'M •r^ fV V' « NO WASTE AT MESS HALLS. DO IT RIGHT . DETACHMENT COMMANDER OF FERS A FEW POINTERS. Captain William W. Carnog, M. R. C., detachment commander, has ot tered the following bits of advice, which The Caduceus feels should be passed along tor consideration of all the hospital enlisted men; “It is easier to be ready for inspec tion all the time than it is to pre pare for inspection onoe a week. The keeping of equipment in neat order is only a.matter of habit. Get the habit. “The" military efficiency of a soldier or a military organization can be judged by the time it takes to com plete a formation for drill. “If you can’t swat Germans just now—swat flies. That warfare is al most as important.” THE CADUCEUS. EVEN TIN CANS ARE CONSERVED The “waste not” admonition of Her bert Hoover is being carried out to the letter at the Camp Greene Base Hospital. Not a particle of food is destroyed. Every by-product is utiliz ed. Even the tin cans are saved. The tin cans are wrenched out in scalding water, by the members of the kitchen police force. The cans are then battered itno a solid mass. When a sufficient quantity of the battered tin is collected the metal is hauled to Charlotte and loaded on board a rail road car. It is shipped to a metal re ducing plant and the tin and lead will be used again in a different capacity. Two weeks of saving the cans netted a full car load of tin from the patients’ and detachment mess halls of the hos pital. The government is gaining a goodly return for a product which was wholly waste in past years and which offered the problem of burying the cans. Bread crusts and pieces of bread, which have not been allowed over for a meal on the big platters, are taken to make bread pudding. The way the cooks of the two mess halls have of flavoring the pudding with raisins and custard makes a delicacy much sought after. Large meat bones are saved for flav oring soups and fats are rendered into lard in the base hospital kitchens. Garbage is not wasted as it was in former years, when much fuel was used in burning the discarded food. The food waste is bought, by the farm ers of the Charlotte region, tor ferti lizer and is collected in large cans by colored workmen after each meal. FULL GROWN Lieutenant-Colonel George Renn, present commanding officer of the Camp Greene base hospital, weigh ed 225 pounds when he came to Camp Greene. He had been here just two days when he met one of the old-time darkies on the street in Charlotte. The colored man, whose kinky hair had been whitened by the years, removed his worn hat with great Chesterfieldian manners and., remarked warmly; “Good mornin’, boss. Bless. God I is at last seen one full-grown soldier. Here here soldiers what I bin seein’ is nothin’ but chillen and it makes my heart* so sad to see dese boys—but you is certainly- full-grown. Say boss, what is youv A gineral? PROMOTED AGAIN P. J. DEMPSEY IS HOSPITAL SER GEANT SINCE SUNDAY. PARK PAVILION BURNS. The dancing hall at Lakewood Park burned to the ground early Thursday morning. Canse of the Are, which oc casioned a loss of $12,000, is unknown. The structure will be rebuilt at onoe, it is announced. Private Robert Nikrant, wardmas- ter in A-8, is recovering from the try ing experience of having his tonsils removed. ALMOST COMPLETED NEW WARD BUILDINGS WILL SOON BE ready FOR USE. Top-Sergeant P. J. Dempsey re ceived the warrant on Sunday which makes him a hospital sergeant, an honor which he shares only with Hos pital Sergeant Abel Knight. Hospital Sergeant Dempsey has been in the army but little over a year. He enlisted in the regular army at Fort Ethan Allen, Vt., on May 21, 1917. Ah his promotions have been in the regu lar army and not in the reserve. He was made a sergeant on Au.gust 21, and upon being transferred to Camp Greene with the base hospital force he was made acting first ser geant. He received a permanent war rant for that rank on November 20 His promotion to hospital sergeant is dated .June 19. He has one more step to take, that of master hospital ser geant, before being in line for a com mission and he has shown the stufi which will eventually land him there. Kis home is in St. John, Newfound- ‘ land. Construction of the six mammoth ward buildings, which will double the capacity of the Camp Greene base hos pital, is almost completed. The end of the week will find the carpenter work finished. The new structures, each of which is two stories high, are the most sub stantial buildings in Camp Greene. They are builded for permanent use, which tends to bear out the ai-iginal intention of military officers to make the Camp Greene hospital a general hospital. The construction work, by the J. A. Jones Company of Charlotte, has been a marvel of organization and speed. The rearing of the big structures, in the few weeks that have been taken, is claimed to set a new government record for ward construction. Lumber has arrived for the large Red Cross building, which is to stand in the center of the convalescent wards. ^ Work on the proposed struc ture will start at once and is expect ed to be completed before fall. Tii. Red Cross recreation home will be built in the form of a cross and is to cost $18,000. ‘OVER THE TOP” WILL GO FIREMEN IN DASH AGAINST TIME. Firemen of tba base hospital will go “over the top” in the true serise of the word when they are called into action against any attacks of flame that may threaten the buildings. The submerged runways, through which the struggling firemen dragged their hose carts and other apparatus are to be abolished. The small tunnelways were not of sufficient depth to allow the passing of the ladder wagon, and other loaded vehicles which are some times brought into the hospital, and so were found to be impractical for permanent use. Forty elevated drives are to be car ried over the runways, that connect the hospital buildings. The heavy plank platforms are being construct ed. They are re-enforced by strong beams and will bear the burden of a team of horses and loaded wagon when necessary. The former Sergeant Paul A. Man ger is now a private in the ranks of the ordnance department. His trans fer came through this week and he has already taken uj) his duties in Washington, D. C. eHJelvetXihd 'The cre/vm of ice creams 9f