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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1963)
Jacob On Bridge "DENNIS THE MENACE 1 1 eVORTH (D) T A A65 3 AQ1076SS 65 WEST EAST AQ32 A4 VJ8 6 4 2 VQ1087 4 4 KJ98 KJJ7 Q1032 SOUTH AKJ 10987 AKS 5 A84 North end South vulnerable North East South IVnl 1 Pass 1 pasJ 2 Pass 3 V Pass 3 Pass 4 N T. Pass 8 V Pass 5 N T. Pass 6 Pass 6 Pass Pass Pass Opcjtg.lead 4 Danger Seen In Overruif By OSWALD JACOBV Written for Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Looking at the opening lead, I came up with two distinctly differ cut analyses. Either West had opened a short suit or he had led from the king to make me decide whether to finesse al trick one. Assuming a short suit lead, how could I make the hand? I could play the ace of diamonds, cash my ace and king of hearts and discard a club from dummy, cash the ace of clubs, and then do a lit tle crossruffing. Eventually, 1 could afford to let the queen of spades make, but if I could make eight of the nine trumps in my hand and dummy I would have the 12 tricks for a slam. The only danger would be in getting overruffed by the queen. A second trump lead would hold me to seven trump tricks. Therefore, I must plan plays that would Se most likely to pre vent this. Hers is the one I worked out. : I won the diamond, led a heart fo my ace and discarded a club on the king of hearts. Then I ruffed a heart, led a club to my ace and ruffed a club with dummy's ace of spades. This play looked silly, hut I could afford it as I was trying for six, not seven. Next 1 ruffed a diamond with my king of spades and my last club with dummy's five of spades. I didn't care if this one was overruffed. I had succeeded in trumping all my losers . and it didn't matter when the queen of spades made. Q The bidding has been: Wnt North East South It . Double Pass 1N.T. Pass 2 N T. Pass ? You, South hold: 4,8765 VK42 4AJ9 8 4 2 What do you do? A Pass. Unless your partner Is very conservative in his btd dinr you will have to struggle to make two no-trump and should not hazard a try for came. TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding two no trump your partner jumps to three spades over your one no trump. What do you do? Answer Tomorrow LOOK AT THIS! HE'S BEErJ SAVING ORAMGE PEEUN05.$?MtfS. WILSON CAN MAKE HW SCW& AOf? AVWUIAOE-' Theft Suspect Abandons Car To Elude Officers Klamath Falls police invent!-: gated six thefts of goods valued at over $120 plus the theft of an auto Tuesday that was recovered by police the next day. M. A. Ramsdell, Salem, report ed his locked car was stolen be tween 7 and 9:30 p.m. while it was parked next to the Anchor Cafe. The vehicle was spotted Wed nesday near Worden heading to ward Klamath Falls. City police followed the vehicle after spotting it at Riverside and Main streets and attempted to stop it by block, ing the street at South Third and Main. The driver, however, eluded the roadblock. While police were still hot in pursuit the driver jumped out of the moving car and fled on foot. Rolling into a ditch, the driver less car came to rest at South Second Street. Police were unable to catch the suspect, but he apparently left some of his personal belongings in the car when h fled. A portable stop sign stolen about midnight Monday is still apparently on the loose. The three-foot-high sign was taken from the intersection of South Ninth and Main streets. A .22 caliber automatic pistol was reported stolen from the glove compartment in a pick-up truck owned by Henry M. Stag- ncr, 3052 Emerald Stret, police reported. Stagner said the theft occurred between 5 p.m. Tuesday and 4:45 n. Wednesday. The thief broke out the wing window to gain en try into the vehicle. Police said the gun could turn up at one of the local pawn shops and are looking for two men sus pected of the crime. Two tires and wheels were stol en from a car at the Thomas Dodge Used Car Lot, 4245 S. 6th Street, Tuesday night police re ported. The thieves jacked up the front end of the car to remove the tires. There are no suspects in the case. Police received a report from Steve L. Durkin, Box 4472, King- sley Field, that a 820 battery was stolen from his auto sometime be tween March 1 and 4 while the vehicle was parked in the citv parking lot at the air base. John Weir Phillip, 450 Michi gan Street, reported his license tag was taken from his license plate sometime during the week. Phillip's license number is 6B- 43R7. Four hub caps' (each initialed JRWI worth $30 were stolen from vehicle owned by Dick Hart Box 248, Merrill, between 8 and 10 p.m. Sunday while the car was parked at the Holiday Bowl park ing lot. The caps, obviously, will easily identifiable. Girl Scouts Participate In Meeting Five Senior Girl Scouts from the Juniper Council will partici pate in the All-State Senior Con ference in Eugene March 8-10. With the Three Rivers Girl Scout Council serving as hostess, councils throughout the state of Oregon will be represented in the invitational project. The theme of the conference will be "The New Look in Scout ing." Discussion groups to be formed will explore the following subjects: New Program in Girl ng, -Aido'1 0V: and huS to Keep Troops Active; Senior Opportunities in Scholarship: and Service and Prestige in the Com munity. Mrs. Glenn Johnck, program chairman and board member of Juniper Council, will accompany the local area Senior Scouts to the conference and serve as adviser. The girls will be guests in pri vate homes of the Three Rivers Council's Senior Scouts. The five Scouts who will attend ine state-wide event, were se lected on the basis of applica tions reviewed by the selections committee of the Juniper Council. Applications were submitted from over the entire council. 1 he contcrence delegates are Paula Felix, Troop 67, Klamath Falls; Cherise Smith, Troop 114, Falcon Heights; Janell Beebe, Troop 67, Klamath Falls: Rose mary Johnck, Troop 67, Klamath Falls; and Susan Billings, Troop 105, Bend. Alternates selected to attend the conference include Di ane Selkregg, Troop 114. Falcon Heights; and Barbara Walrath Troop 67, Klamath Falls. hi .'V j be Til I 1- 4 V-- JI- 3 1 1 1 - iL . '""TP" I' K' ! 3 A &?-.-' .'.... .. : . : rv '' -'I I HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Fall., Ore. Thursday, March 7, 1963 PAGE SA Klamath Highway Workers Honored For Accident-Free Driving Records FAMILY LEFT BEHIND Mrs. Elsie Borders, 27, wife of Frank Borders, the former Army military policeman who last week was arrested on charges of being AWOL for I I years, stands in front of their Brainerd, Minn., home with their children. Mrs. Borders is holding daugh ter Bailie. 7 months, others left to right ere Brenda. 5, Bradley, 7, Belinda, 4, and, in front, Bonnie, 2. Borders was arrested last Tuesday while working at his appren tice job at a paper plant. UPI Telephoto Army Finally Catches Fafher AWOL 11 Years TO HONOR CHURCHILL WASHINGTON (UPI I - The House Judiciary Committee ap- proved a measure Tuesday to confer honorary United States cit izenship on Sir Winstnn Church ill. The proposal, sponsored by Rep. Francis E. Walter, D-Pa would make Churchill the first foreign citizen to be given hon orary citizenship bv Congress. It still must be acted on by the House and Senate. Sage Spraying Set For Spring PORTLAND (UPIl-The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) said today 181,345 acres of sage and rabbit brush on government con trolled land will be sprayed this spring in Oregon and California. The spraying project will in clude BLM land in Baker, Har ney, Lake, Deschutes and Malheur counties in Oregon and Mono, Lake, Modoc and Lassen counties in fy;iornia. Spraying will start about April 30 and continue through June 15. .Bids for the work will be open March 18. Term Reduced PORTLAND (UPI1 - A 60-day jail term imposed on Bandon lumberman Wilfred S. Laird, 55, has been reduced to 30 days by Federal Judge John F. Kilkenny. Laird was sentenced Jan. 30 after entering a guilty pica to a federal income tax charge. He also was fined $14,000. BRAINERD, Minn. iUPH - "I sure hope I get him back soon. I lie kids have been asking for him." Mrs. Frank Borders, 27, was talking about her 38-ycar-old hus band. He was whisked off to a stockade a week ago to face a charge of being absent without official leave from the Army 11 years. Borders is lodged at Ft. Sheri dan, HI., pending an investiga tion inlo his failure to report to Camp Attei-bury, lnd., in 1952. Borders, a father of five and an apprentice millwright the past five years at the Northwest Pa per Co. here, w as arrested at the plant Tuesday by two military po licemen and a Brainerd police man. Mrs. Borders said the police appeared at the couple's home with her husband and asked him to produce his Army discharge papers. When Borders could not pro duce the documents, she said, they took him to Ft. Snclling, in Min neapolis, and checked his records there. He then was taken to Ft Sheridan. I Mrs. Borders said she had "no idea" her husband might have) deserted the Army. I He's always been a good litis-1 band and provider and I'm just sick without him. The kids have been asking me where he is. 1 sure hope I get him back soon." The Borders' children include Bradley, 7, Brenda. 5. Belinda. Bonnie, 2, and Bailie .Maine. 7 months. Mrs. Borders said she and her husband, both natives of Brain- erd, were married in 1055. Short ly afterward, she said, they moved to Spokane, Wash., where he drove a truck for a construction turn tor two years. The 5th Army said Borders was "apprehended by order of the Adjutant Generals Depart ment in Washington. We still are investigating the background of the case. It's undergoing inten sive investigation." Three Klamath Falls employesi of the Oregon State Highway De partment's Maintenance and Traffic Divisions have been cited for attaining a record of 11 years of accident-free driving duringl their employment with the depart ment. Those cited were Joseph R. Monroe. 2736 Altamont Drive; Laurence A. Hoppe. 1420 Sum mers Lane: and Williem A. Kieck, 1440 Dayton Street. Five other highway department employes of Klamath and Lake ntses were similarly cited and include Samuel" C Tajlu'' 'Alka li Lake: Roger W. Wright, Chilo quln; Floyd Chandler, Lakeview; lcwis G. Hadley, Paisley, and Frank E. Moran, Silver Lake. Fifty three other government drivers in the two counties re ceived awards for operating gov ernment vehicles without becom ing involved in a chargeable acci dent for periods of from one to 12 years. Throughout the slate. 1.084 driv ers in the highway department's two divisions earned awards for safe driving in l!Ki2, topping the record high of 1,053 for the pre vious year. ut the l!Mi2 total. 129 men earned the 13-vcar award. Next in line for number of years free from a preventable accident were 6 men earning their 12-year awards. "The safely record is remark ably good considering that much of it was attained by driving! during foul weather, a time when most motorists prefer to stay off the road because of the added traffic hazards." the department stated. To earn a safe driving award. a State Highway Department em ploye must drive 55 per cent of the time during the yvar and must do it without becoming in volved in a preventable accident. The department's safe driver program started 13 years ago. The 53 Klamath and Lake Coun ty drivers who received awards lor driving safely less than 13 years follow: ward A. DeBoy, 2. Alkali Lake William R. Ford, William L. Smith. 7. Bly William W. Branham, Glenn F. Sturdivan and Ray E. Nelson, 10 each; Marvin Ward, 9; Percy A. Baillct, 7. Chemult Glenn H. Wood. 12; Corwin F. Galbreath, 10; Gerald G. Johnson. 9; Lewis D. Rice, 1; Lyle M. Sullivan, 2. Chiloquin Robert M. Brother- ton, 9; Kenneth W. Collns, Wavr.e H. Nichols, 3; Glen A. Iloven, 8: C. F. Kellison, 1. Fort Klamath J. F. W'ormer, 12: Donald D. Parker, 11; George Wright, 3; Herbert Cox Jr., 1. Keno Sam L. Wilkins, 9. Leon urd L. Ramsey, 12; Ray W. Bak er, 7: Morris L. Parker, John E. Williams, and Richard F. Young, 8 each. Klamath Falls Arthur C. Spin ney, Francis L. Adair, Henry T. Nichols, and Earl R. Wooden, 9 each; Arthur M. Bradford, 3; Jesse E. Davidson and John F. Gunther, 7 each; Walter F. Ram sey and George H. Walenciak, 5 each: Stanley G. Smith, 8; Leon ard E. Lummus and Jay E. Whit tenberg, 1 each. Lakeview Donald A. Orey, 10; Floyd Crummett, 5; John C. Lew is, 9; William C. Lively, 8; John Spink and Joseph C. Ayoutt, 1 each; Norman E. Wolf, 11. Paisley Clyde J. Bramlette. 12; Elza M. Morgan, 2; Chester L. Swearingen, 5. Silver Lake Henry Markus, 8; Ralph E. McAllister. 1. Sheriff Finds Drifting Boat . A 16-foot runabout, adrift In Klamath Lake, was recovered by the sheriff's office lake patrol ear ly Wednesday after it was found wedged among brush and rocks in shallow water northeast of Buck Island. The craft, painted white with brown decking, is in custody of the sheriff's office pending return to its owners. A resident of Cove Point saw the boat adrift on the lake Wednesday and reported the fact to the sheriff. EAGLES ANNUAL CRAB FEED MARCH 9 Serving 6 till 10 p.m. $1.75 Per Person Hit of the Home Show! The WESTINGHOU "Easiest to Clean' 30" RANGE With tiXMtfi " nil N.d II 'IIUiuiiLiii.i mm in i nil i tas nTTTirtmffWfl ,wulllllii H INCOME TAXES See Your Reliable Income TAX CONSULTANT CHAS. HATHAWAY Auditing - Bookkeeping 120 N. 10rh TU 4-5473 Your uioble discards will help ut to help othen. Don't throw 'em away. CALL: The SALVATION ARMY THRIFT STORE 111) A Klamith TU 4.H0AI Gob Admits Sitter Rape NORFOLK, Va. (UPD-A young failor confessed Tuesday night he strangled and raped a 14-year-old girl he had met through a baby sitter ad the girl had posted in a self-service laundry. Loren Neal Duffield. 23, Trent on. Mo , said he killed Gwen dolyn (Connie! Padgett after pick ing her up Monday night at tbe automatic latindy where she wait ed for him with her older brother. Duflield, who has a wife and n year-old son, was charged with murder, rape and grand larceny. Connie's recently posted hand written advertisement on the bul letin board at the laundry said: "Babysitter available. Experi enced. Phone: JU 8-9234." "Detective Capt. CD. Grant said Duffield. stationed at Norfolk Na val Air Station was arrested Tues day on a hunch. The sailor had reported he was assaulted and ribbed Monday night. Investiga te officers became suspicious when Duffield greeted them in clothes which fitted the descrip ' tion of those worn by Connie's prospective employer i Ceati-to-Coait I vrufpnilCUP I SEUTUM8SJ! "a -b Comet Aluminum Sauce Pans 1 qt. size, Reg. 89c 69' Helene Curtis Sauve Hair Spray 14-oz. si 79 14-oz. size, Reg. 99c C plus tax Comet Aluminum Percolator 7 cup size, Reg. 1.98 69 Mirro Automatic Electric Fry Pan Model C-9213, with controls is?, 1098 One Group Men's Sweat Shirts Several Colors Several Styles Values to 3.29 I98 30 Amp Fuse Plugs UL approved. Box of 5. 29c Washable Lawtex Rugs 100 rayon, cushioned non - skid foam rubber backing, 99 A 99 3'x5' size 24"x36" Reg. 3.49 Mm Reg. 2.29 1 Hot Pad Mitts Reg. 49c 29c New selection of Ceramics Just in! 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