" jgiLSBid Board to Study CVA Legislation Members of the state board of control will study the propos ed Columbia Valley administra tion bill and probably make a report to a congressional sub committee expected in the northwest this fall. The study was suggested by State Treasurer Walter Pear son, who recently appeared in Washington and testified in fa vor of the bill. However, Pear son told the board that he thought there were some fea tures of the bill that would be objectionable to the state of Oregon. Gov. McKay, who also was in Washington, where he opposed the bill, agreed to the study and suggested that the attorney general sit in when the members go over the bill. The board also voted to in spect sites for the proposed $2,- 500,000 office building in Port land Thursday. An effort will be made to consult with mem bers of the Portland planning commission, the majority mem bers of which are in favor of a west side site. p W f w -1 Hamlet at Home Robert Breen, as Hamlet, holds Yo rick's skull in the play by Americans at Kronborg Cas tle, Elsinore, Denmark, where, tradition has it, Prince Ham let lived. Raps Failure To Mobilize Washington, June 29 ff Bernard Baruch took the Tru man administration to task Tuesday for failure to have ready a stand-by total mobiliza tion plan for a possible new war. The 77-year-old elder states man said the need for such plan "never was greater" be cause "the cold war is as total as actual war." "Yet," he said, "with the cold war dragging into its fourth year, we still lack any effective plan for the swiftest possible mobilization of our resources to insure reaching our allies in time." Baruch's text was prepared for graduating exercises com memorating the 25th anniver sary of the industrial college of the armed forces. "Additional delay," he warn ed, "is a needless gamble with our national security a need less invitation to disaster." Baruch nated that when' the the national security resources board to frame a complete war 'time mobilization plan. Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesday, June 29, 1949 17 'When this agency attempted to act it was, as you know, pre vented from doing so," he said. It has still to be heard from." Baruch told a reporter he meant a mobilization plan draft ed by the national security re sources board when Arthur M. Hill was its chairman. Baruch described it as "a full mobiliza tion plan, including price con trols and allocations of mater ials." He said the board approv ing it included seven cabinet members, yet President Truman turned it down. Hill resigned late last year and John Steelman, Mr. Tru man's assistant, has been serv ing since then as temporary chairman. Mr. Truman tried to appoint Mon Wallgren, a friend and former governor of the state of Washington, to the post but cancelled the appointment at Wallgren's request after it wai pigeonholed in the senate. Westbrook Is Honored Falls City Three daughters of L.C. Westbrook helped him to celebrate his birthday and Fathers' Day recently. They were Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dav is of Eugene, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Plank and family of Sa lem, Mr. and Mrs. Don Sund strom and family of Fall City. A dinner was given at the coun try home of Mr. and Mrs. Don Sundstrom for the event also with Mrs. Westbrook as a guest. Grandma's Family "Grandma," a deer on a farm at Arling while Harry Lund, farm superintendent, holds the other two. ton Heights, 111., stands over two of her quadruplet fawns AWKWARD HORATIO ALGER CHARACTER Displaced German Builds $50 into Wealth of Millions By PETER KALISCHER Tokyo U.R) A refugee German artist who was 19 when he arrived steerage class at Nagasaki in 1940 with $50 in his pocket is today one of the biggest business men in post-war Japan. His name Is Shou' Eisenberg, originally of Munich and thanks to Hitler, of Geneva, Luxem bourg, Strasbourg, Brussels, Paris, Antwerp, Rotterdam, Shanghai and now Tokyo. He started by painting oil por traits of a few Japanese tycoons and wound up becoming a tycoon himself. I first met Eisenberg early in 1946. He had a small shop on the Ginza, Tokyo's Broadway, where he sold cheap toys, nick nacks and curios. He still was taking commis sions for oil portraits, a source of income which tided him over the war years. v Last week he greeted me in the lobby of a Hong Kong hotel and returned to Tokyo on the same commercial air liner. I learned that in three and one-half years Eisenberg had become the president of three companies, owned two factories, acquired one-third of a seven story Tokyo office building, a whole one in Osaka and had branches all over Japan. He also owns housing developments In which most of his 1,200 em ployes live. Twenty-seven-year-old Eisen berg is also the largest export agent for Japanese aluminum enamel ware, copper and brass Vmanufacture and communica tions equipment, and sells the lion's share of Japanese textiles and textile machinery to India and southeast Asia. Two months ago he engineer ed a $2,500,000 sale of Japanese telephone and cable equipment to the Indian government. Soon he will represent the Indian Bahrat Air Lines, when it opens its Tokyo terminus. Eisenberg now is Incorporated in New York as well as Tokyo. Asked the obvious question, how did he get the snowball rolling? He replied: "Bathtubs. Aluminum bath tubs and Chinese rugs." He explained that in 1946 oc cupation officials ordered the Japanese government to furnish 20,000 bathtubs for army depen dent houses. The only bathtub factories in Japan turn out enam ed iron tubs by a slow and cost ly process. With my portrait commis sions during the war I invested . in Chinese rugs," Eisenberg said. "I sold the rugs after the sur render for a good profit and bought a small aluminum plant. Then I turned out quickly a nice, cheap aluminum bathtub snd showed it to the army." The army was enchanted and approved the model. With the order as collateral, Eisenberg borrowed 2,500,000 yen from the Japanese government and sub contracted the entire aluminum 'jidustry. Today nearly every American lamily in Japan takes a bath in in Eisenberg tub. "Myself, I prefer the old-fash- i HOT WEATHER! SHOP EARLY IF OlANTj OLYMPIA BEER FOR OVER THE WEEK-END?! ioned Japanese tile tub," Eisen berg admitted. In six months, concentrating on first priority army orders, Eisenberg gained control of the aluminum industry, brought the enamelware manufacturers to the point of ruin and then saved them by selling the Dutch East Indies a 100,000,000 yen export order for enamel pots and pans. In effecting the rescue, Eisen berg also took over the industry. This, big, slow-moving rather awkward Horatio Alger charac ter with lank brown hair and blue eyes was declared stateless during the war but now holds a Polish passport which last October enabled him to leave Japan on a selling tour of the entire Far East and India. He had personal interviews with the premier of Ceylon and In dian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Eisenberg speaks fluent Ger man, Japanese and English, some Dutch and no Polish. His principal reading is American comic books. "They pass the time on plane trips," Eisenberg says. In 1943 he married a pretty Eurasian girl. In six years they had four daughters, whose birth days like the number of Eisen berg enterprises he has a hard time remembering. "I'm sort of the Eddie Cantor of Japan," Eisenberg said. Pontiac, Mich., was settled in 1818 and named after an Indian chief. -HISTORIC MEDICAL HIGHLIGHTS No. 40- LIFE OR DEATH rs a in iiiiir i imW n iru iiuviiiniui i- i Don't take the chance of losing your grain or grass seed in the field. Call our office and we will give you immediate coverage at a cost of only 45c per $100. Fred E. Mangis Agency 121 Pacific Bldg. State and High Phone S-7171 Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever was first known by the Mormons, shortly after they established Salt Lake City in 1845 and it has plagued the inhabitants of the Western United States ever since. It was not until 1902 that the infectious wood tick was found to be the cause of this disease. 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