Çanip Adair Sentry Thiirsday,.November 26.1942. Page Severi A submarine needs 2501>00 HURLEY'S LOTION pounds of lead for storage batter­ For Poison Oak ies and 200,000 pounds for ballast, Over 5000 bottles sold. Guar­ anteed treatment for poison Although continuing the exist­ altogether, as much lead as goes into tite storage batteries of 8.200 oak relief. 50c bottle by mail. ent service setup, the Pacific Tel­ automobiles. Hl KLEYS DRUGS, Albany ephone and Telegraph company . — i x—. - , - ------- d — 1 — has taken over operation of the • --------------------- post telephone exchange and is now supplying ten operators, who will reside on the post. Work of organizing is conducted UNIFORMS ... INSIGNIA ... SUPPLIES by H. B. Judy, staff assistant from L. T. Chillis 1520 Jefferson St.. Corvallis the general office at Portland. The post telephone exchange will later be under supervision of District Traffic Manager, Louis A. Bare, whose headquarter- will be in Eu­ gene. The ten “hello" lasses, tempor­ arily residing at Service Club No. 2, will have been established in their own dormitory next to the Post Signal office, early in the Per Roll of 8 Pictures week. Free Enlargement One-Day Service Chief operator i Miss Hlenriet- ta C. Bell. Post 'Phone Exchange Under New Operation These Men Are Camp Speed Cops ï 4^ 1 ARMY CASH TAILORS I ’*111 This is the squadron of motorcycle Military Police which patrols camp roads, seeing that the 20-mile speed limit is enforced. Left to right: Pvt. Willie Wilson. Pfc. Boyd Finnicum. Pvt. James McBoil. Pvt. Vincent Brennan. Capt. Julius Hale. Provost M arshal; Pvt. Addison Nedenu. Sgt. Joseph R. Holmes. Sgt. Bruce Dyer. Lt. W alter Padrick, Asst. Provost Marshal, Pfc. James Janowsek. Pvt. John Goebel. Pfc, Frederick Adie. (Public Relations Photo). Captain Buys $5000 Bonds in Camp Drive OFFICERS' WIVES HELP New Record for Adair $2000 Above Sergeant The regimental adjutant has raised the sergeant by $3,000. To make it a little clearer, a captain in the same outfit has put $5,000 into War Bonds, one week after a sergeant bbught $2,000. Thus the commissioned officers have it on the non-coms, after all, for the $5,000 in bonds is tops for the camp. ,■ The captain, identity withheld, is a Los Angeles man and Uni­ versity of California graduate and in working for his master’s degree at the University of Southern Cal­ ifornia he helped write a 1,000-word book entitled, “Man and Civiliza­ tion,” He taught in the depart­ ment of military science at the University of Califqrnia and Vvrote an “Outline of Court Martials” for an Anti-Aircraft School at Canfp Davis, N. C. He is 27, single, and is buying bonds because he wants to "help buy bullets.” Even now he is doing historical research in spare time. « CONCERNING LETTERS VIA AIR MAIL Following order received from Post Hq. All personnel instructed to take due notice. No "free" mail can be accepted in an air-mail en­ velope (blue and red border). Air­ mail stamps can only be used when letter or parcel is intended to go via air-mail. IT S A FACT A» we don't have to resell your pol­ icy every year—as it ia renewed by mail—it is not necessary that our rates include a yearly resale cost. That's why a Farmers continuing form* automobile policy gives finest protection lor less. EÀRL HITE Dist. Mgr., Phone 814 221 W. 1st, Albany, Or. FARMERS AUTOMOBILI l*w INSURANCI facM-a* A group of wives of SCU of­ ficers have volunteered to help the Red Cross. They meet ev­ ery Wednesday afternoon from 1:00 to 4:00 p. m. at the Red Cross in Corvallis, 4th and Jef­ ferson Sts. Thirty six members were present at the last meeting (rolling bandages) and other SCU officers’ wives are invited to participate. RED CROSS M \\ HERE Camp Adair Expansion Uproots Quiet Lives Marking first visit since Red Cross field office was opened, July 15, Mr. Charles L. Smith of San Francisco. Pacific coast field su­ pervisor. spent Nov. 18-21 inclu­ sive, inspecting affairs R. ('. at Camp Adair. William Riddles Raised Romneys; I Ex-Sheep Farm Now Part of Camp — CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING » “Take up your bed and go"— tations followed from time to time, the age-old command has reached the last being but a few months the William Riddells at their farm ago when he and Clarence Bishop Wanna Call Up Honey? beyond Cemetery Hill, two miies of Portland brought in three Rom­ ney rams which attracted wide­ Wondering Re. Money? south of Monmouth, Ore. spread attention. For some months war traffic Quoting Prices, Sonny has clattered past on Highway No. Today the national registration Wanna call your honey bunch? 99 west. But Camp Adair has stop­ shows 22,000 ewes and 11,000 rams ped some miles short to the south i of the Romney breed. Of these, Mr. And what’s it gonna cost? of the Riddel) ranch. Only recently Riddell has close to 100. Something pretty close to the it again began its creeping pro­ "We lamb in late winter and exact answer is posted on a big map (which lights up at night) in cess northward to sweep into its | spring and the rest of the year we the waiting room of the Service fold the farm the Riddell’s had harvest,” Mr. Riddell chuckles, Man’s Telephone Center. It’s situ­ worked since the turn of the cen- ; “There is rape in early summer ' and then we follow with the crim- ated on Theater Ave., between 1st tury. “But I have wanted to move to j son clover season, the.Chewings Ave. S., and 1st Ave. N., opposite Theater No. 4 and directly behind town for some time,” Mrs. Riddell fescue, the sudan grass, the oats saiJ. i and vetch and now in fall the Dutch the service clubs. "But you just can’t raise sheep clover has been “ verF nice addi- Although your reporter couldn’t tion 10 western Oregon sheep take his eyes off the pretty gals in Lown,” Mr. Riddell remarked. Sheep, however, were at the ranching. who put through those long dis­ Riddell’s thoughts. The new farn’> to0’ wiU r"‘ate tance calls for time enough to make heart of Mr. Riddell's an exact count, there are upward “They may have their downs. around shet'P. for il unlikely of 75 U.S. cities listed. With them but sooner or later again, they Tb*’r,‘ b<1 a time without sheep is r the toll cost. have their ups,” Riddell insisted. 0,1 the RiddeH ranch- ■ » really got my start before I , If your home town is reached ‘’In the long run sheep will win through that exchange you take for you if you stick bv them—and 1 was born’ tb<" quiet sheep man the figure given, plus the rate there is always the interest in ! sm’led- “M* father, also William Liddell, came to Albany as a sheep. from the city to your home. Then raising.” add federal tax 20 per cent) and Sheep on. the Riddell ranch does man in 1870 Shortly afterwards there’s your answer. not speel just ordinary woolies— ,noved to the Monmouth coun­ *s even likely that the Rid- Here are an exemplary few cities it spells Romney-Marsh—the first deIIh wiU continue to raise sheep taken at random from the map and Romneys in America. "Well,” Riddell explained, “I uftcr me- Mv M,n- Eldl,n- has ahl’eP ranging eastward: It costs to call addcd a’s he pointed to Seattle, 50 cents; San Francisco, wanted something different and 90 cents; Los Angeles, $ 1.30; Salt Joe Wing’s writings about them lht' weatherbeaten sign, soon to be Lake, $1.00; Amarillo, Texas, $1.85; in various part of the world inter- : removed, where father and son Galveston, $2.50; Kansas City ex ted me,” at the same time add- jointly advertised, $2.25; Chicago, $2.50; New Orleans, ing. “and I was never dixapointed. i $2.75. JOINS R. C. PERSONNEL The Romneys will graze when oth- I It's $3.00 each to reach Miami, er sheep find nothing to graze up­ Norborne Berkeley, Jr., has been Fla.; Portland, Me.; New York City on. They are equally good in wool assigned to duty ax assistant Red or Washington, D. C. And that’s and mutton production, and they Crosx Field director, with the Tim- tops—station to station rate, af­ furnish some of the best stock for ber Wolf Division, but working out cross breeding.” | of the post Field Office, headed by ter 7 p.m., when night rates go in­ Riddell's Romney ventures date ' Janies P. Layton, Field Director, to effect—to any trunk line city back to 1904, when he paid $250 in the nation. Sundays too. each for one ram and four ewes GO TO SEATTLE imported from England, where the Attending the regional confer- breed had long been i important. t.nce ,,f the American Red Cross Then in 1911, as his strain of Rom­ in Seattle this week ax representa­ neys was stjll the only one in the tives of post Field Office were country, he imported 12 Romneys, Field Director James P. Layton and going to New Zealand himself to assistants Verl Lewis and Miss By Appointment make his selections. Other impor-' Pauline E. Michael. Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Ten cent« per line per insertion. Count 5 words to line. Cash must ac­ company copy with order. HOME FOR RENT 4 ROOM HOUSE with electricity ami water for soldier and wife. Trade housekeeping work across load 5 days week for rent, 2‘u miles S.W. of Lewisberg or see George Gragg at QM warehouse No. 1, Sec. 3. NOTICE: Soldiers placing classified ads in this column which require answer to your location, must have answers go through Camp Public Rela­ tions office. No outfit designa­ tions may be printed in these columns. Public Relations of­ fice will forward answers to your address. FOR SALE OR LEASE, modern 4-bcdroom, air Cond., basement, fireplace, beau­ tiful yard, outside fireplace. In­ quire 1205 Columbia, Pho. 5516, Salem. 1929 PONTIAC ROADSTER. Good motor, fair tiros. With or with­ out accessories. Phone 1537 or 1759 A St., Corvallis. Ask for Jim. ACREAGE, farms. Large selec­ tion. Robinson Realty, Independ­ ence. pmo. TURKEY TOMALES, 318 S. 7th St., Pho. 354-W, Corvallis. WANTED SOLDIERS to represent their own outfits in the news columns of The Sentry. Turn your stuff in to the Camp Public Relations office, where it goes through censorship and is prepared for publication. <■ DeMoss-Britt Funeral Home (Formerly Hollingsworth) Corvallis Madison St. at 8th. Ph. 45 Evenings Phone 470 or 440-J DR. A. W. MARKER OPTOMETRIST Corvallis — Ball Bldg. Do Your Christmas Shopping Right Here on the Post' 12 Photographs 12 Gifts! Economical, Too! The Ball Studio Post Exchange No. 1 Main Bus Depot INVISIBLE GREENBACKS! If tomorrow, you were dictator and had the power quite easily to avert a ruinous inflation in the United States—of the type that wrecked Germany after the last war — would you do so? This is not so foolish a question as it may seem, For without being dictator you now have this power, You have it in common with millions of other plain men and women as undictatorial as yourself. You have it for a reason that will perhaps be shocking to you: because you are now engaged, as actively as you can be, in bringing on just such a ruinous inflation. Your power thus lies in being able to stop what you are now doing. Every “runaway inflation" in history has had the same prime cause: an enormous and comparatively sudden increase in the money being used by a people. Such a swift increase in our own nation’s money-supply is now taking place—invisibly! And it is we—tens of millions of patriotic citizens—who are responsible for most of that increase. Through negligence, of course, but does that make any difference? BY FAILING TO BUY WAR SAVINGS BONDS. WITH MONEY WE CAN SPARE FOR THAT PUR­ POSE. WE ARE UONTINl ALLY FORCING THE UNITED STATES TREASURY TO CREATE NEW MONEY WITH WHICH TO PAY ITS WAR BILLS. Buy War Savings Bonds, and buy them now. Bny them for cash or A Pay Reservation.” POST WAR BOND OFFICE. 4IIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII FINE PORTRAITS Reasonably Priced also ( ameras-Supplies-Films Wilson Studio 135 S. 2nd Corvallis Send The Sweetie-Pie The ; Sentry ! Regularly By Mail I i 6 Months For | A Buck Send S Bill and Addrem to CAMP ADAIR SENTRY Box 317 Cerva Dia, Oregon OR fl.50 A YEAR STANFORD MEN Stanford men, call Don Prim­ rise, '36. Albany 880 (or resi­ dence phone 7). Maybe arrange a pow wow. BERMAN'S DRUG STORE Opposite The Banks Corvallis, Oregon