TZ MXDFCP.D (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Monday. Ortofef II. 1957
onfusion Rampant as Philippines
Prepares To Elect New President
Quotss From the News
Molllr 3fld SCYSn ! Earmarked nion Raise for Enginemen
Children Die in Fire
Chicago : I? The interna- i President H. E. Gilbert iid
tional president of the Brother- Saturday the annronriation has
hood of Locomotive Firemen and
f fi;trr no'. Nn'mh.r 1? will h
Wtttona Irrrton iiv in th Ph;lip-
wnt Thp mjin amotion n th
rnnlMl fr.r th prmrfmrv In th CUmOT
following 1ipai h. I niid Pr lor
jMu- t.f tn ian--i dnn'ipmtjiu on ual P. Ma.nahsn. Antonio Q'.::
man.
Rj.nnir.z for president s
Carlos P. Garcia
Joe Yuio. C'iaro M. Rc'.o.
e :n-
th rhilippin? p'limiai ren.
Sy M. P. SARMIENTO
United Press Correspondent
Man.ia '7 Thp Philippines'
7' 2 million qvalif.rd voters zo
to '.he poii? :,'ov. 12 to pick the
rr.i to run 'he 11-year-old re-;
public for the next four years.
But vo-rrs v.'il! have a ri.f-j
ficult t;i-K m makir.2 the choice.
For nev er in the Philippines'
post-v.-ar hitory have thy been ;
calied upon to exercise their!
right to vote amids such con-,
fusion as exists in the current
political campaign.
In addition to sven candi-
no, Valentin De Los Santo- ar.d
Fernando U. Gonzales. The la-',
two. however, are completely '
unknown to the people and
probably can be written off.
For the ruling Xacionali-ta
party fNPi the standard bearer j
is 61-year-old Garcia, who sue-;
ceeded to the presidency aft'-r ,
the death of President Ramon '
Ma2.say.-ay in a plane crash on
a Cr,ou mountain peak last
March 17.
Representing as he d"c- he
administration majority policy.
Garcia has ail the advantages.
Pledge Magsaysay Policy
Basically, the MP claims to j
have been chosen to carry on
Ha'es for tue presidency, tne
voters will have to pick a vice j where Magsaysay
president from among five can-
left
It
didates and eight senator; from
48 candidates put up by six po
litical parties for a total of 60
aspirants for national offices
plus tne entire membership of
the 104-seat Hous of Represent
atives. Follow U.S. Form
The Philippines have modeled
their governmental system after
that of the United States. But
1her is one big difference. In
th Philippines, candidates for
the presidency and the vice
presidency run separately.
Henc. president may have a
political enemy as his No. 2
also claims tne n.ipmos never
had it so good, with biaeer em
ployment, peace and order, low
price, land for the lancih.s.
booming industries. coopera
tives, producer incentives and
higher food production.
country is strong, the peso
is s'aole and trade is being de
veloped outside the U.S. market.
It adds that roads are being
h u i ! t everywhere, especially
Barrio 'viilagei roads, and arte
sian wells, a pet project of the
Is'e Magsaysay, are sprouting
e eryy.'here.
Garcia himself, like Magsay
say. believes in the regeneration
of the masses as the ''true sal
va'.on" of the Philippines from
the clutches of Communism. Un
der his administration, the Phil
ippine congress approved a law
outlawing the Communist party
of tho Philippines.
The former vice president and
foreign secretary pledges closer
cooperation with the non-Com-n-.unist
world, particularly the
United States.
He was the Philippine dele
gate to the founding session of
the United Nations in San Fran
cisco in 1345.
His battle cry is simple and
direct: elect Garcia president in
November and assure your
selves of the solution of urgent
problems facing the nation to-
Economically, the NP says ; clay.
dp JU3 STEVENS 3gpr
lebrins . . . Ghost . . .
II m-ts of spooks prowl
on the new
HALLOWEEN
CARDS
W"'4' "-Now noire t
Trees and Power ... 1 azin-, systems of switchbacks,
T. ; (',, l.,,.!-,, -,, i"'in2 trestles one was
from "New Frontiers in Log-,
By UNITED PRESS
London The Sunday Observer, describing the Maryland-
: North Carolina football game attended by Queen Elizabeth and
j Prince Phillip: "The players were padded and armored like stas-
; beetles. They worked up and down the field, tunneling through
the uproar of music and shouting, jerking from one scrimmage to
j another, obeying some intricate and secret pattern of play."
j
Washington Dr. J. E. Smith, acting director of the Civil
Aeronautics Administration's medical division, in charging that
present physical examinations for airline pilots are inadequate: j
. " . . . Present CAA physicals don't do the job and we believe the
j Civil Aeronautics Board must change its regulations to require !
j stricter examinations, particularly for all pilots over 40."
j
Little Rock Clarence A. Laws, official of the National
; Association for the Adv ancement of Colored People, in denying j
that the NAACP pays nine Negro students to attend Central High i
School: "It is the expressed belief of many that if those who persist
: in making false and inflammatory statcsments . . . would refrain i
j from doing so, normal peace and tranquility would soon return to j
j Little Rock." J
i Washington Sen. A. S. Mike Monroney, in calling for can- i
cellation of a Defense Department order trimming 10 per cent from j
j military research and development funds: "It must be hard for an !
! astrophysicist to penetrate the mysteries of the universe when he's !
j trying Jo figure out how his student assistants can feed their fam- j
ilies if their small research grants are eliminated."
I
! Chicago The National Safety Council, in reporting that a
j study failed to establish any conclusive relationship between the I
higher horsepower of modern autos and the rising traffic death
j toll: "Higher horsepower also provides additional acceleration po- !
; tential which can reduce distance required for passing over ve-
j hides, thereby contributing to accident prevention."
! Washington Sen. John L. McClellan, in reporting that his
Senate Rackets Committee has turned up a case in which a Team
sters Union local elected its delegation to the union' convention
; a week after the convention ended: "This is just another shockina
example of the complete disregard for the constitution of the Team
sters Union which took place in the selection of delegates for the
recent convention."
Beipre. Ohio The
death of a mother and seven of
her nine children In a fire which
gutted their once-condemned
apartment here was under in
vestigation on three fronts to
day. Washington County Sheriff
Dean Ellis said he had request
ed the state fire marshal to aid
him and local authorities in
vestigate the death of Mrs. Vivan
Aleen Snider, 36. and her seven
children.
The eight victims had ap
parently suffocated early Sun
day before they could escape
their second-floor apartment.
The only exit was a narrow
stairway at the end of a scries
of five rooms the family occupied
in this Ohio river town.
The father. Lloyd. 39, and
two sons. Darrell Lee. 16. and
Ronald. 12, were not at home
Snider was visiting the home of
a relative in Vienna. W. Va..
about six miles from here where
Ronald had been staying, and
Darrell was confined to a Park
ersburg. W. Va., hospital for
minor surgery.
been approved by the
eneral
Union
Fnfinpmfn annnimrrd a srvrrv
.,, ,.:- ,,;.,' ci chairmen of Vhe BLFE
000 members Nov. 1 will be : officials are to meet here this
used for .a health and medical week to work out details of tha
program. ' welfare program.
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 7 p.m.
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NORTHWESTERN SCHOOL OF COMMERCE
709 S. W. Salmon at Broadway
Portland, Oregon
ing'' the theme of the 1957 ;
Pacific Logging Congress at Se
attle. Oct. 30-31-Nov. 1. !
The first logging locomotives
were small "dinkies." in pio- ;
neer parlance and the trucks!
of the steam cars were so light
1.100 feet long, 235 feet high
and cableway inclines down the
sides of timbered mountains, ac
complished n e a r - miracles in
moving the merchantable parts
of giant trees from stump to
storage boom.
Railroad logging required
Bachelor Dad Series
Brings Odd Problems
that only flat loads of the : enormous investment lor every
weighty Douglas firs were haul- j installation. It brought mechan
ed. Within 20 years the tech-) jcs to th, wonds its logging en
niques of railroad logging had2jneers George Drake, Ed
brought forth a track-supported j stamm poy Morse were the
skidder which weighed more j f,-.pr,,nnpr, of today's forest en-
than 300 tons and car trucks
that would wheel a pyramid of
logs safely to the sawmill booms.
There were 340 individual
logging railroads in the western
states in 1931, with 7.200 miles of
track. The powerful geared loco
mrtive. with logging engineer
ing techniques that devised am-
gmeers. and out of it came the
modern system of power saws
for felling trees, tractors, logging-truck
highways, protection
roads and mechanized forestry
practices. Timber machines, en
gineers and mechanics had to
grow in the woods together, with
scientific management planning
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Hollywood. TP One of the
telesivion season's best tightrope
acts is being done by Broadway
Hollywood star John Forsythe,
who plays the dapper, woman
pursuing lead in the "Bachelor
Father" series.
"We have to be careful," Fos
sythe said. 'In the story I am a
bachelor lawyer, who frequently
brings his lady friends to his
residence for candlelight din
ners. Then I suddenly find that
I have a 1 :i-yoar-old ni'M-o t care
for after both her parents have
died.
Children Will Watch
"And. for another point, I al?o
realize that my own children at
home are going to watch their
father on television and ask him
direct questions. In fact, they do
the technical design preceding
every phase of the evolution.
Big Wheel and Logging Arch .. .
In the more open forest and
with the smaller trees of the
western pines stilled "the
short log country" by loggers
teams of two horses, each team
hitched to a pair of wheels, were
used from the first to move trees
from forest to sawmill.
The big wheels, 10 to 12 feet
in diameter, two in a set. with
strong axle and long tongue,
were in common use in the
western pines up to the 1920's.
A set was hauled by two or
four horses, with two wheels
straddling the log load. The big
wheels of the pineries harked
back to the chariot. The big
wheels, in turn, fathered the log
ing arch and rubber-tired log
ging cart, of today, in universal
use of skidding logs by tractors.
Drives and Flumes . . .
The canyon rivers in the pine
region of the Pacific Northwest
were mainly too rough and
rocky for log driving, but on
such streams as the Priest River
and the Clearwater in Northern
Idaho there were annual log
drives until recent years. Now at
h'st the logging truck has trium
phed over tradition in these ar
eas as it did over the logging
railroads.
There were famous flumes
that kept trees in motion by
torrents of water in both the
pine and fir regions in the old
days, usually shooting the logs
cut from the flume's mouth and
over a cliff into the booms. Oth
er great flume systems trans
ported lumber from sawmill to
railroad. They are about all gone
And the logging railroads fade
away. The logging sputnik com-eth.
already. Paige she's seven
watched a romantic scene and
then asked me about it. I told
her that daddy is an actor and
that he was pretending. Now
every time something like
that happens, she explains to
her friends that daddy's pretend
ing again."
Forsythe said he thinks of the
every-othcr week show as soph
isticated comedy which will
show not only the problems of
the suave bachelor in bringing
up 13-year-old Kelly (played by
Noreen Corcoran) but also some
problems common to teenagers.
"Next Sunday Oct. 27, has
a fine problem," Forsythe said.
"It's Kelly's first date, and I'm
it I'm supposed to take her out.
I forget about it. and she well,
you can imagine her reaction
and my fight to redeem myself."
Avoids Difficulties
Forsythe said that In the in
terests of avoiding difficulties
the girl's room later was moved
around on the set away from
what he calls the bachelor's
"Play Area." That's the living
room-dining room where the
smooth attorney brings his girls
for dinner served by the house
boy. Someone figured out that it
wouldn't look good if Kelly
might wander in on adult re
marks, so Kelly's room was
moved 'way far away to the
other end of the house.
Forsythe said his wife, former
broadway musical actres Julie
Warren, has made a perfect ad
justment to his playing the role
of wolf among the beautiful girls
in the TV series. "She's perfect
about it," he said. 'I think it's
due to her background her
father, the late Mark Wagner,
was a stock company matinee
idol in the midwest. He used to
make his wife, Lucy, w-alk a half
block behind him she'd be
carrying Julie because he
thought his public shouldn't
know he was married."
Personally Auditions
Forsythe said he personally
auditions actresses for the show.
"They must be attractive, of
course, but above all their per
sonality must assert itself," he
said. "They must have impact.
Lots of impact."
In addition to Paige, the actor,
a native of Carney's Point, N.J.,
also has another daughter,
Brooke, 4, and a son, Dall, 14.
who's at school in the east.
Forsythe said Paige and
Brooke both like the show-. He
doesn't know about his son's
feelings. "They're not supposed
to watch television at school,"
he explained.
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