THEODORE ROOSEVELT TELLS OF In Order-toGet Into "the most Fascinating Teddy Advises Beginners to "Collect Your "Collect your own borne district." BT CHARLES W. DUKE. CCli y OST fascinating- same In all 'M the world after you get Into It," exploded Theodore Roosevelt Jr. Two clenched fists came down so emphatically on the breakfast table' as to make .all the silver jingle. Two eyes twinkled in an old-fashioned ' "dee-lighted" way. Two rows of teeth stood out from a strenuous smile very much after the fashion of ' his late beloved father, as be delivered himself of this pos itive political panegyric. . "Biggest game In all the world the game of government," snapped T. R. the Second as he buried hie spoon in a Juicy grapefruit and came up with a dripping portion. " ' Politics, of course, was the subject tinder discussion; the Interesting career that the young Roosevelt, has mapped out for himself, and the life work that he Is pursuing with a full measure of Rooseveltlan punch, per severance and perspicacity. I had camped on the trail of the youthful T. R.as he came in out of the west, where he had foregathered with the clans of the American Legion, and had cornered him at last In the state capltol at Albany. The assemblyman from the second New York district,' embracing the towns of Oyster Bay and North Hempstead and the city of Glen Cove on Long Island, was deeply engrossed in matters of statecraft when I caught up with him In the lobby of the Ten Eyck hotel and followed him into his sanctum sanctorum up on Capitol Hill. But he was not too buy to talk of politics as a field for ambitious young men seeking to solve the problem ot the choice of a career. - "Come, have a bite of breakfast and we'll have a little confab over the coffee cups," was his cordial invita tion an invitation thdt admitted of no R. S. V. P.'s because of Its com pelling appeal. in a minute or two we were seated In the Capitol restaurant. "Shall a young man or woman go into politics as he would Into any - other business or profession, or shall he take it up merely as a sideline with bis other occupational activi ties?" was the general question pro pounded by way of opening up the subject. Roosevelt, it will be remembered, announced more than a year ago he would take up public service as his life work and "make his father's ideals his own work." Out of Har vard, he started first as a clerk in a Connecticut carpet manufacturing plant andL then switched to Wall street, where he became a bond sales man. Came then the world war, when he entered the service of his country and, from an officers' training camp at Plattsburg, worked his wa up through the ranks to a colonelcy in the front-line trenches, where he . served courageously and was griev ously wounded in the Solssons cam paign. Then home, and the decision to enter politics as a public career. . And now, after a successful cam paign that landed him ' In the New York state legislature the identical starting point of bis lllustris father . what would Theodore the Second say of politics in general and of his own career. "Like it I should say I do!" he chuckled, as he finished off the matu tinal grapefruit. ' "Greatest game in tAe world. The more you play it, the more you want to play. Fascinating " that's it, every bit as fascinating as football, war or business. Most as suredly I enjoy it, else I would not - be in it. "You see, I- was brought up in it," he laughed, turning back to early boyhood. "It was all politics in our home. Politics end more politics; we had it for breakfast, lunch and dinner, Sort of raised to it, you know." It has bCen said Theodore Jr. is a "chip off the old block." Certainly in physical characteristics there is much in common. "When "Teddy" talks earnestly he has a fashion of closing his eyes tight, twisting his face into contortions and pushing out his words with a crescendo inflection peculiar to his father. "Some folks seem to think the ways . were greased for my entry into poli tics," was his impromptu digression. "Nothing of the Bort. Heck! I had to ge out and work just like any V That's the Tray to get Into politics. other ward worker or countryside layman. I had nothing handed to me any more than my father had when he started out; I would not have had it otherwise. "I've run my own little district, but I had to work for that small precinct leadership before I landed at the top there. I worked as a private in the trenches in my own county, I got into my own republican club and worked there, and did all manner of little jobs of that kind long before I ever was considered as a candidate for the assembly. "You must have the votes and the delegates behind you before you can go anywhere in politics," was his con clusion. "And the only way you get the votes and the delegates is to in spire the confidence of your fellow citizens and. thus enlist their support." "Then there is no short and easy way into political leadership?" "Teddy" , was breaking crackers into a bowl of milk. He crushed a soda bisctfit into dust with one squeeze of his sturdy right fist as he shot back: "Not when the game is played on the fair, as it "should be. Leaders are necessary in politics as in every other field. But they should come out of the ranks and stand on their hind legs through sheer, merit- rather than through' personal preferment or 'po litical pull,' as we hear It expressed." In college, in the army, in the American Legion, and now in public life, Roosevelt meets many young men who are interested in politics. "A lot of young chaps come to me and ask how they are to get started in politics," he continued. "So many of them have a wrong notion ot the process involved. They want to- be gin right off the bat as United States senators, or something like that. They are wrong; all wrong. "What I tell them Is this: Go back and collect your own home district. Some think they can sneak in through the cellar windows: others have a notion the easiest way is to have a few friends slip them quietly up by the back etairs. Nothing doing, I tell you. Get in on the ground floor as an ordinary district, doorbell ringer and then work your way up. In other words, go home and collect your dis trict." Just as his father's stronghold was with the "common peepul" with whom he mingled in the mines, the marts of trade and the thoroughfares of life. young T. R. believes in mixing up with the "hoi polloi." In that connection, he tells a story of a New York mayor who was elect ed from one of the thickly populated cosmopolitan districts, a miniature melting pot section made up of poly glot Inhabitants. As Teddy tells the story, this mayor, once in power, in stead of mixing with home crowds. turned his attention. to Fifth avenue tea parties. In the 'end he was re pudiated by the people he had for gtftten. "You've" got to go around to your Republican club and meet all the boys and etay with them in their every battle," was the assemblyman's phllo sophical summing up for the case of the ambitious young politician. Spoken just like another Roosevelt now resting in the last long sleep atop Young's cemetery hill in Oyster Bay! True enough, young Roosevelt's forte is the people, with whom he mixes continually and seeks out in dividually. What more Rooseveltian apropos than that bill young T. R. was Introducing in the New York legislature the week I talked with him recently; a bill compelling land lords to open their flats and apart ments to young married folks with children on an equal footing with married folks who practice race sui cide in favor of pet poodles! Hearing the colonel exhort young folks to begin at the bottom of the ladder in politics instead of trying to climb in over the second-story veranda brought to mind the stead fast manner in which he has insisted all along in everything that, despite the name and fame of his father, be be first entered ae a private in the ranks and enabled to climb through his own initiative and merit. When T. R. was through with col lege it was reported he was to. step into a big job in Wall street with the steel trust. Influential business mo-' TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIATf, PORTLAND. NOVEMBER 14, 1920 ft fKJ .-Or MWe must," and bans; goes the emphatic fist of Will H. Hays, republican ,- about tt In Chicago. rrJ'X-vr-M .;-Sc. fe- V. - i te:-. s- ' . vfh 's s ' - - WiSf '-X f:l rf--, . '- nr. 1 Roosevelt and his family. guls, it was said, would give the first born of the then president of the United States a position of promience. The answer was, first of all, a shak ing of the Senior Teddy's "big stick" and a veritable roar from the White House to the effect that young T. R would go it alone and start like any other commosk, ordinary member of the herd. As for Teddy the second, he turned up a day or two later as a clerical employe of a New England carpet house and went out into Call- fornia to hew his way alone as a salesman. J All the way -through in the army,' in business and in politics young Roosevelt insisted on taking his chances with tffe crowd.. He wouW take no commission in the army until he had proved his mettle at Platts burg. In business he wrestled with the petty details ot a clerical job until he had mastered the principles of the business. After the war, when he essayed politics, they talked about slating him for second place on -the state gubernatorial ticket, but Teddy turned it all back and said he would start as an assemblyman if the peo ple wanted him. Back in Harvard he was known as "the most modest man in college." " "Would you advise young men gen erally to take up politics as a career?" I asked him. Teddy No. 2 has a big hold among the young men ask any chap in the American Legion who fol lowed the democratic yoyng army of ficerand I knew - what he would have to say on this score would ap peal to young men and be accepted as the friendly counsel of a comrade. A "Most assuredly," he replied. "A republic its present and future wel fare depends upon the average of its citizens taking part in politics -and going into the active service of the republic You are interested in get- t , ' st - X The children, Theodore Jr Cornelias and Grace, ting good roads, good schools,', good administrators in office and the like. The only. way you can get them is to go into politics yourself. "It's easy to criticize your govern ment," he continued, "but the man who stands off and knocks without lifting a finger to help run the gov ernment has no kick coming to him. Get into it!. Your government is no better than you make it yourself. The game of politics is wide open to everybody." - "Then there should be no false mod esty about offering your services in a political capacity?" I suggested. "Modesty nothing!" he shot back. "You have as much right to it as the ovher fellow and more so if you are better qualified to hold down a public job. If you want anything, go after it; that applies equally in politics as in any other endeavor in life. Person ally, I know of but one man who was drafted for public service and that was Judge Miller, candidate for gov ernor in New York this fall. . "If you want the job, announce yourself as a candidate. Go to it. Re member that the people are the judges in the matter. They know whether you are equipped for the job. Modesty? Nothing to it. The Lord helps them who help themselves." Here he Inserted a "tip" to embryo politicians and would-be-place hold ers "Ift a young fellow talks to me about politics as a career I remind him at once it is no bed of roses," said the colonel. "It is all hard work as I have found it; mingling constantly'-with your ' constituents, at tending meetings, makng speeches, organizing and more organizing. The secret of success in politics, as in business, is organization. I know of nothing that requires more plain common-sense business organization POLITICS AS A Game in the World" Own Home District" cr '.j . t-sv X national committee chairman, as lie tells are much interested In n new kitten. than politics. It Is the most practical thing in all the world." It .was related to me how young Roosevelt, in his campaign for the assembly, had followed out bis per sonal method of organization. While a Roosevelt and a candidate for the Oyster Bay district, it might have been possible for him to have re mained at home taking it easy and resting on the family name and laurels. Not T. R. Jr. Every night he covered miles, stopping in a half dozen places to talk to the people. Like his "dad," he wants to know the people, and one Of his delights is go ing from door to door and introduc ing himself not as a Roosevelt, but as "your representative" at Albany. And when any of the home folKs go to Albany to see him about legisla tion affecting the interests of the home folks, he is always available and with an iron-grip handshake. - And his motto all the way through has been "Common sense, common decency and common honesty.'' More oyer, as" he said early in the days of the American Legion, and as he ap plies it now -to the political field: "You've got to think how you can put something Into government, and not how you can get something out of it." "Then, despite the fact that politics as a game is a very practical propo sition, every young man contemplat ing politics as a career should be ac tuated by an ideal?". I "suggested. At mention of the word "ideal" Teddy seemed to wince a bit, and then with a -grimace of glee side stepped the word as though mention of it might plunge him into a par tisan political discussion of person alities on the "other side of the fence." But be steadied instantly and plunged on. . -' - ' "Every young fellow, while' looking out for himself in the choice of a career, ought to have in the back- tst.y JUS. "Teddy" ground the business of helping the other fellow as well as himself. Put the whole proposition on a broad basis of usefulness and not of a selfish monetary consideration. "Aside from its fascination it grips you as soon as you get into it I believe that one of the greatest vir tues of the political field is that it offers such a wonderful opportunity to do something worth while. "Every man wants to be happy at his work; if he is happy in his job then he is more apt to make a success of it than if it is something that Irks him. As for myself, I am extremely happy up here." We were up and away from the breakfast table and on our way through long winding corridors lead ing toward the assembly room. It I takes some stride to keep up with T. I R. Jr.. for he Is full of "pep" and I steps out like Man o' War for the - grand sweepstakes. One thing about young Teddy and in It he is not unlike his "dad" he sticks by his guns. As he related to me, in politics you can do one of two 1 things; stick by your own convictions ! and try to interpret the will of your FAMILY GOAT IN BACK YARD WILL SETTLE MILK PROBLEM Josephine Jenks, Daughter of New York Broker, Who Owns Goat Farm, Declares Goat's Milk Superior to Cow's. F it is feasible for people of small to use goat's milk instead cow's milk in Switzerland, Eng land, Africa, India and other coun tries, why is it not feasible for such folks in the United States to do the same thing? Such was the thought of 11 -year -old Josephine Jenks, daughter of a well-jknown New York broker, when her father presented her with a nanny as a pet five years ago. The thought grew on the child until goat-raising became a hobby. One pet did not satisfy her. She induced her father to buy her more. Then having them merely as pets did not satisfy this slip of a girl. She began, as she grew older, to make a study of the species until now, at the age of IS, she perhaps knows more about goat-raising than anyone else in the United States. This is certainly so when it comes to the thoroughbred animals. Solve the growing problem of the distribution of milk in large cities through the medium of the much ma ligned goat. Such is the advice of Miss Jenks, who declares that it is possible for any city family with a small back yard to keep a goat or several of them and profit in health and pocket book from the milk that they yield. "Why shouldn't the goat solve the current milk problem?" asked Miss Jenks, as a majestic and hornless creature with a , beautiful coat of brown and white approached to haVe his head patted. "After my five years' experience as a practical goat raiser I can see no reason why a family which has a field or yard suitable for the purpose should not become inde pendent of cow's milk, now so very expensive to city folks, by having its own lacteal fountain at its very door step. . "The constant decrease in France's cattle reserve, due to the ravages of the war, has had the effect of restor ing the industry of vending of goat's milk on a larger scale than ever be fore. The rugged appearance of the children in rural France is due to the fact that they subsist on 'goat's milk. But goat's milk is gaining favor"not only in rural France, but in the most " T ; , . . . ' Ana me uuBincaa la v'vitts jruLliaDie there despite the fact that goats in that country now cost nearly 20 times as much as before the war. "In this country tnere is among some a prejudice against goat's milk on account of the taste. This, how- over, can be positively eliminated b CAREER Yon ii g Roosevelt's forte Is the peo ple, t 1th whom he mixes con tinually. constituency, or go along with the crowd. For his part, he will "stick by his guns" from the sero hour right through toithe finish of the fight. This he illustrated during my stay in. Albany by his attitude on the question of seating the five socialist assembly members from New York city. Teddy voted to seat them. Part of the night before the vote that ousted the quintet was taken, T. R. endeavored to round up votes in favor of the socialists. "They were ousted, but eventually they will be seated If they are re elected," he said. "You cannot go be hind the law. If this is a govern ment by the people, and we are to abide by the. constitutional require ments, which say the chosen repre sentatives of the people shall be those who receive the majority of votes, then we must adhere to the law. In voting for them. I voted not for so cialism, but for the principle of the law." Young Roosevelt wants to be judged by himself and not by his father. He wants to stand by him self, and the story that he tells oa this point Is that when a boy his father would show them how their tops spun on their own pegs, and he would add that he wanted his boys to "spin on their own pegs." the selection of the individuals of the herd and by ordinary care and clean liness in the goat's stable and the se lection of proper food. Goats cost very much less to maintain than cows, as they are smaller and consequently eat less than cattle, kin addition they can be kept in restricted places where cows cannot for lack of space. A goud nanny goat should yield, when fresh, at least two quarts of milk a day, while the best animals sometimes give five or six quarts a day. This is a great deal more than cows give and the goat's milk is more nourishing and more digestible, while the ani mals being on the premises the milk supply is always available. Added to these tactiS is the very Important one that goats are practically Immune from tuberculosis, which carries off so many cows whose milk is a con stant source of danger to human be ings in consequence. "Both my father and I regard the development of milk goats as the nat ural answer to the continually rising price of milk. A small family living in the suburbs can easily keep a goat where the keeping of a cow would bo impossible, and in this way the fam ily supply of milk may be provided at a cost equal only to the feed pur chased and, of course, the ordinary grazing and browsing should provide the greater part of the food." In speaking of the food of the-ani-mals Miss Jenks said that the idea that a goat will eat anything from an ouija board to a stick of dynamite is fallacy. At least her herd will not, and all in all they are very epicurean in their tastes. "It may seem a joke, but It is a fact," she said, "that a goat is fastidious as to what he eats." Proof of her contention was almost Immediately forthcoming, as while she was talking one of her workmen a few yards off sliced a piece off an apple and tossed it to one of the ani mals. The goat avidiously did away with it. The man then tdok a bite of the apple himself and then tossed the remainder to the goat. The latter nosed around it, took a sniff or two, and then ambled off without eating it. No. second-hand food for him. Not long after Miss Jenks was pre sented with her first goat she began 'to delve into accounts of their habits and origin, their needs In the way of pasturage, their care during the win ter roontns and their economic value. Mr. Jenks pampered the rather strange whims of his young daughter and bought her a number of foreign thoroughbred specimens, some of which were valued at as much as $500,