Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 247, Decatur, Adams County, 19 October 1937 — Page 5

■lwi PEOPLE Titjmbv SHOW ' -W v From \dams CounAttended National C o |B ’ s.t..nal ShOW W *J B FtlM C nibus. oiilo. last week. she AIIH,US COUn,y Pe °s‘ C JjJjMLnded the show **’* Mr ; £. Wv , HW Aschl ’ man ' -'l'’s ■ ; A<|i|<,n jl, s . Dale Moeen. Mr. ami '. ~ |i i.aii. Rufus and ..(B Innicer F!->d Myers. Jim )b ami Sanford w>rk:ng With the xMFIp < ‘O' Ohio. whilh rhatnimm Jersey Fra stated tnat this H ’ii ..v he lias attend- ! ■ th.it was by far the best .liter lance with the of any show he Kir ended. p.-S'iii ••'•-eding the dairy was presented with and her court. The dairy wss the I li Club health and her iatits were also high e cni> in th-- HI health show. tune Indiana has .' Hphr ard championship at a Na-, ■Lldairy show This prize winna Holstein owned I’aui of Cambridge City, this animal is by yukehihan Brothers of county. Ed McFarland of . i« using the grandson K Bek Paul's animal. van us dairy breeds had at world rec? 'is ati.i char's and literature ** the people to us" better milk and urging better of dairy cattle and dis- :: h< rd improvement work. - CALHOUN INtT!; FROK . AOK ONE.) <• stigat will! the aid of Allen and Adams officers resulted in CalETlßpr» arrest. girl said 'hat Calhoun had LK ' mh»r of auto license plates various states in his car. reported that they believe HHis been m tumble in his home of Tennessee and possibly places. They are endeavor- " ii’.aki .. further check on his TJ B** today it was also learned car used by the defendant "borrowed" from a used car 11 B* 1 Eon Wayns. Calhoun will Bbt i gned soon in Fort Wayne. “■lambshow in d >XT!NUEI krom for the butcher. ■ Pt > -f iambs will be graded ami — ■'t SSPfl ' 'lumbers said after a and noon luncheon in they were guests of the Al- ■ li'.'l Mills be>’d company and the I K Those attending represented Al Huntington, DeKalb. ■ Kosciusko. Steuben. Wells, Noble. and Marshall counties. will be extended to exhibitors. Agricultural Agent' M E'*? ■ Kimmell said. I All OCCUPANTS OF ■ w^B* 1 " bureau of air commerce anin Washington that a board would investigate the ts soon as inspectors make reports. - I 'i. expert would hazard l an "pinion on the cause of KE'-rash, b:' some pointed out ’hai the last word from Earl Woodgerd had said that BM"' flying intermittently by in This was just 23 min- '‘ ‘ .re he was to have landed Eialt City at 8:42 p. tn. ■B 4 - p m tsT) Sunday night. A minutes later he cracked up. Plaue, had been flying a rain storm. Its wreckwas If miles off its route, wight indicate that the IlV'" futd interfered with its radio, B wtiitc Woodgerd to lose his radio oi- that he was merely deviIB’ away from the course to esI oa I 'he storm. The last message the plane was so intertninglggB wil s static that it was difficult •■decipher. addition to Woodgerd, the was copiloted by Jahn Adams. and Leah Derr. Cheyenne. stewardess. passengers than Mr. and Ferreira were: United Airlines employes: W" Conboy. Cleveland, reservaB clerk; Louis Cleaver. Porta co-pilot of company bus■B 8? and Charles Renouf, Kent, HE 0 ' traffic department. »o newsreel cameramen from j| ■"’ York, flying west to make a II ffp'ure demonstrating the safety comfort of air travel, William |H' an< t Joseph Pergola, of Patbc IBB 18 - lb Habers aboard were; HBi’-Pb McKeown. Glendale. CabtA. MacMillan, Murray. Utah,

ill

i banker. i Dr. L. Gross, New York. < W. J. Hart, Sharon, Pa. William Plschell, Salt Lake City, i attorney. | I C. L. Jensen, San Franciaco, insurance man. Charles S. Jamison, head of a Denver poultry firm. Mrs. J. A. Hammer, Cleveland, j Mrs. C. H. Pritchett, Washington D. C. o— —• JUDGE ORDERS ALI-MALE JURY All-Male Jury Ordered To Try Garr Brothers For Murder Shelbyville, Ky., Oct. 19.—(U.R1- I An all-male jury was ordered today to try the Garr brothers on a , charge of murdering Brig. General Henry H. Denhardt, ccused slayer of their sister. The commonwealth had accepted seven veniremen and rejected the other 17 when Judge Charles C. Marshall ordered Sheriff Forrest Barnes. Jr., at adjournment yester- . day to find 100 more veniremen—j all men. •'Women may know more than ' you do in ascertaining the guilt of a person, but they certainly cannot i solve this case with an impartial rmind." the judge said. ‘ Roy Garr, said by police to have admitted firing the shots which killed Denhardt Sept. 20, and Jack Garr, who was not armed at the time, appeared for trial yesterday , Dr. E. S. Garr, a veterinarian, was reported by defense counsel as being in a privte hospital in Peewee Valley. Ky. He was said to be suffering from a mental illness. “If the man is crazy, as they ; claim, I don't see why he isn't confined to a state institution." commented Attorney General Hubert Meredith, acting prosecutor. Judge Marshall issued a bench j warrant ordering "Doc” Carr to, appear and supply $20,000 bond for appearance at the next court term, in February. The Garr brothers killed Den i hardt 10 hours before he was to. be tried a second time on a charge of slaying Mrs. Verna Garr Taylor.! his fiance. —• <h HOLD SUSPECT — ’•.ONTINtTEp FROM PAqE ONE) to be the car used by the murderer of Miss Moore. In the automobile. I found on a road southwest of here were two boxes of shotgun shells. Sheriff Hosinski said the automobile was a stolen car. License plates on the vehicle were issued to Alfred Scrithon, route 1. Parchment. Mich , according to the sheriff. Melba was killed last Tuesday when an unidentified man opened fire on an automobile in which she was riding with her fiance, Adolph Stopper. 20. and a friend. Charles Walton, 16. The man. who was standing beside a parked car, irpened fire on the trio after the boys had stopped i i to offer aid, believing the man to ; be in trouble. ■ - ■ oSTOCKS BREAK i CONTINUED EROM PA3K ONE, Liverpool was a further weaken- ’ ing influence in Chicago. The . break on the Chicago board of ! trade extended to other domestic ' markets as Kansas City, Duluth and Minneapolis prices collapsed for losses ranging to more than i two cents. o Police Autos Vulnerable Elyria, O. (U.PJ — Police cruiser cars are as vulnerable as private automobiles, it seems. Service Director I. I>. Faxon ordered the city’s three police cars into a garage to have their fenders hammered out. after complaints from Mayor Leonard Smith about their battered appearance. ABANDON HOPE <CONTINUED FRQM PAOE.ONE) ion of congress which will convene Nov. 15. They appeared in I the midst of the most ominous 'stock market slump since the new • i deal took command. ■I Congress might, however, ex- ' pand the spending program and ■| further unbalanced the budget. , Mr. Roosevelt scheduled $180,000,000 for “supplemental items" —to i cover overspending in some categories and possibly additional ex- . i pcndltures ordered by congress. i One such likely item wls loans on I this year’s corn crop, understood | to be under serious consideration. ! Former Gov. Alt' M. Landon, • speaking tonight in Topeka. Kan.. ■ to reassert bis leadership of the • Republican party, probably will . make the Roosevelt fiscal report a major theme. i In bis budget summation and re i vision of more optimistic January ' and April estimates, Mr. Roosevelt i reported last night: t 1. Revenue for this fiscal year finding June 30. 1938 will be $6.650,410,000, second largest in treas- • ury records. , . , 2. Expenditures will total ?<,-!

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1937.

546,655,000, a decrease from peaks of the 1936 and 1987 fiscal years 3. Disappointing tax revenue! and congressional appropriations, beyond budgeted levels upset calcu-l

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lutlonx and are largely reoponslble I for the unexpectedly large deficit. Mr. Roosevelt revealed that treasury experts over-estimated ' 1938 fiscal year tax receipts by

$643,000,000 in last January's budget mwl by $256,000,000 when those figures were revised in April. He announced the imminent liquidation of the Reconstruction

Finance Corporation and Ibe pub-1 lie works administration. Neither emergency agency will be permitted to make further loan or oilier commitments. Mr Roose-'

I velt said some commitments now I existing probably would lapse by i failure of potential borrowers to* meet conditions imposed, or other-1 'wise. PWA was forbidden sped-.

PAGE FIVE

tlcally from increasing any loan or i grant commitment for any project already approved. Both agencies, however, are free to discharge all i existing commitments.