0 o New Orleans Sets Desegregation On Anniversary Of Court's Ruling Heads Mothers Club By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The ordering of desegregated ; classes in New Orleans' schools; highlighted today's sixth anniver-l h.y 01 me u s. supreme Court decision outlawing segregation in Hie nation's public schools. ITS. Dist. Judge J. Skellv Wright directed public schools in the Louisiana city to desegregate next September. The judge had advised the Or- Tobacco Heir Wins Divorce DAHIEN, Ga. (AP)-Mullimil-mionaire R.J. Reynolds won a di vorce from his third wife by a jury verdict that gave her ali mony of $12,500 a year. She had asked S200.000 annually. Reynolds, heir to a tobacco for tune, also was granted a perma nent injunction preventing the former lluriel Marston of Toron to from trespassing on his 12-mile-long Sapelo Island estate er from disturbing him there. Her attorneys filed a motion for a new trial. The verdict in the two-week trial was returned Monday night. It provided monthly payments of m.ihz lor a period of 24 years starting June I. Reynolds, 54, former treasurer of the Democratic National Com mittee and former mayor of Winston-Salem, N.C., is described as desperately ill from a lung ail ment. Mrs. Reynolds appeared sur prised at the verdict. "Oh, how terrible," she said. "He has no grounds whatever. His attack on me is the most scandalous thing of my exper ience." Aaron Kravilch, chief of the to bacco heir's legal staff, said the verdict meant that Mrs. Reynolds left the court 5300,000 poorer than when she came in. A pre-nuotial agreement that gave Mrs. Reynolds $15,000 a year was waived by her attorneys in pressing her claim for S200.000 a year or a six-million-dollar set tlement. Insurance policies on Reynolds with a cash surrender value of $210,000, naming her as a beneficiary, were impounded by the court. Reynolds and his wife separated last August after seven years of marriage. Reynolds charged his wife with constant nagging, cruel treatment and extravagance. Mrs. Reynolds countered that her husband was an alcoholic. leans Parish School Board to sub mit a desegragation plan "or I'll ha.ve one for you." Gerald Rault, school board at torney, told the court Monday the board had not prepared a plan because it believed "that it does not have the right to do so" under slate law. I he judge then issued his order. In Atlanta, Negro student lead ers were uncertain whether to go ahead with plans for an integra tion sympathy inarch on the Geor gia Capitol in the face ot a stern warning by Gov. Ernest Vandiver. The governor said he would not tolerate demonstrations which might incite violence and riots." Roy Wilkins. executive secre tary for the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple, issued a statement in New York in connection with the an niversary of the Supreme Court ruling. ' He said that six years after that decision only 6 of every 100 Negro children in South and bor der stales attend integrated class es. Another Negro integration lead er, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., protested his being placed on trial in a segregated courtroom in Montgomery, Ala., would vio late his constitutional rights. That action and other pre-trial motions led to postponement un til Wednesday of the minister's arraignment on charges of filing false state income tax returns. Twenty-four Negro students four of them girls were arrested during a sitdown at a lunch coun ter for white persons at the S.H. Kress & Co. store in Chattanooga, Tenn. In Detroit, the S. S. Kresge Co. said its policy is not to file com plaints against sit-in demonstra tors at its variety store lunch counters in the South. The com pany said it is obeying laws and customs in Southern cities where integration is prohibited. ,1 1 , I v4 V 1 ' ZTi US ' ft? A 9 hi- ,f . l.jMKVl 4 ,T Sirf STATE PRESIDENT Mrs. Samuel Warg of Roseburg has been elected new president of the University of Oregon Mothers Club. She was elected ot the onnual breakfast-business meeting in Eugene. i. WiCL.I Made fo pamper your cat ...they're not just flavors they're the real thing. Liver 'n meat .KIDNEV'n MEAT CHICKEN MEATV MIX CHOPPED FISH US Should Demand Red Spy Pull-Out KLAMATH FALLS (AP) - The United States should not agree to stop U2 flights over Russia unless the Russians agree to pull all spies out of the United Stales and other Western nations, Elmo Smith said Monday. The Republican candidate for the U.S. Scnale nomination made this statement after the President said in Paris that U.S. U2 flights over Russia had been halted and would not be resumed. Smith told a coffee session here that President Eisenhower's pro posal for United Nations aerial inspection was an important step in the right direclion. "We must acconiDlish inter national control of nuclear arma ments, he said, ' or face annihi lation." Turning to senior citizens, he said, "we cannot let them suffer. Where means are lacking (to aid them) we must find some." He described both the Forand Bill for medical aid to the elderly and an administration bill as defective in many ways. He sug gested consideration be given to raising the income ceiling for persons on social security. Khru, de Gaulle Exchange Quips i-akis tAi'i soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev turned to Pres ident Charles De Gaulle of France during Mondays summit session, a spokesman reported, and said: "I wonder what devil pushed the United States into this (spy flight)." Snapped De Gaulle: "There are many devils in the world, and we have come here precisely to ex orcise them." Kennedy Campaigns Blandly On Morse Charges White House 'Buy' By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) An accusation that Sen. John F. Ken nedy is "trying to buy the While House with unconscionable spend ing flung a harsh, one-sided note o acrimony today into Oregon's! Democratic presidential primary i campaign. It was injected by ben. Wayne Morse, who is battling hard to keep his home state Oregon dele gation out of Kennedy's hands at the Democratic National Conven tion, Kennedy campaigned blandly on, shrugging off his attacks. The political trails of the two senators crossed today at Kugene, Morse's home town. After that, il was back to Portland for evening rallies for each, with Kennedy stopping off en route at Salem, the state capital. Republicans were stirring the Oregon political pot, too. Vice President Richard M. Nixon, un opposed in the Friday election in Legates Gain Rank HAVANA (AP) The Cuban Foreign Ministry announced Mon day night that Cuba and Com munist Czechoslovakia are rais ing their legations to the rank of embassies. eoiocrafs C. GIRARD UebbyJ N NATIONAL COMMITTEEMAN Choirmon National Democratic Committee on NATURAL RESOURCES "Continue Democratic Hormony, Liberalism and Leadership." 'Democratic Leaders Recommend Jebby Davidson: President Truman's till. Stcrttory ol Iht In ftrior KF's Census Count Termed 'Ridiculous' . KLA.MATII FALLS (AP) H. Frank Tucker, manager of the Chamber of Commerce, says pre liminary U.S. census figures for uie cuy are rioicuious. The tentative new figure shows a population increase of only 94ti tor Klamath falls since IBdu. The county clerk's office re ported Alonday that the Census Bureau preliminary count was 16.821, compared to the final count of 15.875 ten years ago. City officials said they were shocked, because City Manager C. S. vergeer had estimated the population earlier at more than 20.000. Vergeer pointed out that if the new figures stand, it will mean Klamath Falls will lose $20,000 to $30,000 a year in state gasoline and liquor tax returns. These arc based on population. The 'Preliminary count for Klamath County is 47,183, up 12 per cent irom the 42,150 ten years ago. Rallies Denounce U. S. Spy Flights WORLD BRIEFS MOSCOW (AP) Rallies de nouncing American spy flights were reported today from major Soviet cities as the Soviet press iniensiiiea its indignation cam paign against the United States. The Communist party organ rravda said the people dem onstrated in Moscow. Leningrad Stalingrad, Kiev and many other cities, Diasting "reactionary cir cles" in America. The general tone of the paper;, indicated that the Soviet press and radio would continue to build up feeling, Speculation increased that the stage was being set for a show trial of Francis G. Powers, pilot of the American L'2 plane downed on May Day 1,400 milrs inside So viet territory. Show On Schedule LONDON' (AP) The royal variety pt r'ormance went off on schedule Monday night before (jueen Elizabeth If after a tubular metallic object found near the Vic toria Palace Theater was pro nounced harmless. It was thought 10 be an unexploded World War 11 bomb. Commies Threaten E. German Treaty PARIS (AP) Communist journ alists spread word today that So viet Premier Nikita Khrushchev may sign a separate peace treaty with the Red Fast (icrmany in Berlin shortly in the wake of the summit parley breakdown. Soviet spokesmen were not im mediately available to comment. Khrushchev told reporters earlier in the day he will visit Fast Berlin on his way home from Paris. It was possible Red newsmen circulated the report as a means of trying to influence the big West ern powers to accept Khrushchev's conditions for getting the summit meeting back on the rails. Khrushchev has threatened in the past to sign a separate treaty with East Germany, whose Red regime is not recognised bv the West, if the Big Three Western powers refused to go along with his proposal' that all sign treaties with west and Fast Germany. lie has declared that a separate Soviet-East German treaty would mean denial to the Western pow ers of access to Western-garrisoned West Berlin by every route lana, water and air. "A separate Soviet-East German peace treaty is possible," one So viet journalist said. "Khrushchev will make up his mind in the light of what happens here today." Communist newsmen rarelv de part from Moscow's official line. the Republican preferential pri mary, was on display Monday night in a filmed television show. "Today," he said, "the vice president is a man who partici pates in the making of policy in mis country. He represents the na Hon abroad. He has an opuortu nity u be the president's right arm. ' This year, Nixon predicted, more attention will be paid vice presi dential candidates than ever be tore in history. Perhaps the Oregon committee for Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey lis tened and looked. It decided to stage a belated campaign for a write-in primary vote for vice pres luenl for the man Kennedy knocked out of contention for the presi dency in west Virginia. .Morse and Kennedy are the only active candidates in the Oregon Democratic presidential primary, although Humphrey's name still is on the ballot. So are those of Sens. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas and Stuart Symington of Missouri, but neither has ventured into the cam paign. Over and over, Morse is bearing down on the theme ot heavy spend ing by a rival who is the son of a millionaire. He said Monday night that in Oregon Kennedy is spend ing hundreds of thousands lo his $7,500. Just as oflen he is com plaining that Kennedy is wrecking the Democratic party in Oregon. But .Morse said that if the Demo crats make the mistake of nomi nating Kennedy, "I'll even hold my nose and campaign for him." Kennedy, he said, still would be 10 times better than Nixon any Democrat wuuld. Kennedy refused to be drawn into any political slugging match with Morse. The nearest he comes lo slashing back at Morse is to keep telling Oregon Democrats not to waste their votes Friday on any one who isn't a serious candidate and who has no real chance for the nomination. Cubans Sieze Paper HAVANA (AP) Unions faith ful to Fidel Castro have seized the last Cuban newspaper critical of his regime. Seizure Monday of La Trensa Libre left only two small inde pendent papers publishing in Cuba, lnformacion and El Crisol. Both avoid criticizing the government. The rest of th? press is controlled by pro-government groups. Douglas Fir Research Will Cost $5l2 Million SUN VALLEY. Idaho (AP) -Research will cost the Douglas Fir Plywood Assn. about 5'a million dollars this year, C. Henry Bacon Jr., of Seattle, president said Monday at the upening session of j the group's 24th annual meeting. Members elected E. C. Dwyer. president of Dwyer Lumber Co. of . Portland, to succeed F. L. Fobal, ! Longview, Wash., on the Board of Trustees. Other trustees were re elected. Bacon said the development of new markets is the major prob lem facing the industry. Estimat-' ed production is 8L? hi'iion square feet, he said, and at least IB new mills will come into production at the end of the year. This would make a total of 32 new mills in the past two years. j Tue., Moy 17, 1960 The Newi-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 3 Hotels Confusin' To Ex-Govcrnor KLAMATH FALLS (AP)-"You!nomination. sure lliat's where you want to They had climbed into the taxi, go'.'" a puzled taxi driver here (and Smith had asked to go lo the Monday asked ex Gov. Elmo; Tioga Hotel. Sn"h. -Tiu. Tioga is in Coos Bay, said Smith and his wife had just Ihe driver, arrived as part of his campaign I Smith settled for the Winema for the Republican U.S. Senate Hotel in Klamath Falls. Oregon Traffic Toll Hits 21 8 BURNS (AP) Oregon's traffic death toll for the year stands at 218. The latest to die were two Wisconsin women, sisters. The two were hurled from their i car and killed Monday on a lonely stretch of Highway 395, some 25 miles east of here near Riley,, when the car apparently failed to make a turn, stale police said. Slate policeman A. O. Pollcntier said they were Mary Jane Graf Palmer. 49, Union Grove, Wis., and Molly Graf Borgert, 57, of Milwaukee, Wis. The two sislers were en route back from a visit to their father, Alex Graf, Ashland. The Associated Press count of traffic deaths in Oregon also showed 19 this month. Named Lecturer FOREST GROVE (AP) Mis. Claire A. Aigow has been named sociology lecturer at Pacific Uni versity. She is the former execu tive secretary of the Oregon Prison Assn. Maurine Continues Dunes Park Plug EUGENE (AP) Mrs. Maurine Neuberger carried her campaign for the Oregon Democratic nomi nation for U.S. senator into Coos Bay and Eugene Monday. In a talk to a meeting of Young Democrats at the University of Oregon Alonday night, Mrs. Neu berger again plugged her estab lishaient of an Oregon Dunes National Seashore Park. She described recent action of the Eisenhower administration in endorsing the proposal as very encouraging, and expressed Ihe hope this enthusiasm might spread lo Salem. Previously Mrs. Neuberger told some high school students at Coos Bay that the people are looking to the Democratic Party for more advances in social security and health legislation. Returns To Peiping TOKYO (AP) - Communis! Chinese Premier Chju Knlai and Vice Premier Chen Yi returned lo Peiping today after a tour to bolster China's relations with Asian neighbors. Chou and Chen Yi visited Burma, India and Nepal. CHAPTER TO MEET XI Omicrnn Chapter of Reta Sig ma Phi will meet at thp home of Mrs. Meredith Wilson, 559 W. Har rison St., Wednesday at S p.m. CLYDE DtWITT D"io t.ii COuitf WILLIAM GREEN DANiVl'V. KilEHANl ROBERT CALEY . CHARLES W. LYNCH (.""(ill Sc''f lnl(f"i:wil v.ooiao'kefl 0t Am'ir, ED CLARKE Bfltntl l MARY L. FERCHE MAXINE WEISMAN Members; -DEMOCRATS TO RF-EIECT DAVIDSON Conmit HELP WANTED Due to improved buiinest conditions, we plon to odd two ffomen to our start, one tor sales work end one bookkeeper and sales combination. Should hove some typing experience. Ask for Mr, Sanders at o 0 L.---.- - 1 lilt ' , AiIC, ' I w VI V f i j - ;';'-: : ;vr? 1 . b , j f r .- S v v , r ' li - r .,1 , A ,.:A. a Gerald "Jerry" FOR FAST EVACUATION Research toward making modern airliners the safest method of transportation goes on contin ually. But when it in necessary to ditch a plane, this plastic evacuation chute is a life-saver. Inflatable In nine aeconds, the chute is used on both land and water. For Non-Partisan Office of DISTRICT JUDGE QUALIFICATIONS: 1 Superior Scholastic Record. 2 14 Years Active Practice (in Douglas County) in Civil and Criminal Case!. 3 Father of Two Children Who Have Been Raised in Douglas County. 4 Received Greater Vote from Bar Associa- tion Poll Then Both Opponents Combined. Kabler, As District Judge, Will Give Douglas County Above Average Legal Ability, Tempered By Years of Experience As Laborer, School Teacher, and Lowyer. Pd. Pol. Adv. by Goiold Kabler, P. O. Box 725, Sutherlin, Ore. Now a brand-new, top quality for as little as... PER MONTH 1 RUMBll l 0T 4 f 'iak. Tuns In NBC-TV's "Journey to UnoeriUndlng" lor full SummlWovorsgt 'mln"la"lcw rT?T5!llU JS"5 i . OplMIM Mt I, titti. See Your Ramblfer Dealer Today! hs1t.5t3 UTNE BROS. ,267 N, E, Jackson, Roseburg 529 S. E. Jackson St.