Newspapers / Air-O-Mech (Goldsboro, N.C.) / Oct. 6, 1943, edition 1 / Page 2
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/Of* Tw* nmmhn C. 1943 JIB-O-IIECR Siy—« n«ld. N. C . Ttiis aewspAper to publistoed weeUjr tj aod for tbe personzwJ at Seymour JoUbmo Field. N C.. under tbe dlrectioo o the 8pMl«J Service Officer. Fall ooveriiga ot tbe Camp Newspaper Service to received. All material to passed by tbe Public Relatlona Office. All photographs, tmiess otherwise credited, are Army Air Forces pboto- graphs. News appearing In this paper to for general release provided proper credit to given. COL. DONALD B. BUTTH, Commanding ONlcer MAJOR J. B ICURR. Special Service Officer ^ KDITORIAL Pfc. Leabo WaDar U/8gt Rlcbard B. Tatt Pvt Jamee Reama Poet Pboto Sectton ONE FOR SEVENTEEN OUR NEW C. O. With lha dapcRtoia of Colonel Doncdd B. Smith, Sey* mour ojhnson Field welcomes its new Commanding General Brigadier General Francis M. Brady. irs been a leng, hard pull since the field first rose from (he mud and cotton of North Carolina. Ask any of the of ficers and enlisted men who come here when our post wos still in the blue-print stage. They know tbe struggle it has taken. ■tot led«y. neariy a year and a half later, 'Seymour Johnson Field is a vital, hustling center of octWity—on im portant port of the Army Air Forces and tbe noticm's war eflort. So are wilcsms our new C. G. with a feeling of pride in work accomplished ond a certainty that we can handle whatever is expected of us in the future. * General Brady comes to us from the combat areas of this global war. He has seen in ‘ action some of the men we helped train. And, having seen war in all its reality, be has expressed a profound faith and trust in (he American soldier. il*s vp le all of us, then, to show him that he con expect the limit . . . and that he won't be disappointed. ONE GREAT EFFORT Once npoa a tUne# when the war was young ond coup- * * tries were tailing like autumn's leaves, (he citizens of our nation watched its spreoding growth and did the one. Amer ican thing they could do. They gave their money to help oppressed peoples rav aged by Nazis and Japanese war might. They formed com mittees, staged drives and rallies gave benefit performances, and raised enough money to help many ways the starving, diseased victims of Axis terror.' But, tot the scone time that drives wers under way tori Britain, Russia. China, and other equally-suffering nations! of Europe, the people of Ameridb were being called upon for other important causes. War bonds and stamps claimed Friends, this mootbto edltlen ai cbew and be sme te te^a vm'bwy and sirenuous much of their paycheck, and the United Service Organlza- a nHUon^ ^ making .a skilled musician. , . I I /.■>* fim.4a irt simplv fasctnaUDg article cantof! cabbage, be says bravely. A mqw stridn vaa bacomtns too iions were making a powerful oppea* to them for funds t® -oniy one Way To Oci Thin.” its tittle spinach, plesM,” be says, for hto age and bis bealtli, help keep up the morale of servicemen. theme, if v« understand the ‘*Bow'8 about three slices of bread, f«iiw la be sought ttw While aesi el these drives were successful, they were thought correctly, to *****!S,,‘“ ®hum?'’ he^iks. 'advice and nsedlcal attention o£ a It t 4V • miat. and ****** provW- Result? We see Quagndre being phystcton. The physlcfan recom- confusicg in their effect, were often miscalculated and m you're lat. Don’t eat so much, roued down the street a little whOe mended that be Uke a rest from terfered with each other. Tbe article quoted a few weu- biter, bloated Uke a barrage ba!- hia obUgatloes and work.He sug- .mt however, one national organization was set kuodm physicians doing research )oon and urplng vulgarly all the gested Uiat be go Into tbe maun- up 1c^-oX;irZ^-rai.mg .llort. o7..vent«n ol these while-. He 1. .t, s, Qus^. ttle, sed lUd,, cmplej*. outfits. It's come is TIa NotieMl War FmkI. and it combines all individual drives into one. concerlod effort. Featire... Don’t Eat So Much and You’ll Get Thin, Maybe The CHAPLAIN’S The story to told of vtoUntot accepted ttw suggestioo TUs Is llw Haw of year when the NWF makes its great appeal to the people of America. From the proceeds of its drive, such organizations as the U.S.O.. British War ReHe»', Russian War Relief, and United China Relief gel their money to continue sending food and medical aid to our aU>e«> and to give comfort and entertainment to our fighting men. Fiboi drive, and from no others, do these organifa- tions gel their funds. It it one of the truly important money raising efforts in the nation and ranks second only to our all- out drive to buy War Bonds and Stamps. Ynt «s seWtn, have limited means at your disposal for contributing to this drive. But. while doing what you ot., while. He Is lat, to . _ the conclusion that U you overeat, ^nd hto cheeks flab gently In tbe ly forgetting bis regular strenu- breese. He waddles vbes be walks, ous rootloes In life. The master and tbe seams at hto OI clothes vtottaitoc acceted tbe soggesUon protest in amasement, glvtng Bttle for a rest. One evening, hnvliig (la- tearlng sounds as cTMenee. 'shed supper and being In ’he roi QiMudre to now a diuw-hooe of an old moimUlneer. he into gluttony by Into tbe old guest room with to?toity^aodtohments*of a?f«y itjblg toriplace strong sturdy The debcate flavor of fatty chunks mantelpiece. He noUced an old vio- ef pork surrounds hto greasy Jowto; 11“ case In wn-^ was a worn ■me indMcrib.bl€ .rome ol bre«l niree. »!««■>• Being a i^'lnlet. nwWIng cllnge m hie .lobbertiw nemr^ij Be, w Intemted. He Spe. /Sxl Ai^Ubig eMTTOt ellces . fkea to rttf moijntetaeer II M cSi, iron, hb els hi e eoMer 1;' cascade ^ UtUe.' TbS o’d violintot asked goegi^lre b to«. Irlenda. He b ineuntehieer to pla, a tune lor e bopelees caro. One fate 01 Ol Ibn. end, ol rourse. to moumaln- ch» rod he b gooe lorever, ter .jtojred to rnmio whbh wee , r^Um at tte alUr of g^ food. for contributing to this drive, nui. vrniie aumg w««4 mountain music, ^avlng finished urge your friends and families at home to give as much as sU the time yrw^ ^ wStag thS^SSS? iSh Playm- hto tune, be asked the old th^r Ln spare to this worthy cause. Your own moraIe._™d « ‘‘ —* S^b^^aSHlialS; not. illOJ h.a.u» a|.rMnv .we , the Spirit of millions of fighting people all over the world- _ii ewew.aiwaal ,-nm¥imn anemv and all fidhtinQ wi never get thin. z. -»i .k. while.' Their Idea to that you should and he saU. ’’Yes.” The mountain- vBeaaaa ae. a..---.———- — --a* • - . .a ,. ta. ‘eL. ' — w— “ jw, h hituATuifi thls ncu' oor requestod that the ^^oUnlst all fighting against a common enemy and all fighting with eat s ^ Mm oIrS eating so mu^ to strict- helped by contributions to the National War Funds. blubbery layew. crSjJi ^JiheaLhtMOl sensitive accuragv Mr; thus be HOW IT STARTED- LSS:gh“SU f'SL'S 'SSS.'toi.Ti. « ^ ..••Relreor being on, of .he mo.. «lo.ful ol «rom^ny Investigation .howa that it stem, from the Fiench Cavalry ^t“Z>''miich -don’t g«' "■elMHe" whose tune dales back to the 11th and Ikin t.en- ^ ronrible, we'd sap.l tury Crusade, in the Holy Land. .... ”* “**■ ’ ' ' “""'i The bulge call 'To The Color" Inote that “loi ^ Here, watting bttlhly im to to plural) is played whenever a bond is not available. While niess ball on noon to Pfc Quagmire rK4« «AMom haDoens here on the Held, it occasionally occurs. Fronge. a slim, dapper young M wil « d^Je call 1. «rlu.«f juat a. i. .he Haliar.al -wUh a ^ Anthem played by a band. Inch watoter. wbo has to be careful The music was first introduced as legitimate music by ‘^a^^*** J the famed French composer Louis Berlioz in «m and’^^tUng droTOcdf'* was durir. UlUOU « gwgiv.a a,a,an.f~ww. —— ^ ^ __ ^ ased as a bugle call by French troops in skirmisbes throat tbe cbow-Une with closed eyes and a perpetual | of tbe bead. Mple like him wbo __ int good, healthy food? -n Retreat become a. standardized milit^ cere- iai b^ today, be h.~ . monv gun was usually fired at sundown as the colors ^ ^elnle. be doesn’t wmi w«a iow^ to rost. In the opinion of expert.. 'W- ^ ‘S from the ancient practice ol making loud noises to frighten » half a dab of butter iS Jost forget abort It, ^?- 1*^ awwv she spirits of darkness , munches It wttb water. He's a'just sit around and ^todo- lo, after "Retreat is Knind^. "To The Pol« or the ^t^ "Star Spangled Banner’ is played a the color guered Qu»gmlre beghs to ebafo from lost around andM tbs aw^ nur notiOTTri emblem !o earth. While it i# being played, all ^ belMmckle robs poto build.toger on M rest and military peraoiinel stand at at- against his sptn^ Be to Ibc fonlion and solute. They hold t^ir salute till the iSftS way Urn mess sergeant wants R, ekiy- Wbo are wa to argiM wMb a Itol that clutdicB a meat cleavtu ki hli hand, end a heavy eook-bo«k totbeelterl ing In from the kitchen where she been washing the dishes and stialghtenlDg up after the eve- niiv meaL She was dnrlng her ifBwte CO ber apron. TMrs were In her eyas. Her voice was exclaim- tng. “Ob. what bMUtlful music an old vIoUn can make when toartiH? by a master’s band.” Thto story Illustrates tbe Uvea of todhrldBals and tbe life of our GbrtoL We are Nke the old moun taineer making ordinary taidfvld- als out. of our Uvm bMause we are not nastcra at tbe develop- msnt of charaeter. Our lives would he much more bMuttful; our attitudes much friendlier: our per^ F.:itiea mo^ leveller If they e touched by the master’s d. Jems slends ai tbe door and kaerbs and hr aaya. “Beheld I atsnd at tee door and knock. If any man would let Me In. I would COBH ta and sop wHh him and be with Me.” When we permit Christ to enter tola aur hearla and to dl- roct oar Uvea to tee betog “touched - •a bead.” iniy hot ! aad SCO
Air-O-Mech (Goldsboro, N.C.)
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Oct. 6, 1943, edition 1
2
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