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About Roseburg news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1920-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1937)
Any Team Can Play Better If It Has the Support of a Large Crowd of Supporters. Let's All Turn Out Friday Night and Root for the Indians' First Game THE WEATHER Humidity 5 p. in. yesterday 57 Highest temperature vesterduy i;k Lowest temperature last night 43 Precipitation for 24 hours ii Precip, since lirst of month 1.:n I'redp. from Sojit. i. Ken i.;ti Kxcess aiije Sept. 1. l!Ct7 10 Probably occasional rain. BARGAIN RATES Tho Roseburg Now8-Review9 special bargain utter, starting lober 1, in to be open for only two weeks. After that the nibscription price will be rained, li will coat you money If you delny. Itenew IHIW. VOL. XLII NO. 131 OF ROSEBURG REVIEW ROSEBURG, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, I937-, VOL. XXVI NO. 51 OF THE EVENING NEWS IMI LT THE DOUGLAS COUNTY DAILY VMPt 1ST SHGDE i 0 BULLET FROM DENTISTS GUN KILLS BANDIT Another Wounded in Flight From Bank After Two Officials and Truck . Driver Shot. MIDLAND, Mich., Sept. 29. (AP) A dentist shot ami killed one of four gunmen attempting to hold up the Chemical Stale Sav ings hank, arrows the Htn-et from his office today. Two other robbers were captur ed, one wounded in the arm, and a fourth e.scapeil. Paul I), Iiywater, rushier of tho bank, was shot in the hip; Clar ence II. Macomher, bank presi dent, was wounded In the chest, and a truck driver, pausing the in-! stimtion. was shot and wounded by ihe robbers who used a sub machine gun. Shot in Head Dr. F, li. Hardy fired with an au tomatic Hl'le from his office win dow as the quartet of gunmen Tied from the hank. The charge struck one nf them in the hend and kill ed him. Two of Ihe robbers leaped into their automobile and fled toward a bridge across the Tillabuwassee river, but en route they struck a parked automobile. Jumping from their wrecked car, they shot the truck driver, Henry Porter, and continued their flight on foot. Itank employes said two uen en tered the hank, one of them push ing the Rubumchine gun against Macomher at the president's desk. As he did this. Iiywater started to mos the bank lobby toward Ma comher, and the second robber whipped out a piBtol and shot Uy ivnter. Bank President Shot Almost at the same time the first gunman pressed the trigger (Continued on page 6) SALKM, Sj-pt. 29. (AIM The stale supreme court upheld today thi first dcureo murder convic tion of Jack Justice, serving a. life term for the murder of W. Frank Akin, port of Portland Invcotipu- tor who was slain Nov. 2il, 1933. i Justice was accused of paying SI. 2nn to Leo Hall, who was nang- , ed for the sextuple murders at Fr- land's Point, near Ilremerton, Wash., if Hall would kill Akin, Hall also was Indicted for the Akin murder but was executed he-j fore he could be tried. Lawrence Patrick Paulos. hus band of Peggy Paulos, who be trayed Hall's sextuple crime to the police, testified at the Akin trial that he assaulted Akin, in he half of Justice, for a promise of J2nn. The Akin defense contend ed before the high court that this i testimony was inadmissahle. Five and One Haif End in Death CHICAGO, Sept. 2!!. (AIM The! enigma of pretty Patricia hi tluire's strange five and a half, year sleep was sealed today in death. The 32-yeor-old suburban Oak Park stenographer for whom time stopped ut the age of 2ti died at a hospiial last night without bridging the abyss of unconsciousness cre ated by her baffling ailment, leth argic encephalitis. A common affliction pneu monia was the immediate cause of death. It developed last Sunday when Miss Mat'.nire was taken to the hospital for the removal of an abdominal tumor. Two liloou trans fusions failed to check the disease or shake her from the comatose condition which had proved un fathomable lo medical science. With her when she died was siv members of her family, including her mother. Mrs. Peter Miley. who had cared for her duy and night since she was stricken Feb. 1", Scores of telephone calls, one f i om a London newspaper during tho pa-a two days attested to me rf ,i, nwsinen. interest and curiosity which her -whrt is la"oen;ng to rep'' - ho live years and seven months sleep , fl?;0(j r.r ntother. "T could hnn'lv excited among laymen throuirhout ( kfl(,p Bl. n(0 tit the office tod-jv. lko the world. I you thin'; I'm setting sleepine Medies Are B?ffled Uh kne-s?" Many eminent physicians studied! on .January ifi she Ml apleen on the case hut nonp of their minis- j ifvated train and mde nat tralions proved successful. Serum i . - - injections, massages, :um batlnt.l (Continued on page 6) Ff V Coming Dedication Of Postof f ices V :.ANH. Sept. !t. (API (' mugh, Vuited StuteB aitor no h ail vised today by Am 1? - i'(,'onnell, executive assist in. i Postmaster Ceneral Farley, that Farley would dedicate post offices in Portland and Salem on Saturday. October "MY. Karley. after an engage ineni at Centraliu. Wash., will ar rive in Portland about 10 p. m.. Fridav, October 15, driving here via Vancouver, Wash," said Don augh. "On Saturday, October Iff, at 9:30 a. m.. he will dedicate the eastside posioffice at Portland and after that he will be taken by au tomobile to Salem, where lie will dedicate the new Salem posioffice in the earlv nfleriioon." Farley also will accept an in vilatlon of the Jack club of Ore gon, clemocralic society, to attend a breakfast, probably at the Port land hotel, prior to the dedication here. From Salem, Farley will proceed south to Sau Francisco, scene of the J!i:J7 national postmasters con vention. Whether he will slop en route was nor known. Dounugh also was not advised of Hit! exact lime of the Salem dedication. OUSTER OF LEWIS Head of Carpenters Will Support Move for Expulsion. liv JOSKPH L. MtLLFJt DKNVKIt, Sept. 2!l. (API Will iatu 1. Hutcheson. president of the carpenters" union, said today he would vote lo expel John L. Lewis' rebel CIO unions if the issue came before the American Federation of Labor convention next week. "Who wants to sleep on the same bed as a louse?" Hutcheson asked reporters when they had questioned him as to why he hud changed his position. Hutt'hoHoii, at last year's con vention, blocked eNpulsion, At that time, he said, "what's the use, they're alreudy out, aren't they?" Tho carpenters. worth li.otiO votes, have the largest single bloc n( vo,,,8 in tl(. convention, nut,.heson's unheralded change in nolicv led some observers to change their predictions on the out come of the expulsion iscuc. Juki yesterday, Arthur Wharton, president of the machinists union. lined up with tliose against expu.- Hiou YYhartou had been an outspoken j pi-o-expuhdunlst, and his switch le. j H0Ule to believe t hut expulsion w;i.; , n hut a ,j,'ud issue. Meantime, the federation's metal trades department convention unanimously adopted a resolution assailing the CIO but not mention ing expulsion. Yesterday the convention's reso ld ions committee. headed by Wharton, recommended that the department oppose expulsion. U'he convention sent the report back to the committee for revision. Years of Sleep for Patricia Maguire and artificially induced fever were emploved with equal futility. In October. sbe showed signa of a potential reawakening when she endeavored to smile. She appeared to recognize her mother and at the lalter's commands would w ink, raise an arm. or wiggle her toes. Despite n liquid diet she continued to gain weight until six weeks aL'o when an abdominal tu mor was discovered. One of Longest Recorded Miss .Matiuire's nice,) whs among the longest recorded in medical annals. One cape was that of a lo- year-old Itnssian girl. Kvdnkiya Lichaglna who fell asleep after an attack of typhoid fever and awak ened seven years and two months later. Jim Kalmeer of Fort Smith. Ark., died in W22 aft.-r a sleep whose duration was listed at seven and one half years. Pal ricia was a typical outdoor pirl who excelled i sports and en ioverl a norma I li fe before her strange nfflication began to affect her In January. 1&32. I'uring that mon(n complained of i-erinds POPE ISSUES LETTER AlrVIED ATGOMNUNISM Encyclical Construed as an Attack on Governments of Germany, Russia, Mexico and Spain. VATICAN CITY. Sent. 29. ( A I) Pope Pins XI today issued u dramatic encyclical which was construed as a faceted attack on communist liussia. uai Oerinuny and leftist-inclined governments of Spain and Mexico. The document, "an encyclical letter on the rosary of (he bhvis rd Virgin Mary." urged the Homan Catholic faithful lo pray against the evils of communism and the tendency of some slate leaders who war against communism to "exhume pagan errors and mor als." The encyclical was published as the lialiau press carried the texts I of addresses in Berlin last night by Italian Premier Mussolini and Herman Chancellor Hitler. Moth heads of state had inveighed against the threat of "holshevism" in Kurope. The encyclical urged the prac tice of rosary devotion during Oc tober which is especially reserv ed on religious calendars lo hom age for the maternity of the Vir gin Mary. In an official summary the Vati can secretariat of stale said Ihe "jneyclical credited the virgin in l he past with having been "vic torious over all heresies." Dangers Pointed Out The summary quoted the pon tiff's letter as saying: - "The dangei'H which threaten lire no less grave than in tho past; ,The world Is observed to be in a moral and spiritual crisis due to (he forget fulness of f!od; deep dis sensions rend the classes of so ciety; on one hand communism reals itseli In denial even of all right to private property; on the other, the cult of slate and desire to restore order and public author ity against the intrigues of com munism leads men to forget the wisdom of, Ihe gospels and lo ex umc pagan errors and morals. "A wave of atheism sweeps over the world and threat en.s destruc tion of all civilization." The aging holy father did not mention 'Cormuny by name but prelates Interpreted his remarks on paganism and atheism as dl- (Continued on page. G) SPOKANK. Sept. 20. (AP) The Industrial Kmploycs' I n ion. Inc., successor to the old 4-1,. is preparing to file with Ihe national labor relations hoard charges of collusion by "some lumber com panies" with the CIO and AFI in unfair labor practices. A. I). Chis holm of Port land, president, said here. lie made the disclosure in dis cussing prospective labor hoard hearings on complaints filed against the Mctioldi ick Lumber company of Spokane, the Potlaeh Forests, Inc.. of Lewistou and the (. I). Johnson Lumber corporation ot Toledo, Ore. The complaints, he said, were based upon charges filed !.y offi ce or the ( It) and AFL. follow ing unsuccessful attempts lo "force their respective unions up on the workers of the plants in olved." "Stripped of its camouflage." he said, "this move, initiated hv the j AFL uhd CIO groups, is an attempt i to use a government agency, at public expense, to organize lumber groups under their banner where their own efforts have failed." DENN TO TESTIFY IN MURDER TRIAL II. L. Heiin of Camas Valley In leaving tonight for Portland, having been tailed as a state's wlluesH in the trial of Leltoy McCarthy, ex oonict, being tried on a m order Lhootill of noyd Fenlner. Portland service station attendant August in. The state charges that McCarthy held up and robbed Feulner at his station. Feulner ia cktlmed to h::ve civen .pursuit and to have over taken McCarthy and in grapplin? with the tohher was shot through thf side, his wound proving lata). McCarthy was later captured by ihe Portland police. US HUM lyM1Iffl RDQSEVELT IS J PLEASED WITH OREGON VISIT Governor Martin Declines to Comment on President's Postage Stamp Power Rate Policy. PORTLAND.' Soot. 20. (API President Roosevelt continued his western tour today, leaving behind him in Oregon thousands .whose cheers were rewarded by bis fa mous smiie. other thousands whose long wail beside his route brought only v. disappointing glimpse of a .speeding car and a row with more personal reasons for remembering his visit: . He took with him. besides hi imnressions of the state and his reception, a diamond membership pin of Ihe young democratic clubs of Oregon and a new 10 hat. the involuntary donation of Talmadge I. Htaley of Portland. Staley was one of unnumbered thousands who wailed along th (uuounccd route of the oil Icial caravan for a glimpse (f the presi dent. As Mr. Roosevelt s car pass ed. Htaley in an excess of enthu siasm, pitched the new hat into the air. It fell in Ihe president's car. Smiling. Ihe president waved the windfall in the air and substituted if for his own brown felt. And there was Chino. Itl-year-old Italian hoy, who wailed - with a bunch of purple asters he wanted lo give to (he president. As the presidential car drew near he tossed the Imuquct. which was smashed to the pavement by ale:t secret Hervice operatives guarding the' chief executive. ' " Fighting back his tears, Chino felt his mother's arm across his shoulders. "Never mind, euro mlo,' she soothed. .' You done the best you could. President Pleased Boarding his special train ' at Vancouver, Wash., the president expressed his pleusure lo doverncr Charles Martin who had shared a seal in his car during the day. "1 loved every minute of It," Roosevelt said. "You can tell everyone how happy I am. 1 hope the next time l cau slay a little longer. The crowds which awaited his arrival along his Portland route from (iresham to the northern city limits, utmost halted the- already tardy caravuu in the business dis trict. Several pedestrians were nearly hit by the oncoming cars, and secret amviee men were hard CFNKVA, Sept. 29. t AP) Ap phi use rang through league of na tious halls today when Lelaud Har rison. I" lilted States observer of Ceneva. read the statement which Secretary of State Cordell Hull made In Washington regarding league condemnation of Japanese fliers bombing open Chinese cities. (The I'ulted States government 's attitude was set forth in unmis takable terms yesterday by Hull, who repeater! earlier denunciations of such military operations by the Jananes;.) Harrison, the I'nited Stutes min ister to Switzerland, read Hull's declaration at the opening public session nf the committee dealing with the Siuo-.lupunese conflict, i After Kcuadoran Delegate Que- vedo denounced Japanese bombing of Chinese cities, 1-ran cols de I es san, France's vUw minister of for eign nii'airs. moved that a sub committee be set up to study all questions pertaining to the Chi nese situation. Kesidul ions would be submitted lo the full committee. GIANTS ARF. WITHIN ONE GAME OF TITLE PIHLAhKLPIII . Sent. (API The New York (Hants came vithiti one fame nf clinching Ihe National leue pennant bv lop nitl" the Phillies, tl (O It. in Ihe rirst game of n ilnublehpader tndnv iwMnd th" steady niicMn7 of cliff Melton, who won bin 2'Mh vlciorv nf the reason. A victory for the 'n m in th" .wecond pnme. or a lefptt for Ihe s-n.'d.p'iir e Cuds in Cincinnati would clinch the pen mi"!. iF'Iph i'hiic) It. II K V w Vni-k 9 H ) n Ml-wMrdiift S ft 2 Melton mid Mnnc-iso; Mulcahy, JorgeiiH and At wood. Governor Charles H. Martin of Oregon, who introduced President Roosevelt before cheering thou sands at Bonneville yectcrday, jointed the president and Mrs. Roosevelt on the trip to Timberllne lodge, WPA-constructed recreation hotel on Mt. Hood. The president dedicated both Bonneville dam and the new lodge. Ti Embargo Lifted as Result of Plea by Farmers and j City Residents. SAN KltANCIKCO, ' Ki'Pt. 29. (Al) A blockiuin 01' 'San Frall ulsco'rt walortnmt oikUm! loiiny on order of teamsters union officials who bud prdcred it September I 111 an A.I'M..-0.I.(). dispute for 1- Irol of Inland urelionsenien. Tile executive committee of (lie San Francisco local, international teamsters union, announced in a statement last night that the em bargo had been ordered llfied and pickets Instructed to return to their jobs today out of deference to farmers of the slate and lo Ihe people of San Francisco. John P. McLaughlin, San Fran cisco leamsteiH head, said Whiter Garrison, president of the Associat ed Farmers of California, had ap pealed to the teaiiisterH to end I he boycott which he said threatened r;.iu to Ihe farmers. The executive committee Htross- j ed in its statement, r.owever, nun the decision did not mean aban donment of the union's claim to jurisdiction over w urelionsenien granted by the A.F.L. The ware housemen were organized by llin longshoremen, -now affiliated with the C. 1 O. WILL ASK REDFERN BE DECLARED DEAD DKTHOIT. Sept. 2!!. (AP) Mrs. Paul Itedlern. whose husband disappeared in years ago on an air plane flight to South America, dis closed today thai sle- was prepar ing to usk that he h" declared le gally dead. Mrs. Itedfern has been seeking work in I let roil, w here she has lelat Ives. "I feel that my position would he more secure at least more logical If I knew whether I was, legally a wile or a w idow," shr . . - XI,llll.-.l. BRITISH OFFICIAL STRIKERS RETURN DIES IN PALESTINE TO COQUILLE PLANT LONDON. riepi. (AP SALKM. Sept. 2!t. (API - (lov- Lord William Kobert Welb-sley I e-nor Martin Haid that P (if the Peel, chairman 'of the roval com-1 I'm strikers at the Smith wood mission on Palestine, died yester-j piodurts plant at Coquille return day, it was announced today. led to work today. lird Peel. 7i'. h::d served the Hrhl.-Oi empire in many pails of ihe world. The last few months of his lif he spent defending Die commission's plan to partiliou Pal estine into Arab and Jewish states and a MrMlsh mandated territory. DUKE'S FINANCIAL Uni.U03LL , o PMtis H..."r.vf. . vhii i"" CONTRACT LF.T In III" link" (if Wlmlxiir l,v T II ! FOR VETS HOME HERE Carter, chief clerk acr oiiulnnl of i Hi.- pi Ivy purse rfice of the king's WSinNC,TON. Fe-t. 21.- (MM household in London, nave rl.-e mj - The veieriui mlniinisi rnt inn con lecture today that Ihe former nwerded a u f2-l io'ih-p'-i todav lo lirl'.fsh inonat h finam.ial alfaiis vn thv '-t" Tile and Mnntle cot" were under dl.:eusloii. i unit- P-utlnnd, Ore., for tile ami Cnrler made the trip in Pai it ) bje to be usrd In reinofl"ipi; yentenlay specially to see the. buiblinvs No. 1 and 2 at the Hose duke. 'burg. Ohv, vetcraim facility. Governor Joints President's Party Statement on Klan Issue May Be Made Over Kadio h Intimation. NOKFOLK. Va., Kept. 2!). (AP) Hugo L. lllack arrived from Ku rope todi.y apparently planning to begin immediately his duties as an assoiiale justice of the supreme court. He maintained the silence which he relumed lo break, during his In Kni;land and ',' " '"" 1 France, with regard lo charges that he once received u life mem hershtp in the Ku Klux Klan, He made two things clear, how ever. One was I hut ho was going lo Washington immediately, pre sumably to take his place on the court, which holds lis first, meet ing of the fall term next Monday. The other was that In might yet make some statement, posalhly over tin ladio, about the Klan It sue. That he would take his seat seemed assured when he told newsmen at the conclusion of an interview that they could reach him thereafter In Washington, "probably in my office in the su pi chip court building." Mrs. Itluck gave a rurther inkling of tho na ture of the . justice's plans when she said her first Job In Washing ton would be hout-e-hunting. The Justice Indicated r.lrougly that he may yet make foine state-j nl on the Klan charges, which v. ere first raised in the r.enale dur ing the argument over confirming Ills nouiiuaiion anil later .eie giv en new impetus by newspaper stories asserting not only Hint he once joined Ihe hooded order hut aho lhal he had I n given a lite membership. Questioned by reporters who sought to get a statement from him immediately the Alabaman, mull ing. said: "When I have any statement you cau accept it as definite and final that I will make it in a way lhat I CMI1IHH lie IIIIHIIMII1 e( illMI I'd uu- ,, ,. ,.,. I,." The governor last Thui sda ' sent s'He police lo CoqniMe lo put led T.'.n AFL emidoyes of lie-firiio-Hiv. vhoin be said were threatened by Ihe Him ( to still. ers. Wondwoi kers of the two -ioiial Inhor organizations are : hv a dispute over which mIkiII 1 com i rd of mill employes. na Dictators Part as II Duce Ends Five-Dsy Visit , to Germany. . HICItLIN, Sept, 30.--(AP)" -Like pals, ChnucelVor .lIliler and Pre mier Mussolini parted today, end ing a five-day, demons! rutotii ol lasclsl-nnzi solidarity, in troubled Flliope. it , ' I lolh iimlled 'broadly and appear ed to he exlrtiordihary well-satisfied as they tdiispcd hands warmly In farewell on tlie J.ehrtcr station platfot m. They chatteil'a few ihluiltes, with 11 I nice leaning nut his car window before the Italian special train pulled out or ll)e station. j Hitler sent Rudolf HesH, (lemma minister without portfolio, along to the (ierman-AiiKtriaii border with the Italian party. The train wa scheduled to reach the border early tomorrow, Mussolini's last appearance be fore the Merlin public was in hh ride with Hitler along a unit ol "couqunrors' trail" eii route to Hie station between tens of thousands of checrinv;. yelling admirers lined up along the way. Army detachments, naval units and even the air force turned out at the station with bunds to send II Duce on his way with Ihe mime flare and military pomp lo which he has hen accustomed to his Vive day visit to Nazi Cornmny. Prior to his departure Musfolful honored (iermany's World wat dead, then reviewed a mammoth llsplay of the third rclch's military strength. Oddities Flashed (Ity the Asrociated Pre.s) Erave Mare SAl'LT HTK. MA It IF, Mich. The old gray mare galloped to the rescue w hen a bull charged her owner, Steve o otiuor. The mare, i years old. was grazing when lie1 bull attacked O'Connor fn a pasture. She quick ly til ( !,.-.! Ihe bill! lhh I en-rut. O'Connor esc jut les. ipi-d witli minor In- Necdle Ache ANDKltMON. Ind When Wllllitiii Oill. 77. nibbed In Mrs ;i h- inn hi;, a needle iliieiged. Theil She I'eiiieinliei'ed S Will low ing Ihe needle more than r.o years ago. Cosily Practice MCFFVLO. N Y The baKcbnll bill for lluttalOH Internal hum I lea gue Itisoim will be a little hinher this vear. A Jurv o-rjered the Itisons to pay Fred Phillips ll.oiiii because he was stnick on the heal by n uac lice fly that chared the fense. What a Thrill PACOS SPIMMJS. Colo The couple who parked their auto at ATTEMPT TO BLOW JAP VESSEL FAILS Daring Chinese Destroyed by Own Countrymen Long Awaited Push Gets Underway. SIIANCHAI. Sept. 29. (A P) A daring suicide squad of 20 Chi nese soldiers sacrificed their lives at dawn today in a desperate attempt that just failed to destroy Ihe Japanese flagship idzuinn. As ihe mine they had propelled through the murky waters of the Whangpuo river blasted a 150 foot geyser of water and sprayed Ihe ldumo with shrapnel, the en tire waterfront and tho battle lines northwest of Ihe city crashed Into uu inferno of war. Chinese declared the long-awaited Japanese "big push" on the Shanghai from had begun and the troop.'i manning ihe defense lines stretching 25 miles northwest of the city had hurled back wave after wave of attacking Japanese infantry with terrific slaughter. . ' The blast of the Chinese mine n few hundred yards to starboard of the ldzumo rocked the cruiBer Augusta, flagship of the I'nited Slates Asiatic fleet .and hurled American officers and sailors from their hnnkH. During the night, tho Chlnesp suicide squad, some swimming and Home using sampans, gradually floated the mine from tho Poo lung shore, across the river from Shanghai, through. the line of Jan- ' auese patrol boats. ; Attached to the mine was n, cable extending to the Hritiah nwned Shanghai now engineering docks on the Pootung shore. Aft? er moving stealthily for fevernl hours the soldiers reached the Hteel net which surrounds the ld zumo to protect the flagship from torpedoes and mines. , Attempt Falls They had just started to tmlp tho net and slip the mine through when Ihe first niyn of dawn began to light up Ihe mist rising on the river. . . A Japanese lookout on tho Id- (Contlnued on pngo 0) Tl raci LOS ANCFLKS. Sept. 20. (API Freddie Hartholomew, 13-year-old pawn In n bitter salary fight, wa prohibited by u court order today from working for any movie sludlo except his contrae lual employers, Met o-Goldwyn-Mayer. ; ' The temporary 1 n j u n e 1 1 o n against Hie young Kngllsh star will he effective until trial of M-(i-M's suit to make it permanent. Freddie's mini, Miss Mylllcent Bartholomew, previously sought lo void his contract, running until lit 1 1. Sim said he had oflors of S7.rioi a week from rival produc- I ers, although M (!-M was paying him only 31,100. From Press Wire Wolf Creek pass had a peach of it story to lell today If they weren't still too scared. They drove up Just as engineers set off J-l tons of dynamite to tear out one side nf ttie pass fur a new road. A boulder Hit? sie of a house pounded down the slope and came to rest 12 feet from the car. When the dust cleared awny Hie couple bad driven orf -viiill Ullideuliried. Ransom PASADFNA. Calif Overparkod cars are lo be impounded here. Owners w ill have to pay a $2 pound lee in addition to the regu lar fine, Homework 1 '( ) TITI .A N 1 1. Ore. Robert Henry, is sludving Ihe Hlble in Jull. Anxious to learn the ten com mauiliu ills, he told police, ho went ho far as to flteul a 111 bio from a minister. Municipal Judge Cohn mild ho would deTer sentence until Henry memorized and repeated the ccni mnndiueiits In him. Two hours later Henry waa buck In court. Jie flunked. o