HOME AND F.UM MAGAZINE SECTION p Ik" Editorial Page of Home and Farm Magazine Section Timely, Pertinent Comment Upon Men and Affairs, Following the Trend of World Nowa; Suggestions of Interest to Readers; Hints Along liincs oi riu8miYB gmm xuougut. TO ADVKItTISUItS. .tilveidsers In (Ills loeitllty who M fully rover all suctions of Oregon mill Wash ington and it poll Ion of Idaho will iipply to loi'iil publishers for rate?. General iiiIvorllKcra may nddrcss C. T. Hiir (on, .diTtlslii-; MiiniiKrr of On-Kon-Wnsliliis-(oil-Idaho Fiiriner, OreKoulnii lltilltlliiff, l'ort limil, Oregon, for nili-H nnil hiloriimtlon. TO ItKADKItS. Hrmlers nic requested tit sond letters anil iiidclcs for publication (o The Kdltor, Or egon - Washington - Idaho Farmer, Orcgonlun tliilldiug, Portland, Oregon. J)Irnsslons on questions n n d problem that hear directly on (he uri fcult uiul. live stock mid poultry Interests of the Northwest, and on the uplift mid rmnfort of the farm home nlwiijs are welcomed. No letters treat ing of religion, politics or the European war nrc Rolirlted, for the Orcgoii-Wnshhigton-Iilnho Fanner proclaims neutrality on these mutters. Comparatively brief contributions ar pre ferred to long ones. Send us also photo graphs of your livestock and farm ucciicn that you thiol; would Ik? of general Interest. Wo wish to nwUo this imigniiic of inlue to you. Help us to do It. CHEERFULNESS. SMILE u while, friend, smile. Tons of ndvicu linvc Iiocn ladled out on the subject of cheerfulness, and if all the precepts of good cheer hnd been followed in past days Ihis world would he a much brighter onu in which (o live. There is noth ing which costs less mid bus more far-roach-"ing results tliiui cheerfulness. It is nu At tribute tlmt nut kos u person beloved among bis fellow -nioii. The nrtifieiiil elicerfu1iius born of a desire to please and placate has no place in the rciilin of joy. Thai it is forced is too obvious and, far from having the effect desired, it often breeds sneering cynicism in the ob server. An idiotic grin can never take the place of a warming smile. Things will go wrong, it's true. It is hard to be cheerful all the while, and often im possible; but cheerfulness in I be face of ad versity, wins the praise and admiration of the world. For the test of tlio lioiut Is trouble, Anil It nlwny-R comos with years, Ami tlio 8inllo that Is worth the ni-nta ot oarth Is thohinlUi that Hhlnert throuKh tonrj. A smile is not the vapid leer at a joke that's "(juoer," but an expression of the best in man. The most tender of human emotions. mother love finds expression in the smilo would bo fatal. As Churchill says, the British, by the no eessity of their nntrol dutv. Imv.. !. v. ol'Jho mother at the warm body clinging to posed to submarine itltuek and losses from mines, wliilo their enemy was bevond reneli. Answering the speculative inquiry -whether uormany cannot thus cut down tho British her breast. True immim&c enmna win, .. smile. The riches of Midas cannot bring tho pleasure that lies in tho smiles of a child, l.ovo and friendship thrive on smiles, with out which neither could exist for long. It's so easy to bo cheerful, and what a pleasant, friendly road is tho path of life when bordered by tho smiles of those we know and love. WHERE RIGHTEOUS SUFFER. TjKOl'liK who conduct business honestly lm.'ee ,)y Germany. Two 25,00Mon battle- -- invariably suffer when dishonest 0o- WPS "Wo ,,e added siueo the war boron. Plo are allowed to ply their trade unmo- ', , .. -J'00?-10" battleships are to be fin. .-..,. .u..u six niontns. Four light cruisers, AC des royers and a number of submarine suffer should the Uovernment attempt to force the unwatering of the stock. Most of the railroads have seen the error of their way and arc now hewing to tho line and making an honest effort to miiko the railroads pay in spile of what has hap pened in the past. Howard Elliott, president of tho New lravcn Railway, made the following state ment: Wo mum Rlvc our rallwnilft tlio lilirlieat charac ter for honesty, uml In onlcr to do tlilM wo must ho honest ami ulncore ournolve. Ami wlion I nay tlint. I don't m.'ttii only about money, but 1 menu wo must ho holiest of purposH and lionet of statement and Maiiin out all vlucncea of tool leliiion.f in )erxoniil and railroad conduct, anil Hlmliiato anything that looks mimilelotm In the af fairs of (treat public norvleo corporations. HomctlniKS wo are ankrd to ko into politic?, and, as you know, the railroads and bmduuNS Kenerully havo been charged with engaKlnt; too much In politics and trying to iiiiiuhku politics. That day has koiio by. It would certainly be a splendid thing if every railroad would act in accordance with the statement of .Mr. Klliott. It would not only be much better for the railroads, but it would be better for the public and the country at largo. The rate increase allowed by the in terstate Commerce Commission is based on the belief, by men who ought to know, that the railroads are entitled to a living profit. Since the progress and financial affairs of this country depend so much on the rail roads, it seems high time for everybody to get busy and boost for prosperity. BRITAIN'S NAVAL POSITION. WINSTON CHURCHILL'S statement of the British naval position, while, of course, intended to reassure his countrymen in the faeu of recent losses, pre sents certain non-controversial facts which are too often forgotten in popular discus sion, lie has abandoned tho bellicose tone in which he promised that tho British navy is in accord with tins liiuhost dictates of would "go after the Cerman ships and dig humanity. them out of their holes." There will be noth- But because we arc more compassionate ing of that sort attempted as long us Britain than nature, can wo nfford to be less wisol remembers the possibility of what naval dc- Can wo afford to use weaklings and defec- feat must mean. The continental combatants lives as breeding slock? The proportion of might lose their navies and remain strong, tliese is increasing with alarming rapidity, but if England lost control of the seas it How lornr can civilization continue, to nro- gross with a handicap liko this! WAIT FOR HER, BOYS I (Editorial In Slicrlilnn TOr. Bun.) TWO girl who is unkind to her mother isn't worth u tinker's dog-gone. This isn't written 'in any part of the Bible, about 1,000,000,000 u month. This in a year will aggregate about 12,000,000,000. Tlio five big belligerents havo now Khot away between a fourth and a third of the vnluc of American railroads. SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT. TIIM other day I noticed him in the ele vator a puny, untlcrsii-cd, ill-shaped errand boy, says the editor of tho Prairie Fanner. His vacant eyo and reced ing chin showed that ho was us lacking men. tally as lie was physically. Evidently he wis hardly worth the meager three or four dol lars a week that he got. as errand boy. "What will become of him as he grows older Ho will never be an asset to the community, but always u liability, part of the increasing dead weight that, makes human progress slow and toilsome. You can find hundreds of boys and girls liko this in Chicago or any other largo city, and less frequently in the country. Any stockman recognizes them as the result of improper muting, Ho would not tolerate such individuals among his livestock, for lie knows that the result would soon be an un profitable lot of scrubs. Ho knows thnt lie cannot improve his stock unless he prevents the unfit from mating. Is it not time that we seriously considered applying the same methods to tho human family ? Tho objection is at once raised that such action would bo against nature. Hut wo are already far uwiiy from nature in our treatment of defectives. Nature maintain! the vigor of primitive people by eliminating tho unfit. Only the strongest and most per feet survive. Modern civilization, less cold blooded than nature, protects and keeps olivo the people that nature allows to perish. This on Z v Y m' ,laUlC Ca" ,,C ivcn ,",t il' Litton in the history of thousands flnin ovl.K 7. V"''"""". "oinowlmt and thousands of misfit homes. If one of U n S, 0t 'o,8,a": L"m l0S0 a ,mt- y W over run across u girl with her face neslnp a month for 12 months ninl cfjii i, . ,.n .. ., .. " ,,,..,!.. months and still lm flB much stronger as at the beginning of the war. This is based on a programme of complet ing 15 new battleships within a year against loMud. Honest railroads havo sufl'ern.l w !uso of tho dishonest deals of other rail roads. Tho time should be past fr 1)0o,,e to condemn every railroad beeausa of tho manipulation of eertain railroads which have watered their stocks to such an ex tout that it seems impossible to make tho Ration show a profit. In recent years hero bus been poetically no stoek-watering, ihilo ,oM of it w,s iJono so long ,B0 tb.U th' statute of lbuit.UoiH no loir ap2 "d it ccriii iilv um.1,1 ,V ' ,a" ,ii,ii . , ... " ""1 mniion (1"'l'"'s in Hi. Cni.ed States who would have already been added. But whether Germany's building capacity w limited, as Churchill avers, and whethe'r Cerman submarines and mines and internal accidents may not reduce the British supc viority much more than one battleship n month, is a question. At last we have an approximate idea of the governmental expenditures in the Euro Ptan war. Austria, England, France, Ger many and RS!iFH) to say nothing of BoWum Japan, Scvia and Turkey, are tw2i full of roses, wih eyes thnt would dim the luster of a Colorado sky and with a voice that would make the song of an angel seem discordant, and she says, as she comes to the door: "1 can't go for a few minutes; I'vo got to help mother with tho dishes." Don't give her up. Stick to her like a burr to a mule' tail. Just sit down on the doorstep and wait. If she joins you in two or three-minutes, RO" much the better; but if you have to Etay there on the doorstep for half an hour, you just wait for her. If you don't somebody else will, and in timo you'll bo sorry. For you'll realizo what you have lost. Wait for her, boy. She's worth it. After tho war is over there ought to be some profitable lead mining in some of the European countries. Andrew Carnegie ought to endow a regi ment of soldiers to protect his peace palace