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Show Th 227fA Conwy Cvcrkers HflHeW HiMfielder r) Im Fcrf e,,rrts LongTr ips automobiles to arc urgent y request. relations branch, .tr with the employe of the unit in civil-V48'1- action if their loaded to capacity. not lire was victory over Japan num-- " a ereai. ICfi r field employee kona Kaon I hout rides ana iu, rant. ftpeople course riders of at cany erfer to get new must rs in & points out Hazen driving to work al-jS- pto the expenses meet vm nntn their "A." . 7 ,A "C" ration dooks and as these mileage records, in valuable securing prove : i jt L without a I"" tigers are requested load of to call Cmploye transportation unit, Won 237, and riders will be from along the driver s 0i yor Workers W Party M Saturday evening the moil transportation pool, preverft-- V maintenance branch, and powered md equipment section, held Germelon bust, ball game, W dance, as well as swim- -, md other games at Como line ithe vehicle to. of 'lie evening fun and enter-ime- nt got underway Vwith an estimated 200 at 7 including 50 mil-- jj peo-fjttendi- ng, personnel. in iCommittee charge of sements were--: f of the vehicle ar- - - F. W. Shum- and powered equipment section, Glen of the motor pool and rles Salmon of preventative (maintenance branch. Works On bes For China TSC From Page 1) climate and for ion for loading and un- is being put in, and some changes are being made the instrument Danels. M United States Army Air Continued me & .", Chinese ig By Pfc. Harvey Reese The 2287th Quartermaster Truck Company, which is marking its first anniversary at has had a training as signment which has carried it through five western states a distance of more than 9000 miles at a time when most people were restricted from making long trips. As part of intensive training for future assignments, the com pany has visited many of tha scenic highlights of the west, FIVE STATES . were visited bv i - these GIs and fh.ir a vviiiic nicy were on a convoy including Yellowstone National cLiaenWeStreCe?Uy- - N0,W thCy "e baCk again at OATSC, but these men of the Park, Bear Lake, Lost Lake, and other areas in Wyoming, Utah, soon forget the scenery they saw in the states visited. Idaho, Nevada, and Montana. These visits, however, have not been pleasure trips. During the journeys, the company traveled in convoy, simulating conditions they anticipated overseas. Traffic instructions and reThe attention of all Hill The ninety-nin- e enlisted men minders were issued this week in the company are under comis Fielders to called nationthe by Major Johnnie P. Harlow, wide programs which are being mand of Capt. James M. Dawprovost marshal, in the hopes of by Lts. James A. broadcast by local stations and son, assisted eliminating traffic hazards near M. Paris. James and Skipper the parking lot. These instrucfeature the work done by the At present, the company is tions are as follows: Army Air Forces. Following is helping alleviate the shortage of All private vehicles approacha list of these programs and the drivers in the base motor pool. the company has ing Hill Field from the mounlocal stations from which they In the past, tain road will turn right at the loads of material to Hill brought are broadcast. east approach road to the parkField from other installations Wed. "Wings Over the Na and while on convoy duty. lot will in east the ing park section. All private vehicles apTwelve mechanics are charged tion" (Mutual) 10:30-1- 1 p.m. with the responsibility of keepproaching the field from the KLO (Ogden) 1430. ing the company rolling. They Layton road will use the right Sat. "Flight to the Pacific" side of the main approach road perform their own second eche5 KUTA lon work and are capable of (ABC) and will park in the center secp.m. tion of the parking lot. All pri(Salt Lake City) 570. "I Sus- third echelon repairs. vate vehicles approaching the tain the Wings" (NBC) U. S. CASUALTIES 1,060,727 field from the lower road will p.m. KDYL (Salt Lake City) Total American war Casualties turn left at the main approach 1320. "Return To Duty" are well over the million mark, (Mu road, utilize the left side of the main approach road and park according to recent Army and p.m. KLO (Og tual) in the west section of the parkNavy releases. The total is 1430. den) with those suffered by ing lot. Sun. "The Fighting AAF" The cooperation of all drivers MRS. CLARISSA J. HOLMAN, (ABC) 6:30-- 7 p.m. KUTA (Salt the Army broken up as follows: Dead, 197,676; wounded, 570,766; is requested in the best inter- Hill Field employe, died of in- Lake City) 570. missing, 34,734; and prisoners, ests of this command, as any received in an automowere: These programs are broadcast 117,741. juries Navy totals indeviation from the above bile accident last week. at this time and deal week 51,588; Dead, 72,855; every wounded, structions by drivers creates a with various phases of AAF missing, 11,611, and prisoners, pedestrian and traffic hazard 3,756. which might necessitate the trafto of direct posting guards fic on the highways, Major Harlow said. Hill-Fiel- i55 2?S5taSf Rules on Parking Lot Are Issued Succumbs Broadcasts Air AAF Activities 7:30-7:5- 9:45-10:- Employe Dies As Result Of JAPS WILL LOSE ' jF"3 f Oceans i'1 OjiJ: .akshaii i v. m mm law i.v-n- i . t'' rmw is iiul n VJJu.EAT' according to Allied plans, will cost her ; 11 the territory -. lhe nome Wands of Honshu, HokKaiao, and UCdl vPl . U W A Mn Hn I I1T CMIIW ii i j ""iiur lsianas. bmci areas uu uic in 1895; Korea UP: Formosa (1), which she seized WT'nlHOS: PmiA. t mil. Manrhuria (4), j , and ; P8rt of Chin (5). taken in 1937; WfiV Island (7), in 1940 as "protectorates"; Wake the u g. ln W41. Burm; and straits Settlements (8),the ru W1 u- TV T 1 . TV . ti fr.Pied Indo-Chi- na Those Endearing Young Charms Car Accident Mrs. Clarissa J. Holman, 48, of Salt Lake City, an employe in the reclamation section, maintenance division, at Hill Field, died last Wednesday in a Salt Lake hospital of injuries reautomobile ceived in a head-o- n crash on the highway near Farmington. Five other Hill Field employes injured in the accident are reported recovering from injuries. Mrs. Holman was born at Union, Utah, Nov. 15, 1896, the the daughter of N. M. Jensen and late Sarah Jensen. She is survived by her father, her husband, B. Holman, and six Travel Ban on Gl Wives Continued A 15 . Novel River Bridge A of a Bailey bridge section markings are being re- -' and being reDlaced mounted on pontoons and towed bv Of the f!hinci Ail- - Vnffn by amphibian trucks was used Nher identifications will be as a ferry to haul supplies across the Irrawaddy river in Burma to jved showing these planes wrly belonged to the Unit-speed British advances south to ) Sates, with the ex-- J Mandalay, the Ninth Service possible of the serial number, command ordnance officer said Mounger reports. today. TERRITORY Taken by Truck Co. ' ' Ms V '' ' A www iiifp The personal affairs section at OATSC reports that no in the change is contemplated War Department recurrent strictions against dependents of their army personnel joining husbands and relatives stationed overseas. are Reasons for the policy causof transportation, shortage of ed especially by acceleration shortPacific; the in operations continental age of food outside United States which necessitates to personnel shipment of food overseas; lack of housing and unrest in occupied areas, according to Capt. Chrl& affairs P. Murphy, chief personal YANKEE MODEL . . . This nifty little trick all dolled up in a section. art or what peasant dress is a prime sample of American pin-u- p The The result: do can with quaintness. NS) Yankee ingenuity SAUGUS, ruled hails dress The abbreviation! has such such straight such Selectmen sparkle, of style, fhat any town employe; with the from the filmland version of "The Ziegfeld Follies," bat the girl odor of liquor .on.1mebdrieaateli hails from Ogden. Name: Anita Fowler. Tender age: Eighteen. will be - Propensities: Skating and acrobatics she likes swimming and will employ undertown The ly - - Me.-(C- . old-wor- ld ifill |