THE CADUCEUS. LOTS OF MAIL HOSPITAL POST OFFICE HAN DLES 5,000 LETTERS A DAY. Five thousand letters come and go through the base hospital post of fice a day, when there is an ordinary run of mail traffic in the camp. There are nearly always seven sacks of mail handled in the transac tions between the hospital post of fice and the main office down in the camp. These sacks hold about ten pounds of mail each. As a result the hospital office is in the 750 pound class, as that is the daily weight, cared for, and is far above many of the small town offices of the country. The little town aspect of the hos pital office is witnessed twice each day when the representatives of the many wards gather in the receiving ward, about the post office window, to await their allotments of incom ing mail. Each ward appoints a con valescent patient to go for the mail. The patient, dressed in his character istic garb of pajamas and robe, gener ally seeks the post office several min utes before time for the mail to be put up. The result is a merry gath ering near the postoffloe door while Sergeant Jenkins and his crew sorts the newly received mail. The two mail deliveries are receiv ed at 9 o’clock in the morning and at 2 o’clock in the afternoon. It requires about a half hour for the three postal clerks to distribute the letters and packages to their proper sections. The mail is scattered into many pigeon holes and sacks. There is a section of shelving for each one of the hospital wards. There are sacks awaiting the deliveries for the nurse s home, officers’ ward and the barracks row. Every army regiment carries its own post office equipment and mail clerks but the hospital office is much more complete than any departmen tal office. At the present the base hospital postoffice is receiving nearly half the mail of the entire camp. Work Systematized. Sergeant Ellis L. Jenkins, in charge of the office, has systematized the work of the three men who operate the branch post office. Each one per forms a part of the effort ol keeping track of all the patients in the hos pital as well as the comings and go ings of medical units which halt here for a time. Sergeant Jenkins has been the chief postal clerk since he came to the base hospital, from Port Ethan Allen, last October. His assistants are Privates Ira Hart and Frank Gavagan. Hart is the only member of the force who was a post office employe in civilian life. He was a mail carrier at Hart ford, Conn. Sergeant Jenkins was formerly a messenger for the Adams Express Company and Gavagan was an insurance salesman. “Passing the buck”, is a notable army sport in every branch of ser vice and the base hospital post of fice claims to be the court of refuge for Camp Greene. Whenever a sol dier .cannot be located in camp and the central post master is distracted as to the meaning of the address it is believed that he sends the letter out for the hospital postal clerks to wor ry over. There are dozens of misfit addresses in each mail. In some cases the letters are addressed to dif ferent camps. Sometimes halt the name is gone. Every now and then a patient, who has been in the hospital long enough to have spent his army pay, sends a stampless ’etter. There are many of them each day. In most cases he neglects to give a return address. Those are the chances for postmaster Jenkins to. “pass the buck” and he sends the letters on for somebody else to trouble over. LAYING THE CLOTH FATHER DIES. Private Joseph Mathews, wardmas- ter in D G, and whose hdme is in Dor chester, Mass., was granted a live-day extension to his furlough because of the death of his father. FOR HER SERVICE STAR BOARDER. All through New England and out into the western prairies this sort of preparation has been going on for sev- erals weeks. As our comrades came back from their furloughs they tell us about it. As the furlough season, is in its midst, we think it especially timely for th© benefit of those who have returned, and who live in the memory of such bits ol cheer, and for those who are yet to journey home that we portray this idea of the wel come as crayoned by Private Bissell. LESS AND MORE. The, burdens of the officers and en listed men of Base Hospjtal No. 51 have not been lightened by the order to lighten - their maltetrial burdens. None of the men will be allowed to take barrack bags. The officers will be reduced to fifty pounds of bedding. Only one suit of clothes will be grant- e dthe enlisted men. The burden is to be carried on the back but it is the burden that is to be left behind that worries. Major Eveth who has. been ill for the past few days is now improving. Dail Overland Co. 436 West Trade Street CHARLOTTE, N. C. ALL MODELS IN STOCK Willard Storage Battery Service Station WE TEST AND FILL YOUR BATTERY WITH PURE WATER FREE Can make immediate delivery Carolina Storage Battery Co* Corner S. Tryon and Second Streets