Newspaper whyalla sa




















Never too old to be calendar girls. Critical shortage of aged care workers threatens care standards. The true beauty of older models. Man arrested over Qld Palm Island killing. Alleged Vic hit-run driver faces court. Four arrested after man shot on Gold Coast. Slain Qld cop's wife 'silenced' in inquest. Three men face child abuse charges in Qld. Genetic variation map to enhance chickpea breeding.

Lambs defy later break. Soft pastels are on trend for a summer garden display. Grow a better world from your backyard. Cross sailing hydrofoils with e-bikes and what do you get? Restrictions to labour and paper during the Second World War caused the Recorder to close in In it was taken over by Rural Press, now a subsidiary of Fairfax Media. West Suburban Echo , Adelaide more This small newspaper was produced through the Hilton Progressive Association.

Its news coverage concentrated on news items for the suburb of Hilton, in particular news of this Association, reports of the West Torrens District Council, sport, and original humorous articles and letters.

The West Torrens Gazette , Hindmarsh more This began as a magazine format, but from July was printed as a broadsheet newspaper. Covering news from the West Torrens district, and including photographs, the newspaper included strong coverage of the West Torrens Football Club.

The newspaper also gave much space to reporting the first months of the First World War. The West Torrens Gazette , Plympton. West Torrens News , Adelaide. Western Districts Local , Allenby Gardens more Its geographical coverage was the western suburbs of Adelaide, in particular Findon, Beverley and Flinders Park.

The Western Mail , Ceduna more The Western Mail concentrated on news for the town of Ceduna, in particular the movement to build the local hospital. News, obituaries, social notes, a children's column and pages of motoring, radio and agricultural information were included.

This newspaper lasted only three issues. The newspaper contained Tumby Bay news, local council and sporting club news, and tips for farmers. The first issue included a commemorative single page supplement with photographs, one depicting Wade's printing office. The Western Times , Adelaide more This was a free newspaper, published by Wahlqvist Press in Pirie Street.

The content was mostly short news items and advertisements for local businesses, with sporting news on the back page. Longer 'interest' articles on the front page, included a series of melodramatic South Australian history articles.

Front page headline news included the disappearance of year-old Vernon Pretty, son of the mayor of Thebarton. This was the first newspaper for the expanding communities of the Eyre Peninsula at the beginning of the 20th century. The aim was to cover news for the whole of the Eyre Peninsula, but Port Lincoln received most coverage.

A 'local' column contained news from the various small towns but Streaky Bay and Franklin Harbour had more frequent reports. Sports reports most often covered tennis and cricket. Interestingly, in the issue of 18 October , the Franklin Harbour correspondent refers to the completion of the dog-proof fence.

West-Side Messenger , Port Adelaide. Whyalla News , Whyalla. Whyalla Times , Whyalla. Willunga Bulletin , Willunga more The Willunga Bulletin was really a four-page advertisement for the American based Dr Sheldon's medicines.

The broadsheet was printed so that any title could be added to the front with local agent's advertisements placed on the back. In this case the local agent was Matthew Goode who ran a general store at Willunga from about until the s.

The four pages are filled with short jokes, articles about uses for the medicines, and a competition for children. The Woodville Times , Woodville more This grew out of a Woodville Council newsletter named Topical Tabs. Eventually this newspaper was taken over by Messenger Press. The Wooroora Producer , Balaklava more In James Walker established the Central Advocate. At this time the newspaper was re-named the Wooroora Producer, and later became simply The Producer.

It was suspended during the Second World War, but reopened in Roger Manuel and his wife Margaret purchased the newspaper in In it was renamed the Plains Producer.

The newspaper has won the BankSA Award for the best newspaper with a circulation under 5, in , , , and Its area of coverage extends form Snowtown in the north to Virginia in the south. The Workers' Weekly Herald , Adelaide more It has existed under various titles at different times. Yednist , Adelaide more This was the newspaper of the Ukranian community in South Australia.

Yorke Peninsula Country Times , Kadina more The Times is a descendant of the longest running newspaper on the Yorke Peninsula, which began in as the Wallaroo Times. It has absorbed several other newspapers.

From until the newspaper occupied the same offices in Taylor Street, Kadina. It has won several Country Press SA awards. This is one of the few country newspapers still privately owned. It has been in the hands of four generations of the Ellis family. The Yorke Peninsula Farmer , Moonta more This is the later title of the Yorke's Peninsula Advertiser, published at Moonta for some decades.

Yorke Peninsula News-Pictorial , Yorketown more It later became part of the Yorke Peninsula Country Times. Yorkes Peninsula Advertiser , Moonta more It provided the town of Moonta with its own news reporting. In June editor Edwin Derrington published a scathing attack on various politicians which caused a Parliamentary debate. The newspaper contains some interesting comments on early unionism in South Australia.

But later under editor William Wilkinson, the newspaper supported the newly formed Labor Party. Like the other Yorke Peninsula newspapers it supported women having the right to vote.

The newspaper at times took a high moral tone. Editor William Richards was a preacher in the Wesleyan Methodist Church and brought his religion to the paper. Various references to the Aboriginal mission at Point Pearce appear in the pages of the newspaper.

Local sport was not such a feature of the Advertiser as it was in the other Peninsula newspapers. From the Advertiser took a stronger agricultural focus, with advertisements and articles. From detailed obituaries of local people were published. These increased during the years of the First World War.

The newspaper ceased without notice in , almost certainly due to the closure of the copper mines. The following year the Yorke Peninsula Farmer was started up to replace the Advertiser.

Yorke's Peninsula Plain Dealer , Kadina more As well as the demise of the famous copper mine, the pages of the newspaper reflect the political upheavals that took place in the district during and after the First World War. The Plain Dealer was a small and outspoken competitor to the long-running local newspaper, the Kadina and Wallaroo Times.

Between and an interesting series of humorous articles appear, written in the Cornish dialect. Between and the Copper Age was printed as a mid-week subsidiary to the Plain Dealer. Youths World , Adelaide more This was a free newspaper distributed state-wide to young people.

It was published entirely on a voluntary basis. The newspaper was principally the work of a combined churches group. The Youths Journal , Adelaide more This was a short-lived publication produced by Walter Cousins Sims.

Sims previously published the Adelaide Miscellany. In its second year Youth's journal simply became a new version of his older title. The magazine contained stories, poems, puzzles, and a chess column. All the material seems to have been locally written. The Rev Wilton Hack contributed a series of articles about drawing techniques, as well as an article about morality and avoiding temptation.

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