The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, June 14, 1946 Page: 2 of 6
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THU DfiNlflON PRESS
THE DENISON PRESS
m£Swr«^,"fA
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A.SSOC IATIOM
Telephone NO. N*
Offise of PubUemttM 306 W.
Issued Each Friday
4GH
12* r «
UROY M. AND0RSON
Editor
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Outside County add 26c each six months
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tion, yet “exempt from judicial scrutiny of its
action seems to be the ambition ot every Federal
k
administrative agency and is urged by a group
of writers and teachers with increasing insistence.”
“As a result,” he says, with the multiplication
of these agencies, the increasing subjection of
every form pt activity to administrative regula-
tion, and hostility of administrative agencies to all
attempts to impose effective legal checks upon
them, we have been coming in practice to a con-
dition of what may well be called adminstrativu
absolutism. This is nothing short of revolution-
ary in our (American polity, and some academic
teachers of the science of politics do not hesitate
to pronounce it a revolution and to praise it as
such.”
CHARGE ACCOUNTS are accents’ 1« from persons
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ERRORS: The Denison Press will not be re-
lionsible for more than one incorrect insertion.
CLOSING HOUR: Copiy received by 9 a m. will
bo published the same day.
Any erroneous statement reflecting upon the
character or reputation of any persons will ba
gladly corrected if brought to the attention of the
publishers. The Denison Press assumes no re-
sponsibility for error in advertising insertions
beyond tfr.e price the advertisement.
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 10 a. m.
in order to avoid publication in currant Issue.
Dedicated to clean and responsive governmeal;
to individual and civic integrity; to individual and
civic commercial progress.
"Instead of a law which thinks of citizens
and officials are equally subject to law, we are told
ot a public law which subordinates the citizen to
the official and enables awriter to put the claims
of one citizen over those of another, not accord-
ing to some general rule of law, but according
t- his personal ideas for the time being.”
Dr. Pound declares that many of the admin-
istrative agencies entertain complaints, institute
investigations, begin what amount to prosecutions
before themselves, allow their own subordinate to
act as prosecutors and often make adjudications
in conference with those same subordinates.
“All this,” he finds, “runs counter to the
most elementary and universally recognized prin-
ciples of justice.”
I he need for checks on the unfairness of
administrative agencies, declares Dr. Pound, is
not so much a question of protecting wealthy
wrongdoers and great corporations from reason-
able regulation, since they alone have the re-
sources to gain some protection from the courts,
as it is a question of protecting the average and
small business and the individual citizen.
-00—
WHAT IS HAPPENING
TO LAW?
I
Challenging the view that “law is whatever
is done officially,” Dr. Itoscoe Pound, former
Dean of the Harvard Law School, urges that im-
mediate and effective checks be placed on ‘the
administrative absolutism” of the Federal agen-
cies, in a recent article.
<
In the article, “What Is Happening to the
Law?” Dr. Pound finds that for a generation the
courts have leaned over backward in the effort
to facilitate dhe administration of social legisla-
And don’t forget those fellows who voted to
raise their salaries down at Austin represent a
group of fellows who ran for the oflice knowing
the salary to be ten dollars a day for a period of
120 days in the regular session and five dollars
per day for days in addition to the 12U. After
letting the office and ion assembling in session,
they then voted to raise their pay by J400 per
cent, and draw salary at the rate of $10 a day
the whole year round. Ar^d on top of that they
Wanted the salary hike to be retroactive and thus
draw pay inviolation of the agreed salary when
they were elected. Of course, the cure is in
the hands of those persons with a ballot.
WHAT OTHER
ED SAKE
THINKING
—•
A SNAIL’S PACE
(Dallas News)
We live to learn, thanks to
more observant contemporaries tous
who tell us what we haven’t
known. In all of classical and
modern literature may be found
frequent reference to “a snail’s
pace.” That has meant for us
the slowest of slow progression,
hut not until recently has any-
one told us specifically
just what a snail’s pace
organized a national Snail
Watchers Association, reports
tliat a snail travels at the rate
of ninety miles a year.
Break that figure down.
Ninety miles in a year of 360
days means one fourth of a
mile per day, or one ninety-
sixfth of a mile per hour. That’s
fair going, better for a snail
real I \ is. Now, an English j than we have hitherto believed,
gentleman who spends much of. But when his pace is compared
his time observing this ubiqui-1 with the 750 mph which the
crustacean, who has even Army’s new rocket-propelled
0
Silhouettes of Four
Well Dressed Women
You may think these women
are dressed in their be t dress
up clothes .... but they are not
%CfHoilSf
rS "/?■ 2W
F~ j\msmw
.Won’t it be great when you
cun ugain order a hum sand-
wich and get ham—and not
“pressed ham ”
Rambling over Texas: Near
Springtown, a road-runner scrur
rying across the highway, the
first one this observer had seen
in a long time; and, .south of
Sweetwater, a hawk so big he
looked like an eagle—he sat on
a fence post and disdained to
stir as the oar whirled past.
Near Hondo, a vast field of
yellow stubble with hundreds of
red-and-white cows grazing—-in
the distance, a solid line of jag-
ged mountains veiled in blue.
At Yoakum, chickens peering
out of second and third story
windows of a building—a poul-
try establishment, of course.
And in Abilene, a sign; “Fris-
ky Minnows.”
Your columnist is a candidate
for Lieutenant Governor of
Texns. It would be deeply ap-
preciated if you would say a
kind word to your friends about
Boyce House. With your help,
we can win.
Why is a lawyer’s brief
called “brief?”
There was a little discussion
in this space a few weeks ago
about whether it ulas ungram-
matical to use a preposition to
end sentence with. E. Rob-
erta of the Andrews County
■yews 'ends in a story about a
hoy whol was sick and asked his
nurse to read to him from
“Robinson Crusoe” but she
hroutht in “Swiss Family Rob-
“What did you bring mo that
book- to be read ou*“?!T to from
for?”
Jester Says
Determined
To Carry On
Corsicana.—"Gov. Coke Ste-
venson’s announcement that bo
would not be ft candidate for
governor brought me so many
telegrams and letters pledging
support that I now am more de-
termined than ever to fight for
the state’s post-war welfare, as
well as defend it against evils,
both present and future” de-
clared Beauford H. Jester as he
completed a campuitteU a cam-
paign swing through East Texas
Saturday.
“Everywhere I went people
deluged me with offers to work
for my election. This indues I
the common people and busi-|
ness leaders alike. It was tdue
in Waxahachie, Hillsboro, Madi-
sonville, Lufkin, Nacogdoches,
Palestine and all of the other
places I visited.”
Jester said peace officers are
enthusiastic about his declara-
tion for a modern parole and
probation law which will pro-
tect citizens against habitual
criminals.
Two network broadcasts are
on Jester’s schedule next week,
the first on Tuesday June 11
from Dallas over Lone Star
Chain at 8:30 p. nv, and the
other from Ran Antonio over
Texas Quality Network Thurs-
day at the same hour.
Jester was in Austin Monday
for hi Railroad Commission
hearing. He will be in Kerville
for a Flag Day celebration, on
Friday.
HEAR HIM
MONDAY, JUNE 17-8:30 P. M.
PRICE DANIEL
OF LIBERTY
For
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Slatewide Rally, 1! P. M.
MUSIC HALL AUDITORIUM
Houston, Texas
Attend or TUNE IN
TQN or TEXAS STATE Networks
8:30 P. M,
Monday, June 17
(Pol. Ad Fold (or by Friend,)
Rugged Plastic
•j
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Pres® Is authorized to ■»-
nounce the following candidate*
for the office indicated for tEe
Primary Election, July 27, 1946
FOR SHERIFF—
M, G. (Murkcl) Dicken
Fred Prestage ;
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
PRECINCT Mo. 2:
Cany Hart
COUNTY JUDGE:
J. N. (Jim) Dickson
OR DISTRICT CLERK—
S. V. Earnest
There are diamond deposits in
many states, but only in Arkan-
sas is there a working diamond
mine.
ip •- W
RATES
Contract rates will be (tree
upon application. I^gal rate* al
one cent j>er wordier isiiiHn
1 Time lc per word
3 Times 2c per word
6 Times 3c per word
Minimum charge is for 12 wards
(For consecutive insertions)
MAKE BRICKS. Millions are
needed. Start a quirk Cash
business, returns can start In
two weeks with an inexpensive,
easily hand operated TYRA
BRICK Maker, only satnd and
cement nnd any old shed need-
ed. Build your HOME of brick.
Get a i1 RA-PLAN. See what
can bc done. R. K. TYRA CO
DEBT. T WYOMING, MINN.
PIANO—Decker Bros. Cabinet
Grand, a bargain, 206 Main
Street.
OFFICE SU™KS-T^~s^d
chairs, adding machine stand,
desk pen sets, fountain pens,
pencils, rubber hands, s apling
machines, staple, other items.
2 O.j hlain street.
TKIIMl’ET FOR SALE—Won-
derful buy in a Martin trumpet
with ease. Call at 205 Main or
phone 300.
Two p! •• V cn« charred
from im.v.ir a ii bulling sul-
phuric nci.i, lie- other un lilerlcd by
the same t t. tinent, arc shown
above as pi, ,ji, d in the June is.ue
of Science l!li, ' . led magazine. The
rod on the right Is made of l»u
Font’s new Teflon, a plastic so
strong it resists even aei.ls that
ordinarily dissolve platinum and
gold.
Mass Production
Oi New Homes
Now l nder W av
Mm OR—Horse and a half
motor, in good condition. Want
?35 for it as is. Press office.
SOCIETY PRINTING—Or en-
graving if you wish. Any style
and all designs. Quick Service
and priced right 266 llnln
Street Anderson A Sons Prtnt-
A. E. FRITTS
Gen «ral Concrete
Contractor
Phone 47
They’ve just learned the
secret of keeping their ev-
ery day dresses looking like
new.
m
:
a
1
r
It is unlawful to place the
likeness of any living person
upon securities, money, bonds,
stamps, etc.,
.States,
of the United
They make it a habit to
send their clothes to us, of
fourse.
SNOW-WHITE
LAUNDERERS—GLEANERS—DYERS
PHONES 716-717
"T.
A tallyho is a four-in-hand
coach, or one pulled by four
horses, the heins of which are
so arranged as to be held in
one hand.
plane will be <able to make, the
snail must rate for what he is,
a loiterer and laggard on the
highways of the world.
Yet the time-worn expression
still is applicable. Certainly,
the rate of the world’s progress
toward universal peace is little
better than a snail’s pace. In
this hour of uncertainty, we like
to believe that rocket planes
which can travel faster than
sound will help to maintain
peace in the world. More peo-
ple watching snails might also
help. The exercise is especially
commended to all American mo-
torists, _____ ..._ *
Should Housing Expediter Wyatt.
goal of nearly 2,500,#uo new homes
between now and the spring ol
1948 be attained, it will do more
than take the edge off the housing
shortage. It will constitute the most
epochal development in housing in
5000 years — mass production ol
homes.
For under this program, Wyait
proposes that 850,000 of these m. v.
homes be factory-built, thus la;, i.
the basis a nev. industrial a
that eventually will make pos.-,i>."
the creation of millions of luxury
homes at the price of cotta,,,-..
More *hun nine oul of ten of the
“prefabs" called for ly ihc Wyatt
program will be built by applying
machine methods to the building in-
dustrys traditional materials, ac-
cording to an article in the June
issue of Science Illustrated, new
.;eiencc magazine.
The c i awn denominator of this
method i; the ready-made panel,
generally of wood or related mate-
rials, from which walls, floors, ceil-
ings, ami rool i re a- embled. And if
building codes .permit, the panels
arrive at the hi-riding site with
doors, windows, and wiring already
nstalled. f=>
"Prefabrication’s promise of low-
est housing is often attributed to
t sacrifice in quality," the article
dates in part. “There are, of course,
, rry-buildors In prefabrication just
's among conventional builders,
'dost prefab homes, however, will
)0 better than their handmade ri-
vals, for factory production is in-
comparably more precise and better
:ontrol!cd.”
BRATCHER MOORE
FUNERA L DI RECTO RS
Phone 113
401 W. WOODARD
__
BABCOCK
BATTERIES
All
MBT
•
BE
BURE
AND
FILL
WWW
INSURANCE
Lillian Handy Cavender
D—B-A
J. R. HANDY
303*4 Woodard
VyAV.V\VAVW.VVVJWAi’,
Dead Animals
Removed Free
PHONE COLLECT
CENTRAL HIDE &
838, SHERMAN
RENDERING CO.
Steakley Chevrolet Co.
The Place to Buy O- K Used Cars
Telephone 231-
-206 So. Barnett Avn.
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, June 14, 1946, newspaper, June 14, 1946; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527114/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.