The Laws of Texas, 1929-1931 [Volume 27] Page: 412 of 1,943
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98 LOCAL AND SPECIAL LAWS.
said funding or refunding bonds to a vote of the property taxpayers
of said County.
Section 2b. From and after the taking effect of this Act,
it shall be unlawful for the Commissioners' Court of Childress
County to issue or cause to be issued any warrant, scrip, or
otherwise evidence of indebtedness, or to create any debt,
against the Road and Bridge fund of said County, except as
authorized by this Act, in excess of the current revenues of said
County for Road and Bridge purposes; provided that in case of
great calamity, said Court may issue warrants against the Road
and Bridge Fund in excess of the current revenues, for the purpose
of repairing roads and building bridges occasioned by such
calamity, but in no instance shall such warrants exceed the limitations
provided by the* Constitution and Laws of this State;
provided further, that no warrants shall be is issued for such
purpose until first authorized by order passed by said Court, and
provided further that said order shall recite fully the necessity
therefor and particularly specify the several purposes for which
said warrants are to be issued, which said order shall be spread
upon the minutes of said court, and shall be published at least
one time in some newspaper published in Childress County before
said warrants are issued. If no newspaper is being published
in said County, then in some newspaper in an adjoining
County, nearest the County Seat of said Childress County.
SEC. 2. That House Bill No. 86, passed at the 4th Called
Session of the 41st Legislature be and the same is hereby repealed.
SEC. 3. The fact that Childress County has a large amount
of valid Road and Bridge warrants outstanding which can probably
be refunded by the issuance of bonds at a lower rate of interest
with a more convenient schedule of maturity constitutes
an emergency and an imperative public necessity that the Constitutional
rule requiring bills to be read on three several days
be suspended, and such rule is hereby suspended, and this Act
shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage, and
it is so enacted.
.1
Effective 20 days after adjournment.
\
FNoTE.-S. B. No. 65 passed the Senate by a vote of 24 yeas,
0 nays; passed the House by a vote of 105 yeas, 0 nays; was received
in the Executive Office March 13, 1930, and in the Department
of State March 14, 1930, without the Governor's signature.]
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Gammel, Hans Peter Mareus Neilsen. The Laws of Texas, 1929-1931 [Volume 27], book, 1931; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth16362/m1/412/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .