Yoakum Daily Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 228, Ed. 1 Monday, December 30, 1940 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Yoakum Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Carl and Mary Welhausen Library.
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and by the legs,
as second-class matter at the Post Office, at Yoakum,
Texas, under the Act of March 3. 1807
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Society and Circulation
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HERBERT “DUTCH”KOEHLER
TRANSFER CO.
North of Fire Station
Agent Herder Track Lins
General Hauling
WOOD--SAND --- GRAVEL
Phone 321 --- Day or Night
NATIVES CALL THE TIGER.
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FIRST RIUBLIC
MOTION PICTORE SHOW
WAS INI PHILADELPHIA,
«=EB. S’, 1070-
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recorded >aa dead from
is during the year 1930,
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UNCLE SzXAA
OWNS ABOUT
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OLJTSIDE THE
BOUNDARIES
OF THE us proper.
XXS A WHOLE,
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OF APPROXIMATELY
<c><& PERCENT
INSECTS
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IF YOU TRAVEL
UNTIL THE NORTH STAR.
IS ONI THE HORIZON,
HOW SOU^
WILL VOU BE
forms in the whole boards-and- j
agencies set-up. Chief trouble i
here is that the board has been I
in labor for upward of a year and
the Senate is tired of waiting.
It looks now as if the bill would
pass the Senate and get vetoed, b 1
is doubtful that enough votes to
over-ride a veto could be obtained.
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the
The ter-
a consti-
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proval of Congress and
President of the United States.
rnoif notice- ©f these three treatments:
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lo^
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most youd^MWin
reation the mere;
the people of Hi
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NEW YEAR GREETINGS :
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We wish to thank our customers and friends for j
.■MVXMX? «M>W £WM W1M *** *<r-»V, CM1M UlCUBll
we will merit a continuation in 1941.
' you we wish the beet of gvofl health, and
in abundance for 1941, from the Officers,
and Employees of the
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HI WAY PACKAGE
STORE
THE FRIENDLY LIQUOR HOUSE
FEATURING THE FINEST LIQUORS,
WINES and GINS
R L DARI ING
Irrvine Street Yoakum, Texas
•links. Chain letters are written communications kept in unbroken
circulation.
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I NATIVES 2
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T. B. Claims
Many Victims
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AUSTIN,
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BL.
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IF YOU FEEL THE
TENTACLES OF AN
OCTOPUS
CREEPING OVER
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When they; perch
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as oMe or rue
PRINCIPAL FCATURCS OF
THE DEMOCRATIC SYSTEM
please Bear im miHd that
democracy IS COOUnNCT
OAl YOU IAI THE PRESE-N’’
SMERFFaIC’Y
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Thia will force the
tile feathers. Sufch <
emnrnended only <
weather-
Laige poultry p
far the nicotine go
Hawaii has been
I ably active i
| the other two regions mentioned, dip the birds in sodium flouride
t although Alaskans say they are mixture prepared according to dl-
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35c
2c per word
1c per word ■
(Display rate for Daily and Weekly — Same ad
in each, 55c combination)
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Spr'-^f
bill itself. There is no arbitrary
grant of power to the courts.
“If enacted, it wouldn’t jeop-
ardize or harm any such agency
as the Labor Board, because the7 ,
principles it sets forth have al- i
ready been announced by the Su-
preme Court. We’re merely writ-
ing into lav.’ what the court has
already said.
“The big thing is that every-
board and agency 'would know
that there is some court that can
review its decision, so that its find-
ings can never be arbitrary.”
VETO
LIKELY
ADMINISTRATION opposition
to the bill rests on several
arguments.
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te
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t-
certain well-defined grounds '
iNBA Service Staff Correspondent ' which are clearly set ^orth, Jn t..e !
'WASHINGTON.—About the only
! thing the United States Senate
has to worry over in the immedi-
ate f u t u r e—
say the next
week or so—is
a ha ngo v er-
headache called
the Walter-
Logan bill.
Briefly, the
bill would
make decisions
and findings of
administrative
boards (with a
few specific ex-
ceptions) open
to judicial re-
vie w. Courts
would be em-
powered to up-
set an action by—say—the Labor
Board, if in the court’s opinion the
board’s finding was not supported
by substantial evidence, was not
supported by the board’s own find-
ings of fact, or was in violation
either of the U. S. Constitution or
of the law creating the board in
question.
This bill is either a much-
j needed reform or a thing which
' will cripple the government’s op-
i erations, depending on your point
of view. It has already passed
the House. Last spring the Sen-
ate passed it in a moment of ab-
sent-mindedness, reconsidering its
i action a bit later when adminis-
tration leaders realized what hud
happened. ———
HOT T
FIGHT — 1
AROUND this bill there has de-
veloped an extremely hot con-
flict. The administration bitterly
opposes the measure, but a ma-
; jority in both houses apparently
f favors it.
The case for the bill is perhaps
best put by Senator Carl Hatch
of New Mexico, who is leading the
fight for it in the Senate.
'’This bill merely provides a
fundamental in our form of gov-
ernment—that absolute power
' shall not rest anywhere,” says
i Hatch. “It comes naturally out
l of our basic theory of checks and
1 balances.
| “It calls for judicial review only
........
D. MEISTER
fA 8. MORGAN
RHODES
Phene No. 99
ft. dl
T. M. MO. U. a. Fl
— ANSWER: India, China and Siberia.
K2
k°°N
Bl* g.
as the Interstate Commerce Com- ■ j ■ \
mission specifically exempted ' i
from the bill? ;
Another argument is that the l '
modern need for carrying on much i j
of the government’s work via ex- j I
ecutive boards is creating a brand- i j '
new field of administrative law i j
and administrative procedure, H
which must in the nature of things 1 |
develop outside of the old, recog- i
nized legal channels. To try to I
force it back into those channels, ,
it is held, would halt the whole - ,
process.
Lastly,. Senator Barkley, the ,
majority leader in the Senate, asks ,
that action be delayed pending the
report by the attorney general’s I
special committee on administra- |
be on the verge of suggesting re- , i ' *-?/A
........I
Corn iMo l>v nc* tr'nvicr. inc.Chief of these is that the bill , 1
would almost nullify the work of
the various government boards j
and agencies, by causing a legal
delay of a year or so between the
time an agency issued an order
or made a finding and the time I
that order or finding actually
went into operation. If this isn't
so, ask the New Dealers, why were ;
such “non controversial” agencies !
NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE
Clark Company. Inc- 205 E. 42nd St., New York
cent per word will be charged for all Cards of Tnanks, Reso '
lotions of Respect and similar matter of Ix»dg-es, Societies, Sup
W. etc., where an admission fee is charged the public.
KWALTER LOGAN BILL, PROVIDING COURT REVIEW
OF AGENCY DECISIONS, IS LONE SENATE WORRY
BY BRUCE CATTON | on
i
11
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s i
-
fan
ity ofl
i Puerto Rico to achieve full state-
hood for their territories should
interest many of ua not immedi-
ately concerned
Hawaii recently vot?d two to
one to ask for statehood.’ ThAt.
however, is juat a beginning. The
Ilawallian legislature must
send a formal request
United States congress,
ritory must also adopt
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'■it j ifood x» H -< wff»i1 ‘ T ■
* beet her ire car
and Puerto MHM|*>heyht
F ' 44long been prepared for,* U
the last; duties of an Amertean state?’
HP and States so far removed in i>]«aee through ttg mixture
DAILY ., Eatabl&d 1897 YOAKUM, TEXAS ;
ted Cireulatton of any Pnbiieation in thia Motion I
Eveiy Day Rxoept Saturday by Bankers Printi^Co. L
Morning editon every Sunday 5 \> £» j |
w heeond-elaaa matter at the Post Office, at Yoakum.
Texas, under the Act of Maaeh 3, 1897 ,
wish to thank our customers
r confidence and good will in 1940, and cherish
he hope t
^or ail of
prosperity fa
hdtftfl
they can control theW
ition. It is moat effectil
oi^it.ll nights- ,
The roosts are painted lighfl
with nicotine sulphate abouMl
minutes before the hens eoidFV
-•M night., When they, perch oi
the i-oosts, the fumes from tM
chemical penetrate the feathan
and kill the lice. The treatmed
should be repeated i|i 10 days ■
take carc of any Ifee that haw
hatched out In the interval,
the ventilators are closed dunfl
the treatment, they should fl
opened about nine o’clock tM
same night to allow the fumetfl
escape.
ported today by the Texas Tu-
berculosis Association.
However, out oi the total of
3,945 deaths from this cause for
the year 1939, nearly three-
fourths, or 2/433, were between
tbe productive ages MvM' to 45 j
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from, the present 48 are really
more accessible, with modern
■Mflht of communication, than
|^|4 the states west of the Alle-
the Mississippi when
njAnrrr
specially if the;
which they can
IV
BKWl or
Bftwjr came in-rExcaanmBJHy-agse
• L-flfc - -W
Egfg Production
Cut When Lice
Are Prevalent ,
COLLEGET STATION. — Lice
are prevalent in exceptional num-
bers in many poultry bouses at
the present time and in many
cases have caused egg production
to drop sharply.
Geo. P. McCarthy, poultry spe-
cialist of the Texas A. & M. Ex-
tension Service, recommends one
„ ____I : dust
in this matter than ’ the birds with sodium flouride;
'xx X - -I 1 .1?__ xL 1* V 1 • • -a
Alaskarv
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Morgan, Cena S. Yoakum Daily Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 228, Ed. 1 Monday, December 30, 1940, newspaper, December 30, 1940; Yoakum, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1366396/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carl and Mary Welhausen Library.