Provincial or Municipal nurseries, policy on establishment thereof

Media

Part of The Local Government Review

Title
Provincial or Municipal nurseries, policy on establishment thereof
Language
English
Source
I (10&11) October-November 1949
Year
1949
Subject
Nurseries (Children's rooms)
Government aid to child care
Child welfare
Institutional care of children
Social services
Rights
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
Abstract
The article stated that the Local Government is not in favor of establishing provincial or municipal nurseries on borrowed money. Such nurseries must be financed locally as the national government is not in a position to provide funds for them.
Fulltext
ernment of the entire shipment in which found. Sec. 82. Failure to report kind and quantity of fish caught.~Wi11fu1 failure by any licensed fisherman to render a report of the kind and quantity of fi~h caught, as provided in section seventLtwo of this Act, shall subject th2 offender to the payment of a fine of not less than ten rior more than one hundred pesos for each offense, and to the re\·ocation or cancellation of his license. (As amended cy C. -~· 471-1.) Sec. 83. Othei: violation.-Any other Yiolation of the provisions of this Act or of any rules ar.d regulations promulgated thereunder shall subject the oL fender to a fine of not more than two hur:dred pesos, or imprisonment for not more than six months, or both, in the discretion of the court. CHAPTER VI FINAL !PROVISIONS ARTICLE XV .-Effectire11ess of this Act Sec. 84. Repealing clause.-All acts, [:dministrati ve orders and regulatior:·~, or parts thereof, inconsistent with the µrovi~ions of this Act, are hereby repealed. Sec. 85. Date of taking effect.-This Act shall take ertect on its apprornl. l ppro\·ed, December 5, 1932. ---oOo--EXECUTIVE . . _ (Continued from pa.r1e 510) PROVINCIAL OR MUNICIPAL NURSERIES, POLICY ON ESTABLISHMENT THEREOF.-As a matter of policy, this Office is not in fa rnr of establishing provincial or munic:pal nurseries on borrowed money, especially if there is no assurance of a continuing financial support from year to year for their prop.er maintenance ar:d operation. It is essential that such nur_ series be financed locally as the national government is not in a position to provide funds for them.-7th Ind., March IO, 1947, of Undersecretary of Aqviculturn and Commevce to the Sec. of the !11t. (Case of Alimodicm, Iloilo.) Pag·e 518 THE FIVE FREEDOMS FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT listed five objectives which must be realized before permanent world peace would be assured. 1. Freedom from fear, so that people will not be afraid of being bombed from the air or attacked by another nation. That, he said, means removal of the weapons which cause fear, or dis'll'IYl".ment. 2. Freedom of information. That is important, Mr. Roosevelt asserted, because the whole countn· must be able to get news of what is going on in ewry rart of the country and in everv part of the world, without censorship. He said that it meant not freedom of the press alone but freedom of every means of distributing information and that without it there could not be a stable world. 3. Freedom of reli1rion. Under democracies, the President said, this freedom has been maintained fairly well but not in countries living under other svstems of government. 4. Freedom of expression. A person should be free to voice his opinions, the President said, so long as he does not advocate overthrow of his government. 5. Freedom from want. That must be arcomplished, Mr. Roosevelt declared, bv removal of cultural and commercial barriers between nations. ---oOo--RIZAL ON ... (Continued from pa.ge 503) others. Which of the two is older? Are both branches of; one trunk no longer existing? This is what I shall investigate because I greatly distrust the Malay. Loleng (Blumentritt's daughter) would find Spanish more beautiful. It is more natural and more useful than the Tagalog. The continuous reduplications of word-forms in certain tenses uglify owr language. But when well spoken, the Tagalog can be just as good as any other language. It has a wealth of words for the feelings and actions of ordinarv life.-Rizal i1I his lettei· to Prnf. Blu1;1entritt frnm Dapitau, Febi·um·y n, 18!1.J. T.HE LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVIEW