page rous Tli OREGON STATESMAN, Salom, Oregon. Ttidaj Momlnij, May Ti. 1342 itatesmati teaoti 5 'No Favor Siaays Vs; No Fear Shall Awe' From Fint Statesman. March 28, 1851 THE STATESSIAN PUBUSHING CO. CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President - Member of The Associated Press Tha Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. 02 .aw w ssr sr If iWi It What Price Freedom? In the days of the Caesars only the precious metals were money, and only money and slaves were wealthy. That is, negotiable wealth. Emperors fought and conquered lor gold and laves. Masterpieces of statuary were melted down without compunction for their gold. Men of substance owned thousands of unneeded laves, keeping them for their trade-in value. It wasn't until the fourteenth century that the Invention of double entry bookkeeping trans lated land, buildings, machinery, warehouse receipts in other words stored food and ac counts receivable into values expressed in money. From that moment the character of money became increasingly vague and elusive. Money became a relative thing, subject to violent fluctuation in relative value. Right today it has less relative value than ever before. We are afraid this discussion of billions for war is going to bore you. For, though the invention of bookkeeping caused an immediate decline in the negotiable lvalue of slaves, there has been a steady increase 'in the relative value of freedom. Congress is going to consider seriously the general sales tax as a means of financing the . war -effort. Though the sales tax may finally be rejected, it will play an effective role in the development of the new tax law. To avoid congress' threat of a sales tax the treasury will be receptive to an alternative which tends to ward the same result; a lower income tax base than it otherwise would accept. What is freedom going to cost in money? A Wall Street Journal writer estimates that if the war lasts as long as President Roosevelt guesses it will, four and one-half years, the cost will be 225 billion dollars and that total cost of federal government will be 260 billion. y- Since John Q. Public will get only one bill, we'll trace the total cost: For the 1940-41 fiscal year it was 13 billion- for the 41-42 year now closing.it will be 45 billion; next year 77 billion; 43-44, 87 billion; for the last half of 1944, 44 billion. Government squeezed out in taxes the first year 8 billion, the next 13 billion; plans to collect next year 27 billion, the following year 30 billion, the last (we hope) half year 15 billion. Total, 83 billion. Sales of war bonds will bring in another 38 billion so that in a sense though government must later pay off these bonds the nation will pay 132 billion of the war cost in cash; approximately half. That means that the government debt will exceed 160 billion when the war ends but that's the part that may bore you. It is more Interesting to note that the price of freedom will be about $2000 for every man, woman and child m the United States. And cheap at that. Do you have a relative on Bataan? Wouldn't you pay $2000 for his ransom? But the taxpayer isn't going to get off quite so easily. The cost of freedom for each gain-, fully employed American is going to be $5100, if all these "ifs" and estimates are correct. Of course he'll pay only half that in cash while the war is on. Next year, according to the schedulejavored by the house ways and means committee, a married couple without children and with a $2500 income, will pay $219 income-tax, buy $208 worth of war bonds and pay $90 in the proposed higher payroll tax so that their in come will dwindle to $2292 before they pay a lot of hidden excise taxes and their state and local taxes. The childless couple with $10,000 income would in like manner see it shrink to barely over $6000. And besides, there's the HC of L. So you see, freedom comes high. Having seen the price tag, are you interested in the alternative? Laughs :lile ields (the tall one): You look ed room. Weber (the fat one): Why do you go with me, then? Fields: Why? Why? Because I like you; Mike, when I look at you I have such a oo-oo-oo-oo! (Chokes him, then turns to audi ence) Why do I go with him? When I look at him by heart goes out to him. (To Weber). When you are away from me; I can't keep my mind off you. When you are with me I can't keep my hands off you. (Chokes him again.) But sometimes I think you do not return my affection. You do not feel that something that oo-oo-oo-oo! (Chokes him some more.) They were cradled in the unspeakable Bow ery of post-Civil war days and in more than' half a century of entertaining they never spoke "smutty" line nor figured in a suggestive scene. They started their joint career as pro fessionals at age nine in the Bower's dime museums. Seventeen years later they reached Broadway, an hour's walk from their starting point. Their formal education stopped at about the third grade, but they wrote in their early "teens the skits and scenes which caused audi ences on both coasts to howl with glee. Movie fans within the last decade were favored with a sample of their comedy and save for those who sensed it through a nostalgic haze, turned ud their nosps at it 'Rut - u - - - . you cio muni ad any other two human beings had helped to cre ate a distinctly American theatre to rr.l9re the exclusively imported entertainment of the previous century. - Their comedy consisted of slapstick antics and pointless mutiliation of Noah Webster's English and when you read their scripts today, like the sample above, there doesn't seem to be a laugh in a carload. But, Weber and Fields fans Insist, you had to see and hear them to appreci ate it Besides, theirs was the era on the legiti mate stage of long, flowery monologues and the stupid i-aside" which now are forbidden. Today comedy isn't funny, nor drama impres sive, unless you can manage somehow, to be lieve in it. Well, there are exceptions. You can laugh at Abbott and Costello i you're in News The News By PAUL MAIXON i wsj NV Pari Malloa Mm Hitler by adopting national socialism in one form or another, although they do not seem to be conscious of it. Maybe the British system is a failure. I doubt it. I know ours is not. The news of this trend rising in Britain comes simultaneously with official reports that our pro ductive system has just won the greatest success in all its 166 years of trial. After five months of war, it is producing in every phase beyond the colossal and unbelievable goals that Mr. Roosevelt set for it (that is every line except ship building). It has met the test of war and won. It has surpassed th feats of nazi ism, communism and every other ism. This was done by effective unity between indus try and labor, not the way Hitler did it, with a bayonet, but by the democratic appeal to reason, with a little pressure here and there. - t If this unity can be maintained the same way in a post-war peace era, what a country this will be! Real wealth these days as well as real security, is the ability to produce. Money is worth only what the government says. Prices likewise. Taxes are destroying old wealth and will pre vent any new wealth from accumulating. The only thing you can really count on as an individual is your ability to produce. So also with a nation, which is only a collection of individuals. The British trend, as manifest again in this lady's speech, is the opposite. She thinks security lies in supplanting individual initiative in owner ship and work with the unambitious, static, nega tive, reactionary force of government ownership, out of which no one has ever made mony except politicians. Through socialism, labor in this country would only acquire an interest in bankruptcy. Certainly labor is not making any money out of the little government ownership we have today (public utilities, etc.) Its organization advances have been less marked in government than in any other line of national activity (only about 50,000 government workers have been organized out of the millions employed). That is not the way toward labor advances or any other advances. Socialism may have provided an advance for workers in Russia because anything would be an advance over the economic standards of czarism. It may even have been constructive in Germany, where it supplanted a standard of living worse than the level of our worst slums. Here in America, where workers are accustomed to automobiles, plunbing and good wages, it could be destructive. Our post-war economy should be founded pri marily on the interests of our 50,000,000 or more good workers, not directed entirely toward the interest of a few million unemployed or unem ployable. It must be aimed at keeping good jobs for good workers, not at an unattainable security through bankruptcy. Peculiar wartime cross-currents are not con fined to Britain. Someone started lambasting congressmen a few weeks ago and since then the popular movement has reached th proportions of a campaign against congress. Apparently it started out as a campaign against the former isolationists, although God knows why, because they have been as docile as if they were in a concentration camp since the war started. They have voted for every war appropriation, have made few speeches. However, a liberal magazine started off with a purge list for the coming elections, and other magazines got busy along the same line. Soon some of my columnar colleagues were calling for the scalps of congressmen in general, noCjust a few in particular. ; Congress is in disuse. If it also comes into dis--credit, the main constitutional bulwark of the7 democratic way of life and the four freedoms, will be lost . . v , . . There are.' both-good and bad individuals LY congress, but congress as a constitutional force, is not functioning during this war. It has wisely tased to be a restraint on the executive. It has, like its isolationists, kept quiet and permitted the swifter functioning of one-man government Some minor officials (not many) in this gov ernment think this would be a good idea to con tinue into the future. They think congress is a .failure. ' j It is all right with me if you want to throw anything you like at a congressman as an indi vidual, but when you start throwing at congress; you are most apt to bit yourself. , Like a furnish the mood and they are no more credible than Weber and Fields, though they employ a dif ferent tempo. So we pay our respects to America's all-time ail-American comedy pair, Weber and Fields, the second of whom has recently departed from among the living. They were funny in then day and whoever can coax a laugh from America's millions has accomplished something. Besides, a few of their laughs are funny even n6w. Witness the preliminary exchange of their famous pool game scene: Weber: I don't know dis pool business. Fields: Voteffer I don't know, I teach you. A headline in an eastern paper says "gas rationing to take in northwest." We suspect most headline readers, unless they read on, assume reference was to Michigan and Minnesota. Behind (Distribution by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Repro duction in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, May 28 A female Scotch labor ite made the best speech at the trades union con vention in London the other day (so the radio says) advocating nationalization of everything mines, factories, property. She wanted the government to own and run everything. To none of her audience, including the radio reporters, did it occur that what she advocated was a union form of naziism. Her speech was only an open declaration of the popular mur- ing up from the Cripps groups, assuming that "our system has Droxen down, mat "we must provide a better one after the war." In all their proposals they seem to want to out-Hi tlerize I P 1 : jU AIR EASE , ! 'Lost Horizon' Radio Programs KSLM FRIDAY 1J96 Ke. 6:30 Rise TJ' Shine. 7.-00 News in Brief. 7:05 Rise N" Shine. I'M News. 7.4i Your Gospel Program. 8:00 Shep Fields Orchestra. 8:30 News Brevities. 8:35 Lew White. Organist. 9; 00 Pastor's Call. 9:15 The Quintones. 930 Musical Horoscope. 10:00 World in Review. 10:05 Silver Strings. 10:3O Women in the News. 1035 Melody In Miniature. 10:40 Homespun Trio. 11:00 Maxine Bur en. 11:15 Harry Owens Orchestra. 1130 A Song Is Born. 12:00 Ivan Ditmars. 12:15 News. 12:30 Hillbilly Serenade. 12:35 Willamette Valley Opinions.' 1:00 Lum and Abner. US Milady's Melody. 1 JO Four Notes. 1:45 Isle of Paradise. 2:00 Tune Tabloids. 2:15 US Navy. 230 State Safety. 2:45 Novelette. 3:00 Old Opera House. 40 Sing Song Time. 4:15 News. 430 Teatime Tunes. 5.-00 Here Comes the Band. 930 To the Ladies. 535 Dinner Hour Music. 6:00 Tonight's Headlines. 6:15 News Analysis. 6:20 Evening Serenade, 6:45 Religious News. 7:00 News in Brief. 7:05 Interesting Facts. 7:15 Szath Myri. 7:30 Willamette Valley Opinions. 7:50 War Fronts on Review. 8:00 Burns and Allen. 830 McWain's Melange. 8:45 Ray Noble Orchestra. 9:00 News. 9:15 Rollo Hudson. 9:30 The Roundup. 10:00 Larry Clinton's Orchestra. 10:45 Mexican Marimba. 10:30 News 11. -00 Bert Hirsch Presents. 1130 Last Minute News. KALE MBS FRIDAY 1134 Kc 6 30 Memory Timekeeper. 7:00 News. 7:15 Memory Timekeeper. 8.-00 Breakfast Club S 30 News. 8:45 What's New. 9:00 John B. Hughes. 9:15 Woman's Side of the News. 930 This and That 10:00 News. 10:15 m Find My Way. 1030 News. 1035 Women Today. 10:45 Buyer's Parade. 11:00 Cedric Foster. 11 :1S Dance Time. 1130 Concert Gems. 11 :45 Luncheon Concert 1230 News. 12:45 Civilian Defense Protc. School. 10 Bill's Wax Shop. 1 :15 New York Racing Season. 130 Mutual Goes Calling. 2:00 PT A. 2:15 Sweet and Sentimental. 230 News. 2:45 The Bookworm. 2:00 B. S. Bercovici. Commentator. 3:15 Baseball Roundup. 130 Johnny Richards Orchestra. 330 Hello Again. 4.-00 News 4 J 5 Johnson Family. 430 Salvation Army Program. 4.-45 Music Depreciation. 50 Captain Danger-. 5:15 Jimmie Allen 830 Captain Midnight 9:45 Jack Armstrong. 6. -00 Gabriel Heatter. CIS News. Spring Offensive These schedules art supplied by the respective stations. Any varia tions noted by listeners are due te changes made by the stations with out notice to this newspaper. All radio stations may be cut from the air at any thus la the Interests of national defense. 6:30 Songs of Marching Men. 6:45 Movie Parade. 7 :00 Serenade. 7 30 Lone Ranger. 8:00 Wally Johnson Orchestra. 8:15 Enric Madriquera Orchestra. 8:30 Tropical Serenade. 8:45 Fishing Bulletins. 9:00 News. 9:15 Speaking of Sport. 930 Fulton Lewis. Jr. 9:45 Hank Keene in Town. 10:00 Joe Reichman Orchestra. 1030 News. 10:45 Freddy Martin Orchestra. 11:00 Jan Savitt Orchestra. 1130 Ella Fitzgerald Orchestra. KOIN CBS TKIDAT 954 Ke. 6:00 Northwest Farm Reporter. 6:15 Breakfast Bulletin. 630 Koin Klock 7:15 Wake Up News. 730 Bob Gerred Reporting. 7:45 Nelson Pr ingle. News. 8:00 Victory Begins Home. 6:15 Consumer News. 630 Valiant Lady. 6:45 Stories America Loves. 90 Kate Smith Speaks. 9 J5 Big Sister. 930 Romance of Helen Trent 9:45 Our Gal Sunday. 100 Life Can Be Beautiful. 10:15 Woman in White. 1030 Vic and Side. 10:45 Jane Endicott, Reporter. 110 Bright Horizon. 11:15 Aunt Jenny. 1130 We Love and Learn. 11:45 The Goldbergs. 120 Eyes of the World. 12 J 5 Knox Manning. News. 1230 Joyce Jordan. 12:45 Woman of Courage. 1 0 Stepmother. 1 :15 Exploring Space. 130 Joey Kearns Orchestra. 1:45 Very Truly Yours. 20 News. 2:15 Siesta. 2:30 William Winter. News. 2. -45 Scattergood Barnes. 3. -00 Russ Brown. 3:10 Ted Husing's Scoreboard. 9:15 Hedda Hopper's Hollywood. 330 Frank Parker. 3:45 News. 40 Second Mrs Burton. 4:15 Young Dr. Malone. 430 Newspaper of the Air. 5:15 America's Home Front 530 Harry Flannery S. -45 Bob Carred. News. 555 Elmer Davis. News. 60 Leon T. Drews. 6:15 State Traffic. 630 First Nighter. 635 Ginny Simms. 70 How's I Doin"? 7:30 Jerry Wayne. Songs. 1:45 News of the World. 80 Amos 'n Andy. 8:15 Shep Fields. 8 30 Playhouse. 90 Kate Smitn. 9:55 Find the Woman. 100 Five Star Final. 10:15 World Today . 1030 War Time Women. 10:35 Air-Flo. 10:45 Know Your Navy. 110 Gut Anaheim Orchestra. 1130 Manny Strand Orch. 11:55 News. 120 to 60 ajn Music 8s news. KEX NBC FRIDAY 1194 Ke. 60 News. 4J5 National Farm and Home. 645 Western Agriculture. on Home Front gKT JTJMSTfOR KE.TMf j A CtmtMat JBttsWe Cmmin-WawNm 70 Frank Castle. 7:30 Breakfast Club. 80 Haven ot Rest. 830 Don V in ing. Organist 8:45 Keep Fit Club With Patty Jean. 90 Meet Your Neighbor. 9:15 Vicki Vickee. Singer. 930 Breakfast at Sardi's. 100 Bauknage Talking. 10:15 Second Husband. 1930 Amanda of Honeymoon Hill, 10:45 John's Other Wife. 110 Just Plain Bill. 11 :15 Excursion in Science. 11:30 Stars ot Today. 11 :45 Keep Fit Club With Patty Jean. 120 News Headlines and Highlights. 12:15 Your Livestock Reporter. 1230 Market Reports. 1235 Musical Interlude. 12:40 Stella Unger. 12:45 News Headlines and Highlights. 10 Arthur Tracy. Street Singer. 1:15 Club Matinee. 1 35 News. 2.-00 The Quiet Hour. 230 A House in the Country. 2:45 Chaplain Jim. USA. 30 Stars of Today. 8:15 Kneass With the News. 330-Skitch Henderson. Pianist. 3:45 Beating the Budget. 3:50 Wartime Periscope. 4:00 Clambake by Clancy. 4:30 Tea for Two. 4:45 Diminutive Classics. 5:00 Flyinx Patrol. 5:15 Secret City. 5:30 Jack Owens, Singer. 5:45 News of the World. 6 0 March of Time. 630 Songs by Dinah Shore. 6:45 Four Polka Dots. 6:55 Ramon a & Tune Twisters. 70 Elsa Maxwell's Party Lint. 7:15 Mary Bullock. Pianist. 7:30 Lightning Jim. 80 Meet Your Navy. 8:30 Gang Busters. 90 Down Memory Lane. 930 News Headlines and Highlights. 9:45 Glenn Shelley, Organist. 100 Studio Party. 10:3O Broadway Bandwagon. 10:45 Dance Hour. 11:00 This Moving World. 11:15 Organ Concert. 1130 War News Roundup. KGW NBC FRIDAY 421 Ke. 40 Music. 530 War News. 60 Sunrise Serenade. 630 Early Bards. 7:00 News Headlines and Highlights 7 US Music of Vienna. 7 30 Reveille Roundup. 745 Sam Hayes. 80 Stars of Today. 8:15 James Abbe, News. 8 30 Symphonic Swing. ' 8:40 Lotta Noyes 8:45 David Harum. 9 0 Bess Johnson. 9:15 Bachelor's Children. 9:30 Collins Calling. 9:45 Organ Concert. 100 Benny Walker's Kitchen. 10:15 News. 1930 Homekeeper Calendar. 10:45 Dr. Kate. 110 Light of the World. 11:15 Arnold Grimm's Daughter. 1130 The Guiding Light 11:45 Betty Crocker. 120 Against the Storm. 12:15 Ma Perkins. 1230 Pepper Young's Family. 12:45 Right to Happiness. 10 Backstage Wife. 1:15 Stella Dallas. 1 30 Lorenzo Jones. 1:45 Young Widder Brown. "20 When a Girl Marries. 2:15 Portia Faces Life. 230 The Andersons. 2:45 Vie and Sade. 30 The Bartons. 3:15 Hollywood News Flashes. J JO Personality Hour. 430 Funny Honey Man. 455 Stars of Today. 90 H. V. Kaltenborn. SOS Cocktail Houn 530 Keep America Singing. 8:45 Bill Henry. 60 Waltz Time. 6:30 Plantation Party. 70 People Are Funny. 730 Grand Ce.Trnl Station. 80 Fred Waring Pleasure Time. 8:15 Lum and Abner. 630 Whodunit. 90 Musical Interlude. 95 Dark Fantasy. 930 Log Cabin Orchestra. 8:55 Musical Interlude. 180 News Flashea. 10:15 Your Home Town Mews. 10 as Citizens Alert 1 30 Moonlight Sonata. 119 St Francis Hotel Orchestra. 11:15 Hotel Blltmore Orchestra. 11 30 War News Round ubl 120-3 sun. Music. KOAC FKIDAT 156 K. 100 Review of the Day. 195 News. 16:15 The Homemaker Hour 11 0 Beethoven. 12 .DO News. 12:15 Farm Hour. 15 Favorite Classics. 105 Variety Time. l:4S-Ceacert Hall. 20 Clubwomen 'a Half Haw. 830 Memory Book of Music 25 Monitor View the News. 80 Plantation Revival. ans Science News of the Week. 830 Orchestral Gema. 145 News. 40 Keyboard Classics. 430 Stories for Boys aad Otrta. 90 On the Campuses. 930 Melodies for Strings, 8.-45 Evening -Vesper Service. 60 Dinner Concert dS-Newa. 639 Farm Hour. . 730 Consumer's Forum. 7:45 Concert Hatt. 7:55 OSC Baccalaureate Service. 9:15 Music of the Masters. 9:45-100 CP Ke By KLRKE L. SIMPSON Wide World War Analyst for! The Statesman i Whatever else as to Hitler's strategy can be read into the renewed axis attack: in Libya on British outposts for defense of Egypt, It is clear that the To bruk bastion is Marshal Edwin Rommel's immediate objective. Military opinion on both sides of the Atlantic seems agreed that the war-wrecked Libyan port, scene of an unforgetable stand by British imperials for many months although completely cut off except by sea, is the key point of the fifth Libyan cam paign. However, even if the nazis capture Tobruk, they prob ably would not try to invade Egypt immediately. Word that one of four armored nazi spearheads launched east ward had knifed to within 15 miles of Tobruk's inner defense in the first rush strengthens the belief that Rommel has strictly limited objectives. This belief Is based partially on difficulties of hot season of fensive operations In the Liby an desert; bat even more on the fact that within a month or so the sand storm period which makes an inferno of the track less battle ground will be at hand. Nobody who has experienced Libyan sand storms has a good word for them. They not only make desert life all but unbear able but render war a blind-man's-buff affair. Sand-laden 'Crime at By EDITH BRISTOL CHAPTER 27 Two significant things hap pened next day. Both are re corded briefly In my diary. In the first place, after the long delay, the Durfee inquest was held and what an anti climax that turned out to be! With his face still puffed and purple from his recent disad venture with the hornets' nest, the Gallina coroner tried to im part to the hearing a feeling of drama and mystery. But the public interest in a mystery will hold suspense for just so long. An unsolved crime goes stale. After a time another, more mys terious, supresedes it. And that's what happened in the case of Worth Durfee. Estelle's death, following so closely on the killing of her husband, had stolen the show. It had more class, anyhow, as I heard one of the reporters whisper to another while we waited for the arrival of the coroner. The finding of the body of a middle-aged eccentric, not too popular in his community, whether by bullet wound or by accidental automobile crash, had no thrills to compete with the mystery of Estelle's murder if it was a murder. So the Dur fee investigation became routine question and answer routine verdict J'death at the hands of person or persons unknown." I was fed up with courts and coroners. I was weary of ques tions and answers. I wanted to get out into the brilliant Octo ber sunshine and walk over the hills to forget this atmosphere of plot and counter-plot I was not destined to be free from it not yet, anyhow. Something was brewing in the Gallina court house trouble was in the air. You could feel it in the tension of the court room. It was written on the faces of the court attaches. Whisperings and buzzings in the corridors I was aware of it the minute I stepped inside the building. And as we drove home from tee inquest, Lance told me what it was. He had managed, some how, so that I rode in his car and Sydney took Martha in his roadster. "Somebody's going to be put on tee spot by District Attorney Stevens," Lance said, swinging his machine out of the town traffic and into the broad rib bon of the highway that led toward Castaway. "How?" "Well, there's a first rate feud on between tea district attor ney's office and the sheriffs of fice. It's been going on for some time and it's coining to a crisis now. This case or rather these eases are going to make it si knockdown,' drag-out scrap between Stevens and Nathan Anen.' -Tell me about it." I aaid. "I havent heard anything about such a feud between officials.' 'There's not an awful lot to telL except that I feel sorry for the fellow who' gets caught be tween the two sides ! of . the scrap.'' There was nothing in Lance's words right then to sound prophetic, 1 hut j looking back on it there might well have been. "Stevens is a young man,! Lance went on, "eager , to get air obscures the' vision both oi troops on the ground and of air observers soaring above the grit ty clouds. Even the desert land marks by which tank pilots and airmen check their positions art subject to the whim of the winds. Great sand ttunes disappear at one point to rise at another as if by magic. That Rommel can hope to break through British defenses and into Egypt deep enough within the next four weeks to get beyond range of the sand devils b wholly improbable. The troth appears to be that he Is now seeking only to seize the Tobruk outpost which Jammed Iikea poisoned thorn Into the sea flank of his last abortive offensive In order to prepare the ground for later major operations. Nazi possession of Tobruk is essential to an invasion attempt on Egypt. It would require some thing more than mere holding of the port, however, to implement a drive far beyond it into Egypt effectively. The previous Libyan cam paigns have demonstrated that aggressive mechanized action in the desert has a strict limit It Is fixed by communications with the rear. It has worked out each time at about 400 miles. The fasgt that made the heroic British stand at Tobruk possible was British sea control. The To bruk garrison was supplied by sea at night when darkness ren dered nazi planes all but sightless. Castaivay' ahead and ambitious. A good official, too. But you know how It is with district attorneys " "Not very much," I said. "You forget that my only experience with courts of any kind has been since I came to Castaway." Lance explained. "When a dis trict attorney comes up for re election and Stevens will next year he makes his campaign on the number of convictions.. He asks people to vote for him on the grounds of the number of people he has convicted." "That doesn't sound quite fair to me," I said. "Suppose some of them shouldn't have been convicted " "That's the way it's done, fair or unfair. He's supposed to con vict. That's his duty. And Stev ens is after Allen's scalp for being too easy- on the criminals in these parts." "Would Stevens rather have Allen arrest a man who was innocent than not to arrest any one at all?" To me, it sounded infamous, this system. "I wouldn't say it quite as strong as that But Stevens Is determined to have somebody arrested and prosecuted for the killings of my uncle and of Dur fee. About Estelle he's not so , much concerned " "Why not?" "Because that, my sweet child, took place outside of his Juris diction. And I must state, in my opinion which may not be worth much in law that Stevens is more concerned with getting somebody convicted in Gallina county than he is with finding a murderer. Or two mur derers." "Wasn't that what the city de tectives tried to do? They tried to hang something on you whether you were guilty or not." (To be continued) Today's Garden By LII.T.IE L, MADSEN G. W. reports that her flow ering almond is wilting at the ends of all the branches. Answer: This shrub seems to be given to dying back in this community. Other communities report that It is not so affected there. Best thing seems to be to cut it back severely each season as soon as it is finished blooming. Spray the shrub with bordeaux after it has been cut back. In autumn, just before the leaves fall, spray with lime sulphur and again before the plant starts growth In the spring use a lime sulphur dor mant strength spray. H. S. reports that she plant ed lilac shrubs two years ago but they have not bloomed. Says she bought them from a . reliable grower.' Answer. Rholin Cooley of the Cooley gardens at Silverton re ports that lilacs are slow to establish after transplanting and may not bloom for two or three years. Lilacs should be grown in the sun . in a well-drained soil. Fertilize them with a com post or a balanced fertilizer at once. The old established bushes seem to thrive best if .given a good feeding of bonemeal each autumn. Lilacs do not want as? add soil.