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Session Laws, 1912
Volume 370, Page 1380   View pdf image
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1380 LAWS OF MARYLAND. [Ch. 790]

twenty dollars, or be imprisoned in the Maryland house of
correction for a period not exceeding six months, or be both
fined and imprisoned, in the discretion of the justice of the
peace trying the case.

1904, ch. 269, sec. 77A.

204. It shall not be lawful for any person to catch or kill
any black bass, green bass, rock bass, pike or pickerel or wall-
eyed pike (commonly known as salmon) in Montgomery county,
save only with a rod, hook and line or dip net. The words
"hook and line" shall not include trot lines or out lines.

Ibid. sec. 77B.

205. Any person violating the provisions of sec. 204 shall
be guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be punishable, on con-
viction, by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six
months or by a fine not exceeding two hundred dollars, or by
fine and imprisonment.

FOXES.
1900, ch. 343 sec. 1.

206. That if any one shall knowingly shoot a fox in Mont-
gomery county .whilst the same is being chased by hounds
under the charge of foxhunters shall be guilty of a misde-
meaner, and upon conviction thereof before a justice of the
peace, shall be fined not less than five, nor more than twenty
dollars, and be imprisoned in the jail of said county until the
fine and cost, be fully paid; said fine to be paid over to the
county commissioners, one-half for the benefit of the public
schools, and the other half for the informer.

GAITHERSBURG.
1906, ch. 292, sec. 1.

207. The inhabitants of that district of county situate in
Montgomery county, in the State of Maryland, embraced within
the limits prescribed in the next succeeding section shall be
and continue to be a body politic and corporate by the name
and style of the town of Gaithersburg, and by that name shall
have perpetual succession, sue and be sued, and have and use
a common seal.

Ibid, sec. 2.

208. That the limits of sail town shall be as follows:
Beginning at a stone planted on the dividing line between
Ignatius T. Fulks and Etting M. Hinckley, and run thence
with a straight line across the lands of John W. Walker and
others to a stone planted on the northeastern corner of Nathan
H. Darby's lot; thence with a straight line to a stone planted
on the dividing line between George E. Noyes and Mary

 

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Session Laws, 1912
Volume 370, Page 1380   View pdf image
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