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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1954)
if SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1954 PAGE FOUR IIERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Ifcralfc anil FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS Editor Managing Editor Entered as second clasi matter at the post office at Klamath Fall, Ore., on August 20. 1906, under act of Congress, March I, 17 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Presa la entitled exclusively to the use for publication ol all local news printed tn this newspaper as well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BY CARRIER 1 Month I 1 35 1 Month . I US Months . I 6.60 Months 11.10 1 Year 111.00 1 Year 116.30 BILLBOARD . Br BILL t In case you're wondering what tlie picture at the head of this column Is perhaps I'd better ex plain. It is a shot taken from the observation tower of the Agency lookout. The maze of wlggly lines are creeks that flow from the hill around there and head for the lake and the grey stuff further out there that looks like a poor eras ure Is the Upper Lake. Of course, a small part of It Is the meadow up there, too. One reason for the picture being no faint is that I was so faint when I took it. I'm no great boy for the heights. Put me on top of any tlng taller than a small slcplad der and I get the Ecrcaming wid gets. Also a bad case of queasy stomach. Which all leads to n rather poor picture in most cases. X alnyst always say to myself "why bother focusing the camera when I'm going to be dead In a lew minutes anyway?" If you want to know why It was printed here the answer is much simpler. I needed it to fill up space. This being the hunting season end the resultant misunderstand ings, enmities and feuds being well under way wo might as well launch out with our annual tirade on the subject. This year it occurs to us that perhaps ft lot of us should take long look at both behavior and lacts and see how we stack up acorewisc. When you look around you at the stltuatlon it s the same here as it Is in the Willamette Valley, in Nebraska or in Maine you find thai at least Illty per cent of the hunting, particularly up land bird and migratory bird hooting, Is done on privately cwned land. Quite a lot of big gamo hunting is also done on pri vate holdings, but not to such an extent as the bird shooting. Who owns this land? Most of It Is in the hands of farmers who are working it themselves. Most of these same farmers are nicf guys who are quite willing to let you hunt on their land If you prove to be a gentleman and a. sportsman. Unfortunately It can't be said ol CAUGHT IN By ni:n ADDISON THIS IS ONE of those in one ear and out the typewriter reports that was badly delayed in transit. Not that there's much in between to cause the delay, but allalrs of the moment, like duck hunting and pollilchins to be fixed ads for and stuff, have delayed column writing. It has to do with a report on "Washington 1!54" by Senator Wallace Bennett of Utah who was hire a week so. and It's still in lime for some snb.-r thoughts on fundamentals, amidst tho final hip hurrahs ot the political campaigns, bclore you go lo (he polls. The key word In explaining na tional allalrs iSrn. Bennett sald is "transition." P's tnwiv.illon between the pat tern that was llxed in 20 years ot one kind of administration and the paVcin that Is emerging from two years ol the present administra tion. There Is still some confusion and the new pattern is not yet en tirely Jelled. Tin mil underlying transition goes deeper I hough and is more important. That's the Hamilton from war to peace. The condition of peace is desired by all of course, hut It carries with It some things that In themselves are not too pleasani. War, lo a nation, is like disease or serious illness lo an individual. Peace I like good health. In the crisis o( an Illness land ri you don't connt the cost. Ancthim: tlmt will help pull the patient thrniiiili Is masped at, and yon worry about settlinvr up later. The habit of borrowing Is easy to grt Into and hard to get out of. One or the most dlfllcult tasks Is to put on the brakes to live within your means. The habit of borrowing has not Vet run Its courne In Washington. I - :. ..'-? 1 I:,:: : ... JENKINS all hunters that, they are sports men. Most of 'em, yes. A few, no. And these few sour the brew for the rest of us. But, let's take a slightly differ ent approach to the subject. The average sportsman looks on the farmer as the original man with the hoe. A stooped, knotty, gnarled man with dirt under his fingernails and a slip of straw eternally be tween his teeth, a fellow who grubs In the dirt and toils that the rest of us may eat. A fellow to be condescended to, tn be talked down to. As a matter of fact the aver age farmer has a sheepskin from a well known college, has a heck of a lot more money invested than the sportsman will ever earn In his lifetime and Is a scientific businessman where his farming is concerned. He's intelligent, well learned, well mannered and pleas ant. Plus having quite a well de veloped sense of responsibility, so cial, civic and financial. On the other hand we have the sportsman whom the farmer re, Bards as a Johnny-come-lately hoe. caker whose ideas about property rights are strictly Communistic what s mine is mine and what's yours is mine and whose trigger finger Is too Itchy to be trusted within the fence line. And he's Just as wrrong about this. Most of the fellows who ven ture out with a gun, particularly those who are devoted scattcigun- ners, are pretty nice fellows. Po lite, easy to get along with and real sportsmen at heart. Isn't It a shame to have this misunderstanding all the time? Isn't 11 a shame that we can't all be reasonable and get along? But, anyway, maybe it's high time we all took a look and found out just where we stood. I'd hate to find that I was on Ihe wrong side of the fence. t Which reminds ur that we were driving around the country the other day and spotted a sign on a fence which read "hunting by per mission." Can't remember where It was but aim to find It again when we have more time and go In and shake die hand of the man lhat posted it. That's the proper spirit. THE ROUNDS ' We reduced the cost of running lhe government (Sen. Bennett said) by about 67 million a year land at the same time put through jthe tax cut. This was accomplished !in the face of having to pick up the C.O.U.'s of past legislation. I Atosl important, from the sland I point of stopping inflation, we reduced the amount of tax money 'going Into the stream by $62 bil lion In two years. I When Ihe patient is really se riously III you step back and leave everything up to the doctor with no questions asked. As the patient 'starts to pull through It's hard to start to take over the responsibili ty yourself again. The national patient was ill from jwar so long that some people be came convinced that the control pattern Is the normal pattern. Headway is being made though. While prices doubled and the val ue Of the dollar wax rut in hair during the price control period of 1941 to 1953. both nrl nri Mi llar value have become quite sta ble in the two years since the controls were lilted. ! Tile bla nroblem fir r,n. I Illness is that of keeping the pa ! item from becoming a hypochon- ,.t. nc paueni gfij t0 loving the sleeping pills and the drugs that dull his aermes. fi ta ..... fully mad at Ihe doctor when the qoc starts to cut these oil. We had to chant,,. h..... - couple of years ago lo trv and save the national patient from hy pochondrla. Now we have the con dition that, as the naiimt tn. get up and feels weak and duzv and as he tries to sleep without the sleeutnr nllls. the old ,w i. 'standing In the comer of the room 'reminding him of the lovely drugs he used lo give him and promis ing him more and more of the They'll Do It Every STORAGE-SHE A5r VjTWlCE-rrsPRACriCAay TALKS LIKE SO- ffiUti flv a SDNEW-.. IT OUT (CHARGE $3)-" Jt-, D.O VOU CLEAvl IT? v?7 iPnfe HER TUNE'S DIFFERENT, fWPi 'MT ABOUT WESE ) . -.?-, AND TUE COAT SOUNDS TSiWSL- T") 3fe2, TELLING THE EDITOR MILK ANSWER We, as members of the Klamath Basin Orade A Producers Associa tion, wish to answer the letter by Mr. and'Mrs. George Lewis, print ed in the October 31, 1954 Herald and News. We believe there are many questions which we are m a position to answer. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis are not Orade A producers, and to our knowledge have never attempted to become Orade A producers, therefore it Is evident that they do not understand the problems of producing Grade A milk, and the constant turmoil which existed within the dairy industry before the Milk Marketing Act became ef fective. We agree with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis that the Milk Marketing Act in itself does not cover the sani tary regulations for production and distribution of milk, however if producers lose the protection of Milk Marketing and are forced out of business, then any milk, which might be available anyplace, could be brought into our market to sup ply the demand. This milk would undoubtedly be sold to the public li regardless if it meets Orade A requirements or not. Who suffers in the end? The consumer mainly, since public health is at stake. In Oregon there Is a Bengs Con trol Law requiring every cow of a dairy breed, whether the milk is sold or not. to be tested annually. Did Mr. and Mrs. Lewis have a producing cow for sale which had never been tested? Were they threatening their own health by us ing milk, from an untested cow? This is Just one of the safeguards that is available to consumers of Grade A Milk. What Quotas? Just as the milk marketing act states it guaran tees the consumer a constant and adequate supply of wholesome milk. Without quotas to meet, producers could let production drop, or take a vacation during the winter when production costs are high. This would result in a shortage of milk to the public and prices could soar out of sight. (Sure, outside milk could be brought In to take up the slack at a transportation cost so high the cost of milk to the con sumer would be prohibitive.) Local producers could also luruisli the milk during tills shortage period but who can alford to buy cows and set up for production, meeting all sanitary requirements. Just to supply milk for a short period of time. There Is no guarantee that their milk would continue to be used after the short supply period was over. Under the quota system if producers do not supply the market, anyone qualified as a Orade A producer can receive a quota on the market. The cost of setting up a Grade A dairy is so high that a person cannot afford to go into the business unless there is a constant market for his product. Would any business man start a business without a market for his product? Anyone who does quality as a Grade A producer will in time get a quota on the market. There are always some producers who fail to meet their quota, and new producers, if qualified, receive this unfilled portion of the market quota. New producers also take the place of producers who quit the business. (The national average that a dairyman stays in business is 7 years. Under the milk marketing act, the minimum price is set to in sure a talr return to producers. This price varies throughout the state according to cost of produc tion. In Klamath County the pas lure season Is short, and more pro ttcllve buildings are necessary. La bor costs are the hishest In the slate. This causes production cosLs to be higher than In other areas of the state. Even at that the price ot a quart of milk in Klamath Falls Is the same as the average price throughout the United States. Twenty five stales have higher milk prices than Oregon, and Ore gon has the lowest cream prices in the entire United States. Oregon is also the only state lliat requires the minimum butterfat content to be primed on the canon. At least our consumers know what test milk, they are buying while con sumers in other states have no idea what they are getting. A: present wage scales an hours labor today buys mote milk than at any- same If he'll throw the new doctor out. I Ihe problem In the Untied Slates today is that of helping the patient get back on his feci and jthrow the drugs sway. i As you go lo the voting booth lllhis is us not Bennett) to decide between Cordon and Neuberger and Coon and Ullman, and local jcandtdates too lor lhat matter, iJtisi remember who's trying to get jthe patient on his feet and who's ipromislng him more soporifics. Time time In history. Anyone who qualified as a Grade A producer in Oregon, meeting ail sanitary requirements, can obtain a license to sell his milk at his farm, but Just as Mr. Jenkins has said if that producer meets all the sanitary requirements ne win not be able to undersell his costs are iust too high. In the past 10 years ihere have been several producer distributors in Klam ath county. Every one of them have either sold out entirely bp cause his costs were too high, or obtained a quota on the local mar ket to supply Grade A milk to lo cal distributors. Oregon has led the way with its Milk Marketing- Act. Many states which do not have such an act are preparing one, copied after Ore gon's. Why should anyone want to throw the dairy Industry into tur moil by repealing an act that is good enough to be copied by other dairying states? We believe in keeping our Milk Marketing Act. and continue to improve upon it by legislation as new production and marketing methods are developed. If we may borrow Mr. and Mrs. Lewis's words, "For your own good, for the good of your chil dren and for the good of the dairy industry," vote NO on measure eight. ' Klamath Basin Grade A l'roducers. Directors: -- Lawrence Geraghty Ray llobson J. L. Harris S. C. Masten George E. Reiling -Ken Waters Wilbur Rellinr 1 . ANSWER Dorothea Buck writes In the Herald & News To the Editor to "look at the record" so I have in hand Mrs. Buck's letter print ed In the October 28 issue; also I have In hand the "record." In this case. Ihe Final Revised Cal endar of the 47th (1933) Session of the Legislative Assembly. Mrs. Buck states that "Senator Neuberger has always given sup- port to education and to Klamatn," " m Countv." The record, however.! By mcal ,nese aKements shows" that Mr. Neuberger was ab- Germany changes from an oc sem at roll call for no less thani-uPietl country to a pracacally nine measures which were con-i!;overe'Sn member of the Western cerned with education. As for hisiUc'ense system, support of Klamath Counly li That means 12 German divisions, note three absences during voting I01"6 .500.000 men. along the lion on measures concerning the Klam- cmtaln by the spring of 1957, If all ath River Water Commission: 80es accordmg to plan, the committee which is being set 11 als0 mea"s voice for Ger up to prevent the diversion of the "t 'be cold war planning most precious resource we have " tl,e Wes'. And as the voice of a in the Klamath. Basin. Support like much strengthened country in Eur this. Is, in my opinion, no support Pe's strategic heartland, a court at all and about what we could nose eastern half is occupied expect of candidate Neuberger II bv e "W- "is promises to he represented us In Washington, be a ,lrm and influential voice, nn So Adenauer comes to Washing- Mrs. Buck also savs "Now that '" "V as a bigger man than it is right for Republican teachers n(Lwa3 on n,s last ,yls." to get into the fight, lets allow That ws '" VJaJ3- lSo,vlet Democratic teachers and other P"mier Stalin had died not long .,,r,r,nrtr nf Rpn-inr u.iihr7Pr tn before, and the whole world won- have their sav." I have observed tht tiinnnrtrr of Ncuberier have had a field day as far as "say" is concerned the record clearly indl- cates that Neuberger is talking while Cordon is Ihe lob done, In Mrs. Buck iV letter she also stated "previously I had refused to organize a teachers for Neu-imust also avoid promoting any at berger committee for fear ot em-j'mpt to destroy the unity of the barrasslng our school admlnistra-1 Weft and Its unified front with re tors. I was wrong. It Is evident. pard to Soviet Russia." ,l,o IHlo latin,, ttha tanhpp clrmn,1 ! letter in support of Senator Cor don) has the full approval of our administrators." I am amazed that, as u teacher, Mrs. Buck so quickly refused to comply with that request. It must have been a fast "no" tor If she had taken time to consider the request, she had time to contact one or all of the. school administrators al lowing them to decide what em barrassment would be involved, either personally or to the admin istrative office. She says "I was wrong." She was wrong in not giv ing the administrators a chance to make a stand. With me this is a local issue and I feel that by Implication that non-partisan administrative olfice Is unjustly accused of a political plot to thwart her candidate in the .same paragraph which admits that the decision was solely hers. Mary Juckeland (Mrs. II. O.) SOU Larry Street FDR's Son Urges Votes For GOP PHILADELPHIA The young est son of Franklin D. Roosevelt has urged Republicans "to go out and work for the second great crusade, election of a Republican Congress next Tuesday." John Roosevelt said yesterday a Republican Congress Is needed be cause the Democrats won't sup port President Eisenhower it they win." iJy Jimmy Hatlo James Marlow By ED CREAGH (For James Marlow) WASHINGTON, ( "Mr. Ger many" comes to town today. Konrad Adenauer, chancellor ot the Federal Republic of Germany, might reject that title. And a great many ot his fellow Germans might have misgivings. The idea of wrap ping up a whole nation, or even half a nation, in the person of one man seems to have perished there with Adolf Hitler. Still, Adenauer is a symbol of Ihe new Germany to most other Western countries. Since the deaths or Ernest Reuler and Kurt Schu inacher, he is about the only West German political figure whose name is widely known in the United Slates. He occupies a dominant position too in the eyes of Western political leaders who deal with Germany. It is a respected position. Secre tary of state Dulles went out of bis. way, In addressing Monday night s televised Cabinet meeting, to praise Adenauer as a "great statesman." Many of these political figures can't figure out who the Germans have to fill Adenauer's shoes when. inevitably, the time comes for someone else to become chancellor. And Adenauer will be 79 next Jan uary. Only Winston Churchill, among the West's political leaders, is older. Churchill will be 80 Nov. 30. In a real sense Adenauer can be called the "father" of the new West Germany. He directed the drawing up of the basic law which set up the Bonn Republic. Actually, this law is a constitution but Adenauer prefers not to use that word until such time as it can apply to a united Germany. Just when East and West Ger many can be brought together un der such a constitution, nobody in a responsible post cares to predict. But Adenauer like Dulles, Brit ish Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and most others who were involved say that day may well have been brought nearer by the j agreements reached in the past s"e1 a change In Russia's attl- iude toward the West might follow. Adenauer was one of those who cautioned against too rosy expec- itations. i "We must not reject everything : in advance." he said in a speech to I the National Press Club, "but we DON'T VOTE until you get ALL the facts!! the facts on: Klamath Water Tidelands Oil Bonneville Line Hell's Canyon Hear FLOYD WYNNE On "The Importance of Your Vote" Sunday Evening KFLW- 7:30 PM KFJI -9:15 PM fd. for by Klam, C, Republican Ctntr. Comm., Elmtr Ltmltr. Chrmn. Along Nature's Trail By Ken McLeod The story of "Mystery People"! of Mount Shasta had its inspln tion in the book "A Dweller on Two Planets." Mount Shasta plays an important part in this book as it becomes the locality where Walter Plerson, the young Am-. -can gold miner meets Quong p Chinese student of the occult and member of the Lothiman Brother hood.. Quong is responsible for bringing Plerson into the Brother hood where Pierson is given the name of Phylos, the date is 1864. Scattered through the second half of this book are various parts of the Tradition. The first half of the book contains the story of Atlantis which the author dates as being the "experience of a personal life history enacted over one hundred and twenty centuries ago." In the Tradition of the "Mystery People" this ancient period of Atlantis as visloned in this book by Oliver was brought into the present pe riod and attributed to the lost col ony of Lemurians by Professor Larkin who very obviously used this story as the "basis of his hoax. One of the important parts oi the Tradition of Mount Shasta is the mysterious light of ceremonial fires that observers are supposed to see In the depths of the forest. We learn about this light on one of the trips that Walter Pierson makes with Quong, the occult, into the forest about Mount Shasta. Plerson tells this story: "More than once were the Tchin (Quong) and I companions on his leisure days. Sometimes we went to tne town but more often we turned our horses' heads awav into the wilderness of the moun tains. Without his guidance I had surely been lost there, amid, the vast gorges with their shade of giant pines laying between the al most interminable ridges, those stern ribs of the planet. But Quong was never lost, never hesitated, though the night was upon us so dark on more than one occasion that I could not see my hand be. fore my face, a fact I never quite Comprehended at the lime, though it is clear to me now. Once at such a time as this I felt the need of a light, so greatly, it was In a cavern which we had found, that he said: 'Here, t give you light. I heard him break off a fragment cf rock from the side of the wall of the cavern: next he put it into my hand saying: 'Have care now, It must not touch you; like light ning: would kill you.' As. may be imagined, I touched so little of the rock that Quong directed me to hold It tighter. Then up sprung a brilliant light from the tip of that rock, illuminating all the cave like sunlight! Had this thing occurred a few years later, I should have first pronounced It an electric light, then, bethinking me that no battery was there, nor any dynamo-electric machine, I would have done as I did do, sat down and gazed at the marvelous light, for- getful where I was. As Quong would give no other explanation than he had already given. I was. Derforcc. content; only I was not' But his . power of keeping his course where not even the track of an animal was to be discerned. was sufficiently astonishing, and I was often amazed at the man lor not losing his way amongst ranges of sierra which stretched away to where the vast snowy peaks de. fined the horizon and kept the blue of the sky from blending lnsensl. bly with the blue of the moun tains." Thus Pierson is introduced to one of the phenomena under con. trol of the occult an.i we recog nize it in many of the reported stories we hear in regard to the "Mystery People." In another nassage we find Quong again dem onstrating to Pierson the mystery of these occult tires: "Quong drew a circle on the ground about a, foot across, then In this c rele a couple ol lines in a simDle cross, one north and south, the other east and west As the four ends of the cross were contacted with the circle, a tall, steady flame sprang up. Its pear shaned cone trembling within It. if hut being wholly uninfluenced by the wind, which had some t(me before commenced mowing in vis orous gusts. Then said the Tchin: "B-hold the Vis Mortuus. Of all mankind only an occult student rould bring It forth: only such . one could put it out. unless by ac cident. Touch it not: 'twouM be fatal, on the principle that the oT.t-r contains all lesser iorces. and It would Instantly absorb the force of life, or of wind or wave, or projectile; it exists visibly here because on a inaumaiurgic oji"' CALIFORNIA POLITICS . By ROSS RAGLAN D Constitutional amendment which would auihori the legislature to permit use of money collected from end motor registrauou ""--nr manning and constructing parking facilities. AS Uie Motor v emu ww ri all this revenue must be spent on construction, improve ment and repair of public streets end highways. Prooonenis ciaun uii ii"" facilities are Just as important as . lihnnl Bond Dark- ! i.mtios hiehwavs become in adequate to nanoie ue u -. Opponents state that at the present time there Is still a short age ot lunos neeaeu w wnn-, -iinnn rands and high ways. Parking facilities can be fi nanced by other means ana uic adoption ot mis proposiuuu i,. raita ltral flliestiun 8S 10 W'heth- cr Calilomia could continue to re ceive funds from tne eaerai m for Highway Act. All organizations. Including the League of California Cities recom mend a no vote on Proposition No. 17. Proposition No. 18 ' Ti,K Avscmblv Constitutional amendment would extend to all residents who are foreigners wait in? for U.S. citizenship the same privileges concerning property ownership. Accordmg to the terms ol tne Education Week Slated American Education Week, No vember 7 to 13, will be observed In Klamath Falls, Andrew Loney Jr., chairman of the week, has announced. Each school is planning some sort of observance; the majority of schools are inviting parents and friends of the public schools to visit school during this week. Many schools will have interesting displays of students' work and everyone is urged to visit. Members of Loney's committee include James TThornton, Fremont School: Isabel Jackson. Mills School: Howard Strode, Pelican School: Marjorie Howe, Roosevelt Schoo': Bennet Loftsgaard, Fair view School. V e 1 d a Hodgecoke, Riverside School, John Lake, vocational de partment. Klamath Union High School: J. v. LaClair. supervisor of Instructional materials: Howard Hall, art Instructor, Klamath Un ion High School. bol. You think that symbol might as wen oe or anv other form? So think those who comprehend not. See that moth darting about tne name or the light; It will enter,, dui not oe burnt; no. quick er see! It touches and dis appears and leaves no sign yet the light is not hot, no, not even warm. I will nu. it out." When Larkin used this form of light in his story of the Lemurians he knew that the average reader could not accept fire without smoke and so he visualized smoke as rising from the ceremonial fire that was surrounded by the cele brating Lemurians. This one ob servation was sufficient to warn anyone interested in these occult stories that the story was false, yet those who desired to prove their thesis failed to notice the tell-tale warning In their eager ness. Qake if fto'm me... MILK bnhS Wi HEAR- "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers" Starring Jane Powell - Howard Keel on "Two Tickers to Broadway" KFLW - 9 .PM. - SUNDAY measure, foreigners of any race eligible to become citizens of in, U.S would have the same rights regarding property as enjoyed by native born citizens. This amendment will provide a . constitutional guaranty of existing statutory rights. There seems to be no arguments against this meas ure. Vote yes on Proposition No, II. Proposition No. It. An Assembly constitutional amffnriment Which would mult - judge of a justice court eligible to hold office as a judge of a munici. pal court even though he is not an attorney wneucver autn court supersedes the Justice court. Proponents claim that this amendment is needed to remove nil doubts as to the status nf in. cumbent justices who are not law yers, bven mouzn a lew judges are not lawyers, justices who have five years experience in their po sition since 1945 have the neces sary Qualifications for a munici. pal Judgeship. Tins would further amend the mninr reorganization of th lnfr. inr court structure that was . proved by the voters in 19511, Opponents state tnai an juoges should be lawyers regardless. Tne county supervisors Assoc!. ntJnn and the State Chamber nf Commerce recommend a yes vot on Proposition No. 19. Proposition No. 20. A Senate Constitutional amendi ment which would extend the time ' allowed for the preparation oi a county charter by freeholders front 120 days to six months after the declaration of election results. At the present tune the consti tution permits any county to frame and adopt its own home-rule chart cr. otherwise counties are organ lzed under general state laws. The purpose of this amendment is to give any county more time with which to write Its charter and submit It ot voters for approv al. The amendment would elimi nate nomination of freeholders by petition and make it possible that they could be nominated simply by filing nomination papers. Opponents state that the present provisions for framing county charters have proved workable end proposed change in the pro cedure for nominating freeholder candidates would encourage un qualified persons to seek the po sition. The Supervisors Association op pose this measure an say vote no, TOe Taxpayers Association and the Los Angeles Chamber of Com merce say to vote yes on Proposi tion No. 20. QUICKIES By Ken Reynold. ". , . this Halloween costume yoo rented for me in the Her ald tc News Want Ads makes ne feel like the devil!" 7P f$ Ml GRAPE X MILK Vv VT BtPTlML RELAXES FTC Van clip into rut M9ST WONDERFUL OF SLEEPS. r COLD OR WARM PERFECT FoRTVfE J J Best in Rest