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Show X L - . I Jy ijrhten Ijhicle Use I New Rule S WD 1 Ogden Air Service Command -- is With Suggestions Are Sought From Personnel Here Wednesday, August 23, 1944 Memorial Service Held for Hill Field Pilots Asportation TOf"""" ef-rLrd-irif de-Tj- Jat Jesdnuarters. Ccircular, number 275, dated stated that official purposes it Vnot include the transporta-- f officers and employes be-- L their domiciles and places Sployment, except In cases of and employes engaged in of fL work, the character of whose T makes such transportation Canr and then only as to such ,a ZTcises when the same is by the head of the depart-Ctestablishment concerned." Sntinuin it said that "any of-- V or employe of the government k uses or authorizes the use of ap-C- or passenger-car-- motor-propell- V leased by thegov-Zc- ot for other than official Coses or otherwise violates the "771. J tklc ahsll visions vl mo niluuilnn wm mnunaruy removeu vehicle -- w said that these limitations do awly to any motor vehicles .mLi.i iim at the nresident heads of the executive depart- Su. - Ambassadors, Ministers,rta d'affairs, and other princldiplomatic and consular offl- ' V" ' to the commanding delegated said, (ice forces, army air forces, and army forces that no appropriation liable for the executive depart-- it and independent establish-l- b for the fiscal year . 1943 M be expended for the main- -, nee, operation f nich vehicle for official their lives last year while searching for the crew of a amlsslng army bomber were both of Charley J. Langer, district forest ranger; Capt. Bill Kelly, pilot, and 14. Arthur Crafts, Hill Field. In an impressive ceremony about two miles from where their plane crashed in the Challis National Forest, OASC Chaplain Stowers dedicated a memorial to them, and conducted memorial services on Tuesday, Aug. IS. Above, a picture of the ceremonies. UEKOES . . . Who lost eo-pll- ot, Wxxuibility for Insuring corn-S- ee with these regulations has sals, army ground r - s . , i r Trash in wte Paper, Says zse Headquarters E-1- 51, i Charts had eoh-J- d 50 August urday, ing orchestra. program featuring the "Keep 'Em Flying" Orchestra, directed by TSgt Ed Stoker. Transcription of the show will be made tomorrow night at the Little Theatre. from 8:30 . . . With a picture of Forest Ranger Charley J. to 9:00 o'clock. A will be offered at eight sharp, com posed of specialty numbers by the orchestra and comedy by Sgt Dan BaUey and Pfc. Ray Varela. Military personnel are invited. Military and civilian personnel interested in participating in a series of radio dramas prepared at OASC are invited to call Lt Levy, extension 8460. national Challis 'AtTn tafp?eiive ceremony in Idaho's Thursday night KLO show has Willis J. been temporarily discontinued. OASC's Chaplain 15th, on Aug. Tuesday, of new time will forest, stone memorial, erected Announcement be made in the Hillfielder. Stowers, unveiled a concrete and E-24- 6. pre-sho- w ibu.tthiw Cant. Kelly, Lt. Croft Are Honored for Rescue Attempt 'Flights9 with its army's big 4 bombers crew became hopelessly n over the Chains rEtiomS Forest? With their gas low, they out Ultimately five frozen from the of the crew, half on winter's deep snow . tubled shelto and finally one another, to After ter in a forest watch tower.a signal five days of searching,which they witchwas found, withthe outside were able to give their survival worid the news of B-2- ten-ma- i i T izv J. B. Ktell . pine circ- - as pS?!. Vhig vantage of ? flying weather around ae Cr v nd nd Mrs. O. B. two emergency n runway oc Hospital here, looks of the precarious-ri tying they havo htn do. othep unpredictable mr be made almost any LV-.Klon- f r Jcal offl-- Captain Bill Kelly, CApTs, and Lt. Arthur A. Crofts, pilot, District together with J. Langer Forest Ranger Charley left the of Maho, as guide, in search for Hill Field the army of five "remaining In the bleak bombcrew. hold winter's unyielding were in which they search their pUne crashed onto a mountain, instantly killing all three. death by the untimely OASC of (SSTtwo Hill Field fliers,o assistant base C. Hammond, led the party to bring back JhTougTierrarn accessible only by skis and snowsnoea. for whom Charley J. Langer, whic they upon the mountain was crashed has now been named, his forest among favorite agreat buddies. To his memory, ranter United gers all over the so forest that money States contributed would be the stone memorial actedas a lasting tribute to him co-pil- ot, run-wavs- dark-nassT- of of SSuXithe per-Sfal- ly SBZprc"v,-t- - " that his de- - "ai.xo accomodate as the the fuTtleTS of the ? J lET ,and that a "welcome" Ward lust outside of thm Ana ' for all . prospective ftrt?.'Jhe Mior is busy book for lit. and i to 5:39 p. m. Sat 26 Keep 'Em Fly OASC takes the airways again this Saturday over KUTA from 5:00 to 5:30 p. m. with a sparkling B-2- Hsj. -- KUTA their lives a Tittle in memory of three men who had given members of an over a year before while searching for crewforest. in the heart of the army 4 bomber, lost t one On March 20, ma, him l OASC Radio Show Set "The command that keeps 'em in the air is on the air." do Much Zxt ririd control ef the seg- -, ttiea of shreddable paper and M was required this week by iaaeadaeartert. offieial said that apprexl---T 5 per cent ef the waste staled to the paper sal--i to consider "victory" ideas sub mitted by military and civilian personnel was announced yesterday by Col. Paul orW. Wolf, com uisu. xno manding orricer new committee is bedded by Lt. Milton M. Harrison, chairman. rkthor mtnlMN r mn K. Tav- lor, Arthur W. Jackson and Don Johnson, the executive secretary. Recognition for ideas resulting in conservation of personnel, ma terial and equipment has been provided for military personnel by the war department, Don H. Johnson, executive secretary, civilian personnel suggestions committee. announced this week. Form of recognition in individual cases will be determined by the commanding officer of each installation. It may be a letter of commendation from the commanding officer, recommendation for promotion or a recommendation for the Legion of Merit, fourth highest U. S. army decoration. Suggestions should be written up in regular form used by civil ians ana placed in the suggestion boxes located conveniently throughout the field. Each idea will be investigated and evaluated by the headquarters, suggestions committee. Those approved will be forwarded to the commanding officer, Johnson said. For Saturday and repair of not used exclu-l-y purposes. warehouse, building the last two weeks rejected because it to much trash. committee for New suggestion the Osrden Air Service Command will be pun-?- S .Jemployes with removal from, to a new war at circular, receive f Jbxiarrison Is New Head Of Committee Circular Lgtofflcisl use of Jtt-- t and the men who flew with on the mercy mission. Relatives, friends and neighbors, a a manv as could come to the me morial spot last Tuesday, just two miles northwest of the place their to nlane had crashed, gatheredstow-OASC with Chaplain gether h iinveiflnff and dedica tion of the memorial in memory of ih full on three whose names ap on the granite tablet set in pear n th mountain rock, in wwwMt destructible either by passing of time or the elements. A piciure oxn and his wife ap-Charley Langer sranite tablet, also ihave the nmtected from the ravages of weather and the nasslng years. nhanlaln Stowers was flown north for the memorial service by It was Lt Yardley Lt Yardley. who flew the plane over the me morial ground and who cuppea nis and ninnp'i wins; in military salute Forfinal tribute from the air to est Ranger Langer, Pilot Kelly and . ot Sgt. Robert Heath was recently promoted from sergeant it was reported this week from an Eighth air force service command station in England. Sgt. Heath was employed here from June, 1942, until November, 1942, as a carpenters helper. At his depot somewhere in England d aircraft of the where Eighth are repaired, he is a statistical clerk In the maintenance divi sion and keeps close tab on the job of ground mechanics who patch up Thunderbolts, Mustangs and Lightnings. His home Is in Salt Lake City. He entered the service in Novem ber. 1942. His wife, the former Margaret Lyman, is residing in Salt Lake City. this week that 96 per cent ef men wounded in action have recovered and that about ef them have returned to duty as a result of modern bile surgery and reconditioning treatment Figures compiled between Jane 25 and July 25, Che department said, show that 23 per cent ef the men discharged from hospitals with serious physical limitations had elected to remain ia the military service rather thaa take- a discharge. two-thir- ds . - Leslie Norton Is Sent to Hawaii Leslie T. Norton.' occunationaL standards unit supervisor, left recently . for two months' detached service at the Hawaiian air "depot to aid in establishment of occupa tional nanaaros, and a locality wage prosrram there. Cant Ellis T. Demars, OSU chief, announced. this week. Think in terms ef safetr. Act hm terms ef safetr. Yen are needed est the job, net in the hospital. Transferred 4 battle-scarre- Crofts. 1m ' Edna Venberg, public health nurse of the Davis County health department, will conduct a first Monday of baby clinic on the 10 a.m. until 12 each month from n nurina that time she will all children weigh and measure between the ages of birth to six years. Make Recovery The war department announced Former Hill Field Worker Promoted To Sgt. in England Marines Over 38 Can Be Discharged Sahara Village to 38Enlisted marines over the age of years may now be discharged Have Baby Clinic from service, if they are serving in the continental limits of the Co-Pil- 96 Out of Each 100 Wounded United States and if they are to go into Jobs as important to the war effort as the military duties they are presently engaged in. This rul ing rescinds a previous ban on marine discharges for age. Whether this is a forerunner for other branches) ef the service is unknown. ,: k.' , I V 7 ''""'fy Hajer H. J. Erennaa Major Hubert F. Brennan. supply control section" ch'ef, has been transferred to the AAF overseas replacement depot at Kearns, Utah, neadouarters announced this week. Major Brennan has been assigned in the supply division since August 1943, at which time he was named chief, receiving branch. Until May, 1943, when he was appointed control chief, he served as assistant purchasing and contracting officer and area gasoline storage officer. His home is in Baton Rouge, He Is on military leave Loiana. from the Louisiana National bank of that city where he was cashier before his entrance into the army in June, 1342. . |