The Laws of Texas, 1929-1931 [Volume 27] Page: 58 of 1,943
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46 GENERAL LAWS.
imperative public necessity that the constitutional rule requiring
bills to be read on three several days in each House be suspended,
and that this Act shall take effect and be in force from
and after its passage, and said rule is hereby suspended, and it
is so enacted.
Effective 90 days after adjournment.
[NOTE.-S. B. No. 9 passed the Senate by a vote of 26 yeas,
0 nays; passed the House by a vote of 97 yeas, 14 nays, 3 present
and not voting. Was received in the Executive Office February
12, 1930, and in the Department of State February 18,
1930. without the Governor's signature.] .
BOUNTIES ON PREDATORY ANIMALS IN CERTAIN
COUNTIES.
H. B. No. 89.] CHAPTER 26.
An Act amending Section 1 of Chapter 27, Acts Forty-first Legislature
Second Called Session; and declaring an emergency.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:
SECTION 1. That Section 1, of Chapter 27, of the Acts of
the 41st Legislature, Second Called Session, be amended so as
to hereafter read as follows:
"Section 1. Chapter 90, of the General and Special Laws
passed by the Regular Session of the 41st Legislature and
Title 7, Article 190a, of the Revised Civil Statutes of the State
of Texas of 1925, be and the same are hereby amended so as
to hereafter read as follows:
"It shall hereafter be lawful for the Commissioners' Court
of McCulloch, San Saba, Lampasas, Mills, Erath, Limestone,
Jasper, Hood, Bastrop, Brazos, Grimes and Sterling Counties
to pay out of the general fund of said Counties, bounties for the
destruction of wolves, wild cats, and other predatory animals
within said Counties as hereinafter provided.
"On the petition of two hundred resident freeholders of any
one of said counties, being presented to the Commissioners'
Court of such County, the Commissioners' Court may, by resolution
entered upon its Minutes, provide for the destruction of
such animals and the amount of bounty to be paid for the destruction
of each of said predatory animals and the method of
providing such destruction so as to entitle the person destroying
such predatory animals to receive said bounty. Provided,
that in the County of Sterling, the Commissioners' Court is
authorized to act upon a petition of as many as fifty resident
freeholders of said county.
"The amounts paid as bounties for the destruction of preda-
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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/m1/58/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .