Additional sPors Coaches Snap At New Rules By IMTCI) PKKSS uisappointed college roaches took pot shols at the new basket ball rules today, predicting a num ber ot bad effects Milling from more zone defense to a waste of pamr. A vast majority of the coaches disliked at least some of the six new rules, which were passed bv the National Rules Committee iii disregard of recommendations made by the Coaches' Association. Only a small minority uppeared pleased by all the rules. The rules changes ranged from extending the bonus throw for the full 40 minutes to widening the free throw lane from the present six to 12 feet. Under Ihe old bonus rule, an extra free throw was awarded if a player sank' his first effurt during the first 37 minutes of the game. Two free throws were awarded automatically for fouls occurring in Ihe final throe min utes. "Basketball is not progressing," complained famed Dr. Forrest C. (Phog) Allen of Kansas. "The game needs more balanced rules." "Why, they're just messin' up the gyms," grumbled Ed Diddle of Western Kentucky;' "Every gym floor in the country will have to be repainted. , Ken Loeffler of La Salle, who teaches law, summed up his feel ings tersely: "A tremendous mis take." Caterpillars Set Buchan Bakers DENVER (UP) Darkhorse North Carolina Slate and the per ennial powers see their first action today in-the National AAU basket ball tournament. Phillips Oilers or Bartlesville. Olila., tangles with the Santa Mar ia, Calif.. Golden Dukes in the first game of real consequence in the weeklong tourney.. The Oilers drew a first round bye and the Dukes tripped the Mt. Morris, 111., Kolts 71-57 last night. The Peoria, 111., Caterpillars like the Oilers, members of the National Industrial Basketball League and pro-tourney favorites,' also were idle during the first round. They meet the Buchan Bilkers of Seattle, Wash., at 5:30 p.m. North Carolina State, the na tion's fourth ranking college team, will get their first test in the AAU tourney against the older compe tition of the current meet playing Hone Wuthnow of Hope, Kan. The collegians figure to win and tire given a fair chance to go all the way in the tourney. In other games today and to night, the San Francisco Olympic Club plays Ihe Akron, Ohio, Good year Wingfoots of the NIBL; the Arlesia, N.M., Travelers of the NIBL meet Gregory Clothiers of Greeley, Colo.; the Denver Cen tral Bankers of the NIBL play the U.S. Marine Champions, and the ADA Oilers of the NIBL piny Luckett-Nix of Boulder, Colo. There were no upsets in the Sinai games of the first round yester day, although Kirby Shoes of Los Angeles bad to hustle to whip the collegians playing for the Utah Ili-Ilats 71-G2. The Marines, from Quantico, Va., used their second team most of the way in trouncing St. Ag- r Mow You Can Own a TV Iff Loan we'll take care of the rest. You can also finance ANY new home appliance washers, dryers, freezers, vacuum cleaners, ranges, etc., with Portland Loan. Simply ask your dealer for Portland Loan financing. No kteey Down 2 Years to Pay PORTLAND LOAN CO. 85 Oregon Ave. jLaPine Families Report Visits Spcelal tu The Bulletin LAPINK-Mrs. Ora Riddle and son Orville visited in Klamath Falls and at Modoc Point Satur day. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Maker of Bend were in LaPine Friday visit ing friends. . Former I'iPine residents, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Anderson, visit ed Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mi's. Lloyd Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Buck had as visitors from Springfirld Sunday Mr. and Mrs. John Gwathney, for merly of 1-aPine, and Mr. and Mrs. Judge Balleiv. Visiting Sat urday at the Buck home were Mr and Mrs. Clarence Still, onetime owners of the 1-aPine Highway Center. The Young Peoples class of the LaPine Baptist church celebrated St. Patrick's day Friday with "An Irish Spud Spree." Twelve young people attended the affair held in the church under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Clark. A party honoring her daughter Lorene on her thirteenth birthday was held recently by Mrs. Lloyd Anderson. Twelve guests were present. Mr. and Mrs. John Christenson and Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Thur mun, all of Eugene, were week end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Skidgel. A short business meeting was held Saturday evening by the Lit tle Deschutes grange. A social hour followed. A safety program was presented by Lecturer Mrs. Mark Ferns. Following square dancing, an oyster stew dinner was served by a committee under Mrs. Jay Shultz. Seven members of the LaPine Home Extension unit met Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Jess Buck to make potato salad for the luncheon of the annual meeting of the Mid-State Electric cooperative, Inc. Enough potato salad was made to serve 250 to 300 persons. Those making salad were Mrs. Jess Buck, Mrs. Del bert Angel, Mrs. Ora Riddle, Mrs. Ira Skidgel, Mrs. Welborn Parker, Mrs. Lloyd Anderson and Mrs. Floyd Anson. Benson Winner In High Hurdles Dean Benson, ex-Lava Bear and now a junior at Willamette uni versity, Salem, won the 70-yard high hurdles for the second year at. the annual Washington State college invitational indoor track meet Saturday at Pullman, Wash. Benson's time was 8.9 seconds, the same as last year. He did not enter the low hurdles. Benson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Byron Benson, Bend. Students Take Aptitude Tests Five Bend high school seniors today participated in the National Honor Society scholarship project by taking a general aptitude test. Local students in this nation wide competition sponsored by the National Association of Secondary School Principals are Earl Cork ett, Shirley Edmison, Larry Mize, Lynn Sehroek and Gail Thomp son. Miss Cecilia O'Leary and Miss Mary Bugar are advisers of the Bend chapter of the National Hon or Society. nello of New York 105-50. The Buchan Bakers were not pressed in beating Donti Lavelli ot Cleveland 79 C2. " SET Yes, with NO MONEY DOWN and as little as $14.76 per month you can own a new TV set, complete with antenna ' and installation. And you can buy from any TV dealer in Central Ore gon. Simply pick out the set you want and have your dealer coll Portland Bend Phone 173 ARE THINGS HUMMING AT YOUR HOUSE? Here's a little guessing game each householder can play It's called How Many Motors? Think you know your house well? Okay, write down on a slip of paper on estimate of how many electric motors you own. A warning the elusive little things are hard to bring to mind. So mechanized is the American home that most have at least 20. Mrs. Frederick Frost of Pittsburgh guessed high and said 20. By actual count she had 38. There were eight in the kitchen1 dish washer, blendei, clock, mixer, refrigerator, range timer, ventilating fan and garbage disposal unit. Elsewhere in the house she had: two air conditioners, furnace blower, electric fans, vacuum cleaners, deep freeze, washer-dryer, ironer, sewing machine, record player, hair dryer, vibrator, movie projector, electric razor, electric drill, additional clocks, a garage door opener, the starter motor, windshield wiper and heater in the car. Indians used to be rich 'in the number of ponies they owned, slaveholders by the number of slaves. In America the standard may be set by the number of electric motors: Session Held By Postmasters Special to The Bulletin CHEMULT Pending Congres sional legislation affecting the Post Office department was re viewed by Mrs. Irvin Horn, post mistress at Jennings Lodge and a director of the National Postmas ters association, at a district meet ing here Saturday. Present were postmasters from Deschutes, Klamath, Lake Jack son and Crook counties. The lunch eon meeting was held in the local Methodist church. Featured speaker was P. I. Bcckley, director of the regional counting -office in Portland. Host ess for the meeting was Mrs. W. W. Smallwood. postmistress at Gil christ. Mrs. Carl A. Waldon, post mislre.'f! at Oregon Technical In stitute, presided. The dinner was served by Mrs. Leslie Norlin, Mrs. John Andin and Mrs. Harold Crow and prepared by Mrs. Howard Snyder. Word has been received by rel atives in Bend of the death in Portland of Fred A. Matz. Mr. Matz died Monday In a Portland hospital. He had been an employe of the U. S. Forest serv ice and had spent several sum mers in the Deschutes forest sur veying and supervising limber cruises. Funeral services will be held to morrow at 3 p.m. in the Pearson Mortuary in Portland. Mr. Matz is survived by his wife. Emma, a son. Dr. Homer Matz, Ash Grove, Mo., and a daughter, Ida. Ida lives with her mother at the family home in Portland. Local relatives include a broth er-in-law, George L. Roberts, and a sister-in-law, Mrs. Lester Dod son. Another sister-in-law, Mrs, Jennie Allgood, White Swan, Wash., is visiting In Bend. VAI.l ABl.E PIGGY BOSTON (UP) When Jos eph Malone, of Dorchester, report ed to police that a burglar had stolen his piggy bank, no one be came too excited. Not until Ma lone told them that the bank con tained $200. 4 frfiZ&OMA KD!ll;(gEmi t: l THE UK LAI MvA Or THE FIGHTING SIOUX LEADER ANB THE STORY BEHIND CUSTER'S LAST STAND! PI I IC vp!l ? Shrine Club, Racing Group Join in Refurbishing Track SM'ciul to The Bulletin PRINEVILLE Members of the Prineville-Madras Shrine club and the Central Oregon Racing asso ciation have joined to construct a grandstand and surface the three eights of a mile track at the Prine ville speed-way. Volunteers from the two organ izations hope to have the project Youth Captured Following Chase PORTLAND (UP) A youthful escapee from the Salem city jail was captured by Portland and Os wego police here early today after a 100-mile-an-hour chase. The escapee, Wendell Franklin Holder, 18, was surrounded by police and recaptured after the car he was driving was forced to a halt in railroad yards at the foot of NW 4th Ave. The chase began when Patrol man S. Starr Thurston, of Oswego, after hearing details of the escape on an all-points bulletin, staked himself out on the Salem-Poitland expressway. When he saw the car streak by on the way north, Thurston gave chase and radioed ahead to Port land police. Two patrol cars joined the pursuit and the procession, punctuated by gunfire, screamed through city streets. Holder, after his capture, said he escaped through a window. Jail bars had been spread, police said, but no other details were avail able. A companion In the escape was captured earlier in Salem. The escajK? took place at about 1.1:30 p.m. LOW niDDKK PORTLAND (UP)-Midland Con structors, Inc., Huntington Park, Calif., was apparent low bidder at $138,772 for clearing and construct ing the Forest Grove - Tilla-'-iok 115-kv transmission line, Cal"S Creek-Lee's Camp substation, ac cording to the Bonneville Power Administration. You Sport Car Race "THE FAST AND completed by April 2-1 to open the I spring and summer racing season in mid-Oregon. The Shrine club will sponsor the events to be held each Sunday into September and to feature both stock car and modified car events, A meeting of racing enthusiasts interested in sponsoring;, building or driving an aulo in the Sunday events has been scheduled for Ihursday evening by the racing association. The meeting will be held at Parkey's barbership in Prineville and will begin at 8 p.m. A variety of racing events is slated for the Prineville oval. Sep arate stock and modified car events ai-e planned, with a total of eight events to be run each Sunday through the summer. Slat ed are four qualifying heats and separate trophy and main event races for stock cars and the souped-up modified cars. Aside from improvement of the oval track and the construction of a grandstand, other work also has been undertaken by the'' sponsoring Shriners and the racing associa tion. A large parking area is being readied adjacent the grandstand and concession booths are hem; built. Drivers of cars m the races must be over 21-years-of-age under association rules. Youths of 18 and older, however, may sponsor car and serve in the cars pits with parental consent. Saturday Hours Set by Offices Special to The Bulletin PORTLAND Field officers of the Internal Revenue Service throughout the stale of Oregon wi keep open on Saturday, April- from 8:00 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. and on Friday, April 15 from 8:00 to District Director of Inlcrnvil Rev enue service, Portland, announced today. Taxpayers are urged to file their returns as soon as possible, in n der to avoid waiting because of lastrtninute rush periods, Gran quist said. Fans, Don't Miss FURIOUS" Strasser Could Prove Headache For W. Germany (A I'MTKO PKKSS EXTRA) By CHAKI.KS M. MW'ANS Tutted Press Staff Correspondent Otto Strasser, who once was Adolf Hitler's bitterest enemy, is likely to become enemy No. 1 of the West German Republic before long. Strasser has just managed to get back to Germany after 22 years in exile. He had been trying to get back ever since the end of World War II. For years, Allied and German authorities, who regard him as po litical menace, refused him admit tance. But last November, Strasser fin ally won o long court fight to get himself declared a German citizen the Nazis had deprived him of his citizenship in 1934 and there was no longer any legal way to keep him out of the country. Party Already Waiting So Strasser went back to Ger many from Canada, where he had been living since 1941. Strasser arrived back in Ger many last week with a ready-made extreme right-wing political party awaiting him. ' He h id organized the "League For German Revival," and kept n touch with it, in correspondence with his supporters in Germany during his years ot exile on a farm near Bridgetown, Nova Scotia. Strasser took back with him some ambitious plans. He announced he would work for the unification of Germany and for the restoration of all the territory it lost as the result of the war. Germany, he said, should be come an "armed neutral, aligned neither with the Western Allies nor with Russia. An "Armed" Neutral We need armed neutrality," he said. "A neutrality not linked Willi either Wall Street or the Kremlin but one which would cooperate strongly with Sweden and Switzer land." AS a one-time Socialist, Stmsser still believes In state ownership. But Strasser says he now is a "solldarlst. "Solidansm, ' he explained, is basically opposed to Marxism as well as to capitalism. I reject Marxism, centralism and bureau cracy." It was with meaningless gibber ish that Hitler worked himself '.nto power. What Strasser really wants lo do is to build up an extremist movement in hope that some day he can grab power as Hitler did Inspection Set For CAP Group Oregon staff officers of Ihe Civil Air Patrol will make their semi annual inspection of the Bend squadron Thursday evening, Pat Gibson, squadron commander, has announced. The officers will 'fly in Thursday evening and expect to arrive nt 7:30, in a USAF C-45 piloted by Capt. George Ramsdell of the Air Force. 'Staff officers tentatively sched uled to make the inspection are Col. Kenneth Jordan, Oregon com mander; Major Charles Chicks and Capt. Kroener, all from the Oregon wing headquarters In Port land. The inspecting officers will at tend the regular weekly meeting ond inspect equipment and person nel and review activities of the local squadron. Immediately following the In spection, the officers will return to their headquarters in Portland WOMAN KILLED SEASIDE (UP) An elderly Gearhart woman was killed here yesterday when her car crashed into a slump. Dead was Ella Wallace Hamp lon, 69. State police said she was alone in the car at the time of the accident. STARTS WEDNESDAY ill ft " 'v. ,, a IN I rlil m 'Jil 1 1 I 'mum. iHIIH:iiM'lll I The Bend Bulletin, Wednesday, March 23, 1955 3 City-Owned Property Sale A new motion authorizing sale of a city owned lot on E. 3rd be tween the Game Commission of fice and the city pump house to Lawrence Clausen was given unan imous approval at a special meet ing of the city commission yes terday afternoon. Recindcd was an earlier motion authorizing the sale with a provi sion that the city not relinquish title until construction "of sub stantial nature" was made on the property. The motion approved yesterday at the meeting held in the city managers office provides that Clausen need only undertake "sub- tantia improvement of t h e property before the deed is Issued. Clausen objected to the original motion because he plans to dev elop the lot not for building pur poses but- for a parking lot and entrance way to lots he Intends for a motel. Clausen's offer of S1800 for the lot was accepted by the commis sion at its last regular meeting a week ago. Price remained un changed in the amended version of the sale motion. Under terms of the motion contract will be issued to Clausen that will provide for the issuance A a deed should he complete im provements specified by the com mission within a year. The improvements, under the motion made by Commissioner W M. Loy, must meet with commis sion approval. But it wus ade clear that paving and surfacing the lot for parking purposes would be considered acceptable Improve ment. Also included in the motion was nwision for right of easement for the city for pipes and other con nections naming to the pump house on the corner of E. 3rd and Clay. It was reported that Clausen has Immediate plans for the-construction of a combination office and gift shop building along the lot. The structure would be backed Easy Shrimp Creole Tastes just right with BLUE PLATE SiStV Canned Shrimp Hearty, hurry-up meals are easy with plump, ready-cooked llluo Plate Canned Shrimp: add thorn to well-seasoned, home made tomato gravy. Serve over rica for quick. Shrimp Creole. Or add Blue Pinto Shrimp to salads for s new treat Try 'em too in chop auey, omelota, soups, casseroles. Blue Plate Shrimp give tempting variety to dishes by the dozens, iilue Plato Shrimp come from the sunny Gulf of Mexico home waters for nature's beet-tastinn shrimp. Enjoy their sea-fresh flavor ofton. Heady to eat. No peeling. No waste. A t-i . hn ml tlu Plata Shrimp ll mmI It I lb. whri raw iMfn. STARTS THE THRILLS ROAR DOWN ON YOU! you've never seen anything to match its excitement rUGLAS LATEST NEWS and against the Game Commission of fice. Clausen is owner of the Mid get Drive-In, adjacent to the com mission office to the south. Raised for brief discussion at the short meeting was the zoning problem along the northern high way approaches to the city. Commissioner Vernon W. Lar son said he heartily favors the commission's recommendation to the planning .commission that it study setting up a commercial zone along the north Highway. Lar son was absent from the meeting of the commission at which the recommendation was made and approved. Larson quoted a recommenda tion of the 15-member advisory commission on planning, suggest ing "more liberal use of high ways" and urged that the planning commission make a proposal for future plans." He suggested that the recom mendation might be forthcoming before completion of current mas ter plan studies. Mayor Hans sSlagsvold Indicated that the planning commission might prefer to wait and submit a package zoning proposal instead of recommending piecemeal changes. Lainon praised the planning commission for doing "a fine job" but said "it should be far enough along with its studies to make some recommendations." TWO FACE CHARGES Special to The Bulletin SISTERS Evelyn Madeline Ma gee, Route 1, Box 59, Terrebonne, was cited for violation of the ba sic rule. She was charged with traveling 50 miles per hour east on Cascade street which is a 25 mile zone. She forfeited $10 ball. Donald Zarlos Stratten. Box 65, Seneca, Oregon forfeited $10 ball on a basic rule violation. Stratten was arrested for traveling 45 miles per hour in a 25-mile zone. TONIGHT! and tutpeniel KIRK CincmaScoFE COLOR by dE LUXE Bella Gilbert DARVI ROLAND Cesar Katy Lea J. ROMERO JURADO COBB COLOR CARTOON