National Municipal Review, 6. sējumsNational Municipal League, 1917 |
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Populāri fragmenti
335. lappuse - It may be said in a general way that the police power extends to all the great public needs. ... It may be put forth in aid of what is sanctioned by usage, or held by the prevailing morality or strong and preponderant opinion to be greatly and immediately necessary to the public welfare.
415. lappuse - It shall be the duty of the Legislature to provide for the organization of cities and incorporated villages, and to restrict their power of taxation, assessment, borrowing money, contracting debts, and loaning their credit, so as to prevent abuses in assessments and in contracting debt by such municipal corporations...
12. lappuse - Nothing will ruin the country, if the people themselves will undertake its safety ; and nothing can save it, if they leave that safety in any hands but their own.
203. lappuse - All communities divide themselves into the few and the many. The first are the rich and well born, the other the mass of the people. The voice of the people has been said to be the voice of God; and however generally this maxim has been quoted and believed, it is not true in fact. The people are turbulent and changing; they seldom judge or determine right.
284. lappuse - ... majority of the frontage of the property, on both sides of the street, in the block in which such billboard or signboard is to be erected, constructed or located.
616. lappuse - It must now be conceded that the great weight of authority denies in toto the existence, in the absence of special constitutional provisions, of any inherent right of local self-government which is beyond legislative control.
552. lappuse - United States. Public Health Service. Control of pollution of streams; the International Joint Commission and the pollution of boundary waters, by Earle B.
315. lappuse - Nolen, John. Better city planning for Bridgeport: some fundamental proposals to the City Plan Commission; with, A report on legal methods of carrying out the changes proposed in the city plan for Bridgeport, by Frank Backus Williams.
320. lappuse - Engineers appointed to formulate principles and methods for the valuation of railroad property and other public utilities.