ML i In. The lavslws !,',.!'. il...-. II y FRANK JKNKINN ,, I'vo been lulkliiK lo some friends who tin vo Just returned from Ku rone England, Scotland, the Nrlh- erinndn, Helghim, Hie Aiiii'ilciin j ("no "I Clcrninny. Franco, I'orlu , iiul, Hpulh, KwltMirliiiiil, part i( ' Austria. They miw unite n lot of 11 In till" course i( liner or luiir months mid talked to a lot of pro. 'llio report Ihrv bring buck dlf- fern rather ntrlklngly from wlmt wo rend In the paper mm from the nicuiinln given In un hv a lot ul our big fihoiH especially our govcriiinoniiil bin nhotn. I'crliiiDN Til belter explain whv llii'V went, 'lliry lo.il it mm In llio lain uiiplrnnuntnrnn. lie wan u bom bardier nnd our llnv IiIk bomber illiln't conic buck Iroin 11 mission. II wui ii Hull' lliluu In n wnr nn U villi im the lust line, bill It wunn t a little IIiIiik lo tliriii. II wun every- . IIiIiik In tht! world. II In body wun found, nnd luid ' brrn burlrd In u little I tit I lit it ccino- ;' trry. Alter pence caiuo, It wun i removed to thin country. These .? pnrentn wnnled to nee where their - Min'n bomber hud been "hot Jlnm ' Ink down out of the nkv. They . wanted lo nee where It tell, They ; wanted to nee the Utile plot of earth wherein hit innrtul bourn hud lulu during llielr brief nojiuirn III it foreign Mill. Thrv wmited l know the kind of people for whom nnd among whom he hnri fnUKht. TrlflPfi? Oh, no! Much things nrrn't trlflrn to the parents of noun who tell In ft lorelgn wur. They mo terribly, terribly Impoi linn. We cun now, I think, net on ! with our nlory which, In the innlii. In thin: Americans lire NOT populur ANYWHERE IN EUROPE. Thcv urn leant populur. Ihene frlendn I ve been quoting think, In Frnnre. Amrrlcnnn nre LEAST UNFOPU I. AM. they udd, In Spnln and In Portugal. 1 That, of emirne, In very, very Inlere.itlnn. We haven't brrn In hpnln very long and In Portugal hardly at all. In these two covin trlen wr are readying the nark from which we ahull later tonn In menu. Tluil In In nay. Die attitude of the Spanish and the Portugese toward un In a lively nntlrlpulion of henrflln VKT TO COME. Elsewhere In Europe, we've pretty much done our do, and are begin ning lo talk of cutting- down. If the Russlnns move, will the Europeans fight? My frlenda doubt It very much Indeed. Nowhere In Europe, they nay, (lid they find any enthusiasm whutnoever for flKhllnit under ANY rireumnlnncen. The opinion rnlhcr urnerully nremn to be, they report: ' If there In iiolnu to be another Kurnpean wnr, lei the Americans ..JJliht II, We've done our tlghiinp." Over here, war In the enernlly prevailing nublrct of convernntlnn. Over there, It III practically never mentioned, Are the Europeans really In bnd nhaiie? Thai In, nre Uiey hungry and nhnbby? My frlendn nay In annwer to that: "We never naw no many fur coaln In our liven. An a mutter of I net, we didn't know there were so mnny In the world. "As to food, there in plenty of It." How about . the English? ' Well, the Engllnli. they any. nre more courteous In the expresnlon of their dislike of us Ihnn Uic pco plen of most other countries. And the English do realize not only that we fought beside them In the war but thnl we -have stood be hide them unfailingly In the great problems of pence. But TJIEY DON'T I.IKE US. Nobody In Europe likes un. I.et'n put It fhls wny: Suppose the hint vnr had been fought on OUR noil, In OUR c ltlen. 8uppose the British or the French, or the acrmnns. hd come over nnd saved un nnd after saving us hud nlnyed on. living In our houses and In our best holds, eat ing up our food, corrupting our manners nnd generally losing no opportunity to point out to un how much they had done for un and how huge In the debt of gratitude we owe them. Would we love these Interlopers? WE WOULD NOTIHI We'd despise the ground they walked on, and we'd loso no op portunlty to pull their noses nnd tweak their ears. Nobody ever i loven anybody Hint he owes any I thing to. Thnt'n one of the fundu rrentnln of human nnturo thnt wo too often lose sight of. Acheson Sees Tough Future LI8B0N. Portugal "B A grave faced Dean Acheson told the 'At Jnntln Allien, opening their ninth council season Wednesday: "Wo must take actions thnt will strain nil of us to llio utmost. "It Is B task for governments and for peoples," the U.S. Secretary of State said. "We must develop the concrete military strength which alone can insure our people against the destruction and suffcrng of another war." Two now membcrn, Orccce and Turkey, Joined the 12 Western Al lies In a meeting of the North At lantic Treaty Organization council composed of foreign, defense and finance ministers. Portuguese Foreign Minister Paulo Cunlin, In the role of host, broke into the usunl welcoming pleasantries with a pica for tho nd mlnson of Spain to tho alllnnce. He blunted Spain's exclusion as a strategic absurdity, and nuld de fense of tho Ibcrinn Peninsula was indlvlsble, 1 Achcsons words catno shortly flitter reliable reports said North Atlantlo Trenty Organization eco nomic experts hod reported that the 100 division military target for 19M will fall 12 per cent short of realization, f I v. K , fSi 'A&'k- i A I , 'I ,? i SHIP DEAL TALKS Joseph E. Casey (left), Washington lawyer and a former congressman from Massachusetts, and Vice Atlm. E. L. Cochrane, maritime administrator, are tell ing a Senate investigating committee in Washington, D.C., about a complex surplus tanker transaction which netted a syndicate headed by Casey a 3Vi million dollar profit on a $101,000 investment. , , Solons Seek Ship Profit, Morris Link WA8HINOTON l Sennte In vcsllgnlors called Joseph E. Casey before them alimn lnte Wcdnesdny to tell about bin drnllnKb If nny with Ncwbold Morris. President Truman's corruption sleuth. , Casey, a former Democratic rep resentative from Massachusetts and now a Wu.ihlnffton Inwyer. al so will br asked for more details on a surplus ship deal In which he piloted 11 1101.000 cash Investment into 1 1 '1 million dollar profit for himself and some prominent iriends. LARGE FEES Casey's group in reported to have pnld lurgc fees to Morris' New lorn luw linn lor un counsel on some nspecUi of the deal. Morris hiin denied receiving any money In the case. The New York liernld Tribune Wcdncsduy quotes his luw partner. Houston H. Was sun, un saying Morris shared In a "normal division" of the law firm's Hit 01110. - '' Senntor ' JI 0 e y D-N.C, chair man of the Senate Investigations subcommittee, described the in quiry as one which might: 1. Set off sweeping moves for federul sel7.tire of ships sold by the U.S. Maritime Commission after World War II to Casey's group and others. 2. Bring a tightening of the tax laws as a result of testimony thai prolltuble ship charter rentals were exrmpt from U.8. taxation. Hoey said he also wunts to determine "whether tuxes were avoided'' im properly. WITNESSES The subcommittee disclosed It In tends to call as witnesses Robert W. Dudley, Casey's brother-ln-liiw, and Joseph II. Rosenbuum, ' Wash ington lawyers mimed by a Senate bunking subcommittee lnsl Febru ary an members of a group which exerted Improper influence on the Reconstruction Finance Corpora tion. Casey defended Uie ship deal be fore the subcommittee Tuesday. lie cieniea any "tax escaping schemes, but conceded the trims- action "undoubtedly wan ndvnn- liiRcoun from a tax standpoint." Francis D. Flanagan, subcom mittee counsel, questioned Casey closely an to why his group bought live oil tankers from the Maritime Commission In 1047. formed a U.S. company lo own them, and set up a subsidiary firm In Panama ex empt from U.S. taxes to collect charter rentals on Uic vessels. Weather FORECAST: Klamath Falls and vicinity, few snow flurries, clear ing Wednesday night. Partly cloudy Thursday with snow flur ries townrd evening. Low Wednes nesdny night 12. high Thursday 33 Northern California, showers Wed nesday night turnlnr to rain Thurs dny. Snow In mountains. High Tuesday 31 Low lust night id I'reclp Tuesday 02 rreelp since Oct. 1 12.32 Normal for period 7.0(1 'crlod last year 11.00 OPS Ponders Potato Ceiling Increases By MALCOLM EPI.EY JR. Farm Editor - Tho Office of Price Stabllzaton in Washington, D. C, was reported by the Associated Press today to be considering granting Idaho growers and nine other states ad justments In potato prices. It aunted possible Increases to Idaho growers would bo 20 cents In a projected "disaster" clause. No mention of hlko amount lor other states were mcntlonod, nor was Oregon stated as one of 'the nine other states. Howcvor. potatomcn hero said It probably is. uva onicinis declined to give cx- nnt. nmminljt pven for Uie Idaho white potato growers. Idaho Is al ready holding an OPS-granted 20 cent premium over oUier Western States In potato cellng prices. Some action was said to be In firospect by the eqd of the week, he AP said. BULLETIN INTO DEMANDED WASHINGTON (') The House Wednesday demanded that Presi dent Truman supply full Informa tion on any commitments made lo Prime Minister Churchill In their January talks. The roll call vote wan IBS to 143. Seamen Cling To Yreckage CHATHAM. Mann. l Thirteen wenry senmen, true to tile tradi tion of the nens, stuck ll out Wednesday on the derelict stern of n broken tanker hoping to sulvagc the hulk. Crewmen of Uie tanker Ft. Mer certorn In half bv the winter s worst storm two days ago passed up rescue Tuesdny night. Twenty live of their mates were token olf the wreck by Coast Guardsmen. SALVAGE Eighteen of them reached Boston Wednesday aboard the culler Achushncl, while tugs and other cullers hovered around the bob bing wreckuKO mapplns oul tul vago plans. . - : Hie master of the Acushnct, Lt. Cmdr. John M. Joseph of Truro. Mnsn., said he could have taken all the men off. "There were several elderly men aboard who were nlrnld to take a chance and Jump (to life rafts bob bing on the rough seas)," he told newsmen. 11 was hoped the stern section could be towed lo port, but the ves sel's owners In New York, the Trinidad Corporation, said a deci sion might be made to sink 11 by gunfire. The Coast Guard had said the wreckage is a menace to nav igation. TWO TORN The Ft. Mercer, loaded with fuel oil for New England ports, was one ol two 10,000 ton tankers torn in hull In the vicious northeaster storm off tho Cnpc Cod fishing community. Both halves of tho other tanker, the Pondlcton, washed aground Tuesday. Strike Stops Transit Lines SAN FRANCISCO Wl A strike by municipal railway workers tied up the city's entire transit system at 5 a.m. Wednesday. That forced many thousands to drive or hike lo work. Mayor Elmer E. Robinson said because of Uie emergency workers could park their cam anywhere even in Ihe middle of Market Street 1 the main thoroughfare ) if ncces snry. He said Ihe city would go Into court and demand an anti-strike injunction. The A Fli Carmen's Union nu Uiorlzcd the strike by a vote of 313 to 62 In an early morning meeting. CIO carmen said they would ob serve llio strike. P The number of transit employes affected wan not reported. The transit employes arc protest ing r change In schedules that spread eight hours of work over more than 10 Hours. Meanwhile In Portland the Ore gonlnn today reported some Califor nia potato buyers are disregarding celling prices In bidding for Ore gon potntocs. The newspaper said the Califor nia 11s are outbidding Oregon and Washington buyers at Redmond and Klamath Falls, some paying 86 cents above the celling price, or $4.66 a 100-pound sack. Theoretically, under OPS ceilings, a grower might possibly become a shipper himself, and OPS margin nt the retailer Is $4,66 per hun dred pounds. One Redmond shipper was re ported by tho Orogontan to have been approaohed by a Fresno deal er who offered "whatever price is necessary" for n truckload of po tatoes. Tho Fresno man was quot ed as snylng he needed tjie spuds to meet competition, Other fruit salesmen, he said, are offering oranges with a tie-In potato sale. Price FI.P V KLAMATH FAI.L8, OREGON, WEHNEHDAY, FEBRUARI 20, 195Z Telephone Sill No. 27 Commies Stall Truce Talk HST Orders Probe Of Air Crashes WA8H1NOTON 11 President Truman Wednesday appointed a special commission to make an In vestigation Into air crashes and crowded airports. He named the famed flier, James H. Doollttle. as chairman. Doom- tie, a retired general, led the first World War II raid on Tokyo. Charles F. Home, administrator of Civil Aeronautics, and Dr. Je rome C. Hunsaker, head of the Department of Aeronautical Engi neering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, were named to serve with him. In a letter to Doollttle disclosing appointment of the temporary commission, the President said. "For Borne time now, I have been seriously concerned about airplane accidents, bc'h commercial and military, that have occurred In the tnke-off and landing of aircraft, areas." Setting' up ' of the commission came as the aftermath of a series of three airplane crashes at Eliza beth. N. J., within two months, which took a toll of 118 lives. Wife Right, Uses Might TOKYO W Women used to be mighty meek In Japan when ihey didn't have any rights, but not in this democratic day. Mrs. Klsaku Inoue beat up her husband, an unheard of feat in the old days. Inoue sued for divorce. Japan's Supreme Court said Wednesday it was OK for Mrs. Inoue to beat her husband. It said Inoue wasn't entitled to a divorce because his philandering started all the trouble. Plane Strikes, Kills Woman MEXICO CITY ( The sum mit of the centuries-old Pyramid of the Sun was stained Wednesday with the blood of a U.S. diplomat's wife, killed by a low-flying private plane which hit her as she stood atop the 216-foot monument 28 miles from here. The dead woman was Mrs. Elea nor Wernlmont, of Aurora, 111., wife of Agricultural Attache Ken neth Wernlmont of the U.S. Em bassy here. INJURED Her sister and niece. Mrs. Wil liam Bailey of Yorkville, 111., and Gernldlne Bailey, 20, to whom she was showing the historic pyra mid, were injured by the plane. The accident occurred Tuesday. The 18-year-old pilot of the plane, Jose Galil Velazquez, of Bogota, Colombia, landed his aircraft safe ly amid the ancient ruins surround ing the pyramid. He and another 18-year-old flying with him. Francisco Atayde Garcia of Mexico City, were held on charges of homicide by negligence. PICTURES The pilot said he got his private flying license last month and was flying low to take pictures of the pyramid. Mrs. Wernlmont had taken the party to sec the ancient ruins at San Juan Teotthuncan. which arch eoloRlsIs believe date from at least 2,000 years ago. 1 As they stood on top of the pyra mid, the little plane's wheels dashed through the group. Mlulgc Bungle KENNEWICK, Wash. Iifl Bulg es In the wrong places trapped a woman in a food store here. Store employes found three slices of ham under her coat. When police were cnlled, they hit the Jockpot. They found three steaks tucked In to her stocking tops. The OPS said It, was having trou ble investigatng potato shipments out of the Klamath Falls area be cause some shipments were made without bills. The Herald and News two weeks ago quoted local shippers as saying they had been offered "cash-on-the-slde" deals to get potatoes to Cal ifornia markets. One shipper said he had been offered $200 per car extra above the Oakland market price for spuds. Others said they had been offered side deals of $1 per 100 pounds extra on any spud they could dig up for "outside op erators." Later the OPS In Seattle was re ported as declaring a vicious black market existed In Klamath Falls and Twin Falls, Ida., nam ing the Illegal operations active at the shipper level. However, Klamath growers called on the OPS to "put up or shut up" when lt tailed to show proof of its Dying Baby's Life Saved by Firemen ( ) JOHN G. JONES I LaGrande Man Eyes Congress John G. Jones, LaGrande radio station manager, probably will seek the Democratic nomination for Congress from the Oregon 2nd District. So far there arc no aspirants ' ell Stockman, Republican from 1 Pendleton, on the Democratic tick et, but Jones said in an interview here yesterday he was seriously considering going after the Con gressional post and would nave an announcement one way or another in a lew days. There are two avowed Kepuon can candidates: Giles French, Moro newspaper publisher and member of the Stale Legislature, .and Lt, Ernest-Frederick Hinklc ol The IJalles, wno at present is stationed In New York with the Air Force. Stockman, finishing his fifth term as Oregon's 2nd district Con gressman, has announced he would not seek re-election. Jones was mentioned as a pos sible candidate on the Democratic ticket two years ago, but at that time personal responsibilities kept him from running. Now, he said, he believes he is in a position to make the race. Jones is 45. married and has two sons, boih married. He has been manager of KLBM at La Grande for about six years and has been a resident of Eastern Oregon some 15 years. Several years ago he was a high school track coach at Bend and later worked at KBND, the Bend radio station, then for the Army Engineers at Camp Abbott, near Bend. In the latter part of World War II he worked for a time in Portland, then went to Bavaria with Uie UNRRA for a year. He Is a native of Iowa. Jones is an able speaker and makes a very good appearance, but is making his debut in elec Uve politics. At LaGrande he is a past pres ident of the Chamber of Commerce Rotarv Club and of the Northeast ern Oregon Development Associa tion is Presbvterian and member of the Elks and. Grange. An interesting sidelight In Jones possible candidacy on the Demo cratic ticket is the fact that Mrs. Marshall Cornett of Klamath Falls, one of the owners of the radio sta tion Jones manages, is Republi can National Committeewoman from Oregon and only this week announced she would seek re-elec- tinn In thnt nost. Mrs. Cornett said that if Jones wanted to run for Congress as a Democrat it is certainly his privi lege an dthat their political dif ferences would hove no bearing on his radio station work. HORSES WON COLUMBUS, O. I Two Ohio owned horses, a pacing gelding named Paratrooper and a trotting mare calld Nancy urimm, were the leading dash winners on the American harness racing turf in 1951. statements. The OPS later de clared in Portland it had never claimed a black market actually existed, but only "threatened." Maanwhlla Ihn Pnt-tlflnd OPS RTI. nounced todoy retail potato sellers m Oregon ana nve ouuuiwea Washington counties must file po- l-tn nAB, fimtrae wllh th Porl.lnnri office so new markup regulations can oe emorcea. The markup, which Is applied to the price the retailer pays, ranges liwm no nai-AMit - hulk and 20 Der- cent packaged In larger stores to 35 percent OUIIC ana .perceni. packaged in smaller stores. in.- Im.i Diata nemavtmftnr or Agriculture office reported this morning an esumaieu tm load of potatoes remain In the VInmnfK TOoeln 7t. cfllri 7.469 CRT- loads had been shipped to date this season, of an estimated 10.000 cars produced In. the basin -last year. 9 City Firemen are credited with last night. And according to- Mrs. James Savage, maternal grandmother of Michael James Bllyeu. "that ma chine they used (an E and J re- suscllatori is the most wonderful thing in the world." Mrs. Savage Is staying with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bllyeu, 743 California. "I was giving the baby its 10 o'clock formula last night," Mrs. Savage said, "when all of a sudden milk started coming out the cor ners of its mouth, and the baby went limp." Mrs. Savage stated she and Mrs. Bllyeu tried raising Michael's arms above his head and then turned him upside down, but to no avail. So the fire department was called and arrived in a matter of minutes though it seemed longer, according to Mrs. Savage. "They put the baby on the floor nnd started the machine going," Mrs. Savage told the Herald and News this morning, and on the third trf the baby was revived, she said. Thin morning young Michael seemed normal, his grandmother related, and was sleeping late with his mother. Mother Kills Two Children RENTON. Wash. Wl A mother who said she thought death was the "only way out" of domestic financial difficulties shot and killed ber two small sons Tuesday night, detectives reported, then failed in an attempt to take Ber own life. The mother, Mrs. Madeline Smith. 31, was in a hospital here Wednesday with a bullet Just -below uie near;, .uociors- saia-ner con dluon was critical but they oe- lieved she would recover. Dead were her sons, John Thom as Smith, 10, and Michael Patrick, 5. Their father. Eugene J. Smith, 30, a. consulting engineer, found their "bodies w-nen he returned from work Tuesday night. On the table was a four page letter. Before he could read It he heard his wife moan In the bed room. There he found her gravly wounded. The boys were dead. A rifle lay on the floor. Mrs. Smith was taken to the New Renton Hospital where she gasped out a statement to County Detective Chief Adam Lyskoski. "I am tired of being a liar and a cheat," she told Lvskoskl. "My husband earned 15.000 last year and I spent aU of it. I didn't do any Uilng right." The letter to her husband said she had dissipated family savings, allowed payments on th hnn car and freezer to lapse. mis is me only way out," she wrote, "and I decided to take the babies with me." Vallgren May Seek Office WASHINGTON lfl Wallgren, former Washington State governor and U.S. senator, said Wednesday there is still a possibili ty he may run for elecUve office in his home state. "I plan to go back to the state in a little while and see how things stand," he told a report, "but righ now I'm not very enthused about Wallgren, a personal friend of President Truman, visited him at tho White House Tuesday. He de- cllned to say what they, talked about. Wallgren resigned last fall as chairmnn ol tho Federal Power commission. He has been men tioned as a possible candidate for governor, U.S. senator or congress man. Things' Seen In Korean Sky TOKYO l.fl American bomber crews have reported seeing strange looking objects over Korea at night. Air Force spokesmen in Tokyo and Korea refused to comment. They said the information was clas sified. Night-flying B-26 bomber pilots in Korea told of seeing "things" in the air. Earlier Air Force B-29 crewmen reported sighting "strange looking orange globes" In nlpht tllehts. One veteran pilot in Korea said the "orange globes" could be flashes of exhaust from Communist Jets. Red MIG-15 Jets nave been reported over North Korea at night. The Washington spokesman said the crewmen told their superiors that the globes were about three feet In diameter, generally light orange in color with an occasional change to a bluish tint. U.N. Balks On Soviet Supervision By GEORGE McARTHUR MUNSAN, Korea I Commu nist Insistence that Russia be In vited as a neutral nation to help supervise a Korean truce stalled armistice talks Wednesday. The Allies offered "in the In terest of progress" to pare then troop rotation llgure from 40,000 monthly to 35,000. But the Reds would not even talk about It. No specific progress was report ed from another truce meeting on prisoners of war. And no date was set for a third committee of staff officers to work out technicalities on the final truce clause recom mendations to governmental INSISTENT Red negotiators were insistent that the Soviet Union be the third neutral nation nominated by the Communists. The United Nations Command already has approved Poland and Czechoslovakia, U.N. negotiators refused to in dulge in a debate on the neutrality ol Russia in the Korean conflict despite repeated Red hints they would like such an argument. The Allies said simply that Rus sia, as sponsor of Jled Korea and Communist China, was "not ac ceptable" as a neutral supervisor. Col. Andrew Kinney said the Red nomination of Russia was not "ac ceptable to both sides" -as called for in previous agreements. viuLsiiun He said the Communist stand "is in direct violation of the agreement reached between the delegates and in violation of the instructions giv en to the staff meetings." (jommunist stall omcers insisted the nomination was "fully consist ent with the agreed principles of uie nomination-of neutral nations" and did not need Allied approval. ine neas said the proposed dralt for selecting neutrals did not spe cifically mention that both sides must approve. That agreement was oraL .- - - - - The draft provides merely that neutral nations must not have con tributed combatant .forces in the Korean War. No mention was made of the fact that Red air forces in Korea are supplied exclusively with Rus sian type planes, or that their ground forces use Russian type anti-aircraft guns, artillery, tanks and other equipment, or tnat tne North Korean army was Russian trained and advised. Senator Says Not Running WASHINGTON Wl "I am not a candidate for the Presidency of the United States. The people of my state know that" That was the comment of Sen. Wayne Morse (R.-Ore.) Tuesday when he was told that two Oregon Republicans were having petitions printed to put his name on the GOP Presidential primary ballot. Morse has urged the nominaUon of Gen. Dwight Elsenhower. ON THEIR WAY to work this morning when snapped by the photographer were Thomas Snowhill, 1972 Fremont, and Francis Landrum, 825 Newcastle, both employed at Swan Lake Moulding. . ' Prisoners To Revamp Jap Center Tulelake'i old Jap Camp, which during World War II housed as many an 20,000 Japanese aliens. In now being readied as a detention camp for subversives If and when the need comes to round up ele ments dangerous to this country. The military area of the "War Relocation Center has been taken over by the Department of Jus tice, and two men from McNeil island federal prison and another from the Bureau of Prisons have spent a week Inspecting the fa cility. C. F. Hlser, administrative man ager at McNeil, and T. F. Butter worth, engineer for the Bureau of Prisons, said that by April 1 about 40 prisoners from McNeil Islrfhd will be brought here to start the work of renovating the camp. TIME ' Construction and repair work probably will take all summer and part of the fall. Hiser said, and later on there probably will be as many as a hundred prisoners from nicneu at tne camp. - They will be "minimum Mmirl. ty" prisoners, Hiser said, and will be guarded. C. F. Craig, who has been cor rectional officer at McNeil has been left at the camp as caretaker. The facilities of the camp, when repaired and fenced, will be large enough to house from 60 to 1,000 internees, possibly more. Hiser said the Tulelake camn was Just one of six facilities the Bureau of Prisons is taking over to ready for possible use as iner ment camps for subversives. The others are at El Reno, Okla.; Wickenburg, Ariz; Florence, Arls.j Allenwood, Pa.; and Avon Park, Fla. Butterworth said all ttv camps are of about the same size. -As for the work Us be dnna Tulelake, Hlser said all personnel would bo transferred from other federal institutions that the Bu reau of Prisons Isn't hiring anyone at Tulelake. RUMORS Dozens of rumors hnv Iimh floating around about the purpose of the camp, but Hiser said there isn't anything for the residents of mat area to jear. "We get alone well with neighbors." he said. There are 44 buildings br the military area, which was used by tne Army during the life of tha Jap Camp, including barracks. store buildings, mess halls and the like. Hiser said the bureau of Pri sons plans at the moment to lease about a third of the buildings to the Tulelake Growers' Association for transient labor housing. The Growers association had leased the camp since the war from tho Bureau of Reclamation for tran sient labor. : . Ike Going On Oregon Ballot SALEM im Gen. Dwight Ei senhower's name will be placed on Oregon's Republican presidential primary ballot at 10 a.m. Thurs day, State Rep. Mark .Hatfield, Salem, said Wednesday. Hatfield, who sponsored the pe titons for the general and who Is a member of the statewide com mittee supporting him, said he has far more than the 1,000 signatures that ore needed. While the deadline for filing of candidates is March 7, only one name is on the presidential pri mary ballot In either party. That is Gen. Douglas MacArthur, whose name was entered Tuesdayi in the Republican race.