Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1941 — Page 21
¥ JORITIES AID TO SPEAK HERE
‘Warren G. Bailey to Con- * duct Luncheon Forum at Indianapolis A. C.
Reservations are being made at ‘the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce offices for a luncheon meet- : ing Thursday at which Warren G. ‘ Bailey, OPM priorities manager for
this district, will speak. The luncheon will be held at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mr. Bailey will discuss priorities prob-
Jems and procedure for the benefit| -of Indianapolis
industrial execu-
tives. . Following the address, Mr. Bailey
- will conduct an open forum for discussion of individual problems. W. 1. Longsworth, chamber president, today expressed the hope that “executives of local industrial firms will take advantage of this opportunity to hear an authoritative discussion of a problem which con- : ons all manufacturers of the Mr. Bailey Yas had a long ex- - perience in industry. He served as management engineer in the efficiency department of Arthur Young & Co., Chicago, from 1918-20; as senior associate of Griffenhagen & Associates, management engineers, Chicago, 1920-22; as supervising management engineer, assistant director and vice president of the Research Corp., Chicago, -36, and as president and genmanager of O-Cedar Corp. Chigo, 1936-40.
KIWANIANS HEAR COACHES Football coaches of Indianapolis
ublie schools will be introduced -to-
ans Wednesday noon at the ia Club. DeWitt 4S. Morgan, : tendent of schools, and J. Pan Hull, Shortridge principal, will on the program, also.
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By FRANK SMOTHERS Copyright, 1941, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. REYKJAVIK, Iceland.—A day in August.—We stepped up the other day to the door’ of the British~ American canteen in Reykjavik. It
was at the height of operations. British Tommies and sailors, Amexican Marines: and sailors, a few Norwegian tars, crowded the place— a big long hall with long tables, an old piano, a fairly well-stocked shop, substantial ndwiches and plenty of British beer. Some newly arrived Americans, one of whom played with much thump and gusto, were en ining all near the piano with the “Hut-Sut Song.” Before we entered from the vestjbule, a rather surprised British ‘guard noted our civilian clothes and stopped us. “Have you a card of identification?” He asked me.
ish.
longer on hand gave good reports of the Royal Navy and officers in
and Marines in the streets ‘on double dates with Reykjavik girls. American and. British officers have good relations, too—somewhat slower in developing, more likely, in the early stages, to be courteously co-operative than\ the free-and-easy comradeship. In this meeting place of officers of the two finest navies in the world there naturally is a certain amount of professional rivalry under the surface, between naval officers. But such indications of this rivalry as I've heard—a few remarks by American officers not entirely laudatory of the ways of “the Limies,” have mostly been before the officers of the convoy with which I came began getting personally acquainted with the Brit-
American officers who had been
Americans Welcome
“Not anything very official,” I said, fumbling in a pocket. “Wg're American newspapermen from those ships that came in the other day.” The Tommy melted, grinned with immediate friendliness: “If youre Americans you're welcome here,” he said. We found it was that way within the big hall, too. And from all evidence at hand it is clear that the British and American forces in Iceland, not only in this canteen but generally, aré' getting along excellently together. The British have put themselves out to help the American newcomers to @ good start. For example: When the American Marines arrived, the British stationed in the same camp area assigned to the Marines gave over their comfortable Niessen huts to them, and went into tents. This applied to officers as well as men, and some British officers hade their beds on the ground for a while as a re-| sult. Relations Cordial :
American authorities here have been impressed, some of the agreeably surprised, by the relations the forces of this country and the British have established. Now and then you see Tommies
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18 N. ILLINOIS
classic World War I trick, of using Indians speaking their own lang-
again being used in the Army, this time during the great summer maneuvers in the south.
have small groups of Indians from
. {sion to power:
it. They told of Britons here who have been sailing the seas almost all the time since Dunkirk, many
of them with no word from fam-
Reporter in Iceland Finds Cordiality "In Relations Between U. S. British, Navies
ilies in England for many months,|
most of them hungry for news and a chance to be in England, but all of them keeping “chins up.” One Sunday the officers’ softball team of this battleship, several newspapermen with them, rode in a gig to a British warship, where we were transferred to a. British boat, and with a British officers’ softball team, improvised to take on the Americans, went ashore, We brought lots of sandwiches with first-rate American roast beef and butter, chocolate bars and plenty of cigarets. The British furnished a parallel abundance of beer. That combination of respective supply kits were perfect. The British made no secret that their lack of sweets made the chocolate an extraordinary treat.
The sandwiches were very wel-|
come, too, and even the American cigarets, tasting very different from the British, went well. As for the Americans, from a Navy in which all alcoholic beverages are barred from ships, the beer was an equal treat.
By Science Service
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2.—'The
uage. as “code” transmitters, is
Three units of the 32d Division
Wisconsin and Michigan tribes, who receive instructions in English, put them on the air in a tongue intell® igible only to their listening fellow= tribesmen, who in turn. re-trans-late the message into English at the receiving end. The Indians themselves have had to overcome certain language difficulties, for there are no words in their primitive languages for many of Ihe necessary military terms. In one the groups, ingenious usé
Army Again Using Indians as Secret Code Transmitters
cavalry and artillery wear hat cords and other insignia of blue, yellow and red, respectively. The Indian word for “blue” thus comes to mean infantry, “yellow” means cavalry and “red” means artillery. The Indian term for #‘turtle” signifies a tank. The Indians had tb be carefully selected, for many of the men entering the service had forgotten the language of their forefathers, and others could not translate it into English very readily. However, thanks to the efforts of Lieuf. Newton L. Chamberlain, of Grand Rapids, Mich., a total of 17 properly qualified Indians were picked out and trained for the job. The Indian “coders” work in pairs. It is of course necessary - for both members of a pair to be of the same tribe, for the language of one tribe is -as unintelligible to another group of Indians as it is to white men.
was made of the fact that infantry,
14 MONTHS LEFT TO FULFILL PROMISE
& By UNITED PRESS Four months remained to Adolf Hitler today to make "good his promise to the German people to win the war in 1941. :
As the war entered its third year, hundreds of thousands of Berliners spent hours crowded in air raid shelters while fleets of British and Russian planes raided western and northern Germany. Russia reported a whole series of powerful counter-attacks along grea; stretches of the Eastern
Last Jan, 1, Hitler in a new year order of the day said: “Soldiers of the National Socialist German Armed Forces of the Greater German Reich! “The year 1941 will bring consummation of: the greatest victory in our history. It was Hitler's first promise to win the war within a set time. * . He followed this by a speech Jan. 30, anniversary of the Na. acces-
“The year 1941 will be the his= torical year of a great new order in Europe.”
“So we enter the year 1941 cool and determined to end what started the ‘year before.”
DISCUSSES EMPLOYMENT
George J. Smith, manager of the Indiana Employment Bureau, will address the Lions Club Wednesday at the Claypool Hotel on “Effect of
| On March 16 he said at a war |. memorial meeting:
IT WAS A GOOD TIP— BUT IT DIDN’T WORK
NEW YORK, Sept. 2 (U. P). — Detectives John Sheridan and Ralph Lupoli got a tip that two: Brooklyn youths were: planning to burglarize a jewelry store. They picked up their quarry at a dance hall. Keeping an eye on the youths, who were dancing,” the detectives danced, too—for four hours, The youths left the dance hall
‘and the detectives followed them to
a jewelry store. There the. detectives, congrafulating themselves for frustratipg a burglary, arrested the erstwhile dancers. _ Investigation later, however, disclosed that a third person, presumably a confederate of the arrested pair, already had looted the shop. Police and the store owner were still adding up the-loss today. .
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The Indiahapolis’ Salés Executive Council will open its fall and winter program’ next Monday with a dinner meeting at the’ Indianapolis Athletic Club. Jack Lacy, director of the Lacy Institute of Advanced Salesmanship, Boston, Mass., will speak. He will feature his talk with his “Sales X-ray,” a four-colored Neon display. with which he “visualizes the principles which make each step of the successful sale click.”
Members of the Indianapolis Advertising Club and of the retail and wholesale trade committees of the Indianapolis. Chamber of Commerce have been invited to attend. Edward S. Dowling of Dilling & Co. is program chairman for the meeting. _.
IRANIAN PILOTS UNCOWED
SIMLA, Indi&; Sept. 2° (U. P.).— The Iranian Government was reported today to have declared mar-
tial: law because some of the Iranian
Air Force pilots desired to continue hostilities.
TREE!
BEGIN FALL SEES,
Takes Veoorions “HOLLYWOOD; Sept. 2.(U. P.)— Actress Joan Crawrora has started a
two-month vacation.
Accompanied by her children, Christina gnd Christopher, she was en route to New York for a two-day stopover before leaving for a tour of the New. England states and Canada.
VAN ORMAN TO LEAD VETERANS PROGRAM
Harold Van n of Evans-
ville, former Lietitenant Governor;|
will serve as master of ceremonies
at the dinner to be given Thurs-|
day night at the Antlers Hotel by
the Marion County Republicalt 1
Veterans for Ralph Gates, new 0. P. state chairman. - All members of the State Republican Veterans Association and the county and district G. O. P. chairmen have been invited to attend. The dinner, which is to be held at 6:30 p. m, is a stag affair, Frank E. Livengood, county vet-
NORFOLK, Vs., Sept: 3'(U. PY L, Civio ~organizations offered today |:
to ‘fori a citizens. volunteer: gar-| Charles B. Borland ih Lage removal and street cleaning;
erans’ chairman, sai
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