Program Scheduled At Newton Creek 3teus-HoDiow di to via I ja a "Those Fellows Just Don't Know How to Integrate!" The closing exercises of the Va cation Bible School ol the Newton Creek Church of Christ will be giv en this Friday at 7:30 p.m. j The church, which was organized a little over three years aso, and j which erected the first unit of its! building last summer, boasts an enrollment of 42 children, 6 teen-j age workers and 10 adult teachers i for its first Daily Vacation Bible j School. I Tin program will include songs, recitations and pantomimes as well as a display of handwork and workbooks. The public is invited to attend the program. The church building is located at 731 Newton Creek Road. Refresh ments will be served following the program. The Rev. Lloyd M. Whitford is pastor of the church. 4 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Ore. THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1963 The Farmer Is Beleaguered Anyone who says, "Pity the poor farmer." knows what he's talking about. The farmer in Oregon as he has been known for more than a century is rapid ly disappearing. The reason is simple. Unless he has a big, highly, mechanized, farm or another job to suoplemcnt his farm operation, he can't afford to con tinue operating. Some of the items contributing to this situation are pointed out in a report on agriculture in Oregon in 1962 by a legis lative interim committee on the: subject. First, U. S. Department of Agriculture statistics show relatively low returns for farm labor and farm capital compared to the returns for other industries. The' committee points out that fabu lous production has been achieved by the farmer in Oregon, but at the same time, costs of production have become dispro portionately high. ' . ' :. . In 1061, n total $412.6 million worth of cash crops cost the farmers $341.7 million to produce. The total net income from all sources, including $10.3 million in federal government funds left enough for an average salary of $2,650 for each of the 45,000 farm operators in Oregon. Many other things are closing in on the Oregon farmer to drive him to other endeavors, the interim committee report says. Accepting the challenge of compe tition, he decides to practice more and more efficiency and higher productivity. Mis efforts succeed, production goes up, nnd, pow the price falls because of this high production. It's a classic dilemma. High taxes also add their weight to the routing of farmers. That these taxes have proved effective in getting rid of the farmer is shown by a 1960 survey made in Benton County on 42 farm sales. Of these 42, only eight were bought by oth er bona fide farmers. The others were listed as tax refuges for out-of-state buy ers, hobby farms or country estates. In some counties, property taxes on farm lands have almost doubled in the last decade. This is largely due to the tremendous rise in school costs on the local levels and the exodus to the sul urbs by city dwellers who are demand ing other urban services. .The proof of the impact on the farm er is compared in one study with that of a professional man. In this study, a representative farmer In the Willamette Valley had an invest ment of $118,000 true cash value in his farm. It was found that for school pur poses alone, the average yearly taxes paid were $1,800 per farm. On the aver age in this study, the farmer received $4,300 as a total payment for his labor, management and return on the capital he had invested in his farm. This figured out to about 70 cents per hour for labor, providing he could credit capital with a normal farm loan percent age rate of interest. A dentist, on the other hand invests $30,000 to get Btarted in business. This investment was subject to a deprecia tion write-off and very quickly dropped to a 60 per cent taxable cash value; When these factors were all consider ed, it was shown that the dentist was paying about $350 in property tax for us ing the resources in his business, while the farmer was paying $1,800. Of course, on the higher income of a dentist, he was paying a great deal more state and federal income tax. Some of the state tax was coming back in basic school support, but other than that nei ther was tloing much toward defraying the cost of local services. So the heavi est burden was falling on the farmer again. . 1 It's in this area the slate may be able to give the beleaguered farmer an as sist. Other businesses have a deprecia-: lion allowance or some other special tax consideration. Land, the farmer's chief stock in trade, doesn't depreciate. Some equitable taxing system needs to be worked out for him, too.' WASHINGTON WINDOW Opinions From Readers 'What Next,' Says Reader On School-Prayer Issue To Tho Editor: When I was a small boy f was a student In a public school in a little Southern town. The principal of the school was a dignified man. lie also wus a minister of tho gospel. Everyone called him the "Professor." Each morning all of tho stu dents would assemble in tho school auditorium and we would bow our heads in reverence while the "Professor" recited a prayer. Wo would then ling a sacred or pa triotic song. After that we would go to our classrooms. (Wo were taught to lovo God and to love our country. None of us believed we were violating tho Constitution of the United States. Toduy the Supreme Court has abolished prayer in our public schools. Tho court has not abolish ed religion from our schools. In stead they have favored the new religion ot atheism. Something is radically wrong when one or two atheists can go tn court and thereby invalidate tho Christian tradition of the entire Nalion. Soon someone will want the name of God stricken from our coins and also make, it unlawful to swear with our hand on the Rlble. fiavl Marx said: "Atheism comes colore communism conies. Does it seem as if wo are going In that direction? God bless America? Moybe, may be notl Frank Licning Camas Valley Rt. Box S4S Winston, Ore. California!) Derisive Of Legislative Action To The Editor: Tho state of Oregon certuinly has hit upon a means of birth con trol with its new Income lax. From all appearances Hie moro children you have the more tax you must pay. This Is good for tne as I am not married, therefore 1 like this tax. The defeat of the cigarette tox was another victory for the smoker, for If this tax had passed the smoker would become tho clicwer and this would necessitate the re turn of the cuspidor and the fami liar spots on I lie living room floor. Now daylight saving time is one THE LIGHTER SIDE: The Smallest Flaw Philatelists Like By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (l!Pl You don't havo to smile when you call a man a philatelist, but some times it's ha id to keep from It. Stamp collectors comprise one of the few groups on earth that cherish imperfection. Even the smallest flaw in a postage stamp will send a philatelist into spasms of delight. This passion for Ihe defective seems a mite curious to those of us who regard the postage stamp merely as something to mail a loiter with. Some ot the controversies that shake the philatelic world as, for example, the inverted printing of the Dag lUmmarskjold mem orial stamp last fall are likely to cause a non-philatelist to quiv er with amusement. Question ot Eyebrows At the moment, it looks like a major flap is shaping up over the question of Amelia Earhart's eyebrows. A new airmail stamp honoring the famed aviatrix, who disap peared during a flight over the Pacific in 19:17, recently was un veiled by the Post Office Depart ment, . It doesn't go on sale until July 25, but already an issue has arisen over whether R. M, Bow er, who engraved the stamp, ne glected to equip Miss Earhart's likeness with eyebrows. When I heard about this, 1 slopped by the department to take a look t the sample and also to Inspect a photographic en largement o( the area around her eyes. Mower, who worked from an old photograph, pictured Miss Ear hart boyishly attired in slacks and shirt and standing in front ol Ihe silver monoplane in which she disappeared. No Comment To me, l.er brow seemed as barren of upholstery as that of the Mona Lisa. Hut -when t asked a department press officer wheth er Bower had indeed omitted her eyebrows, all I got was an enig matic smile. The ofiicial policy of tho postal service is to he as Inscrutable as possible. I assume it seeks to avoid giving the stamp an inllated value on the philatelic market, as might be the case if word got out that Bower hail goofed. In addition to the controversy over Miss Earhart's eyebrows. Iher also has been considerable discussion regarding her facial expression, which 1 would de scribe as a "grile." or a cross between a grin and a smile She apparently was squinting Into the sun wnen the original photograph was taken. Some phil atelists say the engraving pre sents an optial illusion in which the ees appear open on mo ment and closed the next. Commenting on that, the Dress officer said "at eight cents, an animated postage stamp might be regarded as one of the belter buys of Ih year." of the, most wonderful things that over Happened to the Stale of Ore gon. What is wonderful about it we in California don't know, but, it we havo It, it must be wonderful.' To be able to spend the. . first half. Of Vfllll Ipoislflf iv-A Ensimn tllinklnff lin wavs In snenrl innnnv' the last half finding ways to raise money is an achievement in it self. For f hi I snlntn vnit itiu Stilt. Knlllte VOIt fin, I 1 am aura your own voters salute you. May you keep up the good workl Anthony Sarraguso General Delivery Newport Beach, Calif. Supreme Court Picked Atheism Over Religion To Tho Editor: The Supreme Court of our land has decided for atheism and against Christianity. As a Nation wo have grown Immensely materi ally, hut may have become sterile in our moral and spiritual ctforls. This decision could never have been made with a vital and de cisive Christian effort being exert ed by our people. It seems ralher queer to me that afler two cen turies wo have become so enlight ened finally that we can twist the meaning of our Constitution to con form to any meaning we wish, de pending upon the pressure brought to bear. I am sure the founding fathers of our Nation had no such intent. I douht very much if, with the Supreme Court Justices we n o w have, any law could be written that would, or could, legally per mit Ihe use of our Lord's Prayer in our schools. For years we have taught athe istic evolution in our schools. It is written in the children's text books, and most teachers have made no effort (u curtail it. I At present we are considering tthe 'caching of communism. This I would be a great aid to a com ' munist teacher and should great . ly help our socialistic trend. I If It is wrong to teach Christian ! ity, it Is certainly wrong to teach atheism. I This court decision should bring j a flood of protest from I linslians everywhere. If It does not, it only I indicates the extent of our falling !away in these latter days. I II Is time we started fighting , for the liberties we are losing on every side. We should be ashamed j if we. in our generation, lose the : very things our forefathers gave 'their lives to obtain and preserve. I K.-nncth Kinney Kinnev Variety Store Myrtle Creek, Ore. Negro Prove By LYLE C. WILSON United Prist Inttrnational Candidate Kennedy's principal campaign bid in for the vote of Negroes was made at a mo ment when the attention of most voters abruptly had been directed to another great issue. Kennedy's big pitch for the Ne gro vote was made in California in Ihe second week of September, 1960. Two days earlier a group oi iToiesuiu ministers and lay men had met in Washington, D.C. under chairmanship of the Rev. Dr. Norman Vincent Peale to consider Kennedy's religion. The Peale group issued a statement warning that "a Roman Catholic president would. . .be under ex treme pressure by the hierarchy of his church" to go along willi Vatican foreign policy. That slato ment was made Sept. 7. Emphasised Civil Rights Kennedy was campaigning on the Pacific Coast. His managers distributed an advance text of a speech Kennedy was to deliver on Sept., .9 in Eos Angeles. Em phasis was on civil rights. Citing the vast area ot civil rights per- lormanco promised in the Demo cralic platform, Kennedy said: "1 believe in our platform. And in lSXil I intend to see that its pledges are carried out. I have asked Sen. (Joseph S.) Clark, of Pennsylvania, and Rep. (Em manuel) Celler, of New York, to prepare a bill embodying all of Ihe (civil rights) pledges of tho Democratic platform. And this bill will be among Ihe first or ders of business when a new Con gress meets in January." Kennedy did not follow his dis tributed text when ho spoke in the Vote Can Decisive I.os ; Angeles Shrine Auditorium. The substance of his speech was unchanged but the language was different. Kennedy did not retreat from his civil rights commitments. ,lle actually said it this way: "Let us make it very clear that when the Democratic Party wrote its platform in July it meant it in September and in November and in January. In 1961, I intend to sec those commitments car ried out. "When our next president takes office in January 1961, he must be prepared to move for ward in the field of human rights in three general areas: as a legis lative leader, as chief execu tive, and as the center of the moral power of the United States." Bid Is Successful This all-out bid for Negro sup port was a great success although the attention of most voters at tho time was centered on religion in politics. Plans were being made at that moment for candi date Kennedy's Sept. 12 appear ance before the Greater Houston (Tex.) Ministerial Association. There on television Kennedy an swered and pretty well de molished the objections of the Peale Protestants. Negro voters had been listening, however, to Kennedy on civil rights. That was fortunate for him because Kennedy needed their votes. Negroes had rallied to Franklin D. Koosovelt's new deal but Dwight D. Eisenhower tempt ed a lot of them back into the Republican party. How Kennedy reversed this trend was shown by a Republi can analysis of the Negro vote of 1956 and 1960. In Baltimore, Md., for example, 55.5 per cent of the Negro vote appears to have been cast for Ike in 1956 as against 28.2 per cent for Richard M. Nixon in 1960. In Chicago, the Republican take among Negroes slumped from 33.4 per cent in 1956 to 19.2 in I960. In New York City Ihe shift was from 26.1 per cent to 18.1 per cent. In Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, combined, the Republicans slumped from 26.6 per cent to 18.4 per cent. The big city vote cost Nixon the electoral votes of several states, cost him the White House, too. The Negro vote can be decisive. 2-DAY SUMMER EVENT Irwin Stern FINE FURS Fri. and Sat. June 21, 22 All furs labeled to show country of origin GREAT TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES ON YOUR OLD FURS BUDGET TERMS GLADLY MINK JACKETS from MINK STOLES from FOX SHRUGS from RESTYLE Your Outdated FURS To An Up-To-Date STYLE! Cleaning and Glazing REPAIR and Relining Guaranteed Workmanship at Very Low PRICES FREE Estimates MINK BOAS from $499 $199 $88 $34 $10 '15 Bleached Beaver Jacket $499 $199 $99 MINK FUR COLLARS from FUR HATS from . just Persian Paw Jacket BLACK Squirrel Back Stoles from . . MANY MORE NOT MENTIONED a ynuuvsnnwriir,.., en sr. jackson sr. PHONI OH 3-5011 V Taken from the tilel of The Newi. Review NIKITA ACCtPTS BIDS i OSLO, Norway ll'Ph Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has accepted invitations to visit Nor way, Sweden and Denmark next spring, the Norwegian ttovern ment announced Wednesday, I Khrushchev originally planned , to visit the three Scandinavian J countries in 19S9. Rut he called ioff Ihe trip because of the "un I favorable atmosphere" created by the Scandinavian press. 40 YIARS ACO June 20, 121 From Mrs. Ellsbury's Advice to Ihe Lovelorn column Dear Mrs. Ullsbury: In wearing the Kins! Tut or Deauville neckerchief, should the knot be worn on the side or in the tromr CLASSY KID. Dear CLASSY KID - Either one is cor rect although the side is a little smarter. The neckerchief should be worn carelessly, 25 YEARS AGO June 20. IMS Joseph P. Kennedy, U.S. Amhas 'sartor to the Court nt St .lames. today disclaimed any intention In ;seek the ilcmocralic presidential i nomination in two. ! He made the remark In response ' In a nui'stinrt akeri him as the lin er in which he was returning from Europe tame up to the harbor. Methodist Men's Group To Meet New Ministers Ivan Edwards, president ot the First Methodist Men's Club has announced that the regular month ly meeting for the club will be held next Monday evening at a (ISO din ner in the fellowship hall of the church. Primary interest will be to greet Ihe new ministers of the church, Ihe Rev. Clark En and Ihe Rev. Tatsumasa Shirakana. Laymen and ministers from the Winston Dillard. Oakland and Sutherlin Methodist churvhes have been invited to attend. Such an ambition for him he said, ! "would be a breach of faith" with I President Roosevelt. 1 Kennedy said he would see Pres ident Roosevelt at the White House on Thursday and would report to him on his "political and econ omic observations." 10 YEARS AGO June 20, 19S3 Sen. Aiken (R-Vl) conceded Fri day some of his western Republi can congressional colleagues are worried about possible wheat plant ing quotas and lower price sup ports in 1954. Next year is an election year and Ihe narrow GOP margins in the House and Senate are subject to a test at the (Mils. Orders for Douglas fir lumber fell off sharply during May. ac cording to figures just released by the West Coast Lumbermen's Association. 'Jbelcws-Kcuicw ftciKwrg Or tooo Fittjrtd m inuod c'oH miHw Vv ?, A jl tit w oM' t BtMeurf, Ore (on. u(tw Kl of AUrcft 2, PvtilitKM Dl'lf Etc! Sl"Mt V NEftSW'VIEW PUBLISH. W CO j. V Srtnrttr Puijiithtr Unntj Prsi lnlfrnliwit. 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