2* PLAIN FOOD BUT LOTS OF IT IS FARE OF WAACS DES MOINES, IOWA.—Truffles, pate de fpies gras and caviar will be hardej: to find at the WAAC's daily mess thaii an iota well-hidden in the sands oflthe Sahara, it was revealed Aere. \ Dainties and "food fads" will take I the back seat at the Women's Army ! Auxiliary corps training school and "good, wholesome food" will greet \ the first WAAC's when they sample ; their first mess. That information, girls, comes straight from headquarters where j Capt. John McSweeney, an expert J army food dispenser late of Fort j Riley, Kan., will slave over a hot* stove with his gang of cooks, K.P/s J and a mess sergeant just to keep] you operating dn the right kind of j grub. Here's a sample day's table: For breakfast you'll have your choice of the following groceries on the breakfast list—fresh apples, cream of wheat, fresh milk, fried bacon, wheat cakes and syrup, cinnamon toast, tea or coffee. Then, at lunch time, after you've put in some time