Showing posts with label Mrs. Finley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mrs. Finley. Show all posts

Sunday, January 29, 2012

August 20, 1943


Cpl Stanley W Safford
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas

August 20, 1943

Dear Mother:

After a very tiring day which the temperature rose to alone a hundred and the tent here was unbearable at times and after a very short while of sitting here and sweating a person very soon begins to smell and I feel now as tho I had not had a bath in years.
I received your nice long letter today and really enjoyed it.  I would so much like to write so very much more but you very likely know just what that is to never have the time for anything at any time.  And the heat here just wears me and everyone else down to the place where we don’t feel like doing anything.  And on top of all that I have worked three out of the last five evenings on some of their stupid work that I have had piled up here all the way up to my neck.  I have not forgotten Miss Mosher and her letter is with three of four other unanswered ones in my box and hers was the next on the list but to ever get to it I have been trying to ever since bivouac but just to do it is another thing.  I do think that you should go to the desert for a day or so because the rest would do you good, and then you could just let the rest of the world go by and think of yourself for a while.
It is indeed too bad about Mrs. Finley and I do hate to hear about it.  I always liked the both of them very much and hate to hear of anything happening to either of them.
I guessed that when my clerk left me the time before that he would very likely be back and sure enough he is back and I am really able to give a big sigh of relief since he is such a big help and once again I can have a furlough in sight and it may be the 1st or 15th of September unless the OCS thing comes up first.  So once again we can have hopes and something to look forward to.
Here it is again another one of these tiresome and boresome Sundays when we here never seem to get anything done, most of them here seem to think that their Sundays are a day when they can lay around and do nothing else other than sleep or read some magazines of some kind.  But for myself it is a day when I can get a chance to clean up myself and a few other things of that nature.  It seems that my shoes always need cleaning and my head needs working.  The other evening I went by the library on my way home and it was 98° inside there where they have the electric fans and all the other things so you can well imagine what it is like where we are down here at Dodd Field and the conditions don’t lend themselves towards helping keep a thing clean.
Enclosed you will find one of those orders that was made out when I was sent down here.  One of them as you see was for me  (I & M) but I never received one of them in fact never saw one of them until yesterday when I was going through some of the files and found a couple extra so you can keep me a copy.  All things of this type you can save for me.  They may be useful to me some day.  To look at the thing you would really think that they were send an important personage to some place equally important Ha Ha !
Also you will find a copy of the other order that Major Skinner put over while his friend Col Hill was still here and not the fool that we have here now that listens a little too much to the 1st Sgt who is entrusted only in his own welfare.
You asked about the watches at the PX here.  They are all sold out of all kinds. So they will be rather hard to find around here.
You asking about the mail being wanted by all soldiers.  Yes that is true but so many owe me most of their time.
I always tried to keep the Matsons’ away from the house since it in no way compared with theirs and you know me as far as pride goes in that respect.
You know that Mr. Matson quite often told me that they were always going to never keep the secret from Jon of his being adopted so it rather amuses me to hear about Mrs. M keeping it a secret.
The college where Donald Kingen is more than Texas A M where they have all sorts of these courses.
Your mentioning  the ocean makes me homesick to think of it since we have none of the sea very close here.
It is quite an affair of us being able to take back Kiska so very easily.  Perhaps the Japs saw a hard winter ahead of them so decided to give up without a fight.  The war news looks very promising from all angles today so the more of it the better we like to hear of it.
Yes, the bunch of bums here are all quite a bit like A Grumberg.  All of them always broke and they do nothing else but drink it up and throw it away.  They run around here in some of the dirtiest clothes that I have ever seen.  I get so disgusted with them sometimes.
Your mentioning Jay reminds me that he owes me a letter since I was the last to write him.
Finally the Company Commandment at the Service School put a stop to Sgt Elkins leaving even once Col Fargas’ orders.  So there he is stranded there for awhile, but his wife is down here with him now.
We have made arrangements to meet each other a couple times, that is, Ray and myself, but you know that he is acting almost everywhere now and he is always getting called the last minute and he also owes me a letter.  The same with Bruno who is in Burbank (Lockland) now.  Neither Mrs. Tedesco or myself have heard from home for a long time.  I returned the negatives to him with a note but have not heard from him since.  Also Whitney owes me a letter and I will write again very soon to find out.  He may have gotten a discharge with a recent cleaning up of Limited Service.  We have gotten rid of two or three of them here.
Well they made three more Majors here yesterday so suppose that there will be a wild party at the Officers Club now.  One of them is a very good man from Georgia and quite well to do from what I gather.  His cousin is Governor of Georgia, and his wife is a very nice lady. True Southeners.
Well have just about run out of things to write about so will draw this to a close and wish you all my love.

Stanley

 Inserted in the envelope this letter was mailed in were two pages seemingly out of synchronization.  No explanation why.


Saturday, January 28, 2012

August 5, 1943


Cpl Stanley W Safford
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas

August 5, 1943

My Dear Mother:

After a week of idleness of my pen I shall try and write you a few lines tonight and shall plan on getting this mailed tomorrow.  I am really ashamed of myself for not writing you before this but you very likely know how all things seem to pile up and happen at once.
We spent three miserable days out at Camp Bullis on bivouac at which time we went through the infiltration course under actual gunfire (machine gun) and came out with a few minor scratches and just filthy with this red dirt.  I tried several times to get a letter started to you but as always something happened and I was unable to get very far with it, so when I did get back to it, what I had already written did not make sense so I gave it all up as a bad job and decided to discontinue until after my return.  Fortunately I was able to ride the eighteen miles out and back only because they realized that I had too much to do at both ends. And I worked all day today while everybody else took the afternoon off plus the morning while they all laid in bed since they marched in after dark last night.
I was certainly glad to get in and take a bath and get my head washed and the dirt really ran off in great amounts.  And also pick off a few ticks which seem to inhabit this country the year around.  While out there I saw great quantities of deer and several rabbits.  The deer here do not get as large as our California deer get but they are certainly quite pretty and above all the fawns are exceptionally cute.  They also killed a coral snake while out there.  Otherwise there was nothing else of importance or out of the ordinary.  We did have those canned rations for one day which were in a way a great big mess with the fellows cutting themselves on the cans.  They come in two cans one with the beef and vegetable stew and the other with the five biscuits, small can of soluble coffee and three small cakes of sugar plus four or five pieces of hard candy that I am not too fond of.
And one of the things that is going to happen that I am not too fond of is that the major who is here in the Plans and Training office now is also going to have.  They all more or less get tired of the whole affair and are glad to get out. I do not as yet know just how this is going to effect my furlough, but I am afraid not too well for they all tell me that I know more than anybody about changes etc.  I am going to have a nice little talk tomorrow with a couple of people about a few things, and see just what comes of it all if anything at all and perhaps I may get something out of the deal somehow or somewhere maybe.  The entire bunch here all are dissatisfied with the entire affair and are all trying to leave or go somewhere or another and the less they have to do around here, the better they feel.

Sunday August 8, 1943

It seems that every time I start a letter to you that the interruptions seem to come twofold to hinder my completion of it. And one more thing to add to the mess here, is that the clerk that is in my office is going to leave this coming week for the ASTP (Army Specialize Training Program) which he applied for a short time ago.  I am sure going to miss him because he has been so dependable and has always done everything so well and carefully with very few mistakes.
But he shall do so much better for himself than he would ever have done here.  And I wish that I were learning at the same time with him for the same thing or OCS.
And as for my furlough. That, they tell me shall have to wait until a later date until we get settled again and perhaps get another clerk in the office.
I, in great desperation a few minutes, I decided that I was going to go over and get myself a pitcher of ice water from the mess hall where I found out a long time ago that it always paid a long time ago that it always paid to stay in good with the cooks and they are always glad to do things for me and the ice water today is certainly a great help.
I received a letter from Aunt Esther the other day and a nice letter from Joseph this morning and I shall have to answer them for I am way behind in my writing and I don’t want to get farther behind.
You asked once how it was that Comm Brett of the Navy lived here on the post.  I understand that he is more or less the representative of the Navy to the Army here or sort of a envoy or go between man.
You asked me in a previous letter if I were receiving my Reader’s Digest satisfactorily.  I wrote them a note telling them of the change in my address and I received a card telling me that the address had been changed and my last one came correctly here, so I guess that that is all straightened out by this time.
The other evening I went out to a very nice place here in San Antonio where they serve delicious seafood meals.  Mrs. Tedesco and my friend John Langstadt also went along.  I had some or shall I say half a very good lobster shrimp cocktail and a very fresh salad with some tartar sauce in all we had a very enjoyable evening.
I have come to the conclusion that I am going to send my watch home and have you keep it there after you have it cleaned.  I had trouble winding it for awhile and then it became very hard to wind after a while sometimes it could not be wound at all at times then again it would quite freely.  So when we went on bivouac I left it with Mrs. Tedesco who has a friend at one of the jewelers here.  She took it down to him and he looked at it and said that it needed cleaning because sweat had gotten in around the stem and that it was a little rusty there but he said that they were two or three months behind in repairs.  He told her that that was quite common around here even on the cheapest of watched and that there was not anything else wrong with it.  The same thing has happened to two or three others that I know of around here.  So, if you see some inexpensive stainless steel on around somewhere that is reasonable, will you get it for me because I am lost without one of some kind.
This Texas has certainly cost me enough since I have been down here: watch, cleaning and the high prices in san Antonio are a crime and a person feels worn out all the time because of the heat.
I was quite surprised to hear of the heat spell in Los Angeles and thereabouts.  I certainly do not envy those soldiers at Indio in any way.
You asked if I had heard from Marshall recently.  I have not hear from him at all and he owes me a letter since I wrote him last,  I thought that I would write again.
They do not give us salt pills but they have them here which I take a few of now and then.  My shirts now after I wear them, are all streaked white where the sweat has been.
What did Mrs. Finley do with the antique bed when she sold her furniture?  I always in a way liked the bed, but some day maybe I will find another which I will like much better.
Yesterday they made two of the first lieutenants here Captains so they should all be drunk this morning.  They always have a big party upon such occasions and then they talk and look it the next five days.
Well the day is growing warmer and I have run but of news so I will draw this to a close now and will write again soon. 
Will let you know when I am going to mail the watch home.

Always love,
Stanley