in IwlTJi mm mm m L : HI Hy FRANK JKNKINR I'm wondering If anybody has missed this stulf m tilt) punt few days. 'I ho reason I'm wondering In Unit I'm wrllliiK thlH ono down In ii coiner ill Ihn hiiMMiifiit at Inline on u typewriter Unit was kihuiik inn wiicn fur ran lor his llilKl term mill here lluirv In gel ling I'uudy to run (or HIS third ii'i'in, Typewriter imn oviir these long swings (if history, mid thin on In no cxi pit lull Ui tint nilu, Brought bent In tho flint nliioo no some thing for grandchildren to harden llii'lr muscles on, It Iiiih developed pi'i'iillurltlci under tho treatment. I lilt ii "" buck Ilium It little way, but wim t not printed on the jmiicr wiu this jigger: ct. Now thiil will olivloiiHly never (In. I M'l out hrro to write, high i'Iiinn opinion piece, und things like thin ct. cl. ct. ct, ct. ct., which i Imp buck nt inn from the impel' ma uncd when you send bills to people unit wmit to know why -the neck they don't pay you wlmt they owe vou no you ciui ko out and line Mm money Inatcnd of them using )t, You enn't write anything worth reading when things like Unit keep liHlipenlnn. nnd no I started won dering If anybody lind.mlnnod the Mull on the dayn when It didn't nppriir. If nobody had missed It, vou ire, I wouldn't need to explain why It hadn't been appearlnii. And if I didn't need to do any explain nit 1 wouldn't need to line thin ivnrwrltcr which would be some . tiling. ' But I reckon I'd better he get tSiin on Willi Uiln explanation. Did you ever hear of one of these FLU bugs? I hope not. They'ro disreputable charactorn. I think I caught a glimpse of one the olher night In somcUiliig iiliout hallway between a night marc and whatever ntate It wan ihnl de Qulnccy nnint have reached when he wan hltlliiK the opium ripe really KOod. That Is one of the drawback! of tills Ilu business. It brinu you halluclnatlonii like lltul u'hin nil Vrtu WdtlL bt DOOd. quiet, peacelul nlumber that will restore your lacuiuen anu iov juu gel back to your Job. Anvwnv. thin Ihlna I allinnned wu a horrible looking monnter. II hitd a head nhaped about like a sandbiir If sundburs grew to be about the le of Hubbard squashes. It had a squatty, muscular body and the feel at the end of Ita misshapen lens were also like sandbars In appeurnnce. And It curried In Ita burnt a knouled whin nnd the knoutN at the endn of the whip lanhcn were more annriburn, mane, I would nay, of sharp and shiny and heavy nteel. With Ihln wlcked-looklng In.slru inent thin horrld-looklnti creature wnn laying It onto tome unfortu nute human nhnpe, dancing glee fully all the while on It namibur hhnped feet and buttlnir In every direction Willi Ita nnndbur-nhaped head. And when I awoke Uie next niornliiK I felt exactly an I would hiive fell If I had Rone Uirotmh ah experience like that the nluht be fore. A word "of advice: It you nee a flu-bun coming, run like Ollly-be-damm. If you don't, you'll wish you had. Yider Street Plan Shelved Troperty owners along Pacific Terrace have put the propoanl to widen their alrcet Into deep freexe for at leant six moiillu, and proo ably longer. Petitions bearing the n-imes of 119 property owners, representing 120 ol the 171 pieces of real proper ly Involved, were presented to the City Council last night In objec tion to the ntreet Improvement Job. The number was sufficient, under Inw, to stymie the project ao that It cannot be brought up again for at leant six months. But for all practical purposes, since the Im provement Job has been turned down by property owners twice In three yearn, Uiere Inn't much chance of 11 being revived for a long time. The proposal wa to sldcn each traffic lane lour feet, cutting that much space off cither aide of the center park strip. It was originated by Mayor Bob Thompson, himself a resident of the street, and Uie City Council. The coat would have been, by engineer's entlmntc, $47, 000 to $57,000, with the property owners paying the bill by assess ment. rSabres Knock Down 3 Migs SEOUL, Korea Ml U.S. Sabre Jet pilots shot down three Red Jet fighter plnnen In two roaring air fights over Northwest Korea Tues day. Other Allied Jet filers reported Ihey destroyed four locomotives on tupply network. Twenty-six Snbros fought ele ments of a 50-MIO formation Tues day afternoon In a flvo-mlnute run ning buttle. It started near Slnanju nnd ended near tho Yalu River when the Red fighters iled Into Manchuria. The morning fight was between 27 Sabres and parts of a flight of 100 MIO-lBa. It raged seven to eight miles above tho ground. The U.S. Fifth Air Force said about 300 MIOs were sighted In Northwest Korea Tuesday 100 In tho morning and 200 In the after noon, Tho North Koroans' Pyongyang have dovlsod now methods with mobile "piano hunting units" In an effort to check the Allies dally bombing of Red transport routes and supply editors. The radio quoted Premier Kim II Sung as saying Red forces now "can opnrato with speed and shoot down nil enemy planes that bomb our positions." Communist, flak, night fighters rm) searchlights tried unsuocess hilly Monday night to break up an attack by five B-29 superforta on tho Slnanju rail bridge complex in Northwost Korea, 2 Hurdles Still Face Truce Plan MUNHAN, Korea (If) Negotia tors agreed Tuesday on the final clause of a Korean armistice, but two major hurdles still blocked u truce settlement, Tho agreement: To recommend that belligerent governments hold u high level political conference within 00 days after an armistice to consider "withdrawal of all foreign forces from Korea, the peaceful settlement of the Korean question, etc." Agreement was reached In a full drenn session. Staff officers were annlgned to tho Job of Incorporating the recom mendation In the armistice. No date was set for tho first i.tiiff meeting. rmiuir.u Olher still! officers are working nn two other uncompleted claunen. But they are skirting around the two big unsettled rjuentlonn: Voluntary repatriation of prison em of war. Rebuilding of airfields during a truce. The wording of Ihe political con ference recommendation wan draft ed by the- Communists, Including the "etc." The third ntalf conference meet ing was a Communist Idea. Red negotiators uuusica on u wires ure United Nations Command accepted Ihe Communist wording for tlio political conference recommenda tion, right down U the "etc." Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy. head ol the U.N. delegation objected nt first. He nald 'there In nothing for the ntaff officers to Uo. LIMHKI Later, however, he agreed. But, a UN. communique niini, joy stipulated "the Mali oincern woum not be empowered to make any substantive change or addition to the dralt recommendation." North Korean Gen. Nam H nald the meeting of ntalf olllcern wan necesnary to writ a preamble and "for proper wording and Insertion In the armistice agreement." Joy's qualification limited the work of atalf ofllcern "to complet ing any mechanical details." Jov named Air Force Col. And rew J. Kennev of Atlanta and l.t. Col. Howard 8. l.evle of New York. They will meet when the Commu nists nre-arendy. Stnlf officers working on the prisoner of war claim "continued to make slow progress," a U.N. communique said. Warren Plans Wise. Entry SACRAMENTO, Calif. I -Oov. Warren of California agreed Tues day to enter Wisconsin April 1 primary In his quest lor the Re publican nomlnaton for President. Warren, an advocate of "social progress and world co-oratlon" Umn laid down hln first pre-con-ventlon challenge to Ben. Tail of Ohio and former Oov. Stasscn of Minnesota. Tail and Btnsnen have Indicated Ihey may enter Uie Wisconsin elec tion In a bid for the states 30 OOP delegates. Oen. Elsenhower haf asked that his name be withdrawn. Warren's decision to Invade the midwest will bring the first out-of-state drive for delegates by the 1MB OOP nominee for vice presi dent. He has authorized a favorite son slate In California's June 3 primary and, a three-time winner for the governorship, Is seemingly assured of this ntate Is 70 convention voles. Leiter Lid Left Open NORFOLK. Va. Ml Sam E. Patterson, managing director of Leigh Memorial Hospital here, wrote a letter Monday to the direc tor of Region Four, U. S. Civil Service Commission. In It, Patterson complained of what he called "a good example of gross extravagance" on the Commission's part. His complaint: He received nlno Identical letters subject mat ter and- everything else Uie same from the Commission In one mall. All the letters, he said, were postmarked February 11 In Wash ingtontwo at l p.m., two at 1:30 p.m., one nt 2 p.m., one at 4 p.m., two at 4:30 p.m.. and ono at 5:30 p.m. Giant, Unknown Negro Rescues Trapped Man HOUSTON, Tex. Wl A giant Negro walked out of the night on tho highway about ten miles north west of hero early Tuesday, saw a man trapped In the cab of his smouldering truck-trailer and rip ped the cab apart to save the driv er. The unconscious driver fell free Into tho arms of waiting and aston ished deputy sheriffs, and the Ne gro disappeared as quietly us he appeared. TERRIFIC "No one knows his name," said Deputy Sheriff Don Henry, "but he did a Job 1 couldn't do with six trucks ar.d a wrecker. It was a torrlflc display of human strength." The trauned truck driver was Roy Oaby Jr. 20, Houston. Ho was driving a loaded truck to Houston when he ran out of gas and telenhoned Ills wife to brkig some gasoline. She had brought the gas and was driving tho family car ahead of him when a. driver forced her off the road on the right stdo. Her husband's truck was, forced off on I'rlre live Cents 14 I'ages 'est nr"tf mi ii EL';.. toKJf fi'l S St r IP If I -iT-i. -fti rrrwn l- rlpJJWtl THE CITY'S REMODELED City Council chamber is something of a throne room now. Members of the Council and top officials sit at a raised horseshoe table, newsmen and department heads on a lower level and the public behind a rail ing. Walt Salsbcry, building inspector, and Jack Dyer, plumbing inspector, directed the remodeling work, not only of the upstairs portion of City Hall but the downstairs floor as well. Shown at the Council table are (left to right) Council man Matt Finnigan, Councilman Don Kenyon, Attorney Henry Perkins, Mayor Bob Thompson, Stenographer Mary Ann Wentworth, Police Judge Bob Elder, Councilman Wendell Smith and Councilman Darrell Miller. In the well are (left to right) John Barton of KFJI, City Engineer Taxi Thomas, and Hale Scarbrough of the Herald and News. Councilman Mark Smith was absent when the picture was taken. Idaho Potato Hike Sought BOISE. Idaho. - MV-District Of- flco ol Price Stabilization olflclals and representatives of potato ship pers met again Tuesday to dis cuss potato celling prices. Monday, the OP8 sent n tele gram to Washington, recommend ing an Increase In carlol jhlpment prices for Idaho potatoes. Ell Weston, Boise attorney rep resenting the Idaho Advertising Commission and Idaho Potato Shippers Association, said Uie In crease Is due shippers because "We had it under the old OPA." Truman Loses Morris Bid WASHINGTON W A House Judiciary subcommittee Tuesday unanimously rejected a proposal by President Truman to give clean up bass Newbold Morris power to grant Immunity to witnesses In tils scundals Investigation. The subcommittee Is to confer with Morris late Tucsduy about the second part of Mr. Truman's re quest: That Morris be granted sub poena powers usually reserved for the courts and Congressional com mittees. The President and Attornoy Gen eral McOrath picked Morris to head the government cleanup pro gram Feb. 1. Morris Is a Republican attorney who once was president of the New York City Council. Some senators have suggested summoning Morris before a com mittee Investigating big profits made In a surplus ship deal. Mor ris has denied any wrong-doing. The proposed Immunity waivers was rejected on a motion by Rep. Keating (R.-N.Y.l. VALUABLE RAIN SYDNEY, Australia T) Aus tralia has had Its most valuable rain-storm. In more than a year In the past three days. It broke a year-long drought In Eastern Aus tralia, ended bush fire danger that has caused 22 million dollars in damage In two montlis and saved vast areas of dairying and grazing country. the left. Goby was trapped Inside his tel escoped truck. Flumes appeared. His wife flagged a passing motor ist, and he notified tho sheriff's of fice. Officers, trucks and a wrecker congregated. But tho men couldn't budge the crushed metnl with ca bles. A call went out for cutting torches. The giant Negro appeared. "Can I be of help?" he nsked. Then he walked up to tho cab, placed his hands on tho door and wrenched It off. PRESSURE He climbed Into the cab, planted his feet on tho floor and his neck and shoulders against the top. "You could hear the metal give," said Henry. "The top bowed out, the seat buckled down and the dash broke under the pressure. , "I saw the Negro's shirt sleeves rip open as his muscles bulged." In the excitement of rescuing the driver, still unconscious, no one thought to thnnk the Negro. Ho walked off Into the night. KLAMATH German I' ' ill il . "i wvw" y I lilt i "vin. r:- H&A . " 'O ti five i City May Rent Park Meters as Ad Posts Willie Denies Bank Robbery : NEW YORK MV- Notorious Wil lie (The Actor) Sutton pleaded In nocent to bank robbery charges Tucsdoy and was ordered held In prison for a hearing Feb. 29. The elusive Sutton was arrested Monday In Brooklyn, where he had been living the role of an ob scure miser In a 6-a-week room, after being sought as one of the nation's top bank robbers and es cape artists. He broke out of two of Phila delphia's best prisons, once in 1B45, when he was recaptured soon after, and again In 1947. Two alert young policemen "rec- onlzed Sutton on a Brooklyn street Monday to end a five-year man hunt launched when he made Uie second break five years ago. Queens County authorities have him under Indictment here for the J04.000 robbery of a Sunnyside bank In 1950. Sutton has been suspected of hav ing a hand In the famous $1,500,000 Brink robbery in Boston Uie same year, He was brought Into court sur rounded by three officers. A fourth kept a close grip on the prisoner's ueu irom oenina mm. Red Cross KickoffSet The 1952 Red Cross Klckoff Cof fee Hour has been schedued for 10 a.m. Feb. 27, Chairman Mrs. Buz Larkln announced today. The hour, for all volunteer Red Cross fund campaign workers, is extremely important, Mrs. Larkin said. About 20 volunteer staff aids are scheduled to assist in pouring. Chairman of the day will be John Houston, who will introduce a Red Cross Pacific area field director, Miss Fay Smith who win discuss Red Cross "In the field." Also due for introduction will be George Dlmbat and Russ Tisdale, co-chairmen of Uie 1952 fund drive campaign. Something new in the way ot features as a klckoff affair will be added this time, with a skit by Mrs. Julian Eccles, Mis. Kooeri Thompson and Rev. Gordon Ashbee entitled "Do's and Don't's of the 1952 Red Cross Fund Drive cam paign. Exec. Secv. Virginia Dixon Is slMcd to give a short talk on what the local Red Crass has accom plished here during the past year. The talk will be an explanation of Red Cross1 services to the local community. Klamath citizens are Invited to attend. Mrs. Dixon stressed the fact that the colfeo hour Is to be an open n flair, with volunteers to receive final Instructions before making In itial solicltatons, ATOMIC EXPEDITION PORTSMOUTH. Eng., m The vanguard of Britain's first atomlo explosion expedition sailed for Aus tralia Tuesday. . Britain's first atom weapon will be detonated In some months time, In Australia's central desert or off the coast. FAIXH, OREGON, TL'KHDAV, FEBRUARY 18. 1953 Obstacles Overcome , - ... " - ' ' jpj By HALE SCARBROUGH Klamath Falls' 748 narklmr met ers probably will bloom this 8prtng wnn reminders to the public to buy this or than brand , nf oft drink, soap, shoes, automobile and what not. The CrtyVi unctl la wirkirjr up ncuniTHci wim me Aa-o-Meter Cor poration of Ferndale, Mich., for in stallation of 5x7 inch advertising signs on the meters, for whirh tho city is supposed to get 60 cents per meter per month. At tnat rate, the 748 meters would bring in S5,385.60 a year frdm the advertising source, the money to go into the parkine met- cr fund which is earmarked lor '.raffle control use only. That amount is nbont whnt lhA city spends each year for meter replacements. CONTRACT The contract being drawn would give the Ad-o-Meter firm the right to install and maintain the signs for three years, without option, and the city Is asking that a $5,000 performance bond be posted by the company to insure against damage to the meters, neglect of the signs or other contractural failures. The advertising would be national In scope, with no local soliciting. A clause in the contract pro vides that if the advertising devices are found illegal, the company would remove them immediately. Their legality apparently has not been tested in Oregon. The Attor ney General of Washington state on March 23, 1950, wrote an opinion on the subject in which he con cluded that a city does not have legal authority to authorize a cor poration, Ilrm or individual to place commercial advertising on parking meters or oUier traffic controi equipment." . CONTROL Parking meters themselves have been upheld pnly as an exercise of Uie city's police power to regulate traffic. Advertising matter on park ing meter standards would scarce ly seem to be an aid to traffic control In anv way, other than in that the money derived would go into a fund used for traffic control. The Dalles Is believed to be the only cltv in Oregon presently allow ing advertising on parking meter standards. According to information obtained bv the Herald and News, merchants of Pendleton some lime ago killed a similar proposal, and the City Council of Forest Grove dropped the advertising scheme there after the adverUsing outfit was unable to sell enough ads to go on all that city's meters. , At Forest Grove the soliciting firm apparently was able to book advertising for only about 20 per cent of the meters. Uiose in the choicest, most-used locations. Here in Klamath Falls Uie park ing meter ad idea was brought up before a meeting of the Klamath Merchants Association last week by Mayor Bob Thompson, and the mer chants did not raise objection. But In other localities where the advertising scheme has been tried, there nave been very real objec tions from merchants who have found the parking meters outside their business doors plugging for one brand of merchandise, while thev inside are trying to sell anoth er brand. The Klamath Falls contract with the Ad-o-Mcter Corporation appar ently would require Uiot advertising be obtained for all meters, not just those In most-used locations, ond would require city approval of the ads used. QUEEN. ACHESOIf ' LONDON Iff) Queen Elizabeth n received U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson at her Clarence House home Tuesday before his departuro for Atlantic Pact con ferences in Lisbon. Jap Camp May Become Prison TULELAKE Three men from the U.S. Bureau of Prisons have been here for a week, making plans for rehabilitation of the military area of the old War Relocation camp at Newell which has been taken over by the Department of justice. The camp apparently is destined for use as detention place for Uderal prisoners of ? some undis closed type. The three men here are an en gineer lor the Department of Jus tice named Butterworth, an official from McNeil Island Federal prison named Hlser, and another' man irom McNeil named Craig. The latter is supposed to be caretaker lor tne camp. TRUSTIES Ihe camp is to be taken over March 1, and by April l some trusties from McNeil Island may be brought in to do some work on the Installation. For several years the facilities had been leased to the Tulelake Growers Association for a labor camp and at times houses as many as 50(rtransient workers. Twelve families were living in the camp when it was announced Jan. 10 that the Department of justice would take over the faculty They have moved out. Forty-four buildings, including former military barracks, three kitchens and other structures, are on the property. WAR USE During World War n the camp housed as manv as 20.000 Japa nese aliens rounded up in the Unit ed states at the start of the war. The Tulelake Growers Associa tion is negotiating for sub-rental of a few of the remoining build ings which may not be used by the Bureau of Prisons. No Support, Jail Ordered Refusal of Robert L. Mlsner, uia Aiain, ua employe, to pay support money as ordered by a Circuit Court divorce decree, got htm a 30-day jail sentence this morning. Misner was ordered into court before" Judge Charles Combs this morning to show cause whv he shouldn't pay $60 a month support for a minor child. Payment of support money was part oi a divorce decree issued oy uircuit court here June 8. 1951. A petition filed by U.S. Balen tine, attorney for Misner's ex-wife, Ella, claimed Misner was $240 ar rears in payments. Misner renortedlv told Jnripp Combs, here from Lakevlew while Circuit Judge David R. Vanden bcrg is in Portland, hat he would not pay the money as long as his ex-wife wasn't allowing him to sec his child. Judge Combs said Misner could clear himself of the Jail term when he made payment. The Judge said he understood Misner was out in custody of a deputy sheriff trying 10 raise me casn. Weather FORECAST: Klamath Falls and vicinity, few light snow flurries Tuesday night, partly cloudy Wed nesday. High Wednesday 31, low tonight 11. Northern California, oc casional light rain through .Wednes day, possibly becoming heavier Wednesday night. High Monday ... 23 Low last night 15 Preclp Monday .'. ,. .07 I'reolp since Oct. 1 ...12.30 Normal for period 7.61 Period last year 11.76 (Additional Weather on Page 4) Telephone 8111 No. 2744 European Community Doors Open LONDON in The Foreign Min isters of the three Western powers and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of Western Germany said Tuesday they have removed obstacles to Germany's entrance into the Eur opean community. United States Secretary of State Dean Acheson, British Foreign Sec retary Aninony i,aen and French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman listed In a communique seven points which they said assured a successful 'conclusion of talks now going on in Bonn and Paris. PEACE CONTRACT The three ministers and Ado. nauer have been engaged In con ferences here since Saturday in an effort to smooth out German French relations, open the way for creation of a European army in which German and French armed forces would be unified, and pave the way for a "peace contract" be tween Western Germany and the occupation powers. Earlier Tuesday Uie French Na tional Assembly, by a vote of 327 to 287, gave a qualified approval to the European army plan for re arming Germany. PRELUDE The Foreign Ministers confer ences here were a prelude to a full- dress meeting of the North Atlantic ireaiy urganizatlon in. Lisbon, Portugal. In a separate communique Eden, Schuman and Acheson declared their "abiding interest in the es tablishing and integrity of the Eu ropean Defense Community" mrf recalled their governments' pledg es to maintain armed forces In curope. Ship Severed, 33 Men Saved BULLETIN . CHATHAM, Mass. lift All 33 crewmen on the stern end of the broken oil tanker Ft Mercer were rescued Tuesday by Coast Guardsmen. CHATHAM, Mass. OP Rough seas of the Atlantic boUed anew Tuesday under freshening winds as the Coast Guard cutter East wind moved toward the stern of the severed tanker Ft. Mercer which has 33 survivors aboard. Nine men were believed lost from the tanker Pendleton, which suffered the same fate as Uie Ft. Mercer in Mondays blinding snow storm. Nine others are unaccounted for. Thirty-two were saved Monday night. At 8 a.m. the Eastwind reported she was only 10 miles from the drifting wreck of the Mercer which was more than 50 miles off Cape Cod. Three hours later, the East wind had not reported again. At Coast Guard headquarters it was considered probable the East- wind might throw a line aboard the Mercer and tow her into Boston rather than attempt a rescue in Uie rough sea. The cutter Yakatat, meanwhile, reported taking four survivors off the bow of Uie Mercer before It overturned in heavy seas. '' v---:-;- 9 OjcIojcA Spsudal CHATTING THIS MORNING at the Olympia Grocery were Chris Lampropulos, whose family owns the store, and Leo Friend, who drives a delivery truck for Medo Land Creamery. , ; " Six Major Reforms On Agenda By STERLING F. GREEN WASHINGTON Ifl Urged by former President Herbert Hoover to help wipe out the "humiliation" of government scandals the Citi zens Committee for tho Hoover re port launched Tuesday a lobbying effort in behalf of six major federal reform proposals. ' Heading the list of projects It will push Is a Senate-approved bill to remove many Jobs from political patronage, provide for ad vancing able workers In govern ment careers, and facilitate the removal of incompetents. SICKENING' Hoover told the National Re organization Committee Monday night that the "sickening conduct" of some officials recently mmI is an indictment of the govern ment's method Of Choosinir and managing its 2 yx mmion em. ployes. No one can ignore the flood of exposures ot less than tmi-rcH hn or or real patriotism by employes in many agencies of the govern ment during these recent years " ..... . -iiraiucni ioio duo civic and business leaders anri snuMnmMi officials. "Dally, Congress and grand Ju ries are turning up sickening con duct of federal civil officials. These exposures can mean only one thing: That our method of selec tion and organization of federal employes is badly at fault some where. 'Surely the nation has a right to a better system of choice Ann management of its employees than one which has produced these months of humiliation." COMMISSION Hoover was head of th gress-created. 12-member. bi-partisan commission which In lftoE produced recommendations for streamlining virtually the entire executive branch of the govern- The strategy meeting was told that about 55 percent of the rec ommendations have become law in the past three vhafs- thaf k resultant savings can be estimated- a ted -4 ... b.uuiiu vwo ounon dollars nually, and that adoption of --i,iiiiu,k noover proposals cA oave buuui anomer 3 ft billions. Six May Race In GOP Field PORTLAND IB six RepubH cans, some ol them unwilling can didates, may be on the Oregon presidential primary JballoL - Petitions . to put Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon on the ballot were ordered printed Tuesday at Oregon City. Also Tuesday, F. E.. Epton took to the state capltol for filing. peUtions signed for Gen.-Douglas MacArthur. - Only Monday two Republicans, Mrs. Fred Gronert and C. C. Mar tin, had petiUons prepared for Harold E. Stassen and Gov.-Earl Warren They said they wanted the people to have a chance at all potential candidates. Tuesday, in adding Morse to the list. thv pointed out that labor groups had mentioned mm. READY 1 - . . Signed petitions for am rtoiaht Eisenhower are ready for filing whenever the sponsors decide- lo do so. And petitions were put in cir culation last week for Sen. Robert A. Taft, lust after he had visited the state and said he would not enter the Oregon primary. " candidate nas no final voice on that. Under Oregon law, 1,000 signatures put a candidate on the ballot for his primary nomination. MacArthur has said he is not a candidate, but Epton has declined to accept the general's statements should not be on the Oregon ballot. Sports Bulletin OSLO UV-Canada took over un disputed lead In the Olympic games hockey tournament Tues day with a close 4-1 decision over Czechoslovakia.