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Show r ui May 27,1949 Jtne vaaiw Page 3 Bride-To-B""""" 'tmmmmimmiia "" A t , e "Scribe" . (Cont. from Page S coutgme 21 T'f f Girlish Grandmother! 1, CoL 4) whip and sa to for this a."u radio irjrrir,.9 ' . mention to makT a S0CL00x, hort' the five People 7 Public whn Office the best news leadsformation or stories during any one week will re- ducats to see the oap!iPle,0f P y at John Affle park What c eas,er. xou see IT. .cuung mat other people of your own shop might like aDOUC so yu cal1 243 or En 260 and say: "Hey, Scoop, I got S?r. w ZT :' old. St,ories Th - - PTrw ii.. rest,i n is judged best, you get the yours Annie Oakley's. The stories Can tA hnut om thing that isn't classified informa tion. or example: human interest stories, or just nlain Ktnr;c all must have a tie-i- n with Hill iela. Or if you have anv ideas about ways in which Hill Field n participate in community activities, call 243 or 260 and elucidate. So be on the lookout for a way w yourseir two free tickets June 3 to be exact, Pat Brady, above, will become to win h just 7 days the ball game. If you see w.u nf Jim Roach in a quiet ceremony to be performed at the camisole by a rotenone and the a wear lace will and white She of Pat's gown marquisette parents. 'u cetaphore is very centinithius. erab Wdiite satin for the ceremony and will be attended by her two a pnone and all will be epidepitori Drive slowly, will be in white over iiigters of the groom. They gowned organdy JOHN DOOLEY, isr and pink. Georgia is an employee in the Occupational Stan-- i Office Boy. office, pilot with the 15th Air Force during the war and jflmwas a 4 W attending school at the Utah State Agricultural College. in the Utah National Parks and ( ike newlyweds will honeymoon By i Vegas for two weeks then, will return to make their home at 619 fit ft T- 1 t.t Suggestions Made B-2- Workable Hill Inventor r i St, Ogden. Every employee of Hill Field is a potential inventor when he sub mits a workable suggestion to the :?ULAR HILLFIELDER TAKES awards committee, says Renold A Wyweds,. Mr. and Mrs. Bill" or and Dora Mae, as flower girl. Miskin of production facilities and drafting branch of maintenance di alter, were honored with a wed-(- 5 Bridesmaids were Mrs. Glen Stodvision. sister-in-la13 of the bride, reception May following dard, After suggestions are submitted in the Salt Lake Cleo Hansen and Janet Wood. AlJar wedding 5ple. The bride is the former ton Blain stood as best man for the they are read, studied, investigated and made into workable plans and )a Stoddard, Supply personnel groom. Tjloyee. After their honeymoon the couple inventions and that s what Mis kin's job is at Hill AFB. He eval hr the reception, the new Mrs. will make their home in Hooper. uates suggestions submitted by bker wore a gown of white satin maintenance division employees and then makes recommendations to the civilian awards committee on the best and most workable suggestions. Coming from an inventors fam ily, Miskin knows how to put sug gestions into workable plans. He has toyed with a few- inventions himself, such as mechanical furni Captain Chester M. Schultz, chief ture, instruments, me of the supply division s stock con- chanicaldrafting has also worked and trol section, has been transferred as a tool toys draftsman, me designer, to an administrative supply posi- chanical and industrial tion at Canada's No. 1 Supply De-n- - Miskin. a former Air engineer, Force en (Weston) Toronto. Canada, ac- listed man, attended Ricks Col nordinsr to Colonel H. Sachtman, leee. Rexburg, Idaho, went on supply director, Hill Air Force two-yemission to Germany for base. the LDS church, and completed a Aftpr two week's leave to visit year course in aeronautical engiTechnical Inwith the Captain and Mrs. Schultz's neering at on wm ne go California in in stitute prior to comChicago, parents to the Pentagon, wasnington, v. . ing to Hill Air Force Base. for indoctrination before report "Employees have been submitting full skirt and Jk intr thp TTnited States Air At so many good ideas lately that I sweetheart e inmmed with white seed tache, Ottawa and to the Canadian put a sign on my desk which reads Her finger-ti- p ? 'Oh, my achin back log," Miskin veil was a TJViro Wpnrinu&rters toforhisinter new said. The great increase in his w a crown of seed to view reporting prior jattoe pearls workload seems to be caused by carried a bridal hmmnpt duty station in Toronto, as the fact that employees are bewas first Sphultz ranfoin Zr!? an encircling orchid. at division me g ginning to realize that suggestions Dride were her signed to the supply of improving the working condias matron of hon- - Hill, October 1946. tions and habits of fellow workers will really pay off, he concluded. -Hl VOWS w Copt. Schultz Departs For Canadian Post Ruby Smith, (center), shatters one's illusions of grandmothers being "old and gray." Yes, Ruby's been a granny for nine months now and on her it looks good! Ruby, who works in Supply's moil file and distribution section, has been a Hill employee for seven years and is as young acting as she looks. She is shown here with her daughter, Aria Griffin (standing) and her adorable granddaughter, Mickie. Mickie's daddy, Alvin Griffin, is employed In warehouse supply. Ruby's husband, Art Smith, who is one of Mickie's favorites, works in engine repair. 1-- E, He Went, He Saw, Then Stayed 16 Yrs. Romantic, beautiful, fascinating is part of the glowing description given the sister republic Mexico by a man who went there for a four and a half year assignment and stayed sixteen years to get his fill of fun and fiesta, plus a "fling" at gold mining. Those who would like to learn from a man who knows all the things to do and see on a prospective trip to the land senor-ita- s of jumping beans, dark-eye- d and volcanic mountains, just ask Ray C. Reeder, plant electrician in air installa tions, Hill AFB. The wander-lus- t "bug" which bit Ray way back when he was still an orphaned youngster of 15 in Athens, Ohio, eventually led him arrow-straiginto what he re members as the most exciting and enjoyable years of his life "down Mexico way." Before he was twenty he had chosen the kind of work he liked best a combination of cable splic er, trouble shooter, lineman, etc. Mr. Reeder for telephone and other communi cation companies and he had plied He became a pupil himself, along his trade in more than a dozen with the other men, in attending: states, hour-a-da- y classes for three months ' t a wIi4 r "el to learn espanol ' Day classes his chosen career time when he to Ray fast enough. it didn't give enlisted in 1917 in the Eleventh he so he says, signed up also for ended Engineers of New York and up in France learning the ways or at his own expense. war, and just how hungry one has He must have become fairly pro- to become to relish horse steaks, even with French red wine as a f icient as a linguist, lor according to his own story he met and wooed chaser. "The French follow the belief," a senonta wun nasning eyes ana recounts Mr. Reeder, "that water talked fast enough to convince her is to be used only in combination that becoming Mrs. Reeder was a with soap never as a beverage, aesirame siaius. inat was in ivto, We soon accepted the French point two years alter ne a arnvea in Mexico. of view!" Mrs. Leon Johnson is the name radio seri- The eleven and a half years af- Unlike the time-wor- n the former Elaine Ford, adjutant al heroine of the perpetual emo- - ter the completion of his telephone .roTuirni npfitlon employee, has an tion dramas, Ray believes that ro- - company assignment were spent in swered to since her marriage to mance can bloom in the forties, becoming acquainted with and ap- Leon Johnson last Friday. They too. He proved it to his own satis- - preciative of the people and coun- recited marriage vows in the Salt faction when, at the age or , ne try of Mexico. Kay says he always Lake LDS Temple ana were non-- started on his enthusiastic, pro- - considered himself as a sort of a lweritlon in the Center tracted sojourn in Mexico, sampl- - ambassador for. America, and tried ville Second Ward chapel Friday ing work, sunshine and siesta. to conduct himself In a creditable was manner throughout his entire stay when came about all Ray evening. It . fha rocentlon the bride was chosen by the International Tele- - there. To keep some kind of wedding lovely in a white satinsweetheart Co., of New York to join tact with his comrades and his other men representing native country, he joined the Amer-th- e gown fashioned with a with forty necklinem and long, pointed sleeves. U. S. A., Britain, Belgium and lean Legion Post No. 1 of Tampico, nroa nf French Imported Sweden to install the first teie-- 1 in which he tt actively engaged, 1942 Ray said farewell to his brides illusion and was held in phone exchange system in Tarn-- 1 in seed of pearls. pico, Mexico, macn man was n adopted . country oi 10 years ana place with a , crown white She carried a bouquet expert in his own particular field brought his wife and small daugh- roses centered witn an besides setting up the ex- - ter, Aida, back to the states, and bride, tf.fhtun Ford, sister of thewore it was a short transfer from his taught and trained a change, they honor and men in the complications job as an electrician at Kelly AFB, Mexican Norma A. Galley of telephone repair and servicing. Texas, to Hill in 1944, where he dress of u-lavendar. VfMo mi matron of hon- j reports the Mexicans were i has worked ever since. Beverly Ray Last July Ray's wife and daugh or and Shirley Hess, pupils. apt very and Emma Lou Barlow, ter returned to Monterey, Mexico, brides-ir.ij' t coSJin of the bride, were wnere Aiaa is completing a couege his brother. for urnr dresses of green an, July comes The couple will take a short course. When .nextto drive aVd yellow and carried circle bpu. "south around home Ray plans make their then honeymoon of ...B-..quefai ot alternating rows me w me " wnere uuiu"i In Pocatelio, loano, reunion and vacation. "SSjSSTSiSSfla as best man groom has been transferred. - iPlllilliilllillPi;H!i nt ht ar Cal-Ae- sis-2HL- Force Base Employees Civilian Welfare Fund Financial Statement Air Month Ending 2SLW0RKING CAPITAL 1 "UMPTS DURING MONTH A. B- Pai.Ii $ 2,550.63 1949 OF APRI . scaurant EHvldend 1QiQ s 299.84 12.52 Uyilian Dance Concession refund from Mtn. Sales Distributing Co. ' - 312.36 V XPENSES?tal Recreation ? Petty Cash Bookkeeping u- " 74.95 $ '"CREASE DURjnq THE MONTH OF APRIL 2fof.CAPITAL ASSETS:' Cash in b- - c- - tp-- 5.00 50.00 1.61 Engraving Fee 30 APRIL AltOtjS 131.56 1949 180.80 1949: Bank $ Petty Cash Loans Receivable t. Total LABILITIES: AVEra?;,-N- et 2,118 93 10.00 02.50 a. $ T?.TWPTrv VV. STRENGTH FOR CAPITAL EMPLOYEE con-pho- ne 1 2,731.43 Working CIVILIAN Capital K?G ki, Marries, Moves To Idaho 30 April 1949 Inril ro PER EMPLOYEE WHICH MAY BE ACCEPTED 2,731.43 4266 .6402 .3598 C I |