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Show ST BackFromRaid tPlan Mutual Loans Of Fire Equipment aiues ASt; Ajj Pantelleria, K. Arthur now Schultz, Officer in PllntSchuitZ? Emergency Cases Will Call Out Spare Apparatus the serving pjgbt tivdy calm job of assistant chief, repairable property in was pn the saturation bombing of the June 5U last Ti8land of Pantelleria. He pUoted a nrncer Schultz was senH ' . 71at Africa as part of the P-3- P-3- 8. A hS IJI 8 Pursuit Group, last 1st went into action Camel's battered legions clung on iZZft to their positions in defense ggon, last line of '" Met. yasssssBSMjamcqjienwyjgwij absence of Chief William C. Jensen who is attending a safety school at Palo Alto, Calif. A committee of fire chiefs or their representatives was selected, with Joseph E. Bybee, fire chief at the Naval Supply Depot as chair man, to determine the amount of equipment which could be spared by each installation in an emergency. The committee will also for mulate a plan of mutual aid in event of any conflagration. The plan will be submitted for aDtiroval to the council of commanding officers of the installations concerned. J g heavym their deadly ercifully while libers effected high-flyin- pre-(jiiii- bombing. HrUs lasted from 12 'June "trrible, through 2 regular air traffic with planes hov-i- a target like flies respective turns to days few that during the said Schultz $ June the most concentrated, and destructive air bom-me- nt of the war. Flight Off i- - developed about the M jilting their na in. Sarins the raids 71st pilots also jved as escorts for large forma said that were very He of Fortresses. iile the German planes ts and their not equal usance of the 3d, M Some P-3- 8 twin-engin- military by lJuly, taken Mussolini be they per all-rou- nd "thtnine fighters. Hw Pantelleria raids jsf: too, pilots, the ed proved one objectives air power. Pre' had boasted that atelleria was Italy's Malta. The ?id capitulation of the island was M to superb cooperation of naval Hi air forces, lUght Officer Schultz arrived ai station in August He is marlied and arrived in the U. S. in .fine to be with his wife as she fm birth to a baby His at - girl sne is in Santa Maria, Calif. 1 24 and enlisted the He in army October, 1939. ( He stated 'that without the air rnce command our air forces "old be absolutely helpless. He that employes here realize jjyd Be tremendous importance of the in .. . - are doing. they of the ASC Song a 1 MtmniAinAMfliiM ! the men in the Air Serv- -- wttmaiid has been written. SMUT Jtte Hillfielder prints the WNe' to cUp and save for Kferenn are ice a,,. ai. the anMian Command and mufU marching together with all their " ?jt r their together victory are done right away vaattar. Jobs lUKI Me rinna mwio day wnu i din P leaks with tobacco tin E T"g weir planes no matter throils.h fad batUes -- wt 'em . Master Time Clock Installed on Field Transferred Here . . . Last Au gust, from North Africa, where he was a 8 pilot in the First Pur suit Group, Flight Officer Arthur Timepiece Here K. Schultz said he hojed employees Checked By realized the tremendous import ance of the Air Service Command Arlington Signal to our air forces. "We would be Set your watch by any clock absolutely helpless without it!" he in the Ogden Air Service Command said. installations at Hill Field, and rest easy that you are right on the beam with Naval Observatory time. Instrument Repair personnel working in conjunction with Post Utilities electricians completed installation recently of a master time Exceeds Class B system consisting of 346 office and shop clocks controlled by a master clock in the control tower and five Agents in Ninth clocks situated at strat Hooray! Mess SgU The poor, downtrodden mess sergeant, long the butt of jibe and ridicule, is at last coming into his own. One of them, the other day, received the Legion of Merit award. Staff Sgt. Ed Dzuba, assigned to a medical battalion with an in fantry division, won the award for "exceptionally meritorious con' duct in the performance of out Base Finance Sets Bond Sales Record sub-mast- Service Command er standing service." The citation states that he had originated many unusual and appe tizing recipes for the utilization of scraps, thereby greatly left-ov- er reducing food losses from waste and spoilage. Here's Real Dope On Hill Field's GetPosted! WACs: Dating Between officers, okay; between enlisted and enrolled per sonnel, fine; nix on dates of offi cers and enlisted personnel. Hold' ing hands or walking arm in arm is prohibited, in public. un and flv it ujeir ,a I2!2?ng Jung,e - gum-chewi- ng Gopher Club Holds Musical Program United Behind the War Effort n they'll written by Charles E. "Professor" Whiting, professional composer and arranger, and also a dormitory resident, Frank Hopkins, president of the club, portrayed the lead- -' ing character, Chief Minnesota, in the pageant, while Mary Lybarger sang the role of the Indian princess. Following the legend, Miss Ly barger offered thre vocal selections, two of which were composed by Marvin Silverberg, the other' hav ing been written by Mr. whiting. The presentation was first of several musical programs being planned by the club for the fall and winter season, Mr. Hopkins wh r Y i'' t i deserti ... on frozen WboS said. ofnLi oase W,UI ,W em together and grace make ? JP and nazls out of the 'J' the world they fight as tS rJng Nationals of allied countries may now be employod at Hill Field here at home SE5,,ea fron New Guinea L ooyi ..HKi toijh g i5?u ,8 rmy f "d rong ,,nd,nt tt m,ghty W together 7unnd & Stop Investigation for Allied Nationals' Jobs e 5lneneVer qU,t UU Air they Service Command. "Nor could we have accomplished what has been accomplished without the thousands of splendid young enlisted men, many of whom have now gone out into the theatres of war to keep our military planes flying. "Nor could you have said the good things about us were it not for the industry, skill and loyalty of the thousands of civilians who are and have been employed there. These men and women have been a mighty factor in the success achieved. "And credit also belongs to the officers of other military installations who have been entirely cooperative; to the newspapers, the chamber of commerce and to state and local public officials. "We had cooperation from every body. You worked to provide housing for our thousands of workers, and you brought about the USO facilities so much needed. "I must thank you for keeping down prices and rents, for your attitude of refusing to exploit for profit the great number of strangers coming here to work. Your attitude toward all of us who came as strangers has been friendly to the utmost And you, too, are doing your utmost in your fields to help win the war. "You, too, are soldiers helping to win the war. We in uniform egic points. Open to enlisted The correct time is broadcast WAC Dayroom ' between invitation, Hill Field's finance office topped every hour from the Naval Ob men,' upon of 8 a. m. and 11 p. m hours all other Ninth Service Command servatory at Arlington, just out This isn't the excellent hangout class B agent offices in the cash side the District of Columbia, in it once was: first sergeants now sale of war bonds for September, Virginia. in for . their when looking peek in master the control clock The 1943, it was disclosed recently by straying charges. LL W. M. Hollowell, base finance tower at Hill Field automatically Stressed here. WACs corrects itself . from the radio sig' areFemininity officer. to still as much like soft, look to on corrections Although the finance office did nal, and passes as possible under females clinging not begin selling bonds until July the other clocks. circumstances. Lipstick, cos the made the clocks are The in by fourth of this year, it ranked Business Machine metics, and so on, are not frowned the command for bond sales dur- International excess. are and impulse driven, upon, unless in ing the first nine months of 1943. company, Haircuts Yes'm, WACs take "store means This that they up" of a cash breakdown In sales, Masculine type cuts are not Lt. Hollowell revealed that 6422 added power every hour so that them. members' hair is to the current thing; be shut the electric should series E bonds were sold. Of these, neat and worn above be feminine, to any emerg 4648 were at the $25 level, 830 off for a time due collar. the will the clocks keep right ency, 67 and at $500, at $50, 838 at $100, Jewelry may be worn. Clasps, 39 at $1000. Series F and G bond on "ticking." identification bracelet or watches sales amounted to $3000. V and are okay. No WAC is to look like IN EUROPE G bonds may be purchased at this MP SCHOOL a to depository for scrap metal. school train A police military office in cases where the maxiWACs may chew salute Chewing States has United the army you as brothers engaged mum amount of series E allowable for their need for in a great to the in enough established satisfy European been, struggle. for a calendar year has already is food, but . officially theatre. Major General William y been purchased. out M. The P. announced recently. The base finance omce is open Key Names Married WACs use their commandant will be Major John daily for cash bond sales. Govern- H. C. Williams, with Major V. M. husband's last names, their own cashed ment pay checks will be of the specialists' first name, and the initial of their there if bonds are purcnasea ai Barnes in charge maiden name. division. the same time. A large crowd of Hillcrest resi dents and many area guests attended the musical program and legend presented by members of the Minnesota Gopher club last Friday night in the dormitory east wing recreation hall. Highlights of the evening's enter tainment was the presentation of an original legend Mounds," when the ?' Gen. Berman's address at the dinner follows, in part: "You have said some splendid things about the Air Service Command and Hill Field. I do not in tend to argue about those statements. Certainly I shall not argue with the statements made by Gen. H. H. Arnold of the Army Air Forces and by Major Gen. Walter Frank, who commands the entire Air Service Command. Each of these men recently were warm in their praise of our operations. "But what I will say is this: We could not have achieved this good record at Hill Field without the hundreds of splendid officers who have been on duty at that command or are on duty there now. I can't say enough in praise of their contributions to the Air v Receives Legion Of Merit Citation P-3- done '"woned together to fly as one fc2? the Jungles hw, u " oacK a plane 17 Gen. Berman at Ogden Dinner Cites 4Splendid Cooperation' fighting . . . keeping flying wfj"? 8hips . .battle is -j, meeting in the first big action came . as r. ilr might commenced lay-in- the for groundwork anil eventuallv Cion of Sicily n.i. .Pantelleria, a small island ... .hout 90 miles due east of first on. the list. jjnij, was bombs fastened to the bel-lIZ their "Lightnings," 71st Sti diveombed the island unm- w officers DQXJC8 Brigadier General Morris Berman, addressing a group of ranking military officers and civic officials assembled in of teasibihty borrowing fire equip- his honor last week at an Ogden chamber of commerce ment from one another in cases dinner, declared that without the splendid cooperation of of emergency. Paul J. Ronnfeld, deputy fire military and civilian personnel Hill Field's operational record chief, represented the Hill Field would have been impossible. fire department at the Pilot - . council of and nre chiefs fromsafety the various military installations in this area met recently at the Naval Supply Depot at Clearfield to discuss the -- Saturday November 6, 1943 J npffe' I; VM'' if JiAnDlantandafifth u - hm nininRKN . . at lng Sei-vic- e nrotner wi m wim -- , , t v v j a cadet in nnrih I. imnlnvd -Arms. Three daughters are married to defense work- "1,.n" they too ucan Join the war effort. A finish high too. workln nrniid ... boast is - Of baae MM. Belva v & tnira wim vm biiiij P"!".' ichooln. LZa .employe. . One la ua jld, without investigation by the War Department prior to actual employment, it was revealed recently by Capt. Robert O. Stafford, chief, employment branch, civilian per sonnel section. Prior to this ruling, citizens of friendly powers were restrained from employment here until completion of a thorough investigation. In addition, this station was required to furnish proof that the position could not be filled by a citizen. |