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The South Bend Tribune from South Bend, Indiana • 1

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fterai ribtim Departments and Features ae. 3 Sec. 4 Classified 7. tec. 3 Editorial .4.

Sec. 1 Society Set. 3 Financial 6. Sec. 4 Sport.

1 -2-3-4-5-6-7, Sec. Magasi paces 8-9. See. Woman 6, Be. 3 VOL.

LXVII. THE OXLT ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWSPAPER IN SOUTH BEND SOUTH BEND, INDIANA, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1939. THE ONLY rTTED PRESS NEWSPAPER EM SOUTH BEND PRICE TEN CENTS. TROJANS HUMBLE IRISH. 20 54 PAGES 12 Nazis Claim 'Hits on Four British Ships LansdeWs Score Makes Notre Dame Hearts Sink.

TreadwayHitsF.D.R's 55,000 THRILL TO LONG RUNS IN FAST GAME Lansdell, Schindler and Sheridan Stand Out. GERMANS SINK DETESTABLE' Camouflage TRUCE BALKS LILLHLIHLILv'hhJhBhWhW'' KV" Lk LbbbbbV mBT sBSEr mSm mm U-BOAT TRAP English Say Bombs Did Not Damage 9 Ware raft kfiLtffl PVhW flk dliMriHr KjjJB BS KSlT' 'gJpSaCJ 'IfcBL BBBBBi Bnl Bb. BBBb. ssatafcs. B.

Bv A BEf-tr latwff Prtsl- BERLIN. Nov. 25. Nazi Ger many tonight claimed for its bombing planes a signal success against the British navy-square hits on four warships in the North DNB, the official German news agency, said two attacks occurred 560 miles from the German coast Eluding heavy fire from anti- T-XTT HU rnw man planes returned Kips Into Proposal for National Defen By United Press. WASHINGTON, Nov.

25. Representative Allen T. Treadway, of Massachusetts, ranking republican member of the house ways and tee, tonight de- nounced Presi. jent Roosevelt's gestion of a special nati0nal i (ifnsG t.3.X 3-S tn a further extrava- gance. way Tread- wav attarkpd the A.

T. TREADWAY mittee prepared to begin work Monday on Mr, Rooseveit re- fQr another $271,999,523 for national defense during the cur- of $500,000.000 in militarv costs tfl lM1 fU year, Treadway The DNB account ended there, defi. giving no additional particulars. i appropri-( On a mileage computation as an- ation subcom. proposal as noun ced by DNB the attack would have occurred somewhere in the area or uie aneuanu Mru or me huge British naval IjE HBBBB NATIONWIDE FILM STRIKE Producers Agee on Pay Boost of 10 Per Cent.

I Picture pave three. 1 By Asscciated Press. HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 25. A strike of 35,000 motion picture technicians which threatened to plunge the nation's theaters in to darkness as well as close the studios, was averted today as pro- aucers agreea to a iu per teni wage increase.

A stipulation that the increase "On or about Feb. 15. 104(1. you will give us an opportunity to ishow you that the condiUon of this, taken every possible step within our power to readjust our business so as to make it possible to con Oct. 10 and affect 23,000 studio o.ioinaiwia uuc uclioiuh v-.

nn wouiu oe accepiea as rinar ry Dom producers and the unions. Announcement of the strike set- Dase. ocapa now, is locaiea in rent year Tf granted it wili would remain effective only until 'boost the national defense bill for next Feb. 15. when the wage I (The British admiralty acknow-, jqq j0 $2 009 362 293 iquestion would be reopened for ledger! tonight that two bombing, Referring to Mr! Roosevelt's sug- consideration, was accepted by of-attacks on British ships had estion that- a tax ma have to ficers of 24 A.

F. L. unions of stu-eurred the North sea during the finance increase dio craftsmen. Many a Notre Dame heart sank while watching this play, i which Quarteback Grenny Lansdell (indicated by arrow) smashed I A 1 OUT I 1 1 1 III Ul ULLHO WU I IN CORN CROPS two yards over lert tackle lor soutnern uaniornia nrst touendown Saturday afternoon in the Notre Dame stadium. It took-Jhe Trojans just 12 plays to make this score after gaining possession of the ball for the first time in the first period.

Fifty-five thousand fans saw the visitors finally trim the Irish, 20-12. Photo by Tribune. Staff Photographer. arternoon out oeciarea, xso nils were made and I there were no casualties," although "many bombs were Alarm Lasts S5 Minutes. fin the Orkneys, residents specu- lated on whether German planes, reported present in a "large con-j centration" late today, mieht have! It Jg purew an excuse for not industry makes ua continuance of meeting face ito face the extra va-jwa increases impossible, and gance of his administration.

It isjfurther to show you that we have Cfori2 llU.A.W. Charges 'Bad Faith'; been engaged on a mine-sowing 'reorganization act was passed tinue without recalling these wage intssion. A 35-minute air raid "There has been an extravagant increases," the producers stip-warning was sounded at the Or k-' addition of employes at a cost of ulated. neys. Before that a German S100.000.000 a year." He con-1 Should they be able to make bomber appeared over the Shet- tended that the budget cannot be'sucn a showing, they specified the lands, for the ninth time in four balanced by taxation and saw noiunions would surrender the wage wppks rhanro rf svnoniitnrsi (increase, to be effective as of last The high command asserted to-1 JULIET' AGAIN SPIRITED AWAY Swain Prepares New Skirmish With Her Parents.

By AsficiatPd Press. NEW YORK, Nov. 25. Some- George where on Long Island, Lovelorn Romeo Lowther, III, tonie-ht sought his 20-vear- old Eileen Herrick, as his attorney prepared another legal skirmish to determine whether she had been ui again spirited away and held hid- den and incommunicado" in viola tion of a court-order. Eileen left the hosnital where she had been sent to rest and think things over, Friday, night although George considered the truce didn't expire until 5 p.

m. today and was taken by her mother to the home of an undisclosed friend. Thus another chapter in the'ro- mance of Eileen and George was being written-a story climaxed nay a uerman suDmanne had not meet its present-day expendi-i I union (CIO) tonieht ordered sunk "an English U-boat trap, an tures by anyP form of taction panted 12.000 other craft union auxiliary 7.000-ton warship, and without terrible hardships and per- members since last Aug. 15 ft1 plant of Chrysler corporate press recalled with bitter haps confiscation of property. Otherwise, it was agreed, theitrol program under which farmers kev factory in a 51-day-old phrases Britain's, world war use "It would take income taxes wage matter wiU be submitted to the midwestern commercial Reduction.

A SHIN (iTf WASHINGTON, Nov. 25. The nr I oni np aKPn rpm pp inpir per cent The program established a corn acres for the commercial belt, which comprises 599 major corn-producing counties of Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky, Nebraska, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and South Dakota. tlement came after officers of thelseeding allotment of 36.638.000 Orders Dodge By United Press. DETROIT, Nov.

25. AUluIulle vomer ft. J. Thomas, president of the non, said he had ordered full un time picket lines established at the plant because of "bad faith" of the corporation. He accused Chrys- iler of sponsoring a back-to-work movement Friday in which two policemen and six workers were injured when about 60 persons attempted to enter the plant.

At the same time he announced I to 5St7 tff tepuSS idled more than 60,000 automotive workers. Dodge workers authorized a i or sucn mysrery snips. i In its daily communiaue the high command said "the U-boat, trap was camouflauged as a Dutch steamer and the press, which termed this "particularly 1 detestaoie, added that she went down waters north of Eng- land." (In London nothing was published concerning the German claim and no comment was avail able. During the world war the British navy used camouflaged chl no 4 TT.hAnf-i i V. Recalls War Snares.

The press used the occasion to recall the world war snares, which were described as constituting i neK uthe worst chapters in Bri- uni uaniv aim iivputTLSV, ana praised the submarine crew whirr. i i BY JACK LEDDEN. Notre Dame closed its season with a defeat Saturday afternoon on its own field but won a lot of glory while losing to Southern California, 20-12, in the greatest offensive football duel staged here in years. For three quarters the Irish fought their hearts out against superior power but the Trojans had too much endurance. The crowd of 55,000 was the largest to see a game here this year and marked the only sellout of a five-game home schedule.

Sensational in every department. the game produced its greatest offensive explosion in the final seven minutes of the fourth period. Southern California scoring twice and Notre Dame c-ce: Until then the score was deadlocked at 6-6, the Trojans having marched 67 yards to score in the first six minutes of the ball game and the Irish coming back with a 56-yard advance of their own to square the count on the first play of the fourth period. Grenville Lansdell and Ambrose Schindler, Coach Howard Jones' touchdown twins, registered the Trojan counters, the former hitting pay dirt twice and the latter once. Milt Piepul and Bennie Sheridan were the Irish ball carriers who scored, the latter sprinting 60 yards through a broken field with but five minutes of play remaining to set up a tie possibility.

Piepul's counter came on a six-yard run- around California's weak-side end. Schindler Races 41 Yards. Doubt concerning the ultimate winner existed until the final two minutes of play when Schindler went 41 yards on a cutback play over Notre Dame's guard to score the third Trojan touchdown. One of the Jones boys Bob, the player, not Howard, the coach, kicked two extra points for the coast champions; Piepul and Johnny Kelleher missed a pair for LUC ilIBU- "uu. nave icil ine Kalne neu ana maae Schindler's touchdown necessary to decide a winner.

However, both 1 i a. 1 1 a. Paus sauca Wlae ol we upngnts as dlu rml t-aspcr placement aft- er Lansdell's first touchdown. Vicieus power plunges inside and outside Notre Dame's tackles constituted the main item in Southern California's running game, Lansdell. Schindler and Nave carrying the ball from tail back position.

Passes to both flat to, keep Irish secondary vawud Luiiicau. In all. the Irish threw 20 passes, completing 11, with Harry Stevenson and Ben Sheridan doing most of the pitching to Sitko, Kerr, Kelly and Bagarus. The Trojans threw 15 passes and completed five, most of them in the first half. Breaks were fairly evenly distributed, Southern California fum bling away a touchdown on the Irish two-yard line in the second period and then intercepting a pass by Bagarus to set up a tie-breaking touchdown in the fourth period.

Better protection on pass plays gave Lansdell more opportunities to find a receiver than Stevenson enjoyed, but the lanky Irish half- Continued on Fate One, Sport Section. SUNDAY. NOV. 26. 1939.

Indiana Much cloudiness continued cool today; Monday generally fair and. tlijrhtly warmer. Lower Michigan Fair and continued cold today; Monday generally fair and slightly warmer. Illinois Much cloudiness, continued cool today: Monday generally lair slightly warmer. 1 Monday, sun rises at sets at 4:16.

Moon rises at 5:20 p. m. in Gem-mi. Pegasus at meridian, 6 to 7 p. at.

SOUTH BEND TEMPEBATCBE. Official temperatures as recorded by the O. 8. weather bureau at Bendlz field. St.

Joseph county airport, were as follows Temperatures in downtown South Bend are estimate by the bureau to avtraga four to six degrees higher. 1 Nov 25. 6:35 p. m. ...32 10:35 a.

36 7 35 p. m. 32 8 :35 p. m. 30 9:35 p.

m. .28 10:35 p. m. 27 9 11:35 p. ..26.2 Wot.

26. 12:35 a. tn. .25.4 11 :35 a. m.

12:35 p. m. 1:35 p. m. 2:35 p.

m. 3:35 p. m. 4:35 p. m.

.37.1 .37.6 .36 9 .36.4 .36.2 5:35 p. m. .35 Maximum, 38.6; minimum, 25.4. the Congress of Industrial Or- 41.256,000 acres this year. In the; 6 would arrive here 1920's it normally planted about or? strike, 13.751 to 1,324, shortly of the state executive committee; after a production dispute broke State" Senate Majority Leader Jo-out at their plant Oct.

6, and seph R. Hanley and Assembly picket lines already have been Speaker Oswald D. Heck. maintained at the factory gates. The plant generally has been in-' friJT MAV HP also to camouflage further extra- vagances." Treadwav charered that since the "The government." he said, "can- to.

3o per cent of the tn-1 come of the small man. in addi tion to broadening the base to bring in more revenue, as well as other taxes, to balance the budeet The administration doesn't dare broaden the base-it is too near election." EDISON URGES MORE SHIPS. President U. S. Should Accelerate Naval Program.

By Unjt.d Prg WASHINGTON, Nov. 25. Acting Secretary of Navy Charles Edison told President Roosevelt tonight that the navy should Vi i i 1H ro chinr- a i i i "lrl if a if Ji ful, wartime strength. :4 ii LfLJl.7" r. gram may have to be accelerated, but under no circumstances should be retarded." DEATH CLAIMS 20-OUNCE BABY International News Service.

LA JUNTA, Nov. 25. 'M'ortprn srienee toHav haH fgilAH us ngnt to Keep Little violet Denton alive. The 20-ounce infant' smallest chil ever born in junta, died tooav atter having i iKen KeP several oays in iiieviiaiiicai lncuoator. TEST SQU ALUS' SISTER MONDAY United Pres.

PORTSMOUTH, N. Nov. 25. The newly-commissioned sub marine Sea Raven begins sub- merged trials Monday off the Isles Shoals where her sister ship, Squalus, sank May 23 during test dive with the loss of 26 lives. i by Lowther's demand for a writ of habeas corpus, claiming his lovei Notre Dame did everything dif-was being held from him by her! fercnt Saturday forgetting its family against her will.

That; conservative pattern to gamble phase ended Nov. 15 in dismissal Passs had the Tro an of the writ and an agreement that defens)e most of the after 10 davs of rest in the hospi- secnd, half- sVcn cUcs assured tal Eileen Could see Lowther as dUl1, ments and Pr, much as she wished and marry him iyPof 'nteresting football which if she wished. nad been lackinS most of the sea- Todav. however, the girl's fa- ther, Walter R. Herrick.

former Passing on first down In their park commissioner, said he was rnto sure the girl had changed her mind iour down Pld dividends for the about wanting to marry Lowther. I Insh smcc Southern California He said shl had sent a note tolwas not expecting such drasUc Lowther asking him not to write a 8ysKt1em that had fea" her or try to see her. tured llttIe eTambling in eight pre- studio unions had met with Wil- liam Bioff. western representative of A. F.

L. movie craftsmen, to consider their strategy in view of Friday night's announcement that a strike call would be issued today. Through the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Em ployes, with which many of the studio unions are affiliated, the A. 1 F. L.

could have called out projectionists in 25.000 motion pic- ture theaters in the United States and Canada and rendered approxi mately 250,000 theater employes idle. Union sources estimated the an- nual increase to workers would amount to about $3,000,000. REPORTER SAVES TWO GIRLS FROM LIFE SENTENCES By Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Nov. 25.

A reporter was responsible today for adding a two-letter prefix to court papers to reduce to 14 months a life sentence unintentionally given two young women Judge Frank S. Day did not grant mercy 10 days ago when they pleaded guilty so a sentence was mandatory for burglarizing an inhabited dwelling. John Rees Cleveland News reporter, called this to Judge Day's attention. "1 Plant Strike G. O.

P. TO OPEN DEWEY DRIVE Rv T'niteii Pres. XEW YORK, Nov. 25. A boom for District Attornev Thomas x.

Dewey as New York choice for tne republican presiaentiai nom- ination will be launched formally next week with opening of campaign headquarters, it was disclosed today. Political circles said that statements will be made at that time making it clear to the public and leaders throughout the nation that Dewey is the choice of the New York state republican organization. Petitions designating Dewey for first place on the republican national ticket have been signed by numerous republican leaders, it was said. Among these, it was understood, are State Chairman William S. Murray, Edwin F.

Jaeckle, head OFF TWO MORE KUHN CHARGES By United Press. NEW YORK, Nov. 25. Judge James G. Wallace will decide over the week-end whether to trim two more counts from the Fritz Kuhn grand larceny indictment, counts containing the charge that the German-American bund leader embezzled $717.02 of bund funds to move his "golden angel's" furniture across the country.

Kuhn 's trial in general sessions court will go to the jury Monday or Tuesday. Judge Wallace already has dismissed five of the 10 grand larceny and forgery counts. Mrs, Florence Camp, blond divorcee and recipient of honeyed love letters and a marriage proposal from Kuhn, testified that she repaid $600 of the money he spent to transport her furniture. INDIAN, 126, DIES. By Associated Press.

PALM SPRINGS, Qalif, Nov. 25. Pedro Chino, Cahuilla Indian tribe medicine man whose claim to be 126 years old was supported by friends and relatives, died manes tnese steps aa-it said, had escaped "an insidious Edison told the president ac in the annual navy department German press propaganda at report the same time hammered away importanCe of continuing at another point that neutral an orderly program of additions shipping must avoid the British lto and replacements within our 1S I fleet from year to year without Germany proposes, In other aRain is stressed." Edison words, to turn the table view of the Threatening Britain as compared with 1914 by international situation it is prob-starvmg her out rather than that our nresent orderly nro- 52.000,000 acres. The, 1940 allotment will be P- portioned among farmers under a formula set up in the crop control act. Only those farmers comply- 'ing with allotments will be elig ible for benefit palyments and government loans on surplus corn.

Two kinds of payments will be offered soil conservation and price adjustment. The former payment will be 10 cents a bushel compared with nine cents this year. The price adjustment rate, six cents; this year, has not yet been determined. The department also announced that the national planting goal for corn under the 1940 crop control program would be between 88.000,-000 and 90.000,000 acres compared with the 1939 goal of 94,000,000 and 97,000,0 acres. DAVIES SLATED FOR NAVY POST, CAPITAL HEARS By International News Service.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 25. American Ambassador Joseph E. Davies, who is returning from Belgium in December to confer with President Roosevelt, today waa reported being considered for appointment as secretary of the navy. The navy post has been vacant 'wouldn't sentence anv girls to life for a charge like that," said the operative since early last month.

Conferences between represen tatives of the company and the union were in recess until Mon day but Chairman Arthur E. Raab of the Michigan labor mediation board hoped that before then disputants would- find a basis for agreement on the question of wages. He said this issue was the only one preventing settlement of the dispute and completion of a new contract. In support of theU. A.

I. current reported demand for a five-cent-an-hour wage increase for all Chrysler workers, Rev. Philibert Ramstetter, a member of the Duns Scotus college faculty here, pointed to company earnings and high salaries granted to Chrysler officials. He contended that a blanket increase of 10 cents an hour, which the union originally demanded, would not be excessive. The corporation had contended during negotiations that the U.

A. I. O. wage requests were unreason- 85U IIS MAILS Ut EASTERN PRISON By International News Service. BOSTON, Nov.

25. More than 850 inmates at the Charlestown state prison were menacea by nre ioaay wnen a spectacular nve-aiarm blaze, fed jby highly inflammable materials, swept a near-by pipe plant. Sixty -pieces of fire apparatus responded to the blaze which started in an undetermined man- ner at the New England Pipe Supply company, located' 300 yards from the nrison. not immediately known. let her starve the reich One of the most outspoken dailies, Schleische Breslau, declared Zeitung, of; "We are firmly convinced we will succeed in defeating England with her own weapons, reverse the blockade dart aimed at us and isolate this pestilential island." Artillery Fire Weak.

wuiuinBnuiin Al eryr i 1 U1 vi riuuiio en. Apach, Kitzing and Manderen. all within France and near the junc- tion of the German. French and Luxembourg frontiers. It Bald German artillery hammered infantry positions in the Perl forest.

In the same district, and south of Manderen. French artillery of medium and heavy caliber, it added, aimed at annoying German scouting troops. DNB reported the loss of seven German airplanes in scouting c.v,.. n.k..v. it i t-.

day over western Franee. NAZI MINELAYER 40 of Crew Lost as Boat Down Near Denmark. Goes Mtj uiiin nwi. UUl-aovHAC-lN. Denmark.

Nov.1 smau uerman minelayer struck a mine off the Island of Langeland today and sank with the indicated loss of 40 of the 50 oi ttie CTew- TTie distinction of the nazi ves- sei. ot about TOO tons, was the Coatiaaetj ea Fe Two, column six. it By By of the a Bv if once the you M'NUTT ORDERS SECURITYUNIT EXPENSE MONEY By Associated Press. WASHINGTON, Nov. 25.

Paul V. McNutt has ordered a survey of the administrative costs and efficiency of his federal security agency with a view to its possible reorganization. Now one of the major enterprises, the agency has 21000 employes and an annual budget of approximately $800,000,000. CHEATS TRUCK NOT HOSPITAL By Associated Press. BOSTON, Nov.

25. Eleanor Tuscardi, aged nine, waa hit by a truck. Her mother called a doctor, who decided after a careful examination that the truck hadn't hurt her a bit. But he rushed her to a hospital anyway for appendicitis. The mayor contended an ordinance prohibiting keeping swine within 300 feet of dwellings was unconstitutional.

"Because it permits butchers to raise and keep as many pigs as they wish, while prohibiting poor families from raising a pig or two for winter meat, it is clearly class legislation," Yingling said. duir aim. 1 1 1 ft i Liinnifi ui Aria Swanson and is one of several tfa which the president plans to fill during the coming session of con- moUve emPlyea- gress, including the vacancy on the supreme court caused by theijpJJfc MENACES recent death of Associate Justice i Solution: The judge, prosecutor and clerk put the prefix "un" in front of "inhabited" cutting the sentence to 14 months. STATE SENATOR WEDS. By Associated Press.

NEW ALBANY, Nov. 25. State Senator Roeer H. Phil- lips and Mrs. Gladys Gross Schoen, both of New Albany, were married in Carrollton, Wednesday, Mr.

and Mrs. Albert W. Gross, Louisville, the bride's parents, announced today. Charley horse on the playing field anrl Industrial Medical Officer The remedy Lb rest or diversion. Letdown? Perhaps You Have Occupational Charley Horse 600 Win Their Campaign to Raise Pigs Within City Pierce Butler.

USES DYNAMITE TO END HIS LIFE WALTON, N. Nov:" 25. Ross Travis, aged 44. ended his life bv having his wnf unwittingly deto- nate a dynamite bomb, authorities said today. Travis wrapped dynamite about him in a blanket, wired thej charge to a light socket and tied its chain switch to the front door; so that anyone entering would i fire the bomb.

Mrs. Travis set! off the bomb when she entered They were uninjured. I ass iated. Press PITTSBURGH. Nov.

25. you feel a letdown at the office Jones thinks the same thing hap-, between 10 and 11:30 a. and pens figurately to industrial and or twice in the latter part of office workers. day. Dr.

Russel R. Jones saysj 'They become over-trained, get might be suffering from an stale then accidents begin to hap- "occupational Charley horse." Inen and nroductivitv slows un." he By Associated Press. TIFFIN, Noy. 25. Mayor Charles S.

Yingling today let down the bars on raising pigs in this city. More than 600 persons signed a petition saying keeping pigs HelTeH to stav oft relief rolls. Six Itain the ordinance. Over-art of the muscles causes a 4.

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Pages Available:
2,570,126
Years Available:
1873-2019