtm border. birthday anniversary. Jf a. IMs The scope and fury of the ex The apparent concentration of two full American armies on that narrow front fully justifies the assumption that a break-through effort is in progress there with Cologne or the Cologne Valley west of the Rhine as the Allied objective. Anticipated British success in clearing the foe from the Meuse Miss Agnes Kokinda, of Dean street, is observing the anniversary panding Allied assault indicate that the expected winter breaK-tnrougn of her birthday.

Sailor Returned campaign is in progress although it has still to reach its maximum intensity in the critical north. Only the right flank of Field Marshal Montgomery's powerful British-Canadian army group has yet been Ray Kunkle, 2-c, returned to the U. S. Naval Training Base at bulge will protect the Ninth Army Sampson, N. after enjoying a leave following his "boot training." hours, however, whether they have left flank.

That was undoubtedly the partial purpose of the British drive to clear the west bank of the Meuse. The advance of the Ninth He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira suceeded in massing adequate reserves at the right places. Kunkle, of Short street.

committed to battle. It is swiftly clearing the Meuse bulge just north of the double-headed American drive into Germany through the Aachen breach between Roermond and Duren. tatoes ana caDDage. In Britain, Colonel Olmstead said, the diet is lacking in variety and quality, but is adequate. Yet Britain will need food imports after the war at approximately the present level, he said.

These, he asserted, could be supplied either by the United States or the British colonies. This recalls a recent statement by S. Hudson, Brit-ain's minister of agriculture, who pointed out that the prospects of Britain's obtaining appreciably greater food supplies from abroad during the next few years are not bright and that the British people are not counting on the end of wartime austerity, but are preparing to. endure restrictions and scarcity for several In addition to the demands made upon this country's food production by Russia and fir gland, there will be the needs of the liberated countries which have not yet got back to normal in In some of the countries of Europe, notably Greece and Italy, the people are getting far from adequate supplies of food, but the reason given for this condition is lack of shipping. The Allies are providing a Army toward the Roer above its junction with the Meuse at Roermond should also help the British cross the river when they reach it to come to grips with Siegfried Line defenses in Germany itself.

Field advices disclosing that the KANT at Gi A wide expansion of the Aachen breach in the Siegfried Line could come quickly if, as field dispatches indicate, General Eisenhower suc long unmentioned American Ninth Army had gone into action failed to place it exactly but it apparently is striking astride the German-Dutch border between the American First Army and the right wing of Montgomery's forces. If that is true, General Eisenhower has concentrated two full armies for this ceeded in moving the Ninth Army into position without detection of a feast of Thanksgving values in useful home needs his maneuver by the German com mand. A power smash at so nar-1 row and critical a segement of the Nazi defensive front could bring break-through blow on a shorter front than was formerly held by the American First Army alone. From the scene of the recent decisive results quickly, rfi That is all the more probable III orComfoii ii fy' Smartly tailored wool slacks i right with Jackets' sweaters or I iCjl'l odd coats-: Plain Coverts, Herring Wfi''lf bones, Glen Plaids, Houndstooti yMfc'' Checks in grey, blue and brown. Carving Knives Classes Hostess Aid light plywood carrier holding 6 glaiiei fln for Thanks- MQJ giving partial.

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About Standard-Speaker Archive

Pages Available:
1,357,385
Years Available:
1889-2024