Camp Adair sentry. (Camp Adair, Or.) 1942-1944, July 23, 1942, Page 7, Image 7

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    Camp Adair Sentry
Days Off
Week-End Jaunts
“To be entirely at leieure tor cm
day is tor one day to be aa immortal.“
—Chinese proverb.
By Edith Durban
If you are interested in fishing
and have neither time nor tires to
go to the mountain streams, you
will be interested to know that
there is excellent sport almost
within walking distance of Camp
Adair. Spiney-rayed fishes abound
in at least 10 lakes and many more
sloughs within a radius of about
12 miles around Corvallis, and the
fishermen are few.
Black bass, sunfish, crappies or
calico bass, yellow perch and cat­
fish are among the fish to be found
in these lakes, and they can all
offer plenty of excitement.
The spiney-rays, which is a gen­
eral designation applying to fish
having sharp spiney dorsal fin rays
rather than only soft rays such as
found in trout and salmon, were
introduced from mid-western or
eastern states, and have not been
as popular as native species. Ore­
gon fishermen have preferred trout
or salmon fishing, and as a result
the pressure on spiney-rays has not
been heavy. The accessibility of
warm water lakes, where such fish
thrive, is increasing the popularity
of this sport.
■Of these, Colorado lake is one of
the largest and best known. It is
within four miles of Corvallis and
can be reached by driving about
two miles from Corvallis on the
east road to Albany, leaving town
by way of the Van Buren street
bridge. Turn to the left where the
sign indicates and drive about one
mile farther. Boats may be rented,
or you may fish front the banks
by paying a small charge.
Jay B. Long, instructor in fish
and game management at Oregon
State college, and an experienced
fisherman, recommends fly fishing
for bass and sunfish, although they
are often caught by using worms
for bait. An ordinary fly rod out­
fit, with almost any small fly sire
8 to 12 is suggested for sunfish.
The best results are obtained by
fishing the fly just under the sur­
face with a very slow retrieve. Mr.
Long also suggests using dry flies,
or floating flies on warm, sunny
days when the fish are cruising
near the surface.
For bass Mr. Long suggests large
fuzzy-bodied flies or bass with
cork bodies. Live minnows or arti­
ficial plugs are also effective for
bass fishing. Minnows may be
legally used when fishing for
spiney-rayed fish only when used
in the same waters from which they
have been taken.
The daily bag limit for spiney-
rays is 30 fish or 20 pounds and
one fish.
And one tip—a little ingenuity
will uncover other lakes plentifully
stocked with fish, but the fisher­
men aren’t telling all they know.
There is one catch, however. A
boat is usually necessary on most
of the sloughs and smaller lakes.
July 23, 1942.
employer bluntly asked if it was gallery. Wee Wullie fell ever into
the pit.
a
a real diamond.
His father leaned anxiously over
“Well, if it ain't,” answered the
hired man, “I’ve been skun out of the gallery rail and called out:
“Coom back here, Wullie, fer
four bits.”
gudeness sake; it's a haulf a croon
Bridget, did I see you kissing extra doon there!"
that policeman in the kitchen? I’m
Peter—At phwat age wuz yer
amazed at you.
Well, mum, it’s against the law mither married, Jawn?
John—At fourteen.
to resist an officer.
Peter—Oi kin bate thot. My
“Did you know that old man mither wuz married at thirteen.
Jones’ house burned down last
Mike—Faith an Oi kin bate ye
night?”
all. My mither wuz married before
“I ain’t a mite surprised. I was Oi wuz born!
goin’ past there early in the eve­
nin’ and when I saw smoke a-
An attorney was defending a
comin’ out all around the eaves, I man charged by his wife with
sez to myself, sez I, ‘Where there's desertion.
smoke, there must be fire.’ An’
For a time it looked if it were
so it was!”
a cinch for the prosecution but at
the right moment the attorney
Traffic Cop—Say you! Didn't called the defendant to the stand.
you see me wave at you?
“Take off that bandage,” he
Sweet Young Thing — Yes, you cried.
fresh thing, and if Henry were
Then man did so, exposing a
here, he’d paste you for getting so black eye.
fresh.”
"Your honor,” said the attorney,
“our defense is that this man is
A farmer in need of extra hands not a deserter. He's a refugee.”
at haying time asked Si Warren
who was accounted the town fool,
Izzy—Fadder, dere is a customer
if he would help him out.
I in de store vat vants to know if
“What’ll you pay?” asked Si.
. dose all vool inshrinkable shoits vil
“Well, I’ll pay you whatever I shrink.
you’re worth," answered the farm­
Fadder—Does it fit him?
er.
Izzy—No, it iz too large.
“I’ll be durned if I’ll work for
Fadder—Veil, den dey’ll shrink.
that,” said the town fool.
HOW GOOD ARE YOU?
A snobbish Englishman was. vis­
iting Washington's home- in Mount 1. Where did Portland cement get
its name?
Vernon and was very patronizing'
about the whole thing. He noticed 2. What is a “side-door Pullman”?
the beautiful hedge around the 3. What is “purdah"?
4. What did the “funeral baked
place and said:
meats” do?
“Ah, yes, I see, George got this I
5. What did Napoleon say an army
hedge from dear old England.”
marched -on ?
“Yes,” replied the guide, “he
got this whole blooming country 6. What is a traditional symbol of
Ireland ?
from England.”
______
| 7. What is a coccus ?
His father had taken Wee Wullie 8. In Russia, what are the Pio­
neers ?
to the theater, and, in his eager- i
ness to get a front seat in the | 9. Where are good Americans sup­
Every Day is Wash Day
In This Alaskan USO Club
...
posed to go when they die?
10. What does F.F.V. stand for?
ANSWERS
1. It was supposed to resemble
“Portland stone,” a common
English building stone.
2. A freight car.
3. The Shah of Persia.
4. “Coldly furnish forth the mar­
riage tables” in Hamlet.
5. Its stomach.
6. A harp, or a shamrock.
7. A spherical bacterium.
8. An organization of young Com­
munists.
9. To Paris.
10. First Families of Virginia.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
Ten cents per Hne per insertion.
Count S words to line. Cash mint ac­
company oopy with «rder.
FOR SALE
200 ACRES, good bkigs.. all in cul­
tivation. 154 acres, farm and
dairy very good buildings. 20
acres adjacent to Salem, excellent
district, filberts, fruit, nice mod­
ern home, good out bldgs., creek,
city lights and water, only $7500.
HOUSES—5 rooms in Salem,
garage, 2 lots only $1050. 5 rooms
in Eugene, 3 bedrooms 6 blocks
from post office, only $1800,
would trade for Independence
property. 4 rooms in good loca­
tion, $1575. Also lovely homes up
to $10,000.00. Robinson Realty
Co., Independence, Oregon.
p
Pagv Sevefl
DeMoss-Britt
Funeral Home
(Formerly Hollingsworth)
Corvallis
Madison St. at 8th.
Ph. 45
The First
National Bank
of Monmouth
Complete Banking
Service
Safe Deposit Boxes
____________________
Corvallis Hotel
and
Golden Pheasant
Food Shop
The most for your money
in rooms and Good Food.
Opposite Both Banks
Corvallis
I
Albro & Ten brook |
»
Jewelers
PUPPIES for mascots. Black and
white. Wire-haired terriers. 834
N. 10th street, Corvallis.
PATRICIA
17 jewels
TRAILER HOUSE 7x16. Built-ins.
$175 cash. Inquire of Frank Bed-
narek, Callaway Creek Trailer
Camp.
WANTED
SECRETARY. Experienced or col­
lege trained. Permanent position.
Comptroller, College. Corvallis.
WANTED—Second hand
outfit, % h.p. motor,
and polishing wheels,
good and cheap. P.O.
Corvallis, Ore.
laipidary
grinding
Must be
Box 226,
ROOM AM) BOARD
WHAT A HOME! Boy! This is a
home! Are the exclamations of
every new man coming to stay
at the Arnold Arms, Monmouth,
Onegon. Here you are made to
feel “at home while1 away from
home.” Home cooking—balanced
meals. Breakfast' 6:30 a. m.—
Lunches—Dinner 6 p. m. Com­
fortable, attractively furnished
lounge. Rooms heated in winter,
air cooled in summer. Three
showers, two tubs, five recessed
toilets, lavatories, clean airy
rooms.
Single beds, room and board per
day $1.75. Deductions made for
absences. Transportation avail­
able. E. I.. Cramblitt, Prop. Mon­
mouth.
__________________________a ..
BOARD and room at The Palmer i
House 1409 Monroe, Corvallis.
Big comfortable lounging qoorn
with fire place. Hot water, two !
showers, one tub. Be comfortable.!
Certified Watchmakers
313 W. 1st St.
Albany
flov/ers
WEDDINGS
CORSAGES
Matt Mathes Flowers
Upper Monroe Street
Beside the Campus
I’hon«- 213
Nonsensored
By H> Brid
A negro applied at a stable for
the job as helper.
“I suppose you know all about
horses?”
“Yas suh. I been handlin' hosee-
all my life.”
"And what about mules, are you
familiar with them?”
“Boss. I knows too much about
mules to get familiar wid dem'
The hired man on a New England
farm went on his first trip to the
city. He returned wearing a scarf
pin set with at taast four carats
bulk of radiance. The jewelry daz­
zled the village belies, and excited
the envy of the other men. His
Photo Finishing
There are now more than 800
AUNDRY is always an impor­
tant task for The men of USO clubs and units, over 40 of
them outside the continental
America's sea forces whether they
be on “battle-wagons", “tin-cans , United States, and at everyone
are to be found scores of dev ice 5
“pig-boats", or ashore.
That's why one of the most fre­ gadgets, and so forth from food
quent requests when USO opened to fishing rods, from books to
one of its farthest north service beach parties, for but one pur-
clubs somewhere in Alaska was pose—to bring cheer and relieve
for a mechanical aid in getting boredom for America’s service­
clothes clean USO has become a men.
in supplying seme*
Component agencies of USO are
what they want from the Young Men's Christian Assoc
Arctic iaiions, the National Catholic
a mat- Community Service, the Salvation
Army, the Young Women's Chris-
tian Associations, the Jewish "Wel­
at the picture
fare Board, and the National
the innqvaLon was a popular one Traveler's Aid Association.
L
25'
Per Roll of 8 Picture*
Free Enlargement
One-Day Service
BERMAN'S DRUG STORE
Opposite The Banks
Corvallis, Oregon