THE SUNDAY OEEGONIAN, PORTLAND, :MARCH 19, 1905. t - jsI PFOM such raw material as the most hardened habitual criminals In twenty-two of our gTlm state prisons Maude Ballington Booth, the "Little Mother" of the convicts, Is, day by day, turning out Jean "Valjeans and starting them In the world afresh. A woman who can take in hand a no torious burglar who has served many terms for safe-cracking and the like, and who can get this man employment as night watchman at a bank whose offi cials know his career, is. indeed, per forming miracles, you would say. And a woman who can go to employers who have put a man in Sing Sing for abus ing a position of trust and persuade them to take that man back, at his old desk, you would call equally wonderful. Maude Ballington Booth is performing these and scores of equally amazing mir acles, week In and week out. How she succeeds, prison authorities wonder. It is simply because she has the true psy chology of crime down pat; because she combines with a motherly heart the fac ultywhich so many of us lack of see ing the spots on the barn door without losing sight of the door itself. And above all,-sbe is a consistent Christian Hugo's good bishop of "lies Mlserables" coma tp life in the form of a woman. To her three homes, established in the past few years. Mrs. Booth Is taking dis charged convicts and keeping them un til they have had a fresh start in life. Of the more than 4000 ex-prlsoners to whom she has thus bidden "godspeed" on their new road 75 per cent have proven to be Jean Valjeans. SO per cent are uncertain and have been lost track of. B per cent have perhaps returned to prison. Out of the last 600 men' started afresh only three have deliberately lapsed into crime. Hard to Begin Afresh. A vast proportion of these men would have eltror to steal or starve, just after leaving prison, were It not for these in teresting institutions developed by the "Little Mother." The only hand of help offered to them would, in most cases, be that of a past fellow in crime. First to greet the liberated convict is very often the published announcement of his discharge, supplemented by a re view of his crimes. Even escaping this blow, his very nervous demeanor marks him as an object of suspicion. The street, to his unaccustomed cure, is a roaring torrent. Every car appears bent on running him down; every pedestraln on colliding with him. His eyes are daz zled by the unobstructed glare. He im agines that every one met on the street can tell whence he came. His face is blanched by the tell-tale prison pallor. About his legs still clings the shuffle of the lock-step. Instinctively he folds his arms when spoken to. To the policemen patrolling the streets or the detectives mingling with the crowdB these signs tell too plainly where the freshly liberated convict wa3 last employed. Ho has a shifting eye be cause in the months behind him he has been forbidden to look up from his prison labor, should any one pass through ris shop, or because discipline has de manded that his eyes be dropped and kept down while anyone has passed him in prison corridor or yard. Indeed in sorao prisons convicts are required to turn their faces to the wall whenever approached. Worst Punishment After Prison. His stutter and rtammer are the resultr of long silence. If he does find employ ment some ever faithful Javert prob ably informs his employer that he Is hiring an cx-convict. These are some of tho conditions which excited the pity of the "'Little Mother." "The real punish ment of the prisoner commences after the liberty he has so long sought for tomes," wroto one of these unfortunates to her. In the course of her work Mrs. Booth makes many addresses in the prison chapels. In one of these she volunteered to correspond with any convicts who had no friend to write to. Noting how eagerly many men In tho stripes embraced this opportunity to outpour their hearts to some one, she repeated the offer at each prison visited. One day she re ceived from a long-term prisoner in Joliet a letter, which, he said, was tho first attempted In seven years, for he had r.o one in the world who cared whether bo lived or died. "You said you loved us," the communi cation began. "Nobody ever said that to me before in my whole life. 1 hardly know what tho word means. You spoke of home. The nearest approach to it I eor had was my time la the kitchen of one of the state prisons, where the officer was very kind to me." "If Someone Cares, I Will Try." Born In an Irish poorhouse, this un fortunate had never known father or mother, love or sympathy. Put to work when a small child, he had immediately 'alien among evil companions, and since tl-cn had spent his whole life In state rrlsons, except for short holidays in the 4ums between one discharge and the next arrest. "Now that I know somebody cares, I will try." his letter closed. This and many. like It set Mrs. Booth to think ing She decided upon her homes for just such men as this, and this very one. In tact, after becoming one of her benefi ciaries, now has a happy little home of his own and is a useful member of so ciety. "The "boys' needed a home, and the need called for speedy action." paid she the other day. "When we first started the plans were all talked over in prison. I took the men, not the public, into my confidence. Our Idea was to have a place that would be a real home and not an In stitution. We did not want,a mission In the city with Bleeping rooms attached; certainly not a place placarded 'Prison ers' Home.' 'Shelter for Ex-Convicts,' or such. It was to be a home hidden away from the public, and as much as posslblo patterned after that to which the mother would welcome her boy were she living and able to do so. In Sing Sing prison we named our home, and the name chosen was "Hope HalL " The house which she first opened was a large frame building on "Washington Heights, once used as a club. Then she found a ten-acre farm In the country which Is better shut off from the public gaze. This Is her "Hope Hall No. 1." That It might be a veritable barrier be tween the past and the future she spared nothing on its equipment and appoint ment. The first "Hope Hall" inmate was re called by Mrs. Booth. He was a hard ened ex-convict just out of prison, who had come unannounced to her office, handing over a sandbag, revolver and some cartridges, which ho had got after many futile efforts to find honest work. She took him in. and sotm he worked himself up" to the trusted office of "ser geant" of the home. But the dread "prison consumption" already had taken root in his lungs,, and he was found open air work on one of the .railroad lines. The disease could not be curbed, and he came back to Hope Hall to die. His own mother had refused to see him or own him since his return from prison, nor would she even come to his deathbed. Two other "Hope Halls" have lately been established, in Illinois and Iowa. The latter was fouaJJed and given to the ex-convicts by L. 8. Coffin, a co-laborer of the "Little Mother." . Tho maintenance of the Eastern home, however, has forced Mrs. Booth to spend much of her time on the lecture platform. All of her earn ings have been given to the work. When the writer asked permission to visit the nearest "Hope Hall" Mrs. Booth firmly but courteously refused it. "No newspaper men have been permit ted to visit the 'Hope Halls';" she said. "From the first we have wished the sa credness of their home privacy to be respected. All too long have these, our friends, been marked men, pointed out and associated with their crimes and made to feel that they are the lawful prey ot the morbidly curious." One of her workers had, however. Just taken some photographs of the homes, which the writer was permitted to publish. That the "Little Mother" la a practical psychologist, so far as' reform Is con cerned, is best proved by the rules which she has adopted for her "Hope Halls." There are no public meetings, no experi ence meetings. "Talk of wrong-doing is often the first step to feeling one can do It again," said she. "The shame and humiliation that should be felt are soon lost to those who talk much of what they have been, and a spirit of exaggeration and almost boastfulness takes Its place. We strongly urge silence regarding the past, and, as far as possible, tho forget ting of its sad memories." The rules of the Hope Halls now require all Inmates' to- come direct from a state prison. This Is to .guard against those who might come as a last resort after re visiting old haunts. The Catholic Is as welcome as the Protestant, the Jew as the infidel, the negro as the white man. Contrary to the general notion, member ship In Mrs. Booth's Volunteer Prison League now 25,000 strong Is not a pre requisite. No discrimination is made in regard to crimes or the number of terras served in orison. No limit is put on the length of stay. Every Inmate Is welcome until he has thoroughly built up his strength and found satisfactory work. Some are found to need but a fortnight; others months, to strengthen and nerve themselves, for a life struggle. All in mates are started again In life with em ployers who know of their past. This Is a great safeguard, and they need not work in the fear that their dread .secret may at any hour become known and cost them their positions. Tho able-bodied mechanic or laborer is found to have the best chance for finding work under these circumstances; but the man who has been a bookkeeper, or has held some other position of trust starts his new life with the greatest obstacles. Mrs. Booth says she is not confronted. wRh. laziness In this work. On the contrary, her difficulty has always been to instill patience in inmates who become discour aged because they cannot at once start upon their labors. All inmatos are employed In some neces sary work about the hajls;. some in the laundries, some at painting, carpentering or building; some as cooks, gardeners, farmers, hostlers, etc There are no in dustries, such as mat and broom-making. These, in Mrs. Booth's opinion, would spoil the homo aspect of the Halls or rob men of their ambition to strike out in the world for themselves. The buildings are environed with well kept lawns, with flower beds, rose bushes, vines and shrubs; orchards of fruit trees and fieds well ploughed and cultivated In the farming season. The sleeping rooms contain white enameled iron beds. The floors are strewn with rugs, lace cur tains hang at the windows, and pictures adorn the walls. The dining tables are always immaculate with white linen, while plants bloom in the windows, and waiters in white jackets and aprons serve the food. In the parlor, lecture-room and li brary there are all of the comforts and cozy appointments of the average prosper ous citizen's home, a piano, which the men gather about in the evenings; a phonograph with a large megaphone, bookcases well stocked with the standard literature, potted plants, bright-colored pictures, tasteful draperies and comforta ble furniture. There are also tables on which games may-be played and" broad piazzas where all may gather on Summer nights. Has Men on Parole. Convicts are also sent from the state prisons to the Hope Halls, on parole. , un der Mrs. Booth's .sponsorship. ,Many of hose are men who would have no chance of gaining such liberty did she not vol unteer responsibility for them. She finds them work, keeps in touch with them from month to month, and reports regu larly to the prison authorities until she finally has the pleasure of nandlng them their final discharge papers. "In Illinois most of our 'boys' are taken from the prisons on parole, owing' to the indeterminate sentence law in force in that state," said Mrs. Booth. "Most of these men would have had no chance had we not taken tham home, being of tho utterly friendless class, for whom no one else would stand sponsor. Of these we received there during last year 171 men, of whom only SO proved unsatis factory." Hope Hall "graduates" working within reach often run "home" for a visit during the holidays. " At a recent anniversary -of the New York home 70 sat down- to sup per together. Two teams, composed re spectively of ."home boys" and "gradu ates." competed on the baseball grounds, while little children whose fathers had been given back to them romped in the shade of the big trees, and grateful wives looked on with glad, hopeful faces. But what of the women in our prisons or the women and children left behind when husband and father are taken away by the grim minions of the law? Dis charged women convicts are taken to Mrs. Booth's volunteer rescue homes. They are so few in number that Hope Halls on the scale afforded for men are not needed, but they receive the same care and are given a start In the same way as is given their fallen brothers. Starving wives and helpless- children of men in prison are fed and clothed by the "Little Mother" as soon as she discovers them through letters from her "boys." The mothers are found wholesome em ployment, and the little ones. If need be, are sent to one of two children's homes provided by the "Volunteers of America, the. well-known philanthropic organization of which Ballington Booth husband of the "Little Mother" Is general-ln-chlef. Speaking in general of her work of re form Mrs. Booth said: "The Judge and Jury take cognizance only of the offense; the police and prison records note the list of charges and the number of returns to prison; but those ot us who seek to know the man beneath the criminal have a right to go back and ask ourselves, 'What chance did this man have to do right, to act and to be as we arer " JOHN ELFRBTH WAT KINS. Racing System and the Consequent Poverty Divers Ways for Not Beating the Bookies, Told in Slang by a Wise Guy. "ft FEW minutes- ago," observed the race-follower with the out standing ears, the alert eyes. and the four-karat, blue-white, shirt-front boulder, "I hove alongside a fat-conk, who was worrying hlmelf by doing things with a pencil on a pad. "He was whittling common arithmetic down, to shavings by figuring how much he would have yanked down if he had parlayed ein buck on all of the geergees, including a couple of G0-to-l babeskys, that sklddooed first under the wire at Hot Springs yesterday. "When ne got through with that pad-and-pencll dope, he had John D. Rockefel ler looking, for a soup handout at a Homeward Bound Mission. "The combination ticket on the whole six would only have paid about eighty two billion bones, with a few Amalgama ted coppers over to buy papers, peanuts and gum with. "In milk-tickets or rain-checks, a little bank-roll like that would stuff a line of freight cars that would reach from here to Hong Kong. "When he got through making those figures, this arithmetlker I'm mentioning prodded me for the price of a shave and enough to get his laundry out. I fell for the touch," because his scroll work on the pad had amused me a whole lot. "But I felt like taking him down to Wing Moy's and staking him to a new yen-hok. It looked sad to me that such a high-smoker should have such punk tools, and a blunt yen-hok is bound to hash a smoke. "This pencil parlayer believes in that run-it-along-on-the-hull-slx system, and that's the reason he's been feeding on ginger-snaps and cheese, purchased in nlcklc lots, for so long that, if he ever fqund himself sitting in front of a sure enough steamy beef stew at an honest Injun table, he'd get the gibbers and im agine he bad 'cm. "But they all believe In their systems. I used to believe in the system thing my self. Td hang on to a system till I be came ho anemic that I'd have to fasten my galluses to my shoulders with- safety pins for fear they'd slip down and then I'd go and dig up another system- "if there's any known or unknown sys tem of not copping the kale on the Shet lands that I have not had a wallop at. I want somebody to whirl along quick and put me next to the name and .number of it. so that I can spin out and get lost until all danger of my taking a hack at the new one is over. Thc first system that orer rocked me In the cradle of the weeps was that.play-to-nall-so-much-a-day thing, and that HAD ROCKEI"ELLER LOOKING iOR A HANDOUT. seems so long ago that I feel as If I ought to be Oslerized for even - mention ing it. "All I wanted out of the game was that se miiqh a day and expenses. " Gazing back now through the drift and discard of yesteryears. I can remember that I used to frequently pull out that so much a day and expenses as often as once in every forty-nine days. "I never came so close to having to ship in' the Navy, to get some" place to sleep. as I did while I was playing that I-only-want-so-much-a-day system. "The system itself is all right. If any thing. I'd call it pretty nigh as good as United States of Columbia bonds. The rea son why it was not a dividend payer while I waa toying along with it is a long, pain ful narrative, little Brighteyes, which your weary old Uncle Jabez would fain not dwell upon. One thing that system did teach me, and that was how to Ink away the bum spots on a hat. But almost any old system will teach a gee-gee player how to do that if he stays with It long enough. "The next system that I used as an obesity cure was that thing of desiring the favorite to run second for you, and getting the spinach down that way. "I went along with one for nearly an entire Summer, and I often knew myself to pull out as high as $1.30 per diem at it. On the majority of days, however, I got pulled in for everything but the buttons on my tunic. "When they tap your nerve so that you'll hand the grinning layer six hard wrung aces on the even-money favorite to skate second at 1 to 3 for the place, the transaction standing to slip you just a two-case note if It goes through, then it's' time for you to hunt for a Job as floor walker In a ten-cent store, mess-mate, and that isn't any flugelhorn fantasie in F flat, either. "If there is any lightning calculator that can dope It out where the player of that favorite-to-run-second system geta off when 18 favorites in a straight row run eighth, I want to know what kind of a hoptoy he uses and if he rolls and cooks 'em himself. "The only reason why that system didn't nudge me into the midnight bread line was that the line wasn't going at the time I am speaking of. "The next system that engaged my rapt and tapped attention was that neat and tasty little plan whereby you play the one thing a day that you like' as far back as you can grab even money. "This one works out on paper as pretty as the balance sheet of a Chad wicked bank published four days before Cassie was pinched. But when you begin to push In your ker-tlsh on it, you find out that all this talk about there being such things as rebates Is caloric atmosphere. There's no rebate, even of what you stuff in on that as-far-back-as-you-can-get-even-money system. The whole success ful operation of that gag depends upon you going to the gee-gee that you 'like,' and there's always at least one In each of the six prints that.you like If you could fix it up so that you could find out with a goose-bone or a divining rod which one of 'em you 'liked best, and go to it, you'd probably drift down to the water-front barrel-houses even sooner. "I stayed with that system until I looked like the reclining figure in the foreground of a flashlight picture of the famine In Hlndoostan, and then I stopped 'liking anything and dug up another sys tem that had to be purely arbitrary' to get by. "This was that connin .little consensus system that you may have heard a rumor or two 6f The consensus is one of those you-can't-loae systems. I mean, when you play It with a pencil and pad. But when you fall for it with the rag carpet and the kitchen oilcloth because you need the cush to keep them from hanging a com bination padlock on your door while you'r around the corner staking yourself to a stogie, the consensus system is just as good and game a loser as any of the rest of them, and if I don't know, Alcwyn, good old Doctor Consensus himself isn't there with the wisdom about his own pre scription. "In playing the consensus, all you've got to do is to pick out the stingaree that the majority of the newspapers pick out in their regular selections to deliver the duff. Then you wrap up a piece of gaff pipe in a piece of an abandoned shirt and go out to hunt for the price to pay that one. "After you've traipsed along with the consensus system for about three months, you'll know how to write a -series of ar ticles for a ten-cent magazine about 'How to Get By on the Eat Thing Without Pro ducing.' "I played the consensus syetem consist enly for three months, and at the end of that time I stepped on one of these weighing machines that announces your weight through a phonograph. The best that the machine would stake me to for my slot Investment was, "Nothing doing you don't weigh enough to register get off.' "From the consensus I zephyred along to the jockey system. I guess that's per fectly miserable on paper, that jockey system. "The dub who worked it out foe me in a note-book had fringe on the bottoms of his trousers that reminded me of lambre quin tassel?, but at that he sounded so good as he uncoiled those figures about the workings of the jockey system In real life that I fell into 'the habit of rubbering around Jor a pair of coupon scissors. "But when I went to the Jockey sys tem, the rboys who'd been nailing four wins and two seconds a day out of six races would bring 43 also-rans under the tape, and the minute I'd cut a boy like that off my list, the next race out he'd fetch a 40 to 1 crab home In a two-step, and that's bow I was flagged and fanned, coming and going, both ends from the middle, by the favorite jockey thing. "As soon as Td frame up a mash-hunch on a coming boy. just signed by Sidney Pagot or Jack Doyer or J.-.R. Keene at a salary of whatever the turf . writers wanted to scratch It down at, the kid would develop Into a stretch-ekulker or a-rum-fighter or they'd get him from the outside, and. then I'd have to prowl around for a new dead one in the riding game to become enamored of for gamb ling purposes. "All that I ever got out of playing the jockey system was a knowledge of quin tuple entry bookkeeping that would get me a job any time I needed it as fourth assistant accounter for & dog-catcher. "Then I stumbled on that follow-the-inoney system, and when I got hold of' that one my pals asked me who had been leaving me money, I looked and felt so glad. "I'd just keep the duff right down at the bottom of my clothing until I saw how the boys who soaked $20,000 to a race got down. If I saw Pittsburg Phil or Riley Grannan or Dave Gideon or John W. Gates dingo commissioner romp ing along the bookies line eating up the price against something- that even didn't look to have an outside chance to me, I'd shut my eyes to my own line of thinks and go to the played one with all the enthusiasm of a periodical sudser getting a high-ball light-up for the first time in a year. "Then the played mutts would lose. "I hadn't any sooner begun playing the follow-the-educated-duft system and chas ing the plungers and their commissioners around, the rings than the turf reporters began to print stories of how much cush all of the noted plungers were losing. They didn't print anything about how much I was losing, because they were callous, or something. - "One day I saw Joe Yeager In the act of getting down 340,000 on an even-mo'ney crustacean in his shed that bis boy H1I debrand was to pilot, and I all but broke 11 strong mens arms In getting down my 332 on that one. When the race was over and Mr. Yeager's thing showed dazzling speed after it was all oft and the numbers were up, the plunger person, I observed, cooled out by applying a quart of the hissy amber-juice to his covered works, and I heard him laugh real loud over the contretemps. Then he stepped Into an 318,000 Mercedes and was chaffed home by his Imported- buzz-wagon , motorman. "I staked myself to a high-collared beer, and then beat my way back to. town on a trolley-car. "The system thing is all right -hen you are just feeling around and don't need the money. "But if you try to show, me that It ever fetches anything to a merry-go-round follower who stays with the game all the year 'round and who has found out the difference between a package of dope-charts - and a pound of side-meat, rm from the state that Jde Folk resides in, and you've got to produce the speci fications and blue prints." Copyright, 1S05, Washington News Association. CLARENCE It CULLEN. A railroad constructed by one party upon the land of another from materials furnished by the latter, under an express agreement that the road should be the property of the owner of the land, and should remain so until paid for by the party constructing It, when a bill of sals should be made to the latter. Is held in Webster Lumber-Co. vs. Keystone Lumber & M. Co. (W. Va.). 66 L. R. A. 33, to be a fixture and a part of the . realty.. The question of the nature of a railroad whether real estate or personal property is treated in a -note to. this case.-