4646 ARTICLE 21.
degrees west across the mouth of Radcliffe's or Polly Harrison's cove
to a cedar tree on the edge of the bank; then with the shore of said cove
to another cedar standing in the corner of the graveyard on the Radcliffe
farm; then south forty-eight degrees west to a large cedar standing near
the west or southwest corner of said graveyard; then south forty-seven
and one-half degrees west to a stone set at the foot of a cedar post at the
south side of the road leading from the Radcliffe farm to St. Michaels;
then south five and three-fourths degrees west to a stone set near the line
between the Radcliffe property and Miller's addition; then with the line
between the Radcliffe property and Miller's addition in the general direc-
tion south five degrees east to the line between Miller's addition and the
property known as Miller's heirs; then with said line between Miller's
addition and Miller's heirs south seventy-three degrees west to a stone
set at the public road leading from Royal Oak to St. Michaels; then south
seventy-eight degrees west, close to and past a large cedar tree standing
near the shore, to dividing line at the shore between the Rickett's farm
and the Sinclair or Dorsey property; then with the windings of the shore
of Broad or St. Domingo cove to the railroad bridge across the head of
said cove; then from southwest corner of said bridge north eight and
one-half degrees west to a stone set at the side of Railroad avenue; then
still north eight and one-half degrees west to a stone set at the edge of the
woodland of the Perry Cabin farm; then with said woodland south eighty-
four and one-half degrees east to a stone planted at the corner of said
woodland; then still with said woodland north seven and one-half degrees
east to another stone set at another corner of said woodland; then south
eighty degrees east to a stone set at the west side of the public road leading
from St. Michaels to Bayside; then with the west side of said road south
seven and three-fourths degrees to a stone; then across the field of Perry
Cabin farm south eighty-three degrees east to the southern extremity of
Three Cedar point; then south ten degrees east across the mouth of St.
Michaels harbor to the beginning.
P. L. L., 1888, Art. 21, sec. 177. 1880, ch. 105.
444. It shall not be lawful for any person to enclose any of the streets,
lanes or alleys, or any part of the streets, lanes or alleys, as laid down on the
plat of said town of St. Michaels, under the penalty of twenty dollars for
each and every offense, and five dollars for each and every day that such
street, lane or alley, or any part of such street, lane or alley, shall remain
in whole or in part enclosed.
P. L. L., 1888, Art. 21, sec. 178. 1880, ch. 105. 1927, ch. 469, sec. 178.
445. The Commissioners shall be three in number; and every citizen
of said town of St. Michaels, who has resided in said town six months
next preceding the election and whose name shall appear upon the list of
registered voters of the town, as hereinafter provided, shall be entitled to
vote at all elections hereafter to be held, but no person who has been
convicted of larceny or other infamous crimes, unless pardoned by the
Governor, and no person under guardianship as a lunatic or as a person
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