Jacob On Bridge 17 WEST -0 9 8 V Q J 10 8 4 Q 107 8 3 5 NORTH KQ532 V K9 A2 A864 EAST A 7 V 7 632 J984 QJ103 SOUTH U) A A J 10 6 4 V A5 K6 K972 East nd West vulnerable South West North East Pass 3 A Pass 4 N.T, Pass 5 N.T. Past 6 A Pass 1 A 4 5 y 6 y Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Opening lead y Q I Skill Seen In Slam Bid By OSWALD JACOBY Written lor Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Howard Schenken and Peter Le ventritt are tlie veteran pair on this year's American team. How ard played with me in 1935 when we won the first international match and he and Peter played ; together on the 19(31 team which finished second. Howard's bidding of the North hand shows this experience. He used the Blackwood four no-trump to check for aces and continued with five no-trump to tell his part ner that he was willing to bid seven. Howard did not want to go to seven himself because his club suit was too weak and Peter let the bidding die at six for the same reason. A strange thing about this hand Is that if North had been dealer Uie bidding would have gone ex actly the same way with South jumping in clubs, using Black wood and bidding the same spade slam. Six is a fine contract, but a lot of players would go down on ac count of the bad club break. Pe- ler made the hand easily. He drew trumps, took the diamond and heart tricks, led the seven of clubs from his own hand and let it ride. East won the trick and was helpless. A diamond or heart lead would allow a ruff and discard, a club would give Peter three club tricks. 17 Daughter Wears Dad's Shirts, Sox, Jacket By ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: I'm a fa ther who is ready to tear the re maining hairs out of my head How can I get my 16 . year, o I d to stop wearinc mv clothes? You arc probably think ing all sons like to wear their Dad's clothes, but it's not mv son I'm writing about it's my daughter. Shirts, sweaters, sox every thing seems to wind up on her back. Of course nothine fits but then she says it's not sup posed to. It's the style now to wear everything four sizes too big. Ihe teenagers today buy the lamest size thev can find ex cept when it comes to ieans and saddle pants. Then they buy the smallest. When I asked mv wife where my hunting jacket was last night she said, "Judy wore it to a hay rifle. Is there a solution or am 1 doomed for life? DADDYKINS Dear Daddvkins: Not for lit just until she gets married. And I'll .1 ,1.1. WJMB Q The bidding has been: South West North East 1 Pass 1 Pass 1 V Pass 3 4. Pass 3 Pass 4 Pass ? You, South, hold: 4 A Q 7 6 VAQ76 41 KJ52 What do you do? A Bid four no-trump. If part tier can show one ace you in tend to bid six flubs. The slam may be lay down and at worst should depend on s finesse. TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner responds five hearts to your four no-trump bid. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow Card Club Plays Despite Cold NEW PINE CHEEK Zero weather was no deterrent to 11 tables of card players at the Sportsmen's Club card party Sat urday evening at the Willow Ranch Fire Hall. Electric heaters were placed at various points in the recreation hall to supplement the regular heating facilities. Winning prizes were Mrs. Ruth Tirickcy of Lakeview, women's high, and Mrs. Toni Markstrom of Willow Ranch, consolation. Maury Morton captured the men's high, and Jimmy Russum of the Buck Creek Rancer Sta tion received men's low. The trav eling prize went to Mrs. Vi Bish op. Approximately 50 people were 'present. Mars Expert Doubts Life On Planet LOS ANGELES (UPII-A lead ing expert on Mars said today that interplanetary studies indi cate that Martians, as imagined in science fiction, do not exist. If there is any life on Mars, Dr. Rodney W. Johnson said, "it is probably a low form of animal life or plant life that lives and then goes dormant in seasonal cycles. "The atmosphere and climate of Mars is not compatible with life as we know it," said Johnson. head of General Electric's Inter planetary Systems Development at Valley Forge, Pa. All information we have now does not support the belief that higher types of life exist Mars," he said. Johnson spoke on "the terrain and soil of Mars" to the nation's foremost space scientists at the American Astronautical Society meeting here. He said he did not believe the famed canals of Mars were the ingenious work of Martian beings, as some scientists believe, but either an optical illusion or some form of geological process and probably the latter. The quantity of water on Mars 'there are no oceans) is not suf ficient enough to supply canals of this size," he said. However, Johnson added it would be much easier for Earth space explorers to exist there than on Ihe moon. The mineral make-up of JIars s very similar to the moon and you wouldn't have to combat the high vacuum conditions that pre vail on the moon, he explained. The Mars atmosphere is more conducive to earthlings." What colonization by Earth ex ploratory teams would be like on Mars was described by Chester R. Haig Jr., of the McDonnell Air. craft Corp., St. Louis. Haig said the first colonizing ex pedition would be composed of .12 spacemen, transported to Mars in eight four-man vehicles. The col ony would later be rcsupplied and enlarged with other expeditions. "During the first year or so." Haig said, "life at the colony will not be unlike living in a Pullman car which wanders rather slowly over a vast flatland that alter nates between long stretches of desert and low, possibly tundra like vegetation." He said the "Pullman car" would stop frequently and the "pas.ien;crs" would get out to ex plore. The right hand of Mona Lisa, painted by Leonardo da Vinci, is said to be the most perfect hand ever painted. "i r ' V.I 1 1 II 1 1 IWI I on Hot Cereal V I Ifrp'-O" !X sa til rVH H y it rws. or er st- ti't ;"!. it wt 't I Cr;"t then guess what you'll miss the annoyance. Dear Ann Landers: My hobby is repairing hi-fi and radios. It is fun for me and I also manage to make a little extra money on the side. My workshop was a cozy area off the kitchen. U used to be a butler's pantry, but my wife never used it. Last week she suddenly decided my "junk" would have to go into the basement because it didn t look nice right next to her kitch en. Without even discussing it with me she moved everything downstairs. Now she has her sew ing machine in there and the room is messier than ever. Her patterns, dummies and bolts of material are all over the place. The basement is damp and un comfortable. The climatic condi tions are not good for delicate electronic equipment. 1 would like your advice in print, if you please.-DISPLACED PERSON Dear Person: I know nothing about climatic conditions and electronic equipment, but I do know something about emotional climate and marriage. Your wife had no right to sum marily move your equipment to the basement. Move your stuff back upstairs immediately and make it clear you will not be treated like a small child. Dear Ann Landers: I am 23, a college graduate and hold a re sponsible position. Two years ago I started to date Jerry. Last Feb ruary we became engaged. Jerry and 1 did not have the same religious background. We decided our marriage would stand a better chance if we each ex amined the other's religion, at tended the other's church and then decided which one would change over. After three months of alternat ing attending his church one Sunday, the next Sunday mine I decided his religion had more solace to offer and agreed to change. I told my parents and they were unhappy but did not make a fuss. Last month Jerry and I broke up. My folks are now insisting that 1 come oacK to my original church. I don't want to. What is your opinion? - MERCEDES Dear Mercedes: A girl 23 should be allowed to make this decision on her own. Slick to your guns, Girl. Confidential: Valiant lxiscr On a Great Ticket: Harry Truman said it hitler than anybody ... n you can't stand the heal, get out of the kitchen." Tn learn the booby-traps of drinkinc. write for Ann Landers' booklet, "Teenage Drinking," enclosing with youri PAr,.,.,ci 9n renix in coin and a . . v , . long, sell-addressea, siampeu en velope. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this news paper enclosing a stamped, self addressed envelope. Mil- r"Vje TLRF EXPRESS A'; H0 4I'A1 FLYING HORSE Peg asus never had it so good. Race track operators make excellent use of airborne horse trailers to transport animals from one track to another. Modern Noah's Ark Has Wings, Tail Airlines Happy With Animal Baggage NEW YORK (NE.V-Whcn Ihe ancient Greeks dreamed up Peg asus did they envision the cargo plane of the 20th Century? Horses are doing so much flying these days it is a wonder that rudimen tary appendages don't begin to appear on their shoulders. Horses racing and otherwise arc not the only beasts lakinc to the air. Airline officials are cheered by a daily Noah's Ark- type parade through the airport gates around the nation. Candi dates for flight include everything from worms to woodchucks, from monkeys to hummingbirds. What pleases the airline ac countants mostly is the income de rived from animal cargo serv ice. The basic lare for animals is 250 per cent of regular bag gage rates. The cost for shipping a horse cross-country including attendant's fee stands at about $1,000. And how else can you get a (on of baggage to walk by it self into a plane? "It's no longer a special occa sion or a problem for a baby ele phant or a family of monkeys to be placed aboard a plane for a flight across the country," says R. L. Mangold vice president in charge of cargo sales for United Air Lines. "Flying animals by air makes good sense." Mangold insists. HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls, Ore. Thursday, January 17, 1963 PAGE 11 A "Speed and comfort are two Im portant reasons. The risk of in jury to the animals is lessened considerably, and they require less attention." Almost every species of our ani mal friends requires special han dling. Chinchillas, for example, experience difficulty breathing at high altitudes. So there is a re striction on the number that fly, per cubic feet of space in the com partment. Monkeys, previously banned because of their monkey like odor, are now perfumed. A recent shipment of humming birds required feeding every 20 minutes with the aid of an eye dropper. Dogs and cats remain the best customers in the pet department One company zips about 14.000 of them through the skies each year. The animals are bedded dow n in any one of three ciiffcrent-sized carrying cages rented from the air line. The cost of shipping, say, a cocker spaniel from New York to Cleveland stands at about $30, Including the cost of the rented kennel. Normally, pet owners are asked to make arrangements at least 24 hours before flight time. The most frequent sight in the animal cargo rooms across the country is lobsters. Mangold's line hauls more than half a mil lion pounds yearly. r'wywti'!tW'B''" if f , . . - ft w " L FURRY BAGGAGE Ti. gers, like this in the arms of a thoughtful stewardess, can really be called Flying Tigers when shipped by air. Basic rate for animals is 2'i times baggage rate. rft hi ra r i( SMV i kiS save UU y Viy LbU WuU UuU CASH! TOPS IN QUALITY! 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