3128 ARTICLE 101.
(38) Manufacture of men's or women's clothing, white wear, shirts,
collars, corsets, hats, caps, furs or robes.
(39) Power laundries; dying, cleaning or bleaching.
(40) Printing, photo-engraving, stereotyping, electrotyping, lithograph-
ing, embossing; manufacture of stationery, paper, cardboard boxes, bags, or
wall paper; and book-binding.
(41) The operation, otherwise than on tracks, on streets, highways, or
elsewhere of cars, trucks, wagons or other vehicles, and rollers and engines,
propelled by steam, gas, gasoline, electric, mechanical or other power, or
drawn by horses and mules.
(42) Stone cutting or dressing; marble works; manufacture of artificial
stone; steel building and bridge construction; installation of elevators,
fire escapes, boilers, engines or heavy machinery; brick-laying, tile-laying,
mason work, stone setting, concrete work, plastering; and manufacture
of concrete blocks; structural carpentry; painting, decorating, or ren-
ovating ; sheet metal work; roofing; construction, repair and demolition of
buildings and bridges; plumbing, sanitary or heating engineering; installa-
tion and covering of pipes or boilers.
(43) All salesmen including sales managers employed to solicit orders
from customers outside of the establishment for which they are employed,
who are citizens or residents of this State, employed by a person, firm or
corporation having a place of business within this State, whether the injury
for which compensation is asked was sustained within this State or else-
where. Provided, however, if an employee or the dependents of an employee
shall have received compensation or damages under the laws of any other
State, nothing herein contained shall be construed so as to permit a total
compensation for the same injury greater than is provided for in this
Article.1
(44) In addition to the employments set out in the preceding paragraphs,
this Article is intended to apply to all extra hazardous employments not
specifically enumerated herein, and to all work of an extra hazardous nature.
Under paragraph 6 of sec. 65, and under this section, a claimant is entitled to re-
cover if accidentally injured in course of free transportation to or from his work.
The question of whether an injury arises in course of employment is ordinarily a
mixed question of law and fact; when question becomes one of law. Construction
of English act followed. Harrison v. Central Con. Co., 135 Md. 176.
This section includes drivers of horse-drawn vehicles; construction of sub-sec. 41
of this section. Question of admissibility of evidence that employment of a driver
of a horse-drawn coal or ice wagon is extra-hazardous, not passed on. American Ice
Co. v. Fitzhugh, 128 Md. 390.
This section characterizes operation of motor vehicles as extra-hazardous. See
notes to secs. 65 and 56. Thistle Mills v. Sparks, 137 Md. 121.
Sub-sec. 19 of this section seems to cover road construction work. See notes to
sec. 15. U. S. F. & G. Co. v. Taylor, 132 Md. 514.
See notes to secs. 14, 56 and 65.
An. Code, sec. 33. 1914, ch. 800, sec. 33.
33. Any employer, his employe or employes engaged in works not
extra-hazardous within the meaning of this Article may, by their joint
1 Sec. 2 of ch. 583 of acts of 1924 repealed all laws inconsistent with said ch. 583 to
the extent of such inconsistency.
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