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Publication: European Stars and Stripes Monday, April 29, 1963

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   European Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - April 29, 1963, Darmstadt, Hesse                                Monday april 29, 1963 the stars and stripes Peg 7 to 3rd mrs. Reynolds tobacco heir will pay million in Alimony Atlanta a the hotly contested divorce Case of Richardj. Reynolds multimillionaire scion of the Winston Salem. . Tobacco family was settled out of court Hen by an agreement that gives his third wife Alimony of More than $2 Mil Hon. Muriel Marston Reynolds of Newyork City formerly of Toronto Canada will receive a total of$2.142.624. Reynolds also a freed to pay$500.000 to e. Smythe gum Broil of Atlanta and his partners for Legal services to mrs. Reynolds in a bit Ter four year court fight. In addition. Reynolds agreed notto disturb the life income of about $32.000 annually mrs. Reynolds and her Mother receive from a million Dollar Trust the tobacco Fortune heir established in their favor in Winnipeg Canada Bank. Together 1 year Reynolds. 57. And his 44-year-old third wife lived together seven years in his Homes in Winston Salem new York City. Palm Beach fin., Perls Tahiti and on the Reynolds owned snipe to Island off the Georgia Coull he filed for divorce in August 1960. While she was vacationing i Paris. He won two decrees in Mcintosh county ga., but both were re versed by the Georgia supreme court. He married a fourth time to or. Anne Marie Schultt of Ger Many while the it Lanilon was pending. On luxury uner the fourth marriage terme adulterous in mrs. Reynolds court appeals was performed aboard a luxury liner on the China sea i March 1961. It followed receipt of a Cable from Reynolds attorney it forming Reynolds that u new trial had been denied mrs. Reynolds and that no impediment Rem Lnch. Reynolds in two trials charge cruelty. He said constant nagging by his wife aggravated his illness that she was  and wasteful and that she carried knife in her Belt that caused him to live in Conti tent fear. Mrs. Reynolds denied charges. She sold Reynolds set Upa Trust fund of w million for her then revoked it and that she in stricken into leaving the Reynolds mansion just before her husband filed for divorce. Asked w million she asked Alimony of so  jury awarded her 51.043 i month. Reynolds wealth was Esti mated at $25 million. The second trial jury denied her Alimony and attorneys fees. In the latest Appeal to the supreme court her counsel argued that Judie Henry Durrence who presided at the first trial was Dis qualified because he commended the jury upon its verdict. The a peal was withdrawn when mrs. Reynolds accepted the settlement proposal Reynolds and mis Schultt have spent much of the Pinsl two years n Switzerland and Germany. The third mrs. Reynolds lives in a Park Avenue apartment in new York try. Reynolds attorney William h. Schroder jr., said his client who suffers from a lung ailment. Is not Well a,.d his condition requires that Thi litigation be halted. State gop chairmen about split on Rockefeller Gold water in 64 Boston a Republican state can Lumen in the 50 Stales Are widely split in their opinion of who is lending in the 1964 gop presidential sweepstakes according to poll taken by the Christian science Monitor. There la no grass roots Prairie blazing countrywide for any Candi Date the Monitor  Pool showed gov. Nelson a. Rockefeller or new York and Ari Zona sen. Barry Goldwater were close together As the chairmen s Choice for gop Standard bearer. Fifteen state chairmen and inthe District of Columbia were inclined to believe Rockefeller had the Best Chance of defeating pres ident Kennedy in 19m. Gold Woter we favored As imply to defeat or. Kennedy by 11 state chairmen. Rockefeller showed Mast strength in heavily populated Urban states in the East and my Dost. Gold water was preferred in most of the South Southwest and Western Mountain states. The Monitor said former vice president Richard m. Nixon the 1960 gop candidate rated Only a Brief mention in one  old hays9respite wicket Beer Washington a a govern ment expert put a phony tag on the Good old Days when a Nickel sought a Good Cigar a Stein of Beer a cup of Coffee or what would you like. They weren t the Good old Days Richard m. Scammon director of the census Bureau sold Inan interview taped for use on radio and television bad old  they were the child deaths were Way up. The Standard of living was much lower. It s True that Beer might have Cost Only a Nickel a Stein but the wages were 20 cents an hour and they usually were for a 60 to 70-hour week. No. The Good old Dys exist Only in people s minds and that s where they should stay under questioning of sen. Georgea. Smathers-fla., the census chief explained that an explosion in population a gain in real Pur chasing Power and a higher Educa tonal level had tarnished the Al lure of the Pas Scammon said the . Popula Tion will hit 210 or 215 million persons by 1970. Elmr of the next National Ern Tui. Compared with about 189 million right  said improved health and other measures have caused the world s population to explode an this has produced serious prob lems for underdeveloped and Back Ward areas. Lifetime of dreaming Book collection used for sliding pilfering9 Pouch Kerpsie . A after half a Century of Trown Down main Street 74-year-old John r. Landmark finds his path blocked by an emotional  just can t walk by the shop he said. It would tear my heart out to see what they Are doing to my  referred to some 50,000 of the More than 200.000 volumes which to had collected Over 50 years in the Book shop business. About a Quarter of those books now arc on the sidewalk put the by demolition contractors armed with an eviction  order says landmark was than Dong in the Way of Progress his shop is to be torn Down for anew Highway. 09 vean of collecting Here were Are my wife and i two old people in the Twilight of our lives and what we spent 50years building up is being torn Down and just tossed into the  land Murk said. People Are coming from All Over and just piling the books into tiebacks of their cars and into trucks and kicking aside the ones Theydon t want he sold. Adding some of my friends talk kids Are even using the piles of books to Piny on. A half a Century of working and dreaming. Life int foreign ship of 63 welcomed in Duluth Duluth. Minn. The first foreign vessel of the 1963 shipping season has docked Here. The Clements Sartori out of Hamburg. Germany will unload its cargo of 6.000 cases of scotch whiskey two autos. 040 tons of twine from Holland some German products acid stay in port or two or three Tyr a delegation of Duluth offices welcomed the ship. Time collection being used for Slid ing and  landmark valued is entire col Lection at $3 million. The remain ing 150,000 volumes still Are tin ing part of the More than 15 mile of shelving in the 120-year-old redbrick shop. Among the volumes Are old histories biographies genealogies and books on Art and fic Tion. Priceless items some Are rare and priceless items i bought Over the years from  landmark recalled. Man of them could never be  the state condemned the shop is months ago and offered land Mark $22,000 for the property. He refused saying it would Cost him More than $200.000 to find a new building and move. Several times the state issued eviction delays to allow landmark More time to find new quarters. Finally last Friday workmen began piling the books on the Side walk. Airliner guides plane to Landing St. Louis a George Krause and a passenger were lost near farm inn ton mo., when the St. Louis Airport spotted their Small plane on us , of Cortez colo., Laid to air traffic Tower he Hud Only 30 minutes fuel left Ferdinand Betz. The nor traffic control operator at Lambert  Field contacted a Delta Airliner nearby and asked captains j. Will Nan to Shepherd the Light plane  planes landed it Foly 15 minutes later. Krause and his pass a tic a who was not identified were in route from Dodge City.kan., to Cincinnati. Us s tops the championship form of de Huff a draw an intent audience at top spinning week in Baltimore my. Up photo Board chairman of Ford earned $540,000 in 62 Detroit up a proxy statement issued by the Ford motor co. Showed that Board chairman Henry Ford ii earned $540,000 in salary and bonuses last year. Police9 May graduate to jail alter graduation ball9 Chicago Cap the Village of Lees Vule bos scheduled a big social event on Chicago s Southside termed a graduation Ball or the Community s police depart ment but there might be some problems. The police chief 1s in jail. The Story is rather confusing. Chicago police raided a building and arrested 11 men who said they Wen attending clause at the Loes Ville police department  police that is Chicago police told the men carried weapons wore badges and carried police identification  said a Check with the Kankakee county sheriffs office however showed that Leesville Community of 538 persons 40 Miles South of Chicago has no police  Carlos v. Lindsey. The Vil Lage president said the Community did indeed have one. And he said the men s charges that they paid up to $200 to attend classes in the alleged Academy were untrue be cause he inducted the men As policemen himself. At any rate the school s instructor Joseph Johnson 36, who also claims the title of police chief. Sin jail unable to raise the $2.500 Cash Bond needed on a charge of tampering with Public documents. Police aay he is on sex convict. Johnson and the 10 other me were charged with impersonating an officer after they were  plot goes Back to a i octo Ber when Johnson arrested a Man in Chicago for allegedly going through a Stop sign. The Man turned out to be Chicago detective Anthony re goal of the Chicago police organized crime division. That led to some trouble for Johnson. Re goal in turn arrested Johnson for arresting him. And a Check showed that Johnson had formerly been employed in Chi Cago s traffic court. In Johnson s apartment re goal said were Blank traffic ticket warrant a and other forms. A of now however the graduation Ball is still scheduled and the Village president still insists that Lees Lue has a police depart ment Ford president John Dykstra earned s515.000 in 10c2, which was $85,000 More than he was paid the year before and Arjay r. Miller president elect was paid $417.917, making him the third highest paid of the Ford management team. The proxy statement also Noti fied shareholders of the annual meeting to be held May 23 at the Henry and Edsel Ford auditorium. The Bonus distribution which hinges upon sales was boosted from $34.7 million for 1961 to $4l9 million in 1962.More than 6.000 employees of the firm were eligible for the 1962 Bonus. Art aide named Buffalo . Up Suzanne Ryngler. 22. Formerly of Blooming ton i has been appointed regi tray of air Lam Knox Art gallery Here  
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