TiiE SL.MiAV OHIiUOMAX, POKILAXD, AI'IML. 18, 1U0 CAREER OF GENERAL LEONARD WOOD IS APPRECIATIVELY TOLD Creation of Republic of Cuba Declared Republican Candidate's Title to Be Regarded as Constructive Statesman Platform Advocates Military Preparedness and Is Sympathetic With Labor. X The acotniMinvinir nrtl:le on Oeneral Leonard 'ad i a condensation of an ar ticle that apnear In the April number of the Worlds Work. It l copyrighted by that maeazlnt and i renrinted liere by permit jon of the publisher?. BY BURTON J. HKXDR1CK. T1IL first idea sungestcd by the presidential aspirations of Leon ard Wnnri Is tout h a rrtllitnrw candidate. The second is that hos tility to President Wilson, quite as much as admiration for General Wood, inspires the forces which are promot ing his political interests. In the last few years these are the phases of tleneral Wood's career which have chiefly attracted public attention; there is a tendency to think of him as the great advocate of preparedness Mild its the soldier whom President Wilson, at whatever cost, seemed de termined to keep away from the west ern front in the world war. Tlie hasty newspaper reader, after turning these facts over In his mind, is inclined' to think that they do not furnish the substance for a successful presidential campaign. The American people do not favor a "militarist" for president; nor do they regard a "grievance" as a satisfactory plat form for a great political contest. Yet the most important claim made In the interest of General Wood is of an entirely different kind. The United States at the present moment has a government which does not function. The quality which it most conspicu ously lacks Is executive power the ability to get things done. It needs a master mind which can take up the executive departments, put at their heads able men who can make them operaie for the nation's benefit, elim inate waste, introduce order and or ganize an administrative machine which will be able to cope with the new responsibilities pressing upon the. new America. It would be hard to fit.d any living American who has fciiown himself to be possessed of greater executive and administrative power than General Wood. tieurral Introduces New Spirit. Yet the fact that General Wood in troduces a new spirit into American Ufa Is an important argument in his favor. A pressing need in American public lire at present is for a man who is "different": "genius." "world statesmanship." "vision" have had their innings; America yearns for HERBERT HOOVER HAS LONG RECORD OF Orphan Office Boy, Has Simple but Specific Ideas on World Problems and Has Proved Ability to Carry Them to Thin article on Herbert Hoover UDOciirfl 11 the April number of the W'oriU's Work. Ji lh printed here only in nan. It la a copyrighted article and in reprinted by Hpeirial permission. BY FRENCH STfiOTHER. MANY" Americans are asking these questions about Herbert Hoover: Is he a representative American? Has he the personal qual ities and the gifts of leadership that fit him for the presidency? Where does he stand on the political issues of the day? Is Hoover a representative Amer ican? He was born in Iowa, in the heart of the corn belt, in a village i of 400 inhabitants, the son of a man Mho was village blacksmith and tanner in one. His parents were both Quakers. He is a Quaker, being to this day a member in good standing of "the Highland (Oregon) Quarterly .Meeting, where he has always re tained the membership which he ac quired at the age of 10 and where he still pays his church dues. At the age of 10, Hoover, for come years an orphan, was sent by rela tives in Iowa to live with other re latives in Oregon. At Newberg. Or., he spent the next four years. Under the sparkling inspiration of the vivid life of the Pacific coast, his mind found its natural bent. He insisted on supporting himself at 14. The next three years were spent In Salem and Portland, Or., where he earned his way in a real estate office, living in a back room which he fitted up, and spending his spare hours studying mathematics. In 1S91. at the age of 17, he had saved enough money to start in college. He wanted to be an engineer. Hoover's Luck" Proverbial. "Hoover's luck" became a proverb I among his fellows at Stanford .uni versity in California. He was in the thick of all student activities that called for "doing something," and he was popular enough to hold many offices to which he !.ad to be elected by the votes ot his classmates. He had a genius for organization and management. He did not care to play football: but somehow Hoover was just the right man to manage the team. He did not sing, but when the glee club had to find someone to direct its annual tour of the coast. Hoover was the man they asked to attend to that. He was treasurer of his class, he was business manager I of the college paper, he was treasurer of the student body. Everything he put his hand to turned out well. Hence "Hoover's luck." But Dr. J. C. Branner, his professor in geology I and metallurgy (afterward president of Stanford) used to get very angry when the phrase was used. Luck, nothing:" he would snort. "If those fellows who keep talking about 'Hoover's luck" would study his methods and realize that he succeeds because he works his mind and his body twice as hard as they do, they'd have his luck, too." Hoover spent his summers work- ling in the mines and for the govern ment in surveys. He graduated from Stanford in 1S33. aged 21, and spent (he next year in a gold mine in Nevada county. Cal.. as a common laborer, learning the practical side of mining. Then he went to San Francisco and worked for a year in the office of ..ouls Jantn. one of the best known of western mining en gineers. In 1897 Janln recommended him to an English mining syndicate operating in the new bonanza gold fields of Australia. Within a year. Hoover, now aged 24, had located and developed into a richly paying property one of the best mines 1j west Australia. In another year he was the engineer and manager of a group of three. ;hina Chooses Hoover. In 1S99 the Chinese government created a bureau of mines. Hoover. aged 25, was appointed its chief en gineer, boon came the Boxer . re bellion, which was the protest of the j old-fasbioned Chinese against the presence of all foreign devils and I their works. Hoover and his bride (as Miss Lou I Henry she had been a fellow student In eoloi;' at Stanford and Hoover 1 - r-'.!? ' . - ' -A f v s? - y '- ; - . - 4 V , ' " " 1 -M "V- ' ' t - ' ' , , I something which is not so "original" as the present administration; which does not see so far into the future; which has a keener eye for imme diately pressing problems. In certain d-irections. General Wood is a man of extraordinary ability and achievement: but he is not a super man, he has not concocted in his closet strange and revolutionary no tions of the presidential office, and it is precisely for these reasons that his personality so pleasantly accords with the national humor. The mera details of his life make refreshing reading. His Americanism has an appropriate beginning; two of his ancestors this case is authentic and had made her acquaintance in the classroom by way of a three-sided discussion with lr. Branner on the prehistoric date of a pile of fossil bones) stayed in Tien-Tsin during the siege, not because they could not get away but because they felt it their duty to stay and protect, both from the boxers and the Kuropean troops, the anti-boxer Chinese who had loy ally served Hoover while he was chief engineer.. Hoover returned to the United States but soon had another offer as an engineer abroad and he determined to undertake international practice of his profession. These operations he soon had under way on a vast scale. Always as engineer and administrator. Hoover operated mines all over the world, in North and South America and Central America, as well as in Russia. Australia. Soutll Africa. Corfu. Burma and China so wide was the scope of his work. Duning all these years Hoover main tained, together with his brother, his offices in San Francisco, New York. London. Petrograd. Rangoon and other points, spending a portion of every year except one year in Aus tralia and one year in China and one in Belgium in the United States. l.etal Residence" Scattered. His home was always in California and on every possible occasion he re turned to it. He maintained a house and his family sponl a considerable portion of the years, while he was traveling in various parts of the i world, at Monterey and at Stanford university. He was a "legal resident" in half a dozen counfWes. for every civilized country construes a visitor a legal resident after from 10 days to j two months for purposes of taxation. In 1907 Hoover, together with some other Americans, acquired a consider able interest In a lead mine in north ern Burma. They developed this con cern with railways, metallurgical works, steamships, until it employed 2r,000 men. In the years 1914 and 3915, the Belgian relief requiring his. uiiuiviuen attention, ne sola nis inter- . est to the other partners and thereby gained a moderate competence, much drawn upon during the war. This de velopment in the Jungle of North Burma was one of the largest enter prises ever undertaken in the far east, and its American control was only lost when the British govern ment, decided that no kind of aliens should be permitted control of raw material in the British empire. But perhaps the most characteristic of his activities was in the Ural mountains of Russia, where Hoover represented himself and a group of Russian, British and American capi talists in the task of restoring to productivity the Kyshtim iron and copper mines. Mines Are Restored. These mines, long among I tho richest producers of their kind in the world, had fallen on evil days,! because they had continued operation ! by antiquated methods and because the shift from unpaid serf labor even to the plttapce paid to the freed peas ants was too heavy a tax on its out worn system of management. Hoover was called in. He did what he has always done; he got the best technical brains that money could buy, and he made the most thorough examination of the situation that time and intense study could produce. Then he pre pared a plan of action. . . Hoover's plan was to scrap the entire plant mine shafts, ore crushers, smelters everything that "Kyshtim" had meant for a hundred years. He proposed to move the en tire working force of several thou sand families to a new site nearer the sources of ore, and start - all over again with a modern plan. His plan was to spend several mil lion dollars: First, to build a house, with shower bath and sanitary plumb ing, for every man-and-wife connect ed with the mine. Second, to build new mine buildings and in'tall new" machinery. Third, to pay every work man a real wage for his work. The plan was adopted, and executed. Vision begot vision, and the owners put up the millions without a whim per. In a few months the new equip ment of new processes and the new spirit in the men were producing profits that Justified Hoover's plan to the utmost. . . . Is Herbert Hoover a representative i American? Did bis work in Belgium based upon genealogical records ar rived in the ilayflower. and served under Captain Miles Standish in that famous "first encounter" with the Indians. From that day up to the present the American people have been en gaged in no war. large or small, in which the Wood family has not played its part. The general's father served in the medical corps for all the four years of the civil war; after this he retired to the little Cape Cod town of Pocasset. and spent the rest of his life there as an Industrious, poorly paid, anil very lov;iJIe country doctor. Thus Leonard Wood is not. as many suppose, sprung from the aristocracy . : 'Z T ': . ' shame us or did It make us proud i that he was an American? Has Herbert Hoover the personal qualities of the executive the quali ties of leadership? The surface facts of his career should be answer enough: Managing director of vast business enterprises at 30 or younger; organizer and director of the greatest charitable enterprise in history at 40; and then, in succession, food adminis trator of the United States, and head of the supreme economic council at Paris, where he held in his hands the combined economic resources of the world its food. Its credits, its raw materials. Its shipping. Its railroads and its telegraphs and practically ruled Kurope during the months in which the peace treaty was being made. This control was exercised through an organization of volunteer aids, who numbered among their thousands every type of successful business man and professional man. Practically all these men had been required by Hoover, before he would let them work for him, to sell out their private businesses and give up their private careers. And they took their pay out in two things: the approval of their consciences and the approval of Herbert Hoove. Hun dreds of them never saw hii; but every one of them felt that so long as they fitted Into his organization and were allawed to go on with their work, they had won an approbation that was beyond price. If "the chief" said they could stay, that was all they could ask. Personality Is Irresistible. 1 have talked to some of these men, and the foregoing is an exact state ment of their attitude. Their loyalty goes beyond mere devotion: it is al most a form of worship. I could not understand at first Just why, because every one of them spoke of his lack of all the ordinary qualities of con ventional good-feilowsnlp and most I f 1 . e of New Kugland; his stock is rugged mentally, and physically strong, but it is not of the Hrahmaus; lie was a blue-e.yed. tow-headed Cape Cod boy probably at times a "bare-footed" one educated at a dilapidated district school, trained in a hqme distin guished only for its simple New Kng land virtues. Wood's chief delight, in his early days, in addition to an occasional glimpse into Plutarch's Lives and Dickens' novels, was. a sailboat, and' his earliest ambition was to join the navy. Now and then he dreamed of an undergraduate course at Harvard; but for this the family purse was not ade quate, and. at the age of 18, the future general was thrown on his own re sources. He "worked his way" through the Harvard medical school, at the age of 20 started practicing medicine in the slums of Boston, and, at 24, became a "contract surgeon" In the army. CongrraiNiunal lrdol Awarded. When Geronlmo. the last of the great Apache chieftains, began mur dering American women and most hideously torturing American children in New Mexico and Arizona, Wood, exchanging his surgeon's scalpel for a rifle, became one of the famous little company which chased the mon ster over the sandy and burning plains of the southwest and northern Mexico, and did not desist until the enemy surrendered. The reports of Generals Lawton and Miles bear wit ness to the healthy minded zeal which Wood manifested toward bar barians who wreaked their savagery on American women and children; and the fact that Wood received that greatest of all military distinctions for his efficient bravery In this cam paign the congressional medal Is testimony of the same kind. The next event which stirred the same primitive emotions in this doctor-soldier was the regime of Vic toriano Weyler in Cuba. Wood was one of a large number of Americans who did not believe that the American people should sit with folded hands while a European nation was conduct ing a human slaughter house at bur very doors. By this time Ieoiiard Wood had become an Important man In the army and in Washington official life. As physician detailed by the army at the White House, he had gained the intimacy of the families of President Cleveland and President McKinley, bo.th of whom were greatly attached to him; and he had also made the I great friendship of his life that with I of them hinted that he could be ter ribly frank but in the next breath they would fervently describe his in finite "charm." They all felt it. The man is irre sistible,." One more thing: Hoover's other passion of the mind has been to gel usable knowledge. He has always had an uncanny power to find the Information he needs. Part of this power comes from going to the high est authority to get the facts. If you want some practical information about the art of war. you can study text-books for a lifetime, or you can talk to a thousand lieutenants, or you can ask Marshal Foch. Hoover's method is to ask Foch. It's the quickest, slirest, sanest and most practical method in the world. The truth is. Hoover knows. With his tenacious memory for simple, es sential facts, he went single-handed Into the sessions of the supreme eco nomic council in Paris, facing the best political economists and trained diplomats of Europe and their swarms of "experts." and he dominated it because he knew more than anybody else there. Time and again, for ex ample, Hoover demonstrated that he knew more about the food require ments and the food stocks, the coal, and railway and shipping resources of England, France and Italy than their own administrators knew. For example, be proposed an allotment of food for Italy to which the Italians raised bitter objections, until Hoover proved to them that they were asking tor more food than they had evei consumed in peace times, and then Bhowed them that they had made this mistake by using the British meat ra tion as their iood-inaex, whereas the British had always eaten nearly twice the meat, man for man. that Italians I ate. Kow, to so back to the devotion of Theodore rtooscvclt, now assistant secretary of the navy. . . . Soon after the Spanish war. Wood was confronted with this same issue of fundamental righteousness In a much larger aspect. In 190i, he was a brigadier-general; this elevation he did not receive, as many still think, through an act of favoritism on the part ofhis friend Roosevelt, now pres ident; he was promoted to a brigadier on the field of battle by General Shat ter, in 1898. In recognition of his hero ism and success before Santiago. By 1902 the kaiser had built up his pow erful fighting machine, and took great pride in exhibiting it to the nations for whose particular benefit it had been contrived. In that year Wood was sent to Germany as the American representative at one of the kaiser's annual "maneuvers." The British rep resentative on this same occasion was Field Marshal Earl Roberts. Lord Robert Asks Question. "Wood," said Koberts, "what are your country and mine going to do when that army is hurled against them?" The two men became close friends, and,- in their talks, agreed that each had an identical duty to his own country. In the year 1902 Roberts returned to England and Wood returned to the United States and each started the same . campaign in his own country. How fundamentally alike the British and Americans are these two leaders of a hopeless cause now demonstrated. Kor many years they were two lonely voices putting forth the tanir plea. From the official defenders of American interests and honor Wood received -only frowjis and petty per secution. However, the campaign waged by Roosevelt and Wood pro duced two results that are historic. Their popular preaching converted the American masses from their long antipathy to conscription, and created the public sentiment which made that policy inevitable. Yet an army of 4.000,000 would have been useless without officers. The camps of business and university men which General Wood established and conducted before the war provided these. It was thus the preparedness "agitation" and the constructive work of Wood which enabled the United States to turn the balance against the Gmnan military machine and thus to transform an impending defeat into a victory. ... After the withdrawal of the Span iards in 1898, Cuba presented condi tions not unlike those which prevail over a considerable part of the world today. Kor centuries Cuba had been the men who work under him. They are big men. men of achievement, men of imagination. Their god, almost, is honorable success. Before they worked for Hoover the measure of success to most of them was money. But they knew that even fools some times made fortunes and knaves as well Money was a marker of suc cess, but only a crude marker. But Hoover, the impersonal, tiie honest, the clear-thoughted man who knows his approval was a genuine marker. If Hoover said you'd do. you had passed a test higher than the acquisi tion of money or of ordinary fame. That approval holds big men better than any other reward. A final word fcbout Hoover's quali ties of leadership. lie is a confirmed believer ii common council. As one of his aides expressed it: "Hoover's decisions are his own, but they are always based upon a conference with the largest ntfmber of the beet in formed people he cap gather for a free discussion before he decides. In these conferences he has no pride of opinion, and he expects the most searching scrutiny of the facts by everybody present. His decision crys tallizes the common judgment, and the best method of putting it into practice." What follows is not a STORM'S WILD BEAUTY THRILLS IF VIEWED FROM LEAKY CRAFT When Waves Invade Bedchamber Terra Firma BY JA1IKS J. MONTAtiUU. 1 THIS way to reduce rent Is to live I In a houseboat. The houseboat ! Is immune from taxes. You an- i chor it offshore, put up an awning to keep off the summer sun, and laugh at the assessor. Houseboats cost all the way from fifty dollars to fifty thousand. Ours cost fifty. It was a used houseboat. The family believes that It was used by Noah, but I am not so sure about It. Noah's houseboat must have been a pretty substantial craft. The man who sold us the vessel guaranteed It. Moreover, he gave us a bill of sale for it. He said all we had to do was to nail on a few patches and It would be ready for the water. He didn't tell us that there are things called seams on houseboats which open up when the craft is left out in the sun on the shore. But that was probably due to absent-mindedness. Bnth All Around ( raft. We fixed our new dwelling up nicely before it 'was launched. There were five rooms in it. Including a kitchen. A bath was not necessary. Once afloat, that boat would be sur rounded by the biggest bath in the world. - When the man telephoned us that it was launched we told him to tow it Into a pretty little bay we knew of ar.d to notify us when it was there. It looked very snug and cosy when we first vieweu it, .the blue water lapping all about it and the new striped awning flapping in the light breeze. The furniture was already aboard. In a little boat that was included in the sale we rowed alongside and took possession. Ideal Seems Realized. All the evening we sat out on the front porch and pitied people who had to live in stuffy houses. The wind was just strong enough to keep the mosquitoes on shore, where they be longed. Sailboats darted in and out of the bay. Motorboats chugged past us, bobbing on the waves. Outside on the sound we could see the big white sound steamers passing. Presently the lighthouse began to function and the stars came out. It was idyllic. Just at dusk I remembered that I had forgotten my tooth brush. Its; the colony of a dying European power; a power which regarded col onists not as human beings who had a right to protection or enlighten ment, but as sources of wealth to Itself. ... Cuba Is Wood's Monument. After the surrender of Santiago. General Wood had taken charge of that city, and, in a few months, he had converted it from a pest hole into one of the cleanest and best governed municipalities in the western hemis phere. President McKinley therefore selected Wood to do for the whole of Cuba what1 he had already done for this old province. At this tjme Wood was 38 years old; the work which this young man now undertook and conducted for three years entitles him to the full stature of an adminis trative genius. Probably the highest test of statesmanship is the actual creation of a state; and the republic of Cuba will be Wood's monument for all time. The tangible changes which he quickly wrought in Cuban life were fairly startling. In two years more than 3000 public schools, with an en rollment of 250.000 children, were in full operation. One summer more than 1000 Cuban teachers came to the United States, studied at Harvard and went back, inspired not only by Amer ican education methods, but by the signs of American progress which they met at every hand. Shiploads of school books, blackboards, desks, kindergarten materials, manual train ing outfits, gymnasium equipment and" all the other Impedimenta of the American educational system now ar rived at Cuh;m ports. It is a sufficient indication of the importance attached to this new idea of primary education that, out of a total annual revenue of $17,000,000. Cuba in a year or two was spending $4,000,000 for its public schools. And a similar change took place in every branch of the government. What the Wood administration did in reforming the Cuban system of justice would fill a volume. The fact remains that Cuba, after three years of Wootl, had been trans formed into a healthier country than the United States or England. Small pox, which had annually taken thou sands of Uves. disappeared so com pletely that, after two years, there was not a single case of the disease in the whole island. Malaria and typhu vanished Just about as sud denly. bellow Fever Is Conquered. Then, in 1901, the medical world in two hcmplicres was astounded by the news that the cause of one of the most devastating of all diseases. ADMINISTRATIVE FEATS Successful C ulmination 'Luck" at Stanford Is Proverb. "quotation" of Hoover, but is a fair statement of what he has aid and of the Implications of those sayings. Socialism. Hoover believes thst so cialism is a Kuropean .theory of de spair, which could have been born only in Kurope. where caste and eco nomic wrongs have been congealed through centuries of despotism. It is one of those "disintegrating foreign philosophies" which he has frequently declared to have no place in American life. Foreign Trade. Hoover believes in slimubiting foreign trade and in the manipulation of the tariff that goes with it just so far us these tilings are for the good of the country. I'.ut he points out that Hie basic industry of this country is agriculture: and that the backbone of this country socially anil politically, and not merely eco nomically, is the farmer.' Agriculture. Hoover believes that both the farmer and the consumer are victims of an uneconomic system of distribution of foodstuffs. This sys tem arose originally from our geog raphy: our food is not produced near the places where it is eaten, and so an army of intermediate handlers and profit-takers has grown up between the farm and the home. -We can never get away from the long haul, but we can work out a system of direct deal ing between co-operative bodies of consumers and co-operative bodies of farmers that will cut out a lot of the in Middle of Night Tenant Decides Has Advantages. i would take but a few minutes to get i"" al ."' ,r"Pe b' w "u h the boat w tethered. The boat refused to respond to my' pull. I looked at it and saw that it was reposing on a mud flat. I walked all around the porch. The houseboat itself was reposing on a mud flat. All about it, where a little earlier had been rippling blue waves, there was nothing but oozy, chocolate-colored mud. There is a way to cross water, and a way to fly, but no way to navigate mud. When you are mudbound, un- J ,K, .,,, .,,, But men lived for millions of years without tooth brushes. A few hours. I reflected, couldn't make much dif ference to me. We went to bed still happy. save for the sorrow the plight of our shorebound friends naturally gave us. At about 2 In the morning I was awakened by the lapping of the waves. Drowsily admiring their soft music. I turned over to go to sleep again. Wae Invades Hedroom. But there was something in their lapping that didn't seem quite natural. It sounded too close aboard. I got up and stepped on one of them, w hich continued lapping at my left shin. Others lapped at my right shin. Lapping waves outside a boat are WE HAD RESERVED yellow fever, had been found and thcCuba lay in creating a public school way to eradicate it from the world discovered. . . . This achievement is one of the greatest in medical history, and. next to the discovery of anesthetics, is America's greatest contribution to medical science. After tnree years of Wood's gov ernorship, the Cuban people met in convention, adopted a republican con stitution, elected their own president and congress, and became a free nation. . . . If the establishment of the Cuban nation is not "constructive" states manship. I do not know where an illustration of such a thing is to be found. Moreover, as already said, this experience has an immediate bearing upon many of the problems which will confront the- next presicient. is it not plain, for example, that Wood's Cuban policy presents the only pos sible solution of the Mexican ques tion ? It is absurd to suppose that Mexico in its present condition can go on in definitely; it is likewise absurd to suppose that the Mexicans can solve it themselves. Americans do not wish to "annex" that country or to exploit it; what they desire is that Mexico shall be put u)n its feet, that the blessings of sanitation. education, communications, agriculture and in dustry shall be extended to it, and that out of the present chaos shall be constructed a happy, intelligent and self-goverr ing state. Nor is the experience which Wood pained in Cuba and the Philippines without value in dealing with certain of America's domestic problems. It pave Wood a practical training in the business of government which few presidents have carried to the ex ecutive office. He knows what it is to select men for important work, to supervise the administration of de partments: in a word he has learned, by many years' actual contact, how to get things done. Tie lias also de rived from his experience certain fun damental conceptions of the business of government which are just as sound when applied to the United States as when applied to Cuba or the Philippines. Kor example, take the much discussed question of "Amer icanization." by which term is usu ally understood the development of oppressed European nationalities into intelligent citizens of this country. Remedy Is to Teach Knglish. General Wood sees no magical short road to the attainment of this result, No amount of flag waving or singing of the "Sftar-Spangled Banner" will transmute this rouglt material into the fine metal of the republic. The remedy for most of the troubles in intermediate profits, so that the farm er will get a fair price and the con sumer will pay a fair price. Universal Military Training Hoo ver believes in universal physical training in camps similar to Boy Scout camps under rigorous school discipline, but he does not believe in universal military training in mili tary camps under army officers. The Budget. Hoover believes, as a good engineer and a good manager, that this government can never be effectively run until it adopts a bud get pystem of estimating revenues and controlling expenditures. Responsible (iuvcnimenl Hoover believes that tho present form of the American government is the best form of government ever devised b mum He lias seen "responsible'" govern ments t governments by ministries di rectly responsible to the legislature and the country, as in Kngland and France) at close range for the last five years, and he has no faith in them. League Considered Hope. The League of Nations. Hoover be lieves that the league of nations is the hope of America and the hope of the world. But his idea of what a league of nations is. is the simplest. He regards it simply as nine men sitting around a table, discussing things instead of fighting about them. He has no worries about article X or pleasant. Inside they are more or less supererogatory. I climbed back into bed. From tho other room I heard terror-stricken cries. The boss and the children wanted to know if they should put on life preservers. But that wasn't necessary. The waves lapped upward till they lifted the mattresses gently from the beds, then they began to subside. By morn ing they had all gone out through the seams by which they entered, and we were saved. The boat was messy that day. but habitable. I went ashore to see the man. but he had gone to another tow n. He w as selling out his busi ness and our houseboat was the last article he disposed of. Yoynsre of Adventure Begins. When he had sold it. he went. I came back that afternoon to take the family off till repairs could be made. I had just got aboard when a thun der storm came up. It was not a bad thunder storm, but it sufficed. The awning held for a while, then arose like a sausage balloon and left us. Presently the anchor rope, which must have been older than the house boat itself, parted. Propelled firmly by the keen off shore wind, we went out into the bay. As soon as we slid off the mud the waves came In through the seams for another visit. But we had survived them once, so they didn't worry us. Outside where it was rouh they made a little more trouble. The way they knocked the tables and chairs about was discon certing But we dodged them nimbly till we could get outside, where by means of the ladder we climbed to tho roof. Storm's Beauty Mot A npret-lated. It was a beautiful storm, but we didn't seem to enjoy it. A storm is SEATS FOR T HE STORM. system, tn teachms the masses to read and write; in this way it K.ive them the foundation for the absorp tion of the ideas that promote na tional efficiency. General Wood likc wiso thinks that the best way to "Americanize" immigrants is to teach them to read, write and speak the English language. In the primary schools he would have no language except English spoken or taught. In this way, he says, he would make the United Slates a country ruled by Americans, and Americans alone. On the general question of labor. Wood takes the sound economic ground that the solution of the prob lem of high wages is increased pro duction. There is probably no Amer ican who has thought this problem out in more than general terms; Gen eral Wood makes no pretense that he has an elaborate programme, though he apparently has an inclination to the Canadian plan of investigation, publicity and arbitration, not neces sarily compulsory. On certain great issues ho is defi nite. He believes in a standing array of 2,"0,000 men. six months' training for all young men above 19. and equipment enough to supply, if need ed, a force of 4.000.000 soldiers. He advocates a strong navy. He favors the league of nations with reserva tions which reflect the attitudo of the republican majority rather than that of the democratic minority. He is in favor of a budget system. General Wood is not a "military candidate"; that is. he docs not be lieve that the chief business of a president is to involve his country in war. In fact most of our so-called "military" presidents have not been military in this sense. There is a curious impression in some quarters that men who have seen service on the battlefield do not make good presidents. With the exception of General Grant, all the presidents who owed their elevation to their military achievements have made excellent records in the presidential office. In attempting to estimate the success of such statesmen we shall have to itrnore William Henry Harrison and Zai-hary Taylor, for these presidents died so soon after their inauguration that their presidential qualities could not be tested. The other great Americans who be came politically prominent because they had won military fame were George Wash in gton. Andrew Jackson. Ulysses S. Grant and Theodore Roose- j vclt. It is certainly remarkable that a people whose first president was George Washington should think that a successful general was disqualified, by that mere fact, from directing the 'nation also in civil life. article anything eise. Ho would limit the constitution of the league to three sentences, to the effect tltat it should consist of one representative of each member nation, that these men should meet daily at an agreed place and that they should be re ciuired to discuss every question brought before them until they reached an agreement. That sounds absurdly simple, but remember that Hoover and the other members of the supreme economic council were a league of nations, and that they kept the I'Ciice in Kurope for seven months Just by talking. He sees no reason to abandon a nation's sovereignty or violate it. traditional policies or wrench its spirit strange customs. America Hoover believes in Amer ica. His friends know that bis one fan.it it-ism is his love of country. So in r from fearing his "internatioiial-i-m." the one thing they do fear is hws intolerance of foreign peoples arid ideas. He has lived with those peo ples, and he has had intimate expe rience of their ideas, and it is hardly putting it too strongly to say that he heartily detests the lot. Not the in dividuals, not the tide of them upon which they share our common hu manity. But their social institutions, their governmental Institutions, their business structure these things he has compared with ours and finds them utterly distasteful, and always has. like a tiger; it is a far more interest ing spectacle when you are not tn it. After an hour a man with a motor boat came along and took us off. He asked us all sorts of questions, but as they appeared to impugn our sanity we didn't answer muny of them. He charged us eighteen dollars fov settiu ns on shore. He said that if gas "was not so high he would only have charged us se ventccn-f if l , which was quite consoling. do not knew what became of the houseboat. I have been notified by a tuirboat company that it has been salvaurd and I can have it by paying a hundred and fifty dollars. liut I haven't :ol a hundred and fifty dol lars. The last hundred and fifty dol lars I had I gave to a real estate agent as the first payment on a house I have rented for the summer. (Copyright. 1920. by the Bell Syndi cate. Inc.) Km life to Kxchangre Students. CALC.ARV. Alta. France and Al berta will shortly have reciprocity In the exchange of university students. Legislation :e oeing enacted which provides for these scholarships in uni versities of Paris for Alberta students, A similar action in France was started last summer when an educa tionist from that country visited the west, addressing Rotary and other clubs PIMPLES ON PACE FOR TWOJEARS Itched and Burned. Face a Mass Of Eruptions. Cuticura Heals. " My face was affected with pim ples. They were large and hard and .-. would fester, and were -vj j y i? times my face would be a mass ot eruptions. They itched and burned, and I would lose sleep. "The tranhlr about two vears befnre T iim. a Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and when I had used one cake of Cuti cura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment I was healed." (Signed) Mrs. Philip Hein, Box 303.903 Lake St., Sandpoint, Idaho, Aug. 22, 1919. Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum the care of your skin. (tnplc iMk Ftm kr Wall. Mtres- -QsMtsis Uteituns. Dapl. I. Ihtf.i llui" SoWrT- iyosp umto"it Zfc and Mr Taieam 2ie. Laucura Soap naves witbovt ssss;. 1