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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1963)
Jacoby On Bridge NORTH (D) 11 AAQJ73 874 S KQ87 WEST EAST 4k K 10 8 A 98 52 VKQJ 10 6 3 Q108 32 AJ4 83 3 SOUTH 4s4 A95I K7 AJ10654 Both vulnerable North Eut South Wert 1 A Pass 2 4s Pass 3 Pass 3 V Pass S Pass 6 i Pass Pass Pass Opening lead V K Bidder Seeks Way To Win By OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. In this hand from "AH Fifty two Cards" by Marshall Miles, I have shown the East and West cards, but you should plan your play without looking at the East and West hands. Don't bother to criticize the bidding. The slam contract most optimistic and both North and South have overbid, but we are concerned only with the prob lem of how to make the con tract. Analysis of the lead and a review of the bidding don't help. You have to find some place to park three little hearts and the only place is dummy's spade suit. Do you see any combination of cards that will let you make your slam? If you do you are a really fine player. If you done then look at the East and West hands because they have been set up for that one combination. You lead a spado and finesse dummy s jack. If it loses you will be down three, but you were down two anyway. The finesse works. Now you trump a low spade and draw trumps, stopping In dummy. The ace of spades is played and West's king drops. Now dummy's last two spades are good and you can discard your three losing hearts. Even tually you lose a diamond, but your slam has come home. For 64 pages of easy4o-undcr-stand bridge tips, order your cony of "Win at Bridge With Oswald Jacoby." Just send your name, address, and 50 cents to: Oswald Jacoby Reader Service, c-o this newspaper, P.O. Box 4BD, Dcpt A, Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y. 21 Q The blddlng';haji been: East Sooth West North 1 Double Pass 1 afc Pass 2 A Pass 3 4t Pass 7 Yon, South, hold: AQ87 VAK65 ! 1086S What do you do? A Bid four spades. This is a worth-while (amble, TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding one spade your partner goes to one no trump over your double. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow California Ghost Town Resurrected Court Records MUNICIPAL COURT Aua. it, m) Udell Joseph Gulhrls, drunk, 125 or live or 10 navs. Alelandro Vallelo. drunk, 125 or liver or id Oflyi. Wltller Shoals, drunken driving, UM and 30 days. Gertrude Leah Harvell. assault with a Dangerous weapon, arraigned. Robert A. Maxwell, drunk, M5 lor. felted. Donald William Kepple. vagrancy, tlOO end 30 days. Willie Lea Way, vagrancy, UOO and 30 days. Matlhew P. McGarr, drunk, us or tjvl or 10 days. Edward Eugene Simmons, minor In poj.j session, $25 forfeited. Larry G. Davis, minor In possession, 2S forfeited. Carl George Luce, furnishing liquor lo minors, 25 forfeited. Roy Lee McDowell, drunk, 125 or live or 10 days. Barcle Bell Cooper, disorderly conduct, t25 forfeited. Anlst McKlnley, drunk, t25 or five or 10 days. Howard Malhew Mllllgan, drunk 125 or live or 10 days. Jake Buster Rente, disorderly conduct, 12S or five or 10 daysi drunk, 125 or live or 10 days. Jesse Sanchei, drunk, 125 forfeited; dis orderly conduct, 125 forfeited tmory Curley Wright, drunken driving, 1300 and 30 days. Dave Lee Sanders, drunk, 125 or five or 10 days. Ray Norby Wilson, drunk, 225 forfeited rank Arthur Geslvang, drunk, 115 or five or 10 days. Wesley Wendall Brown, drunk, 125 for feited. Franklin Rudolph Hutchinson, drunk. 125 or five or 10 days. CALICO, Calif. (UPI) - The mountains ... a scorching sun . . . and the relentless wind re main. Only the people changed. They use to come in wagons or on foot. Now they arrive in air conditioned cars. Calico was born in the early 1880s when three prospectors dis covered one of the richest veins of silver ore in history. Within a few months more than 4.000 persons took up residence in tents, lean-tos, and holes they picked out of the mountains. Calico died 16 years later and became a ghost town. Today the population is about 30. The town, nestled in the foot hills ol the Calico Hanne, was resurrected by Walter Knott of Knott's Berry Farm. He spent more than $700,000 restoring the decayed mining mecca of the past located 150 miles cast of Uis Angeles. The few residents live off the jingling pockets of tourists who take a step into the past and relive the excitement of the Old West. It can be recaptured briefly: A stroll down the boardwalk streets, past Lil's Saloon, Hank's Hotel, Lane's General Store and The Calico Print, first published in 1882. Mrs. Lucy B. Lane, a Calico resident in its heyday, is still alive and has returned. She sits outside her store and wel comes the tourists as she used to greet the gun laden miners in her youth. Calico had fires, shootings and bordellos. But there was a 6chool and a church too. Also a Boothill. For 16 years Calico lived gayly, boldly and bawdyily. More than $86 million in silver poured from her mountains in those boisterous years $10 million from the Sil ver King Mine alone. Veins of ore four feet wide were uncovered. Some ore as sayed at 200 to 400 ounces per ton. Today the tourists can take ride through an old mine shaft, ride a small railroad cart down the mountain or pay 25 cents lo view freshly dusted antiques. 1 When the price ol silver dropped in 1896 the hardy miners left in search ot new riches and so did the rest. Some stayed behind in Boothill which overlooks the pock-marked hills. But adventurers in the 1880s had a sense of humor even about dying. "Beneath this stone, a lump ot clay, lies Nora Young, who on the 21st of May, began to hold her tongue," reads one epitaph about the town gossip. "This is ono on me," says the marker for saloon keeper Joe Kelly. Life ended abruptly for some Frontier law took care of Blackie Scroggins hanged May 1, 1882, for claim jumping. The old wooden s tone for Wcs Wescott says, "Hung in his youth, 'Twas a sad mistake when we found the truth." For many there only arc un marked heaps of stone. Calico's marker is the whistling wind, barren mountains and the scorching s u n. Thousands of mourners arrive every year in air conditioned cars to pay their respects as if a lost friend were buried in the Calico Range. Leaders Issue Final Plans For Civil Rights March On Nation's Capital NEW YORK (UPI) Leaders of the Aug. 28 march on Wash ington issued final plans Tuesday (or the giant civil rights demon stration and demanded desegrega tion of all schools this year. In a 12-page organizing man ual, the leaders charged that "the southern Democrats came to power by disenfranchising the Negro. They know that semi- slavery for one means semi-slav-for all." "Our bodies, numbering over 100,000, will bear witness will serve historic notice that jobs and freedom are needed now," the manual said. The leaders expect more than 100,000 persons to attend the rally. Spells Out Demands The booklet spelled out for the first time detailed demands of the marchers. The demands included: Withholding federal funds from all programs in which dis crimination exists. Desegregating all school dis tricts in 1903. Reducing congressional repre sentation of slates where citizens are disenfranchised. Issuing a new executive or der banning discrimination in all housing supported by federal funds. Undertaking a massive feder al program to train and place all unemployed workers Negro and white in meaningful and dignified jobs. Instituting a national mini mum wage act that will give all Americans a decent standard of living. The leaders said govern ment surveys show that anything less than $2 an hour fails to do this. "Our demonstration the lar gest and most significant in the history of Washington will bear eloquent witness that we do not come to beg or plead for rights PACE 8 B HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregim Wednesday, August SI, 196 denied for centuries. Our massive march... will speak out to Con gress and the nation w ith a single voice for jobs and freedom now," the leaders said. Names Chief Marshal A. Philip Randolph, head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Port ers and chairman of the march, said Tuesday William H. Johnson Jr.. a Negro New York City policeman, would be the chief marshal. Johnson is president of The Guardian, a Negro fraternal organization of city policemen. There wil) be 2,000 marshals to keep order. The official schedule calls for demonstrators to assem ble at the Washington Monument by 10 a m., stage twin parades to the Lincoln Memorial at noon and to begin the rally there at 2 p.m. The manual stressed that the demonstration was lo be a one day affair and that all persons were to leave the capital as soon as possible. A nationw ide railroad strike is scheduled eight hours after the end of the march. THURSDAY LADIES AUX. AND CANTON CRATER 7, 6:30 p.m., polluck, meeting, Mrs. Lewis Kandra, 2641 Front Street. SATURDAY NAACP, Northwest Area Con ference, 12 noon, registration, 7 p.m., dinner, dance, Winema Ho tel. Reservations, TU 2-8050 or TU 2-0368. EWAUNA ENCAMPMENT, Rendezvous, 11 a.m., registration, 3 p.m., meeting, IOOD Hall. Cot- fee for women. KLAMATH MINERAL CLUB, overnight field trip, Prineville area, meet 5 a.m., Barklcy Springs, Highway 97. RUMMAGE SALE, Nation al Federation Federal Employes, Local 704, 8 a.m., Old Reliable Cleaners Building, 1116 Main Street. On The Record APPLICATIONS TO WED Lindsay Dean Blss, ?!, and Joan Pa. tricla Hennlnger, 17, bolts Klamath Falls. Vincent u. Lrtevne, 22, Klamam l-aus, and Diane Walker, 19, Merrill. Larry c. Dillon, II. Hanlord, Calif.. and Jacqueline R, Morris, 16, Klamath Falls. Charles Rav Wilson, ?3, Weed, Calif., and Judith Ann Hoppe, 17, Klamath Falls. DIVORCE ACTIONS PILED COLSTON Betty L. vs. Carmon H. j; (Community- ;j !; (Calendar ;j MIDLAND GRANGE, card party, Grange Hall, 8 p.m., Welfare Collectors Recover $49,823 SALEM (UPD State-wide col lections by the Welfare Recovery Division of the Stale Department of Justice totaled $49,823 in July, Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton said today. Thornton said $47,5110 was col lected for child support, and $2, 323 for welfare fraud. 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