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Show ...a 1948 ZZL-- THE HILL TOP TIMES : Page 7 Urcmsrs - Sav Soda Pop Fantasy Responsible- For. UI3 i - - ILL AIM INSTALLATIONS INC Baker Wayne its start Air Force Base got Hill No Blue Mondays Latest in 9 years ago when a soft the vik dispensing invi"y department is the news the Air Reserve Detachment a wwii uuy ana ugaen, that will knock-of- f gtvastaKing Mondays and Tuesdays effective 1 August. This move ,he old timers say. was made to coordinate engineering a crew of carpenters were their to story, operations duties which become According resting and heaviest on the week-endAdmin... of some tall sagebrush . when. the truck lost its carcrn istrative personnel will continue the n tnc B" o suuauuu wicy uctmca mey could make regular nd looking tne stint to coincide with base tnev f to aisnenc . couiu cci inc uiaucnscr foil w. nff tho KaxU mv. Vi a ucuvery trucK s. Monday-through-Frid- - " unemoH r bargained with go thinking, they to run in a dozen electricians ... Power lines strung and C machine plugged in, they sat C enjoy the pause that to ay Second Story Men re-U- es what they'd wim everyvuc Lm, they realized there was a jeflnite fire hazard, what with all so they he dry brush around, fire man department a 61 and smoke Lgt a mile for. or-.jnk- their investment. protect u ed The only trouble was, the had to have some lepartment Not content fire wat-- r. with a haphazard plumbers to put they hired 16 i four wells, build ob a 3,500,000 gallon and install fire hydrants, all the water around, they tservoir, jut with oundthat a sewer was also needed, lere was no other way out; they ad to install a sewage system, too. By this time, gusts of wind were glaciers, coasting over and chilling the men as ey sat drinking their beverages. at was tne only logical solution down ding sides, U put in a big snow soon ell and so a metal building called hangar was put around the ma ie by a 13 man sheetmetal and ifing crew to protect the men the cold, so they itlne plant. However, the winter. ira Wle this work was going on, a working on the outside of got bowed down in the pud and nearly froze to death. To fWnate this hazard, a network of pds was constructed, the grounds landscaped, and inter hangar Bur-Mi- 1 St man crew 48 ihem. this At point the . . timers . old . - tellII npmrwn realized howAva- - . rnniiatl0B .- -i f?. that .!,. twrr 8eted back to enjoy .11 a 4 ana so "Plete. Thev k- -j working , , Knizuon was thai. . . Z? carpenter shop, a "eai sno.P. a toSStalA"i roon -- hop, a roads and a refuse Unt 'g. Won .ugn When fh H . Tfi lust riirht fn. THE HILL TOP TIMES . . . It Is A Good Buy for Your Ad Dollar It Covers THE .i. ' investment m Aim li0na dollap multimlllinn V RVr. ing care Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Nauta are parents of a new baby daugh ter, born July 16, 1948, at St. Bene dict Hospital, Ogden. The name chosen for the new addition to the Nauta household is Sharon Grace. Mr. Nauta is an aircraft service mechanic. A 7 pound 7 ounce baby boy was born - to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Larson on Saturday, July 17, 1948 at the Dee Hospital. Mr. Larson is a radio and electronic equipment in staller. $ SEE NORGE 5 BEFORE YOU BUY j BUY BONDS ; TODAY Home of X i- RCA-Vict- or Radios - FOR TOMORROW MARKET OF OVER IT IS A CONCENTRATED EARNERS WAGE 4,000 Call Our Advertising Representative JIM PETERSON Phone Ogden 4931 VETS ATTENTION! NEW SERVICE CLUB Uncle Solved"?. the old tlmen iae, a soda pop y. ma- - for SOMEDAY DAY'S AF AID SOCIETY YOU MAY NEED YOUR - NOW and AMVETS THE AGENDA HOME CLUB 2416 WASH. BLVD. TOP FLOOR Ask For: "Tony" or "Jim" OGDEN Phone: -- 71 SUBSCRIBE TODAY ALL SERVICEMEN f 0 o .(D PAYROLL AT HILL AFB $1,100,000 MONTHLY PAY DAY EACH IT IS DISTRIBUTED IT NEEDS YOU 32 Tours may be extended for offi cers ana warrant orncers not to exceed six months. Enlisted men may extend their tours indefinitely provided they can pass the required physical examination, and at the discretion of their overseas NOW OPEN orsjaiusa- r lo make ue that had been C?81 Labrador and adjacent areas, and in certain other isolated stations will serve one year if unaccompanied by dependents, two years if families are carried along. On Okinawa, Guam, and Iwo Jima, the tour will be fifteen 24 months without dependents, months with families. In New foundland and the Azores, the tour will be 18 months without dependents; otherwise 24 months. The tour in the European Com mand will be 24 months without dependents, 36 if accompanied with family. The tour in Japan will be 30 months in any case. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd F. Peck an nounce the birth of a 7 pound 5 ounce baby boy, born July 19, 1948. squad. ..' - they HoaijTj the j A 5b, IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE man refrirop.finn K.the adet 11 j0 in refrigeration broke the diSDennei. plant o- -l I rmred r - IT'lfZ" any rpfnao witi the9e : the by dependents. Personnel serving on Kwajaleln and Johnston Islands, Greenland, accompanied that ttiai someone sweep V inund the HrfnV At. J w nave someone to Rby The Air Washington (AFPS) Force has revised regulations governing overseas tours of duty to differentiate in the length of tours for certain stations, and dependent upon whether or not personnel are Rotation within foreign com mands is aimed at preventing long periods of duty at isolated posts or where climate imposes hardship. inc. ons, They f POUNDERS v""v' and gravel agitators are terms not W only peculiar to infantry dough feet. They may well be applied to not ortrflnivo oil f VkAOA the air installations road gang, for rent crews into a cooperative?" it is through their daily efforts that "ea wemselves. Hill retains that new look that's exactly what did they na can themselves Air no V. tU . Air Force Revises Foreign Duty Rules Births pgr hired . to maintain By Edith H. Gudmundsen Another Dr. A.- J. Cronin master piece is the Literary Guild selection for August which has recently been added to the fine fiction collection at the Base Library. "Shannon's Way" is the heart warming story of a young physi cian and his struggle to make a name for himself in medical re search. It is also the story of the woman who loved him and found in that love greater pain, and love, than she had bargained for. . This sequel to "Green Years" opens in 1918 with Shannon, now a research student in the University laboratory, working for an older man who doesn't hesitate to take credit for his younger colleagues' work. Shannon finds a cure for a strange epidemic raging through the countryside, but loses his first patient because of the carelessness of a stupid nurse. There is triumph when he finally receives recognition for his work, and the girl he loves marries him in spite of religious differences. Numbered among the outstanding writers of our times, Dr. Cronin knows medicine, and understands people, and his facile writing interprets both to the reader in "Shannon's Way" without the agonizing of "Green Years." This novel is an inspiring reading experience. Visit your base library and discover what is offered you there. Road Gang (Above) ON THE OUTSIDE LOOKING IN but interested only in their side of the fence are Arthur Amos, George Grow and William Grow giving a new air installations facial to one of the 35 buildings at Hill. 15 painters, under the super vision of W. R. Montgomery, will use 1200 gallons of paint during the base fresh-u- p project. ng Boole Review WELCOME |