{ title: 'The Ellicottville post. (Ellicottville, Cattaraugus Co., N.Y.) 1961-current, December 11, 1968, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92062048/1968-12-11/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92062048/1968-12-11/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92062048/1968-12-11/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92062048/1968-12-11/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Ellicottville Memorial Library
..... - ' . ' . -·· . - ..... - .,. ,i:::-·~··;i\~ ~.~ ~ --: . ' ·::--:-- .... ·-·_,..J,,:r-::'.t(-:' ... · ' ·•. '• ~: .. ' ~ .. .. f •. L .!. 0 · . ..__ .. r • -.- I r .. --,·-·l?;A:~l: TWo, 1 :~· r--:--.',r:· ~~-·..,..·~· •. :7-,-~z---~~~-~-=-=-~' -='·-=-~--~~~\'!'\.-· --·:; __ THE 7 ·;,~U;-,~-~L~-~~C~O~T.!:!V;;·l~.·lJ.;:~j~)o~·--~-s~tf~:-~su.:·~·,:!;ICO~T~T~V~it,~·;;;L_E~· ·~··N~·~·y~~-~- ~'~--~--~=~.::::-~·-~ .. ==- ~::;:;::-~: ~~W~.~~=~\et~t~\~ .. ;-~-~~-,~--n~·~· *}~96~8~., .. ./- ~ ~.r · ··~L'~t.c· o. ,, . · ~~~~>~tilNtoN\~ < : .. . r::i;~t~d 1 \f5-~t;;;essive. ··ri _;rospelrous'· Ouo~e:':, . , __ , Portland'i~~~~-<f~~~::p~ ' ·· $t,nton, Te~~.~~~ Published -Th~ E.llj~rQtt:ville \It isagainsbNe\v .Wrkli!tw: \Chile~ llP· The, lf:Ot:-ld is · for · publi-c emp:lpyes:·, ~o JJ~t-~'l')ag. off as ffmay ap- '· ' \\:;t 'I • ,, wh~ .. ~t bi-·!1-Y ~· \ \f' ~ f®t whi~·l, l!U':: · P~ . ....ti~. ~ aty takiqg•:,if-4- plll ol i,_t))eit!Df;' eyery morning.\' . Samuel Pepyl! \ WbY;~)f.tices and Prices Go ·Up ,An AP af'$atch reports that a top of dollars he had succeeded in gettbg from Treasury Departme-nt offici-al expects spend the federal treasury fo various proj-ects in ing -by the fedel.'al goveri!men·t in the cur- his state .. Now ·that the election is over, rent fiscal year to total about $185 billion - a::1d the people have indicated a \desire to thus ne{lrly wiping out the $6 billion cut in curb inflatio:1 and restore some. semblance -·federal-spending ordered by Congress. No of l&w and order, the question remains of one shou1d- be too greatly surpised at the whether the political habits o.f decades can -apparent inability of Congress to control be curbed. Have we learned that inflation fedeial spending. Candidates for public and soaring federal taxe-s are the price that office in every state in the U:1ion prior to must be paid when we support those whose the recent election, ran on platforms of principal goal b public life is the monetary- \bl'inging home the bacon\ to consitutents. favors they can do for the folks back home. .A sena-torial ca:1didate from a wester£ The winning ca::1didates have yet to prove state listed as his prime qualification for that they are any different than the spend· reelection to office the hundred of millions ers of the past. Rockef~ller on Welfare America:ts will have to step up to th·e question of wheth~r the federal gover::l- ment should be the kingpin in the nation's welfare effort. New York's Gov. Nelson Rockefeller put the question forthrightly on the eve of the Governor's Confere:tce in Palm Springs. The for<um and timing were op- portu:le, sinc-e the hosts and their chief guest Richard Nixon will have to come to an understandbg o.n welfare in January. Governor Rockefeller's own position is that the fede·ral government should take over all welfare c-osts and that a national minimum eligibility sta:1dard should be set. If the federal government did assume 'all costs, the nation would have to spend . '- at' t $3·4. billioo. a ye~r. Th.~ c:;b.iei_ &4- '\.yantag would be greater uniformity in t~ayme system and the freei:::J.g of local fu::uls.Jor oth'e<l:, urgent lo.cal needs. , L~ and st~ agencies currently are buffeted oy a lack and by admin- istrative cha~· These Jed to irregular paym.ents. ~. ~.r::gEl~lcy..ml:tke~ ly. New York pays seven times more per month for families with dependent child· re::-1 . than does Mississippi. And this brbgs us to the second Rockefeller pro· posal: a national standard. This would :10t be feasible without the first proposal, since states would resist any order to pay out more from already tight budgetS. Yet a national standard for welfare eligibility is needed. The lack of it has prompted the great migratiO.\lS of South- erners to the North, with the resulta:.tt ur· ban ..QY~rJogcl, um·~ decay. New York City alone as a million on welfare - more thall\'the entire· population of all but o:te city i.n the South. · · What ma:1y may fear is that federal standards and payouts may lead to . too great-a subsidy for the poor .. The $3-4 bil· lion Rockefell!lr estimated would leap a.i- other $8·10 billion a year to raise a!J un· dereaming Americans above the poverty line. With an estimated $200-250 billio:J annual '\'ate of economic growth for the next decade, however, it would seem the . nation-eould 11fford eve::l the-larger figlire. At the same time the nation may now ~~ ~ ~ ~ ;m.~- th~ir system~ art, to.o in~cient, to. meet· . ...._ ing such a system as a permanent dispensa their <>.W:t '¢nimum standardf}. New· York's ~\1- It-should also strive, tht:augh improv controller, fqr example; says tbat his state ed fl't4tcation and better job opportunities will run $170 million short for lOcal wei- and other measures, to hasten the day- when far~ by the eil.d of this fisc~ I year.~' the- joys of sel[·sufficiency are ·shared by all But the $3.4-b.1Uio.n~$tifnat.eJ~ a s~ep· _ dtizens. - . · . - e'r~ It is based on the state's own pre&.~nt . \ . , . . . .' , . , . st~'el .. But;~an8i~~.k~~V ~e~: ~ut~-accld~nt are ~o~ An intere$tina l~tter: re-· teaCher$.,. 'a(!~. sa4l~tl?n -~c~~~~ng.;:~s f~st as mil~- ·. -,· . - - ·::o · : ~ · wokets':;r- hav-e .. oh,o•elt · ~'\\d · ag~;'d\tvai~\IS ct,~·b·•....-tr··-'\\'r cet-ved ftom an Iowa· ·farm- · · . . ~ -~ 1 . . \\'·· · .u.u . ~~· £;\.& er. \The tam&rs ·aJl'e _in a · b~err ptQJlshed ·onty·hr 1;(lke.Q ·pla.:ies: are sater thiiD ;e~r. most; diftfcult --sitUation. · ifues a:rcrtme:f jailing of a -·-.And o:lly- ~~'t~Lday :~·read Land prices are high · ($751). few union le~dets~ The ·t~at ?t 196~ fo!. th~ . . ~t an acre is qtJite commo:'l.·) cure for ,the stckness that t1me m modern htstory not ¥acbi:lery is high (tractOrs has-caused New York pub- a singlt! fatal streetcar ac'\ $8000 to $10;(100 each. Co~- lie employees to violat;_e the cide-nt w:as reported/' . ~ hiiJes 20 to $30,00(). Actual law and .their oat~ o! office \Hartley Iowa,. s,::'iti'nel: cost to ·raise a bushel of appears from this dista::1ce We, 1 of the press, may ex- coin is~ supposed to be 90c- to be str-ict .. administra~ion ~re~S'.oJJr i~e~Jil a::td f~~~~ize We sell 800 bushels of male of the IDedicme · .presenbed 1~d1vlduals and orgamza- seed corn, 30% • moisture by law.\ tions as long as we do not that had to be dried to 14%- Albany, Ky, News: \Sev- abuse the privile-ge and. un- The price was 93c less mois- eral Congressmen have ob- jus~ly injw.:_e a~ individual tutt-e costs and costs of dry- jected stro::~.gly. to plans or 1::1vade hiS pnvacy. Or ing made our price 63c .. Be- for the 1970 census, plans groups may assemble for cause we· ha:d seed corn con which include 120 questions peaceful purposes, as they tracted.to a deaJer we came probbg.more deeply into do every day, but whe::~. the out OK on the female com, the personal lives and hab- freedom and safety of oth- so our gross will be $4900. its of Americans than _!lver e1s are threatened by such EX'penses for fertilizer, b- before. Census takers would · assemblies they can no long sectisides, etc, will be about ask every American to er be condoned.\ $1000· give the source of all b- Rockland, Me., Courier- * * * * come, the value of his or\ her Gazette: \A little card on The Vietnam w.ar is cost- property, tell with whom he the wall of a Cape.Cod shop i:tg the USA $3 million dol- sharEs his bathrdom, tell over the weeke:lc\· 'Some- lars every HOUR and three his marital, educational, times the Have and Have· · more American lives. military and employment Nots can be trace!l.to the • • * ·• history ~~- Ohio Con- , Dids and tlie Di~ots.\' Some tii:ne ago, President gress+n'' 'James Betts . . . · Johnson r€commended a · introduced a bill to bar the \***************\\***•*** new postal co!poration to bureaucrats from obtain- be formed, co~sisting of a ing this information u:~der number of good executives threat of a penalty of 60 appointed by the President days in jail or .a $100 fine or and the committee would both. He is acting in the b.- e EXTENSION Cattaraugus County. run the postal department · terest of the average citi- ***********************• as a business to get it out of zen, and almost certainly TAKE TIME FOR THE the red- But this has not has the support of a major- been done and the next ity.'' LONELY move iS up to Nixon. This Luray, Va, Page News was a ·good suggestion 0-.1 a:td Courier: \One thing the part 'of· .Johas.on and sure, it.is a-bso-lately neees- would nearly take the pos- sary in these days to know tal· department out of pofi- how to read and write. tics . A better idea would Otherwise, a perso:::J. is con- be to take the postal depart- demned to an ordinary ex- ment completely out of poll istence and in mpy cases tics by selling it all (lock, beco~s the ward of the stock and barrel) to a pn- welfare department. Many vtae concern such as AT&T. .. of the demonstrators who • • • · • shout for change could use The Russians are still try- their time much better by ing to make a glass lens applying themselves to which was'made··m Com- books~a.'l voicing demands ing. N. Y~ 30 yea~ ~go. I fof han'douts which they w~\ha..~~· to'tb! mVlt~d to -do~desel'¥e.- __ . attend th'e pourmg or tllat 200 meh le::ts, at that time, . A.nd~rson. s. c., ~ ~. ~ . ~ PreS$ '1::1 a as tt ~ broke. •loose a'nd to Transpo-rl&tion has announ- the-top. l \Was 46 t -present ced it pla:ts. to study free when the seco.11d anc:L sue- .· auto repair and fref) public cessful ·'le~s'was poured. tra:tSportation service for The lens ,iS still in .uSt: at · po~r people forced to drive M~Jtalorilar . Observa· . _ agJ~St, unsafe cars to ho_ld tory/Calif. ~ a 'Jbb. . · The. Department The holiday season is again in the air! Homes are · full of the spir-it again. The streets al·e.....fuil of it .. and. the shops and trees and churches all speak of it in differe.:::tt w:ays. There is a f.eelb.g of ~xcitement and hurry all around us. Have you ever been alone or ill during the holiday sea son? If you have been. you must know how absolutely empty th~ S'easOJL ~- be. a:td how thankful and hap- py you would have bee:::t ~ ·cnee-r and lovfng.:JOrumess had come your way. • there are those- who . need such att-ention cd would welcome a:ld appr~iate it deeply. W-e. all have aJ.- most unlimited opportuni- .tiea.:ta_s~~ oth~s at this time of·year. ~... . .TH.E ·HIJ~HING POST by Bill Tttmbl,e- - :. D01~Cate: Pro\ain T tf:Be-;fresented, safe and.:agillg--ea~\OWn . in what they can do to help ed by low i::tcome. wag-e . others, forget to ask any- earners~ It proposes to off thing in retur:.t. It is this .. sl)t this .situation by givbg attitude that is 'behind the the. poor wage earner a true holiday spirit. At :10 -~ \-·' .. . .. . . Two of the greatest baskdtball ga~es of ·the season_ will be, Hght hel'e in w~stem New Yol!k this season. One will ·be in Nia~ara'· ·F.alls; the .. other iil ()lean, ~ach .. garne will pit the . ll_row.n. Indiai\s o.f St. Bo,naventure -against the · vironmental Sciences Service Admiriistra· tion will emi on l)i!cember 15. The teams 'will then go to Mi~mi to 'study the data they have compited ·fn the mo>J.th·lo::tg ex· periment. \ ' · ·• * •• ... hi< • - The c.owards. CHRIS~AS COOI:IES .rnan Bob Lanier, and the Eagles will have .-.t~eir sterling ·backeourt man.t Calvin Mi.Ir ;p_J:If 'Who JiOUredin 68 points in 14st.Satur- ' Thera's a hubbub in ~e 'kitchen, ~ay's E3.gle-irbi over Syn(Cuse, 118 to liU: ~ele is sugar on 'the floor, · · i · · · • • • • The air is whiie WI' ~th -Ao\r '\ . - .t'~• ·' ·. we•11 take-Niagara to win one, a:1d thE' Th~'s .a. smudge 'bn e.'verf door . . Indians to wip._one.' . Tha..mlier hll$ b&en hliinming: . • ~ • • Stirring up the dough. - . _ ,., . :1 )~ffo~ts are- peing m;;.de to reju;v~ate _ 1he-.ro,Uin~·pm ia_~Qllfugl • Elheott-V'Ille Troop 5~, · .... 'of A· , By ~ow, 1m SIWe-Y1iU know '-'·'-'='~;~,_ ~~: m.erica- '1\t:_ tr~ m~ts · · \. ~11tltlaare *'tllidnJ'co6kies. . ·-;: . ·. . . at 7 in tli~ . . . r. . . i'~ca ni~ •. ( . -v··--·h·the · . . this part , I ' \ · choice hetw.eeri pri,vat~ ~!ld · other time of year is it so . Why not. have a· family project of -bringing joy to those who live alone - the aged, the destitute, or shut- bs? Or why not visit hos- pital pati~nt, .clrlldren in childte:t's homes or those · homes? '. 't' ...... \