Jacoby On Bridge Neither Snow Nor Sleet Stalled 1912 Cadillac On Journey West NOETO U A7S W953 AKQT4 J2 WEST EAST 4AQ8S2 K103 Q8T Ji08 4 8o4 BOUTS (D) AKJ4 VAJI AKQ10B7 Ha one vulnerable Sooth West North But 1 Pius 1 Fu 8 NT. Pass Pan aii Opening lead 4 5 Deception Nefs Score By OSWALD JACOBY Written for Newspaper Enterprise Asm. Bobby Jordan is 10 year older than his partner, Arthur Robin son, but the maturity of age 36 docs not seem to have made him the steadier member of the part nership. Instead it is Arthur who plays straight man while Bobby creates the situations in bidding and play that are most likely to force mistakes from the oppon ents. In a recent duplicate match, Bobby found himself in a very . comfortable three no-trump con tract. Overtricks are important. in duplicate and at trick one Bob by w as able to make a deceptive play that netted him all 13 tricks and a top score. There wasn't anything too com plicated about the play. West had opened the five of spades and after East produced the 10 spot Bobby won the trick with the king, not the jack. Then he ran off his six club tricks and West had to find five discards. The first three were easy. There was no pain about let ting a low heart and two low spades go. The fourth discard was the queen of spades. On the last club, West could not afford to chuck a diamond and he did not want to unguard the king ol hearts so out came the ace of spades. It looked sale enough. East surely held the jack since Bobby had won the Iirst trick with the king. Now Bobby's Jack and four ol spiides were good and he had 13 tricks. His false card al trick one had really paid of I! O The bidding hai been: Sootll Weat Nortfl- Kaat I Pasa 1 Pan lt Pus 3 Pas Yon, Sooth, bnM: A!l VAQ7 48 KJII What do yon dor A Paw. Te dent eeem to fcava any eoJta to wort Ui ai no-tramp and eleren trinka la elnbe are m lot to haT to try for. If you do bid you abooJ4 try two no-trump TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding two ctabe your partner has raised row one heart bid to two. What do JOU lo now? Answer Monday By RUTH KING Pencil marks on a Rand Mc Nallcy map cover only a few inches of paper but they mark the route hundreds of miles long from Bloomficld. Neb., to Klam ath Falls ... a route that brought a Cadillac touring car and a fu lure businessman to the West. The trip proved that neitheri mud nor snow, rain nor sand could stall a 1912 Cad or daunt a driver with adventure in his blood and a steering wheel in h i hands. The businessman who drove and came to stay was Thomas B. Wat- tors. The Cadillac belonged to his uncle, J. K. Elliott, who yearned to see a brother, E. L. Elliott, a Klamath Falls attorney. On a sunny day In September 50 years ago, young Tom Wat tors was content with his lot, partner in a one-car garago the town of Bloomficld. Neb., not far from the South Dakota line. Bloomfield was one of the peace ful small towns of some 900 to 1,000 "wonderful people," who neighbored along the quiet, tree- shaded streets and around the cracker barrel at the corner gro cery. The prairie stretching out be yond was slashed by a stub rail road, which lclt the main line ol the Sioux City, Iowa-Norfolk, Neb, and ended at Bloomfield. Oldsters smoked their corncob pipes on the benches by the liv ery stable and admired Die pret ty girls under parasols who passed by. Women wore sunbonncts as they hoed their gardens . . . trav eling salesmen who sold pins to perfumes from Paris, hired teams and buggies to reach customers in small surrounding towns after Uicy left the train. It was that kind of town anr1. that time in the century iicfore "demon speed" caught up with the world But change was peering ovcri the horizon. The traveling sales men could make more money if they could reach more towns . . . old Dobbin was no match for the new "gas buggies," and young Tom Wallers and his partner. with an eye on the future, struck while the iron was hot and opened a garage with one car for hire. Few men beyond their firsti shaves could drive a car in those days, and fewer women knew a throttle from a spark plug. Sol small wonder on Ih'.tf, sunny Scp-I tcmner dav in 1912 when oppor tunity knocked, that the forward. looking young garaccman, Tom Wattcrs, opened the dour wide turned his back on Nebraska and and said, "Uncle Jack, you've made a deal. The deal centered around a shl ny, brand-new Cadillac louring car, with soft tires, a folding windshield, collapsible lop, a Kla xon horn and a tool box on the running board. Two men were aboard, a car salesman, the driv er, and Tom's uncle, J. K. Elliott, a prosperous farmer and a wid ower from Cedar County, Neb., who yearned for that shiny new Cadillac. He couldn't drive. Right then and there he of-l (cred his nephew T.B. the most tantalizing proposition ever put to an eager young man with no ties except a pretty girl around the corner, and with a terrific crush on automobiles. J. K. Elliott wanted to see his brother out in Oregon. "If young or surfaced road stretching to ward the Pacific Ocean. By nightfall of the first day they had crossed the Loup River and had reached Grand Island, 150 miles away, known as the eroatest horse market in the world. The Cadillac had per- formed "sweetly," navigating the sandy roads as easily as a cow horse. A drift of snow that night came near changing the course of his-1 torv. but true pioneers never re treat, and they drove on toward North Platte. They still had not used chains. The long, flat plain stretched endlessly beside the slueeish North Platte River. The Cadillac was eased along age. The underpinnings were built to sland punishment. With Tom Wattcrs back under the wheel Ihey headed for a two-day rodeo at Cheyenne, and for Medicine Bow where the "Virginian" was written. While mud slowed their pace at Hawlings, Wyo., the trusty chains and the purring motor of the Cad took them through the crisis. They visited the city where Brighair Young first saw t h e' great Salt Lake Valley under a setting sun and said This is Ihe place." They pulled a Buick from a gulley in a red desert and cruised on to Twin Falls in Southern Idaho where the Snake River cuts its great gorge through River Valley were gold when they topped the mountain, pushing to ward Klamath Falls over the oldj Fort Road around the hill. ' Behind them were the porch of the railroad station they had slept on, the only time on the trip they failed to find shelter. . . the half-way point between Bos ton and San Francisco, 2.000 miles to Ihe east, 2,000 miles to the west on Highway 30 where iack- rabbits were more numerous than guideposts ... the one shot they had fired at a fleet antelope the curious admirers along the1 route ... the feel of the wind on their faces, the sun on their; heads ... the bunch grass on: the prairies, the Continental Di vide that Ihe Cadillac mastered . . . the black dust of the Wyo ming coal towns. It was Oct. 18. 16 days since they had left Nebraska. The five- passenger Cadillac, dusty b u t sound, had passed its exams and its driver had found a new home. Many years later members of a woman's bowling team from Klamath Falls, sponsored by the Winema Hotel where Tom Walters was part owner, made a discov ery about the driver of that Cad illac that negotiated the long miles from Bloomficld to this town. The team had gone to Omaha. for tournament play and through the usual patter of "Do you know?" it was discovered that a Babe Wattcrs had gone from Bloomfield to this city. No one knew a Babe Walters here, only a "T.B.," but by putting two and two together and getting four, the deep secret was learned. "Babe" Wallers of Nebraska was the Tom Wattcrs of Klamath Falls . . . and now the cat is out of the baj. PAGE (A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Sunday, January 13, 19H3 EE If raw S"-tsjy 4. 4fc9-i "HERE SHE COMES" T. B. Watters, Klamath Falls businessman, drove a 1912 four- cylinder Cadillac from Bloomfield, Neb., to Klamath Falls half a century ego in 16 days with some layovers for recreation. His passenger and owner of the automobile was an uncle, J. K. Elliott, who eame here to see a brother, Attorney E. L. Elliott. Tom would drive that Cadillac toi Klamath Falls he would buy it." The deal was consummated with !i handshake on the spot. There was certainly nothing to be gained by procrastination as far as Tom was concerned. The lure of the road and the four cylinder car at the door decided the issue. Tom would go. On Oct. 2, the car, packed with little silk lent, a couple of pil lows and blankets, a small spike slove, some canned goods, a kit of automobile tools, a set of new tires, a vulcanizer and some ex- ra shirts and socks, was "gassed" lor the trip. Friends gathered to wish them well, many w ith tongue in cheek. It was "a mighty long way to Oregon" and there were the Rock ies and the flatlamis, unknown to most of them, ahead. Service sta tions were practically unknown and wayside accommodations be tween towns were certainly not numerous. There was not one foot of paved deep ruts made by the wagons! that had rolled West across me prairies. By this time Uncle J.K. had succumbed to a yen to "get the feel" of his new prize and to hold the wheel. The tracks were deep and he "believed he could hold her in the tracks. The men switched scats. The soft tires gripped the ground send ing small plumes of sand behind Ihe wheels. J.K. shifted into a higher gear and the Cadillac gained speed. The exhilaration of guiding the powerful beauty gave him confidence and he slopped on Die gas. The car responded and followed the deep tracks, taster and faster until the wheels leaped with the acceleration and power null, onto unmarked earth. Examination revealed no dam- For Professional TREE SERVICE Baker's Nursery Call TU 2-55S3 the lava, where irrigation water was just then beginning to flow across the fertile news in tne shadows of the Saw tooths. They saw the county fair in Boise, crossed the Snake at Vale and touched this state's soil as the high-wheeled Cadillac left the last rattling board of the narrow bridge that linked Idaho and Oregon. It was at this end of the jour ney from Burns to Bend, away from the cushioning sand and the dust, that the tires took punish mcnt. The sharp obsidian and the cinders from spewing volcanoes of other ages, cut the rubber to ribbons. Here the vulcanizer came into use. They journeyed on from Bend south. The aspens in the Wood NOW OPEN! Shirley's CoinomaHc Laundromat Hilyard & Altamont Dr. (RATER DRIVE IN Probe Asked Of Primate Study Fight PORTUWD IUPH - A former legislator who led a drive for ex panded research facilities in Ore gon Thursday called for an inves tigation of Ihe Oregon Primate Research Center controversy by the Oregon Legislature. Former Sen. Richard Giwner, a .Milwaukie Democrat, said he is . afraid Hie hassle may hinder the state's lone range economic growth. Dr. Donald E. Pickering re signed as director of the center last week in a dispute with Uni versity of Orccon .Medical School Ivan Dr. iMvid W. E. Baud and the board of governors. Greener was chairman of tlie legislative Intel im C ommittee on Small Business which developed Ihe concept that basic research is the key lo Oregon's economic and industrial growth. "This cnnlroveisv could discour age grants and funds from var ions government agencies and pri vate foundations," tironcr said "My sympathies at tins point aic with Dr. Pickering. "I think there should he a lr:iv lathe investigation to bring buth sides out into the open. The situ ation as it is now could destroy something so important to our stale," Gronor added. GUAR ANTEID Rf f AIR SIRVICt AT WARDS Ml fl photo. rrt'0. TV. pc"oc . . . WanM fcholein It lutt roo cl wyl You It hk 'rvc , . . and the prktl Cll too 1 1 MONTeoMea wao senvici DirAKt"iNT Tu 4-jih tin a am 'ay Vo ii s Build your credit by using it wisely ... always meeting every payment on time. Who knows when you will need good credit . . . for a new home, to join a lodge, to open a new account, because of a death in the family? Keep Your Cr edit Good Market Basket Canned Goods SLUP Continued Mil! These prices and all grocery dept. prices from last Thursday ad effective thru Wednesday. Meat and Produce prices effective Monday thru Wednesday. CHECK THESE CANNED GOODS PRICES Green Beans cr93eo3C:L 1 Re 679c 121.55 Sliced Beets 3S3'07;in, JSr 6i79c 1211.55 corn crofeeKcer:,o3r03-t rn ewe 1211.55 Sweet Peas 689c 12H.69 Tomatoes SiS j-JS 689c 12H.69 Tomato Catsup STL ft y ' 679c 12.1.55 Applesauce R;;;fv,ooe 689c 12H.69 Fruit Cocktail fcr &1.19 122.29 Fruit Cocktail jggT 6? 1.29 12&.49 Grapefruit z .VSt 61.19 12S2.29 Grapefruit 3S't!n:nte 'L 6H.29 122.49 Peaches ITk ... R6c6u2e 6H.29 1249 Peaches DNr303u;insa'v" jtva 61.19 1229 Peaches yjjSrk flflS 611.59 121309 Pear Halves: 699c 12,1.89 Bagley Pears 6f1.49 1252.89 Apricots Sfff fcva 611.19 12jZ29 Pineapple ml!T.d.rN..2ii 61,1.25 122 45 chunk,, Hdbr,,cr,h.d 6 for 1. SO " M Orange Ju. '""ST 57 3? 1.45 6?2.85 P-Orange KJT 3,79c 6H.53 P.-Apricot D::: 379c 6rK53 FLOUR SUGAR Drifted Snow 10-lb. bog C&H Powdered or Brown Mb. pkg. HOME OWNED INDEPENDENT Boiling J p Sweet California Novel C4 0Q Onions ik l Oranges v" 89c USDA Grade Good Rib Steaks . Corned Beef Bonclcu, lb. 69c D..tA Beef, r in DUIIU JlCdlU vcol 3 pkg So. 6th & Shasta Way OPEN TODAY 10:00 to 7:00 Open Til Midnight Wcckdoyt 5p"g.79c USDA Grode Good cut, wrapped and quick frotcn. No money down! No pay ment til March lit. LOCKER BEEF Qtr. lb. 45c Beef lb. 51c