asm home and farm magazine section Editorial Page of Home and Farm Magazine Section Timely, Pertinent Comment Upon Men and Affairs, Following the Trend of World News; ' Suggestions of Interest to Renders; Hints Along Lines 01 regressive iann Thought. I i i TO ADVBKTISERS Advertisers in this locality who uMi to fully cover all sections of Oregon and Washington and a portion or Idaho will apply to local pub lishers for rates. General advertisers may address C. L. Kur ton, Advertising Manager of Oregon-Washing-ton-Idaho Farmer, Oregoninn lluilding, Tort land, Oregon, for rates and information. TO HEADERS Readers are requested to send letters and articles for publication to The Editor, Oregon-Washington-Idaho Tanner, Oregoniau Uulld ing, Portland, Oregon. Discussions on questions and problems that bear directly on the agricultural, livestock and poultry interests of the Northwest and on the uplift and comfort of the farm home always arc welcomed. No letters treating of religion, politics or the European war arc solicited, for the .Orcgon-Washington-Idaho .Farmer .pro claims neutrality on these matters. Comparatively brief contributions arc pre ferred to long ones. Send us also photographs of your livestock and farm scenes that ou think would be of general interest. Wc wish to make this magazine of value to you. Help us do it. FARMER AS ULTIMATE MARKET. MOKE than ever before the manufac turer, the retailer, and the politician is looking to tlic farmer as one upon whom their prosperity depends, lie is the ultimate market for manufactured goods; he is the ultimate market for a politician's wares. The manufacturer who does not mukc good with the farmer, the retailer whoso policy does not please the farmer, the politician who neglects tin farming in terests soon learn of the power wielded by, the man on the land. The farmer is increasing in numbers, as he is also increasing in wealth. The farmer is a man with whom business men of. tint city like to deal. Not that they think that be cause he is not living in a metropolis that he is nil "easy mark" for shady deals, for they know better than that from experience, but because he is good pay a ml a plea.snnt cus tomer. No one has been quicker to sense tlio importance of the farmer than the wily politician. Today it is not the man who breezes about with a glad hnnd.exteuded to the farmer, the man who kisses their babies and talks stock and agriculture with those in rural communities that wins, by those methods ulouc, in the political world, but it is the man who has the ability to make good his promises and integrity to do so. The farmer has been coming into his own for many years. It has been slow, but we may confidently say that he has "arrived." " TAKE-IT-BAOK DAY." THE citizens of u small town in Western Kentucky had a unique festival re cently. They call it Take-lt-Buek day." On that fixed and formally proclaimed day everybody who had borrowed articles was supposed to take them back where they belonged. The man who borrowed his neighbor's lawn-mower last .Summer and forgot to bring it back was to take this day off for tho return of the borrowed implement. His wife, who had borrowed her neigh bor's cookbook, was to take that back. Their neighbors, who had borrowed the snowsbovel lust Winter and tho nutmeg grater last Spring, were to exchange tho.se articles for their own belongings. . And then, of course, everybody woidd be raady to start in on another year's bor rowing. Not a bad idea, at all. There is a good dual of borrowing in small towns. It's a sort of social function, in a largo way. Bor rowing is often done wlioti the borrowed article is not needed; but When tho borrower feels the need of a little social exchange and makes the borrowing the excuse for it. Bor rowing, too, is made the vehicle for exchang ing the latest news. Mrs. Housewife, hear ing the latest bit of scandal, must hasten to Mrs. Neighbor's house to tell it, professing, though, that she is there to borrow Mrs. Neighbor's famous recipe for layer cake. It's a very pleasant custom, too, in many of its aspects. It is the medium whereby tho newcomers in tho neighborhood get ac quainted and are gotten acquainted with. It is the peace overture that has patched up many a quarrel. Unhappily, too, it is the occasion of mnny another quarrel, because borrowers arc sometimes not returners. The "Takc-It-Baek" day, then, is a social reform move ment aimed at robbing tho borrowing prac tice of some of its annoying features. There fore it is a good thing. We wonder the information at hand dons not disclose whether "Tnkc-It-Baek" day applies to books and money. Probably not. That's asking almost too much. FIGHTING THE MAIL ORDER. (LMttorUl In Lebanon Kxprrxn.) TEN mail sacks filled with Sears, Hoc buck & Co. catalogues was one of tho interesting items in the day's work at the Albany postoffice recently. These cata logues will find their way into hundreds of rural homes, and in due course of time tho parcel post will be delivering various arti cles of merchandise at the farm homes. Many will argue that the goods arc sold cheaper, when often close inspection will prove that the goods are cheaper in quality than those offered by the home merchant. There is no doubt that many thousands of dollars are sent out of Linn County every year to the Eastern mailorder houses that should remain at home. What is the secret of their success in attracting the trade 7 It is liberal advertising, and if the home mer chants would study the proposition from this point of view and present their goods in the same attractive manner the order of things would change to the advantage of all con cerned. The farmers are busy peopl,e and it is much earier to scan tho pages of the news paper or turn the leaves of a catalogue, then make out an order for the articles needed, than it is to drive to town and shop in per son. Chicago is only a few days farther off than their usual trading point, naturally tho order goes there. The home merchant who advertises intelligently and systematically will not have long to complain of the mail order houses. THE HOBO DEFINED. IT IS commonly understood that a hobo differs from n tramp in that he wants work; at least tlmt he professes to want it. As he puts it himself, he is an itinerant worker who, if he does not find employment in one town, travels to another in search of it. A newer definition is that offered by a member of the profession temporarily iu New York. He says the word hobo is taken from tho two Latin words, ''homo," man, and bonus," good. It means, therefore, good man, a man who will work when he has a ehanue. The accuracy of this philologieal information is opon to some doubt, but at least this particular man is living up to tho nmue by directing a gang of hoboes in the . - rcmouelmg ami ropaiH 7 winch has been turned over to LlH uuuuvoicui, citizen n m !..,. "" "itu hs n -a place where t hey can Uy in ,1M 1 comfort while iunll,,B wotk JS?1 accommodations they will pay n. 11 able. ', Already they are showing their ,lB ness and self-respect by offering to pirt some form of labor for tl,u unsolicited r of furniture, food supplies, etc., that K comu to them. The working r u. i . schema will bo a good test of the fa of their assertions that all thev ... J; In Philadelphia' is another group 0( 5 or 100 men who call themselves hobonk cause, iih one explains, their work, whf nil, have any, is of a kind that compels wear old and often soiled doting Dictionaries make the term hobo w$ v.uiij ajiiuiiuiiiuiiM whii irninp, and dc! its origin to be obscure, but it is pta only fair to let the members of the frateruh fix the definition themselves; they m however, to get together on the suhWt 3 avoid contusion. WAR'S WASTE OF INTELLECT i nr NOMAS A. EDISON says that irajul J bo devised beam; long to protect ships from torpedo or sulmarite tack. It is not inconceivable, tlialimeitis will make cities immune from air Mi The chemistry ami mechanics of w p duco a constant game of wits, to whiclfii brightest intellects in science mid invtt'n are directed. But here, as elsewhere in the elfilia war, appears a vast, even criminal ii& Wc deplore war for its ruthless wnfittd lifo and its Wanton destruction of proi'iti But what if all the brain power laid utk liarhnriu altar of professionalized klk making were turned to tlic paths of j-Ktl Instend of bottling up energy iu hira'i looking substances that explode with ta mendous force, suppose Hint energy eotil be converted into beat, light ami Vn How much better off the world would M the sum total of brains devoted to contnYaj ninnlitmui fnr ulinln.illi killilU' COllld IW uninterruptedly at the conservation (B and energy I Wni. no n liiioiunuu ilenriVCS tilt WOIU) world of many minds that ought to be thi . ... i ing civilization, not destroying h. In putting in a furnace be sure and pit size lnrgcr than you think jou netd. i ,.r,.i. r ,,mii vnnt iint Inn. Have tit to deep where the furnace stands. Argcntiue has borrowed $15,000,OW American hankers. "Seeing America is becoming a slogan for a nurabtr f ' countries. ftpnee.il Vnn Hindenbunt ll "I08" the German women not to send hi j more love letters. Surely that is not i to arms. Two officers who jumped parole "l ordered back to Holland by KafariWI erals. That's sportsmanship. There are a lot of individuals vlM m method of taking vacation would Ml to work. iTs..i.r t....i : n uncertain t'l the heavy bread is tho worst. Much- of the Billy Sunday hW1. merely slanguage. mi .win