Camp Adair sentry. (Camp Adair, Or.) 1942-1944, October 29, 1942, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Camp Adair Sentry
Pare Revert
Thursday, October 29.1942.
mer.ts. providing service for or­
ganizational needs, will get under
wav during November. The hiring
of the laundry staff, however, is
under way now ;uid those who are
interested should contact V. C. Lee,
civil service representative, whose
office is located in the Post Head­
quarters building. Full details as
to wages, hours and general work­
ing conditions may be secured at
that office.
THIS IS IT. SOLDIER!
Before you make your
Thanksgiving Day plans, you
may care to know what you
will get for dinner on November
26, in ease you make no plans
or your commanding officer
does not approve of them, So
here are the items and the
quantity for 100 men:
Nuts—la lbs assorted.
Roa.-t turkey—100 lbs.
Shuttle Bus System
Giblet gravy—I oz. -age.
Sage dressing 2 lbs onions,
Operating on Post;
8 lbs bread.
Nine Miles for 5c
Cranberry sauce - 12 No. 2
—
cans.
Shuttle-buses, providing inner-
Corn 21 No. 10 cans.
camp transportation on a regular
Washed potatoes—18 lbs.
and convenient schedule, are now in
Sweet potatoes — 15 No. 24
operation during all necessary
cans.
hours of the day.
Waldorf salad— 10 lbs celery,
This service, doubly important
13 lbs apples, 1 qt. Drsg. salad,
now that the season of inclement
2 pkgs, raisins.
weather has arrived, provides an
Olives, large ripe—11 No. 10
adequate and economical means of
cans.
transportation for soldiers, civil­
Pickles, sweet- I gallon.
ian workers ami others living off
Mince pie — Recipe No. 252,
the post as well as a quick means
"The Army Cook."
for those whose duties call for fre-
Bread—12 lbs.
I quent trips within the camp. Thus
• Butter—3 lbs.
far, one Wood and Hart stage lias
Coffee—4 lbs, (i lbs sugar, 5
been sufficient but as the need in­
cans milk.
creases more shuttle buses will be
Do you still want that pass?
added to handle the inner-camp
traffic.
Camp Laundry'Calls
For V Soldier's
Wives
\______
I.
The Army Quiz
r
George, the Composing Room Foreman, scored 7 out of 10
on this teat, and he's only an ex-Marine. Surely you can do better.
"I»
•'»
«i»-3 *
, 7» > .»
'• - «
* * •
1. Contrary to opinion to the contrary, there is only one
branch of the Regular Army to which a woman cun be appointed.
Which?
Red Cross
WAAC
*
•
•
*
S2000
s tuo»
Nothing
•
$6000
ssooo
*
3. If a bobtail is a bunt discharge, then what is a prime
mover ?
The C. O.
B—Second «he I Innin on
C—A gunner.
D—A heavy vehicle.
»
t
...
6-inch gun.
•
•
•
4. Next time the top snarls into your teeth: “Don’tcha know
what a pace is yet?” merely reply:
A—28 inches?
B—An ordinary step, of course.
C—30 inches. Surge.
D—Nope.
Germany, Will Rise Again
FEDERAL TAX
INCLUDED
lie DRINK
TO GO BUY!
r
ASK FOR
BI TTER and
ICE CREAM
(Biggest Variety
of Froren Bars)
Distrib­
utors for
Wm. Konick
Jeweler
Green Valley
Creamery
S. P. Watch Inspector
Hotel Corvallis llldg.. Corvallis
I
Corvalli»
3rd A Adam*. Phone 363
facture. Glass from Belgium shines
in the windowpanes of many of
England's homes. Before the war.
Antwerp and the Flemish province*
ranked first in the number of dia­
mond cutters in the world.
The people of Belgium speak
two languages: French in the
southern areas, Flemish in the
north. Both languages aro spoken
in Brussels, the capital, a splendid
metropolitan city of 900.900. The
bombing of Brussels marked the
opening of the German invasion
of 1940
%
Romans. Franks. Burgundians.
Spaniards. Austrians, Frenchmen.
1 and Dutchmen have at various
( timo» held aovereignty over Belgian
I soil. But out of Belgian culture
I have come soch artist» a» Rubens,
, the van Eyck brothers. Memling.
j Van Dyke »nd Breughel and the
i poet Maeterlinck. Modern Belgium
(aecaaao m ..».k ger. Jam aauo> U
The colonel's job has to do with
the supply of food, clothing, office
ecmipment. furniture, etc. Quarter,
master has to maintain clothing
for U-n» of thousand.« of men
Thousand« of Tons of Coal
On one shift of eight hours tb<
new laundry can handle the laun­
dry of 20,000 men. Quartermaster
also has a repair »hop for cloth­
ing and shoes and it is adequate
or will ba, for the entire camp.
QM takes care of incoming coal,
to be consumed here at the rate
of 76.000 tons a year Ail of it is
sampled and tested, sent to the
Bureau of Mines.
As to office
work, QM has received and dis-
tnbuted. at least in part. 226 office ’
desk* and 320 typist»* desk« Nat­
urally, the paper work ia prodigi­
ous.
A few final farts on the colonel
Chief of Staff Marshall waa in
rcuumaod at
Eirracl
~ ;*%•»
(Continued from page one)
in the sales department, and for
a while he was with a chemical
firm.
Since returning to military ser-
vice for nnother war he has been
at Ft. McArthur, Calif., and at
San Bernardino, and here. He was
born at Seattle, but has lived re­
cently at San Francisco.
When Lt- Mnllonee entered the
service he was first stationed nt
Ft. Lewis and then sent here, At
first he was billeting officer, His
wife is living at Corvallis.
2. What is the difference in base pay of a general and a
major general ?
Belgium Twice Ravaged by
of Corvallis
2 New Majors in SCU
One First Lieutenant
Women’s Ambulance Corps
WAVES
Under the present schedule,
i shuttle buses meet all incoming
stages at the Motor Bus depot, (be­
*
*
tween Hostess and Club avenues
on 1st st., South) from 5 a.m. un­
5. When you gauge the diameter of a gun’s bore in inches,
til 9 a.m. The shuttle service is
Given Inside Track
you use the metric system:
discontinued from 9 a.m. until 4
As Job Applicants
p.m., then resumed, meeting all
True
False
‘
’
A.__ _
stages until 1 a.m. each morning.
Answers on Page I
The huge, new QMC laundry
The shuttle route, about nine miles,
which will soon open here will em­
is covered in approximately 30
ploy a staff of several hundred
minutes, giving service to all sec­
operators and according to Lt.
tions of the post, the hospital sec­
Bernard O. Kearns. Laundry Offi­
tion excepted. Passengers for that
cer, approximately 95 per cent of
area from the south are given di­
those to be employed will be
rect service by the Corvallis-Al­
women.
bany bus while passengers from
Wives of service men. Lt. Ream’s the north are given transfers at
This is the second in a series of 1830; the King had to obey the con-
past experience ha- proved, are the bus depot via southbound bus­
articles, giving highlights in the ( stitution and the laws made by the
the most satisfactory and depend­ es.
history of the United Nations.
two-house Parliament. The major
able group from which to select a
Shuttle buses are plainly marked
powers of Europe guaranteed Bel-
staff to operate an institution of
as such, and the fare to any stop
Belgium, a victim of German ag- ‘ gium’s borders by treaty. It was
this size and it is hoped that there on the route is only 5c. Although
will be a sufficient number of wives shuttle service has been available gression in both great wars of our ‘ this treaty that Germany violated
of enlisted men stationed at Camp several days, publicity and defin­ century, has been an occupied coun­ in 1914. In 1940, Germany again
Adair, to make up a major portion ite information concerning routes try since May, 1940. Sweeping broke her written promise not to
across the borders without warn­ attack Belgium.
of the staff.
and time schedules has ' been with­
Belgium has one great colony in
Nearly all army post laundries held until the experimental t rial ing, Hitler’s gray hordes over­
whelmed a small nation which had Africa: the Belgian Congo. The
are operated in this manner and runs were completed.
made scrupulous effort to remain Congo has an area of almost a
Lt. Kearns stated that he would
neutral in a Europe at. war. An million square mile« and a native
give definite preference to soldiers’
Pastor
Quits
Ring
army
of more than 500,000 — one population of about 14,000,000.
wives who make application for
Belgian out of every sixteen was From the fabulously rich Congo
employment here. Wages for all To Join Armed Forces
in it — fought gallantly until Gor­ come copper, gold, ivory, tin, dia­
laundry employees will he in keep­
ing with present living conditions, j Bob Pastor, who twice fought man numbers and German airpower monds, palm oil. and more than
I
half of the world’s uranium ore
Equipment and machinery, now Joe Louis and long a heavyweight made further resistance useless.
King Leopold III, who led his from which radium is derived.
being installed, is of the latest de­ contender, Monday announced his
sign and working conditions gen­ retirement from the ring for the troops, is now a prisoner of war Many supplies vital to the allied
erally are far above average. Key duration and said he planned to at Laeken. But the Belgian cabinet cause are being shipped from the
positions, calling for salaries in the i enlist soon in some branch of the had gone to France before the army Congo under the direction of the
surrendered and from London still government-in-exile.
higher brackets, will he filled by j armed services.
The 28-year-old veteran of 12 djrects colonial affairs and carries
those women who show industry,
Belgium, occupied, oppressed,
ambition and the qualities neces­ years in the ring, during which he on the war as one of the United poorly fed by her conquerors, still
sary for fulfilling responsible as­ had 70 professional fights after 87 Nations. Many Belgian units are resist«. Scores of underground or­
starts as an amateur, conferred fighting with the British army.
signments.
with his manager, James J. John­ Many of Belgium’s merchant ships ganizations sabotage German ef­
Although a definite date for the
son, and they decided “the war is have been sunk, but the rest carry forts at pacification. Peasants bv
start of operations has not been
torches and fires and secret code
more important at this time than supplies for her allies.
set it is expected that some depart-
guide the British flier.« on their
a
boxing
career,"
Johnson
said.
i
Belgium is the most denselj^pop- bombing flights. More than fifty
Pastor lost a 10-round decision
ulated country in Europe, averag­ underground newspapers arc print­
to Louis before the latter became
i-. ./ r
J
ing 712 people to every square mile. ed and secretly circulated by Bel­
heavyweight champion and later
Although only a little larger than gian patriots whose fate, if caught,
was knocked out by Louis in 11
the state of Maryland — 11,775 is death. And from the far Congo
rounds in a title fight.
square miles — it has a population went Belgian native militia a year
of
8,386,000, more than four times ago to help the British smash Italy
Pfc. Tracey L. Lively can stand
in the gas house, full of irritating as large as that of Maryland. As in Abyssinia nrul restore Haile 8»-
th(. throne. The dauntless
tear gas fume-, for almost 10 a result of this overcrowding, the ,
minutes, without his gas mask, and Belgian people have always had to colonial army, in which black troops
not be bothered at all. He’s at be industrious and thrifty to sur­ played a prominent part, traveled
vive. The cities of Brussels, Ant­ 2,500 miles through the damp
Camp Edwards, Mass.
werp, Bruges, and Ghent have been groves of the jungle, across veldt
celebrated for great artisans and and desert to the mountains of
I
fine craftsmen since the Middle inner Ethiopia where they forced
Ages.
the surrender of nine Italian gen­
While there is excellent agricul­ erals and their troops.
tural land in Belgium, three times
as many people, work in factories
as work on farm.«, and the country Co/. T. A. Beaumeister
1 7 {»w*la
in peacetime imports much of its Faces Big Assignment
food. The tradition of commerce
(Continued from page one)
ami manufacturing is an old one:
Antwerp has been n great port for them. At that time w<- had Fili­
centuries and the rich coal supply pino scouts. Before the other war
of the Walloon region stokes the I wax with the constabulary over
furnaces of industry. With this coal there for nine and one-half years
. x « a, V »
and imported iron ore Belgium in and I saw that these men wen-
atUAMTH
PEFSI COLA it aU«
V
1937 produced 3,700.000 metric tons capable and would give a good
17 ..wait
Pspd-Cd»
L~, IdM City, IL T. of steel. Other large industries are account of themselves if properly
Mtilnlth:
textile-making and cement manu­ led.”
Pepsi Cola Bottling Co.
1
[during part of the four and one-
half years that Col. Baumeister
served there as Post Quartermaster
and quartermaster of construction.
The colonel is a University of Wis­
consin graduate, with a degree in
business administration. For some
years he was an infantry officer.
He has attended various Army
school», including the signal school
at Ft. Monmouth. N. J.
Col. Baumeister was camp ad-
jutant at Sevier, S. C.. ami Camp
Green. N. C.. during World War I.
War Department
In Chest Drive
I
(Continued from page one)
President, into united war chest
campaigns with the total goals of
all these campaigns in excess of
; $150,000,000.
Secretary of War Stimson in de­
scribing the forthcoming and ac­
tive support of the war depart­
ment in these campaigns said, "As
Secretary of War, I bespeak the
full cooperation of this department
and the men of the armed services
hi these volunteer efforts in our
American cities, towns nnd ham-
lets. We’ll do this job, and wc’ll
do it in the American way."
HOME-LIKE RECREATION
ROOMS FOR SOLDIERS
Supplementing the USO in Cor-
vallis, the Baptist church is fitting
up home-like recreation rooms for
soldiers in the basement of the
church at Ninth and Monroe. Be­
ginning this week these rooms will
be open for the use of service men
Saturday night and Sunday after­
noon. Later it is expected to have
these rooms open every afternoon
and evening.
There will be a cheerful parlor
with an open fireplace and all the
I comforts of home for loafing, read­
ing, writing or just visiting. Also
there will be a large game and
recreation room, and refreshment
counter with hostesses in charge.
It is planned to have weekly
entertainments at this recreation
center, a joint program arranged
by soldiers and civilians. Monthly
pot-luck feeds for soldiers of defi­
nite units are proving very popu­
lar with the service men. Thia
plan will be continued, as whole
families have the opportunity to
meet with the soldiers around ta­
bles laden with good things that
only mothers know how to make.
?
•“
t
.
Secretary of the Naw Frank
Knox, speaking in New York in a
Navy Day address to the nation
Tuesday evening said that the Navy
of the United States had “hit the
enemy some savage blows and we
have just begun to fight." Secre­
tary Knox pointed out that V. S.
shipyards are now turning out mer­
chant ships faster than the enemy
can sink them, and added, "he isn't
sinking them so fast any more
either.”
Knox mentioned many facts,
more favorable for the allies now
than ever before but to correct an
impression that he was being too
optimistic the secretary closed his
address by saying, “we have a long
and agonizing road ahead of us nnd
the price in blood and treasure w ill
be staggering."
Throughout the nation, in almost
every village and city. Navy Day
this year was the inspiration for
public rallies and patriotic gather­
ings to commemorate the founding
of our modern navy. In every case,
War Bond Sales were stressed anil
many cities have reported record­
breaking quotas filled. The day
was also marked by the special
induction of thousands of new navy
recruits featured in parades along
with other members of Uncle Sam's
armed forces, auxiliary anil civil­
ian defense groups.
With U. S. naval units now oper­
ating in almost every sea on the
globe, the nation's observance of
Navy Day on this occasion was di­
rected to the all-out effort of win­
ning this war.
Huskies Fear Passing
Prowess of O.S.C.
Oregon State’s aerial attack is
the threat that worries Coach
Ralph (Pest) Welch most in drill­
ing his Washington football squad
for Saturday's game here.
Welch delayed until Tuesday the
start of drills against OSC plays,
but opened the week’s prepara­
tions Monday with an intensive
pass defense session. California’s
effective piercing of Washington’s
pass defenses aroused the combing
staff’s worries.
DANCE IN PORTLAND
He.v, soldier! Going to Portland
this weekend? If so. don't forget
there's a dunce at the USO on Sat­
urday night, Oct. 31, from 0 until
12. Sure, it's a Hallowe'en dance.
Why not drop in if you’re in town?
a
You don't necessarily have to say
"Good night, nurse.” You can mar­
ry a nurse, if she will have you!
War Department lifts former ban
on marriage for nurses, during war
and for six months thereafter.
Il IIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII IfllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIICIIIHilllllli ■
i Get your
OVERSEAS CAPS & CH'VfON'S I
from
Barnum Lodge No. 7
Hcrman's Men's Store
218 S. 2nd St.
Corner 4th & Madison
Ten rrntu par hue par inwwrtinn
Count 5 ward« to line. C am H iuua C ar
company copy with order.
...
Just Begun to Fight
He Says, on Navy Day
I. 0. 0 F.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
-r
Long, Bloody Conflict
Forecast by Sec. Knox
ni .
TUESDAY NIGHT, H:<M>
Service Men Welcome
. CorvalliK, Ort-gmi
——
NOTICE: Soldiers placing
classified ads in this column
which require answer to your
location, must have answers
go through Camp Public Hala­
tion» office. No outfit de»igna-b
lion» may be printed in the e
columns. Public Relations of­
fice will forward answer» to
your aililress.
FOR RENT
CAFETERIA
SERVICE CLUB NO.l
3 ROOM FURNISHED Apartment
on I at floor. 1022 W Sth. Pho.
295-Y Albany.
1st Street North & Club Avenue
FOR SALE
... is now serving Steaks,
Lunches and Sandwiches.
2-DOOR SEDAN — Driven '»000
miles. Phone 346-M, 345 No. 25th,
Corvalli«.
p
ACREAGE, farm*. Large selec­
tion. Robinson Realty, Independ­
ence.
pmo.
37 OLDSMOBILE Coupe. Very
good rubber. 11 Park Terrace
Corvallis, 781-M.
Complete fountain service —
All at very reasonable prices.
WANTED
WANTED
SOLDIER’S WIFE experienced in
housekeeping and child can-. Pri­
vate room and bath. Call Mrs.
E L. Barrett. 204. Albany.
2p
NON-COM’S WIFE for housekeep,
er. Husband may board and room
day» off. Horne of working wom­
an and her mother in Salem.
Call Mr». Umkm. 5367, Salem
SOLDIERS to represent their own
outfita in the new» column» of
The Sentry. Torn your »tuff in
to the Camp Public Relation»
office, where it goes through
censorship and ia prepared for
pnhlimtirni.
Drop in, enjoy excellent meals, well-prepared
★
★
★
Serving Hours Daily: 0700 to 2200
Sunday. 0800 to 2200
Fountain
2200