Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 261, Decatur, Adams County, 5 November 1959 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

ONLY A Korell FITS LIKE A KORILLI « Bk x Dress as « Pictured WM|j 14 * 95 v< ' \ KORELL PLUS - SIZES FIT YOU PERFECTLY • • . witA no alterations if your 5’5” or under! AS ADVERTISED IN NOVEMBER GLAMOUR Delightful holiday choice . . . this distinctively-styled step-in dress. Os paisley-printed rayon crepe . . . with mandarin collar, sparkling scatter pins at the shoulder, softly-slim skirt Blue, turquoise or fuschia. k Sues 12-plus to 22-plus. 14.95 Other Korell Dresses 10.95 up. Niblick & Co. FOR SMART FASHIONS

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Mrs. Sue Estill New Society Editor Mrs. Sue Estill, a Vassar college graduate, begins full time duties Friday as new society editor for the Daily Democrat. Mrs. Estill is replacing Mrs. Marilou Roop, who has been employed by the Democrat for about two years. The new society editor is orginally from Springfield, 111., where she graduated from Springfield high school. Before coming to Decatur. she and her husbapd, Harry, who is employed by tne Central Soya company, lived in Fort Wayne. Paper Collection By Monroe Boy Scouts The Monroe Boy Scouts will hold their monthly paper and magazine drive Saturday. All residents are asked to have their papers and magazines (tied in bundles) in front of their homes. The drive will begin at 1 o’clock Saturday afternoon instead of in the morning, as in previous collections.

Sub-Teen Dresses at TEEN TOGS w* / ---3 JwW /TTSr H Sizes 6 to 14 5-* 8 .. 14-’« Also Party & School Dresses TEENTOGS 121 N. 2nd St.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Central Soya Votes : Common Stock Split I Central Soya Co. shareholders ■ Wednesday approved a two for one split of the company’s outstanding ■ shares of common stock at the an- ■ nual meeting held in Fort Wayne. [ Shareholders also voted to increase the number of authorized shares from two to five million. Harold W. McMillen, board chairman, told shareholders of management's intention to'apply for listing Central Soya stock on the New York stock exchange. He also reported on “a successful year in which net sales and earnings were both higher than the previous year.” Net sales were $284,020,459 as compared with $225,976,682 a year before, while earnings after taxes amounted to $6,860,083 as against $6,718,126. McMillen said earnings per share were $5.03 on 1,363,590 shares outstanding as of Aug. 31, as compared with $4.93 a share in 1958, based on the present number of outstanding shares. Last month the board voted a 10 I per cent increase in the quarterly cash dividend, raising it from 50 to 55 cents, payable Nov. 15 on stock presently outstanding, to shareholders of record at the close of business Nov. 2. Dividends deI dared at the same rate after the : split would result in a quarterly mash dividend of 27Vfe per cent per j share on the new stock. • Directors reelected were Dale | W. McMillen, Harold W. McMillen, Dale W. McMillen, Jr., Wilbert E. | Huge, Edward T. Scheie, John D. j Shoaff and Cole J. Younger. Robert B. Parrott, who was elected an executive vice president during the past fiscal year, was named to the board of directors. After the shareholders’ session, ■ the board of directors met and rei elected the following officers: Hari old W. McMillen, chairman of the board; Dale W. McMillen. Jr., president; Robert B. Parrott, ex- ? ecutive vice president; Paul E. I Hensel, Wilbert E. Huge. Jake L. Krider. Norman F. Kruse, George D. Mac Lean, Burt A. Townsend, and Richard O. Westley, vice presidents; Edward T. Scheie, secretary and treasurer; John L. Andreas, assistant secretary and assistant treasurer; Richard N. Allen, assistant secretary and controller; and Donald A. Cuthbert, assistant secretary. Approximately 800 shareholders from ninq states—lndiana, Arkansas, Illindis, Michigan, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and, Wisconsin—attended the annual meeting.

East Berlin Reds Bow To Allied Stand BERLIN (UPI) — The East Berlin Communists bowed today to a firm Allied stand and announced they would not try to fly their flags in West Berlin Friday to celebrate the anniversary of Russia's Bolshevik revolution. The official East German newspaper Neues Deutschland announced the Communist backdown in an editorial. “We do not assume that flags will be raised at West Berlin railroad installations which belong TdlfieT Ger maiTTSemdcr a tic Republic.” it said. The Communist statement followed a warning Monday by the American commandant in Berlin, Maj. Gen- Barksdale Hamlett, that Western Allied troops stood ready to put down any trouble caused by the flags. Lhe East Germans had threatened to plant their flags on the elevated railroad stations in the Western sectors of the city to celebrate the revolution. They contend their operation of the railroad in both sectors gives them »the right to the stations in the West. TTiey put out the flags in West Berlin for the first time Oct. 7 to celebrate East Germany’s tenth anniversary and rioting resulted when West Berliners ripped them down. Neues Deutschland said the Communists changed their minds about the flags to avoid “bloody provocations.” It said West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt “will not get his wish for civil war” and charged that such a war was planned by the West in order to block the path to the summit meeting. Hamlett, a 50-year-old West Pointer, told the Soviets that the United States, Britain, and France would use their 11,000 troops to back up West Berlin’s 19,000-man police force if necessary. He said the police would pull down any flags that were raised and troops would stand by for trouble.

Find New Hazard To Outer Space Travel WASHINGTON (UPI) — Balloonist Malcolm D. Ross said, today that a newly discovered I radiation hazard makes manned flight in solar space “appear quite unrealistic” for the time being. Cmdr. Ross, whose many balloon flights for the Office of Naval Research have made scientific history and won him world acclaim, referred to unpredictable outbursts on trie sun which fill solar space with swarms of highly penetrating particles. This new hazard is in addition to that of the so-called Van Allen belts, zones of energetic particles discovered in the earth’s magnetic field by the Explorer satellites and Pioneer moon probesThe new radiation, Ross said, make the dangers of the Van Allen belts “seem pale by comparison.” Measurements made by University of Minnesota scientists indicate that when a giant solar flare bccurs, a space traveler in the sun's system might receive a radiation dose of 1,000 Roentgens in an hour. According to present theory, Ross pointed out, just 30 minutes of exposure to this new hazard in space would prove fatal to half of a spaceship's occupants. Even at balloon heights of 80,000 to 90,000 feet the radiation intensity during flares amounts to 10 Roentgens an hour; At the higher altitudes of space flight, Ross said, shielding would have ito beVso heavy* that it “may not Ibe a practical solution.”

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Cold Weather Due In Stale Tonight United Press International Mild weather was fast bowing out of Indiana today, and a blusterly winter storm was expected to replace it in a matter of hours. Temperatures hit the edge of the 70s in Hoosierland Wednesday and dropped no lower than the upper 50s during the night. But forecasters said the mercury would shrink to a range of 25 to 35 tonight on the heels of snow flurries in the north and possibly the central portion, and Friday will be the season's coldest day with temperatures climbing no higher than the upper 30s in the north and the mid 40s in the south. However, longer range predictio n s indicating temperatures would begin moderating slowly Saturday, dousing any fears that winter may have set in for good. The cold day Friday will be preceded by more precipitation such as that which has featured the weather since Tuesday morning. Precipitation during the 24 hours ending at 7 a.m. today included 1.41 inches at Louisville, 134 at Cincinnati, 1.18 at Chicago, .62 at South Bend, .23 at Fort Wayne, .20 at Evansville, .07 at Lafayette and .03 at Indianapolis. A narrow section in the extreme north portion of Indiana rode out a severe thunderstorm and tornado alert Wednesday afternoon, with no bad windstorms developing. The storms had been forecast for an area north of a line running from Rensselaer through Goshen. Three Car Accident In City Wednesday A three-car accident caused SI,OOO in damages Wednesday afternoon at 13th and Nuttman, when a southbound car on 13th street smacked into a westbound vehicle, forcing it into the third car, which was stopped at the intersection, eastbound. The car driven by Billy Dean Tumbleson, 21, of Ohio City, 0.. struck the rear of a car driven by Mrs. Florence Bulmahn, 39, of route 2, Decatur, which in turn rammed into the machine driven by Wilma I. Small, of 608 Indiana. Damage to the Small car was SIOO, but the Tumbleson vehicle sustained SSOO in damages, and S4OO to the Bulman car. The city police investigated the mishap at 3:50 p.m. yesterday. Portrand Plans For New Swimming Pool The Portland city council voted 4-1 Tuesday night to pass an ordinance caling for a $139,000 bond issue to pay for a new swimming pool and bath house in that city.

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Infant Girl Killed As Auto Hits Tree HOPKINSVILLE, Ky. (UPI) - Six-month-old Ruth Elaine Yoder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Yoder, Sr., of Millersburg, Ind., was killed when her father s car skidded on rain-slick U. S. 41, plunged over an embankment and struck a tree Wednesday. The child’s parents and two other children, five-year-old Katherine and two-year-old Henry, Jr., also were hospitalized with injuries. Katherine was reported “critical” and was moved to a Nashville, Tenn., hospital.

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1959

the Yoders were en route to Macon, Miss., for the wedding of Mrs. Yoder’s sister.

PHONE 3-3857 FOR “BROASTED” Golden Brown CHICKEN SHAFFER’S RESTAURANT