PHILLIPS LEE GOLDSBOROUGH, ESQ., GOVERNOR. 697
County now in effect shall continue and remain in effect as if
this act had never been passed, and the fines and penalties now
provided by law, either the public local laws of St. Mary's
County or public general law shall be imposed as if this act
had not been passed.
SEC. 5. And be it further enacted, That no election for or
against the sale of liquors in St. Mary's county shall be held
after the election provided for in this act, oftener than once in
four years, and then only by a special act.
SEC. 6. And be it enacted, That all acts or parts of acts
inconsistent with this act, so far as they are inconsistent, be
and the same are hereby repealed.
SEC. 7. And be it enacted, That this act shall take effect
from the first day of May, nineteen hundred and thirteen.
Approved April 15, 1912.
CHAPTER 494.
AN ACT granting to Joseph B. McCall, his heirs and assigns,
the right to construct and maintain a pier or wharf in the
waters of the Chesapeake Bay from and on the front of his
lots of land binding on said waters in Cecil county, Mary-
land.
WHEREAS, Joseph B. McCall is the owner of a lot of land
situate near Carpenter's Point in said Cecil county and
fronting on the waters of the Chesapeake Bay at or near the
mouth of Principio or Furnace Creek, and being the same
lot of land which is described in a deed from William H.
Simcoe and others to him, dated the 2nd day of February,
1912, and recorded in Liber C. K. No. 4, folio 372, one of
the Land Record Books of said Cecil county;
SECTION 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Mary-
land, That the right is hereby granted to the said Joseph B.
McCall, his heirs and assigns, to construct and maintain a pier
and wharf from and on the front of his aforesaid lot of land
and extending into the waters of the Chesapeake Bay to and
for a distance not exceeding one thousand feet, but not to enter
or cross the channel thereof.
SEC. 2. And be it enacted, That this act shall take effect
from the date of its passage.
Approved April 8, 1912.
|