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Show lotsin Speeds War Worli Q Hifih for - i WdPurchaise 1)1 of lj Deduction Continues i Steadily ( Gain - War Bond report of .i.. ankiorlrvtlnna Adius- V Utll P- - . : 1 rieiq, ugden, Utah Wednesday, Sept. 15, 1943 Hill Fielder Pays Visit to Pyramids fTTje by civilian personnel Mtoer cent for the month, i .7,J rw '.. fhl week. increase was ti I ' j iwg lew for fltriira fV.a Au- - notch to- .fin another J -ww.w.l- The imi per vein. 4. L jiw showed the percentage enroll deductions to be 11.1 lor Itory personnel Q v-- i-. participated mfti M ifl .. nail iiAnfrl . WMW, gg9Ul U ahIv Mak v u fCpurta W ... WW mi this lower contributing to w xw: w the field was the 14th at cjowen jneia, uoise, L with 100 per cent for both rflnr knot . and soldiers. The payroll uction figure was i3.e per cent, md only to the 13.7 per cent to- of the 348th at Cas- - jjjani sub-dep- below. Credit Paul Taggart of the Post schools, Supply Training Division, with a bright idea, and a real ot of the Wyoming. 99.8 per cent h civilians subscribed, outfit with a perfect recora or iuo per cent both civilian and military per-jiwas the 817th Specialized at Sioux City, Iowa, tage Depot 2 per cent payroll however, was lower than t of the 14th the LI Mr penec. recora ouuiu mother ticipauon el de-:ti- on 11-- sub-dep- . ilw 1 civilian hicipation was the 397th sub Vot at Mountain Home, Idaho? aE? hrch Continuing cV if Jap Terrorism Described to Soldiers By Correspondent Radio Talent talmt If you've had radla perienee in the production I programs, you're Just Woman Writer Tells . of Torture, Rapine, Slow Starvation and, Mistreatment; Capacity Audience Crams Theatre Here end the jots that the recreation unit lNtdng for in order to eom-j- tt pians for a coming civilian . mum series. ' . Attractive Gwen Dew, only W07 man correspondent in the Far East when the Japs struck Pearl Harbor, and who spent six months in a Jap prison, spoke to a full house of military personnel at the Little Theatre at Hill Field Friday afternoon. On a tour of military installations throughout the United States, newspaper woman the HP told unexaggerated reports of torture, rapine, slow starvation rf T imposed . upon capsurthe Americans following tured prise attack of Decembet 7, 1941. : Miss Dew was a roving reporter for the Detroit News an6 Newsweek Magazine touring Japan, China and the Southwest Pacific area for four years before the Miss Gwen Dew outbreak of the war. g Hong-Krnthe in was She ' morning when the inhabitants of that city saw large formations of Because war planes approaching. had not been declared, the planes were believed to be British. Then Members of the Salt Lake City suddenly from the bomb bays came anf Ogden T Jnna eluha will be Japan's realistic declaration of war. guests of Ogden Air Service ComDuring the siege of the fortress, mand at Hill Field today for a tour she was isolated with other Amer- of the installation and a luncheon ican, British and Dutch nationals at one p. m. in tne orricers' club. The- vintinir dub members will in the famous Repulse Bsy hotel. r, She has written a tour the field in a convoy of private "Prisoner of the Japs," in which auiomuoiiei, Bccampuiiea uy memshe has set down her own adven bers of the auxiliary milltarv notice tures in the depths of horror found and the military police. in the Nipponese prison. Captain A. a. wanamaker, Hni iriffM soldiers took advantage information officer, ia in chartre of all available standing room to of arrangements for the tour and account or tne the luncheon. hear the first-han- d sadistic nature of the Jap enemy Lieut- nj a Hojirrintlon of the manner In Malntenanee Now In which Americans were tortured Harry Vogler has been transferred and subjected to indignities dur- from warehouse 11 to Maintenance division. ing their Internment. employes interested, those on swing and ; ihifts who haven't had an file a talent to droo in or dial recreation unit of Employe uunu orancn. rv.liaiw Pom.- wcuoa, extension 8315 or 8318. rtunity to ire urged com tlx) he w V Milestone uestic I A . m, bl H New Committee to Head AER Relief seft to m I 'W - vW A: y ( "J n - I ... fSJL McKEE Ha. years ia the aerviee government. I 1 Colonel Fator Dissolves Board 7 i t Order Issued By V4o V An Army Emergency Relief Com mittee of three members has been appointed by Col. Lilburn D. Fator, Base Commanding Officer, to re place the AER Board of Directors dissolved by the same order. The new appointees are Major R. Barton, AER officer; Chap lain Joseph P. MacCarroU, and Mr. Edward B. Eisen, American member. Red Cross, as Soldiers or civilians knowing or mili any case of distress among or imm tneir tary personnel . tn maka these matters Army known at the office of the Room in located Relief, Emergency 106. Base Headquarters duuu....lu.tiAna for Armv Emerah gency Relief or any questionsat that this may arise should be made office to the officer in charge or to the clerk on duty, Lions Clubs Are Visitors to Field a - best-selle- io irterm5 MS E- - thmile post of fit- McKpo . - career fa i f,CaiH assistant McKee, Sa,eg "ioer' Passed civil service . ner Clv" SBn the erv-P- ot Quartermaster he redV! was trans- - b!Pk field. Canal Zone, hu1aba,i was located rSf !CJDavi at the other end of ZVZ 3 F tran. Jwr"- - 5 JiSS" K Her he Utl,ltle 18 svif1 K 2S. to PWt-ft- r. uShlnever rt of a tHiirL'!' " May tfnfrred out i?T K neb Py of thrder' 1 McKee In and McKee nat-Pu.- A Mrs. 2 (i McKee Planned for Hillcresters: wl Tnr Mine to Took .suw riUUlUVl . OvOT 100 Trip f lvddeSVrtiZ"eM h.v heen-fb- -- n. c" Ubon. niLii va often lady v . recre , " the souineasi w .nrihoast in th dormitory area, ation MM 1.-- 11- carry- - or .telephone extension Transportaiion n - Big Copper base commander, Colonelf company by company officials who D. Fator, in cooperation explained the working, of the mine, .t.n mAr s mtti witivnus rrii... with Wasatch Motor company, and of and at where u direction Garfield, the Magna under u. . they 111c t til. recreational super- ...tw A..nl M n Cora Fuller, necessary to Jmelt ore. visor. . The party left the domitory area resiMore than 100 Hill Crest eleven . a. m.,. and . returned at at . . M t ! of wn ociock dents made a similar tour Dunaay nignu Garfield The .tours are sponsored by the Bingham canyon, Magna, recreational unit of civilian per-were welcomed at the Utah Copper the v I i tour through Mercy esting and educational w canyon Weber department of o"thinf City and bacx 10 and sail way of Parley's canyon Lake who wish to who has All tour make the . " contribution to the war effort. The Tech Order Compliance unit over in Warehouse 11 has an or der to fill on wing reinforcement fabric kits for overseas shipment. Rolls of the fabric have to be cut to shorter lengths, and then It's a tedious job by hand, and a long one, and tbe good many of the kits to be turned re-roll- ed. ON LEAVE . . . From the North African battle zone is Technical Sergeant Frank M. Peterson of Hill Field (right, above) in group visiting the Sphinx and the Pyramids in Egypt. This picture was taken Aug. 16 last. He recently sent his wife, Ruth Peterson, of Stock Records, some gifts bought at a little town near Casa Blanca, which she donned (below) for the Hillfielder photographer. ot, with 100 per cent ith Of Post PAUL TAGOART schools has done his bit to hasten the end of the war by inventing a device which enables two persons in a day and a half to do the work formerly done by 12 persons in nine days. The type of work is described LI ' I I i arj out That's where Taggart came in. Seeing the need for some mechanical device, he went to work, and came up with a machine that can h do the job in of the time one-sixt- formerly required. Similar to a Red Cross bandage winder, the device is simplicity itself. But how valuable Taggart'a idea was can be seen in the fact that the job that 'previously took 12 people days to finish, can now be accomplished by two worker in a day and a half." ' And to add the crowning laureta, although in use only a few days, two' new tasks have already been found for the machine; '. namely the winding of soldier fishing kit lines, and of airplane electrical wiring. New. West Hoacl Open Tomorrow Vehicular Traffic to Enter Field Using South Gate The new west road running from Highway 91 to the south-gat- e will be open to traffic to morrow, it wsa announced hv Cast. Nedwin R. Weber, Base Security vehicular traffic to Hill Field, that traveling? the Monn tain road from Highway 89, the south road from Salt Lake and the new . west access road, will converge at the south &ate and follow channels Into the parking All including ftrGA "Mountain road traffic," Capt, Weber outlined, "will take the east lane; Salt Lake or south road traffic, the center lane, and west read or Ogden traffic the west lane. "Entering; the narkine lot. the south and west read traffic will park on the west side of the lot, while the east or Mountain rvtfr vehicles will park on the east side of the parking lot. The state highway patrol will post the approaches for 20 miles per hoar, which will also prevail from the south gate to the parking lot." In the future passenger busses will unload at the east end of the clockhouse and pick up tbelr load on the west side of the clock-hous- e, south of the bank building, Capt. Weber explained. Use of the west gate will bo restricted to the use of government vehicles and truck. Paving of the new west road Is now underway' and will be completed In about seven days, stale high way officials said. To reduce the hazard of collision, no vehicles will be permitted to move against incoming traffic at peak periods during shift changes. Officers carrying - civilian employes will use the parking lot road on entering and leaving the field, and deposit their passengers in front of the clockhouse and enter and depart the field by the Sixth street sate. With thta r. ceotion. officers mav enter an sate at any hour, when properly laenuuea. , : |