The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 13, 1949, Page 7, Image 7

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    nicKeiuoop
Protests Veil
Over He
anngs
New Woodburn Bank Open for Business Today SkoiirasTops Z
Corporation
Salary List
WASHINGTON. June 12 -AV
6enator Hickenlooper (R-Iowa)
Saturday bitterly protested the
raising of secrecy ban in the con
gressional airing of his "incred
ible mismanagement" charge -gainst
the atomic energy commis
sion.
The Iowan. chief critic of AECI
chairman David E. Lilienthal, de
manded a one-day delay in pu
blic hearings to thresh out the pro
blem but with only partial success.
.Senator McMahon, chairman of:
the senate-house atomic investi
gating committee, turned down th
delay request but aereed to a
closed-door session of the com
mittee Monday afternoon to hear
Hickenlooper's objections.
McMahon said Dr. J.. Robert Op
penheimer, who directed research
on the atomic bomb, had been cal
led to testify before the committee
Monday morning. Oppenheimer
now heads the Institute of ad
vanced studies at Princeton. N. J., I
and Is chairman of the OKC's gen
eral advisory committee.
BUler ever Decision
Hitkenlooper. bitter over a
f-to-8 committee decision yester
day requiring him to present his
evidence against the commission's
loyalty review program behind
closed doors, had said earlier:
No progress can be made in
this investigation if the curtain
of secrecy is rung down every time
embarrassing evidence is offered.
' .Said he was sticking to the open
healing plan for two reason: (A)
TJiete had been "conflicting testi
mony" on the matter of shipments
of radioactive isotopes to foreign
countries, and (B) Dr. Oppenhei
mer Li "visiting the west coast next i
w'k and is only available fori
testimony on Monday."
Tells Conference
McMahon told a news confer
ence:
I. He will a?ain bring up th. If . 1 .f
matter of shipping tddioaclive gj Ol Cl ifl (U (I
isotopes i atomic iKimuarneo ut.i
teiial) to foreign nation.-' if Hicken
looper is not ready Monday. Mc
Mahon -said the matter has been
"left hanging in air" as a resu'.t of
last week's testimony.
2. The committee is turning to
Attorney General Tom C'lai k ani
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for
advice on how to proceed with the
loyalty issues raised by Hicken
loopor. A subcommittee of three
4 McMahon, Senator Millikoti
(B-C'olo. ) and Kep. Henry M.
Jackson (D-Wash.) has been
named" to meet with the enfoi ce
ment officials. No date has been
iianged.
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American Gets
2-Faced Watch
fh statesman, oqiem. urxyoa, Mondcry. Ain 1 3. 1343 T
WASHINGTON. Jure U-1A-
Charles P. Skouras, an $810.0OO-a-'
year, Greek-born movie theater
magnate, was listed by the treas
ury tonight as America's highest
paid corporation employe in 1947 !
Betty Grable. with $208,000. was i
the' best paid of her sex in a list!
of over 1,000 persons who drew
more than $75,000 in pay from
NEW YORK, June 12 -vP- An
American (unidentified ) "has
bought what is probably the sec
ond most complicated watch i
the world for between $25,000 and
$30,000. This is reported by the
men who made it in Geneva.
Switzerland.
The watch has two faces. One
shows besides time in secoru's.
minutes and hours, the time of
; sunset and sunri.e and has a sky
; map showing visible constella
j tions. The other has a repeater
, to give the time to the minute, an
alarm clock, a calendar and it
4 Survivors of
Boat Tragedy
; Reach Hospital
ANCHORAGE. Alaska. June 12
(flVFour aurvivors of a fiahing
boat accident in Alaskan waters
that took five lives, arrived here
today in a 10th Rescue Squadron
Flying Fortress.
All four were able to walk from
sich; his 30-year old son, Tony,
member of the Washington ttaU
legislature; Anton Morrozich of
Seattle, a cook; Vincent Vlastelica
of Everett, and Frank Suryan 4
Anacortes, Wash.
. Those snatched from the ley
waters by the Johnnie B. were
Capt. Mardesich's three other sons:
August Paul. 29; Joseph, 25, and
Nick, jr, 24; and a nephew, An
tone, 20. of San Pedro, Calif.
Physicians said Joseph may b
kept under observation today be
cause he was having littla
trouble with his ears from immtr,
sion in water. The others said
they intended to fly to SeattU
early thip afternoon.
The survivors had been taken
Dcnham Asks
Clarification
Of Labor Law
Promotes His
Ex-Employer
PHILADELPHIA, June 12-f.P-Kurt
A. Smith, manager of the
Penn-Sheraton HotclJ saw Paul
Zeidler, a waiter, at a recent party.
It didn't take Smith long to make
Zeidler captain of the Penn-Sher-
f'a ton's dming room.
The twomen first met in Munich
in '920 ; Zeidler wjas majority
i stockholder in a lacge bank. Smith
was a messenger in the same bank.
I Out of the kmd-ness of his heart
Smith siid, Zeidler bought some
s'ock for the young bank messen
ger and later sold it for him at a
profit when Smith needed home
money. Then Smith j obtained e,
hotel j oh and the two men lost
trace of on.e another, j
Zeidler continued to'prosper un
til littler rose to poer. Wheu
Hitler ruled that Jews could not
own banks, Zeidler began operat
ing his country estate as a hotel.
Finally in 1939. the Zeidler family
was forced to leave Germany.
The Zeidlers traveled to Shang
hai where.he opened a restaurant.
That venture ended when the Jap
anese entered the city. Iater he
opened smaller ietaurant but
American IjomOmg planes wiped
WOODBURN Staff members af the Bank f Oregon are shown in
their new bank whieb open Monday In Woodburn, of which the
present bank In Gervais will be a branch. Open house was Satur
day! Left to right are Mrs. G. T. Wadsworth, director; Homer Wads
worth, executive vice president and manarer of the Woodburn bank;
Fern Wadsworth Foster: G. T. Wadsworth. president; Donna Son-,
nerj bookkeeper; R. V. Colby, cashier; Helen Hitler, vice president
. and; manager of the Gervals branch; Lusrene Hanes, Gervais assist-j
ant manager; Dorothy Andres, bookkeeper. The new bank has mod
rn innovations including the ear service window being demonstrat
ed it left by Paul Wadsworth, son of Homer Wadsworth. (States
mail photos.)
t
Tie First 100 Years Aren't the
Hilrdesl'Says One Who Knoics;
i
PORTLAND, June 12-(.P)-William L. Yeater says that old saw
about) the "first hundred years being the hardest" is a lot of bunk.,
!(e should know. Yeater celebrated hts 101st birthday anniver
sary loday. He believes his first year in his second century was
tougher than any in the last one.
ijooking back a century, Yeater observed "times wero never so
terribpy tough as they seemed
then.'j But his lament at the mo
ment lis being forced to go about
with la cane. He fell and broke
one Hip bone two years ago.
"Another thing." reported Yea
ter. "pot many fellow around to
talk Ijo. When I try to tell these
young fellows 'how things were
in my time, they look and say
'tetchjed in the head'." j A largo Salem group returned
Alter settling in Dakota terri- to the city Sunday evening after
Salem Group
Winds Up Tour
Of Dam Sites
corporations in 1947 or in busi
ness fiscal years ending in 1948.
It was- the third consecutive
year at the top for Skouras, al
though his compensation as pre
sident of National Theatres
Amusement Co., Inc., and of Fox
i west coast Agency corp. was
$175,300 less than they paid him
the year before.
All the sums which the treas
ury lusted were before taxes. On
single persons, the 1947 federal
income lax alone ran about $675.
000 on a net income of $800,000,
about S408.000 on Income of $500.-
uuu. auuui xo,ivu on ,
and about $149,000 on $200,000
some states, state income
took an additional bite.
Miss Grable and actress Ol
de Havilland were the only wom
en among the 47 persons cred
in the new list as earning more
than S.200 000 rlnrincr 1047 I
....... t" '"'--' - - e ...
No movie stars made the top
ten money earners, which feat
ured businessmen to an extent un
usual in recent years. In the top
ten behind Skouras were:
2. Vincent Riggio, president of
the American Tobacco company,
with $484,202 in salary and bonus.
3. Preston Sturges, movie di
rector. Twentieth Century - Fox
m corp., $370,650.
4. E. H. Little, president. Col-
gate-Palmolive-Peet Co., $350,000.
5. A. A. Someiville, executive,
of tho R. T. Vanderbilt co , S319,
398. 6. Seton Porter, president. Na
tional Distillers Produces corp.,
$310,000.
7. William Randolph Hearst,
publisher, $300,000. with $150,000
each from Hearst Consolidated
Publications. Inc., and Hearst
Publications, Inc.
8. Theodore Selter, president.
Bengue. Inc.. $295,613.
9. Eugene G. Grace, board chair
man, Bethlehem Steel co., $293,
279 10 G. A. Bryant, president, the
Austin co., $270,789.
shows leap years and moon
phases.
The Geneva craftsmen say the
most complicated watch in the I
world was made bv Charles Pi- I
the plane to a waiting ambulance j from the scene of the accident h
and car, which took them to Prov
idence hospital here for observa
tion. Attendants said all but one
probably would be released today.
Tragedy struck the fishing vessel
guet ol Switzerland s Joux Val-; iunsex and ner ntne crewmen
ley. It was stolen from a Paris 1 early Saturday. The survivors
shop window during t he Nazi oc- I said the vessel, skippered by Nick
cupation of Paris in 1942. It has ! Mardesich, of Everett, Wash., was
not been found since. struck by a huge wave in False
Besides the things shown by the p separating the tip of Alaska
Geneva watch, the Piguet watch, peninsula Irom Unimak, tho first I
among other things, shows the in lh Aleutian chain. j
eauinoxes and seasons, and has a 1 Before the craft could right her-;
thermometer - hvornm.l.r h,r. If. Second mOUnUinOUS WSVt
ometer and a compass. ' i ruck. capsizing the Sunset The
cued by another fishing boat, the
Johnnie B.
The victims wcie Capt. Maide-
nerby Cold Bay where they
boarded tho plane for Anchorago.
Meantime, another 10th Rescue
Squadron plane was en route hera
with the bodies of the victims. A
message from survivors last night
said all but tho bodies of Tony
NJardesich and Morrowich were,
recovered.
A
torv ih '83 and homesteading south
of Bimark, Yeater served in var
ied political capacities in Emmons
county. After 1910 he wintered in
California. Florida or Oregon but
went back to Hazel ton, N.D7 each
summer. Since his accident, he
hasn't felt up to tho trip.
Yeater confessed his 101st birth
day Was disappointing. "Hoped
somebody would drop In today
with a bottle, but nobody has
yet." ihe complained.
WASHINGTON. Juno I1-C4V
Pobert N. Deiihain, the xovern
inent official who receives non
communist affidavits from labor
leaders, wood amidst his ciamm-d
.filing cabinets today and made
this urgent plea to congress:
"If these affidavits are 1o be
required of corporation officeis.
t'X), please give us some definition j out that business
of 'officer'." After working
He said that unless some limits!- .
are imix.ed, there will be "an ad-l
ministrative burden that simply I
cannot be carried." '
Denham, who is general counsel !
of the national hilwo relation
board, told a reporter that legisla-i
tors are "simply not giving enough i
Study" to that problem.
The serrate is Hlmut 1o jtai t the :
grroiid week of its debate on i
changing the Taft-Hartley law.;
The senators iwem almost certain
to approve a prov ision l ecjuu irg j
both union and mployeM to iilei
affidavits if thev w;-nt to do bu- J
iness with the NLHM.
t'nder Talt-Hai ilev. 'iil v union j
officers air requited to io .tin
Mote than 100,000 have Mrd the'
mths. J
Dunham said his offir and thej
ffve-m.iu bojid have a hard job 1
rtMei mining who aie union "o-
ficvis" le-ause the law was no' I
f'e;n on a numlier of poinls. 1
Denham said lhat if the lequire- i
ment is esten'ded .to inmpany "of- j
fir"is" without adeyiiiite tlnrifi-'
f ! 1 1 m. I lit nrf.li1m VL-ill lw ill. I
m4 npposiblv complex. ! m
waiter in
Shanghai, Zeidler decided to bring
his wife to the United States in
1947. ! In Philadelphia, Zeidler ob
tained a job as a waiter at the
Broaqwood Hotel. There ho
countered Smith while the latter
was attending a private party.
Smjth doesn't consider tho job
he gaive Zeidler an act of kindness
alone! A man of Zeidler's ability,
Smith says, is a business asset.
"Who knows." the hotel manager
added. "Maybe I'll bo calling him
boss again someday."
a two-day tour of Willamette val
ley protects climaxed by inspec
tion of the nearly-completed Dor
ena dam Sunday afternoon. .
The 30-car caravan toured sev
eral projects south of Eugene Sun
day, after having visited sites and
works in the Detroit, Harrisburg
and Fern Ridgo areas Saturday
and staying overnight in Eugene.
BRITISH TRAINS TIED UP
LONDON, Sunday, June I2-iVPi-j
Rail traffic between London and
I Britain's north country was dis-
rupted for the fourth consecutive
! Sunday today by a wildcat strike
! of rebellious trainmen.
j
; izens on progress of tho various
At Dorena tho party of about i dams, had several spects of a testi-
100 men and women had luncheon rnonial for Col. O. E. Walsh, Port
at the project mess hall, later, land district army engineer who
were escorted across tho bottom has just been promoted to north
of the vast cleared area which west division engineer with four
will bo filled with water as stor-' districts under his control. Walsh
age in the interest of flood con- has headed valley projects plan
trol. ! nng the past three years as district
Tho trip, besides posting the clt- ; engineer.
)0. Injm i r
,aHly dings Says
Dlivia1 J C J
B' Lilienthal Not
Wary Enough
WASHINGTON. June 12-OV
Senator Tydings (D-Md) said to
day chairman David E. Lilienthal
has failed to take enough care In
safekeeping atomic energy com
.mission secrets.
Tydings is a member of the
senate-house atomic committee
investigating Lilienthal's adminis
tration. He said in a radio interview he
thinks the, AFC chairman has not
been "as judicious as we have a
right to expect of one who has
charge of such an important agen
cy, an operation that affects the
life and welfare of all of us."
Tydings added, however, that
he thinks "in many resects Mr.
Lilienthal has done a good job."
He said he wants to keep his mind
'reasonably open" until all th
facts of tho committee's Inquiry
come out.
His statement came as the com
mittee prepared to open a third
week of hearings tomorrow into
charges by Senator Hickenlooper
(R-Iowa) of "incredible misman
agement" against Lilienthal.
Senator McMahon (D-Conn)
announced that Dr. J. Robert Op
penheimer, chairman of A EC's
general advisory committee and
former director of the Los Ala
mos, N. M , weapons laboratory,
will totify during tho forenoon.
This will bo followed in the
afternoon by a closed session to
discuss the "curtain of .secrecy"
which Hickenlooper charged ha
been "rung down every time em
barrassing evidence is offered."
For th Time of
Your LifI
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Oragaa OJtr
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(AjBim I
Ll'' an ,:A I
388 N. Commrciol Street
Salem, Oregon