WICOMICO COUNTY. 5145
1912, ch. 651, sec. 188.
396. The said salary of fourteen hundred dollars shall be paid to the
said State's Attorney by the said County 'Commissioners in equal quar-
terly instalments on the first day of January, April, July and October
in each and every year, and the said 'County Commissioners shall levy
annually the said sum of fourteen hundred dollars for the purpose of
paying the said salary to the said State's Attorney.
1912, oh. 651, sec. 189.
397. The first instalment of the salary of the State's Attorney shall be
paid by the County Commissioners on the first day of July, 1912, but
the State's Attorney shall not be paid for any services or fees for the
previous quarter, and all fees for said previous quarter collected from
any party or parties required to pay the same shall be paid to the County-
Commissioners.
TRESPASS.
1898, ch. 145, sec. 1.
398. Any person or persons who shall enter upon or cross over the
premises or private property of any person or persons in Wicomico
county, in this State, after having had a special written notice served
upon him, her or them, by the owner or owners of said property, or by
his, her or their agent, not to cross over or enter upon said premises or
private property, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on con-
viction thereof before some justice of the peace of said county, be fined
by said justice not less than five nor more than fifty dollars, and in de-
fault of payment of said fine, together with costs of prosecution, shall
be by said justice of the peace committed to the county jail for a period
of twenty days.
1898, oh. 145, sec. 2.
399. All fines collected under the foregoing section shall be paid by
the justice of the peace before whom such conviction shall be had, and
whose duty it is hereby made to pay the same over, to the County School
Commissioners of said county, within a period of thirty days after hav-
ing received the same.
VAGRANTS.
1914, ch. 762, sec. 1.
400. Every person within the confines of Wicomico or Somerset Coun-
ties, Maryland, not being insane, who has no visible means of mainte-
nance, from property or personal labor, or is not permanently supported
by his or her friends or relatives, who lives idle; without employment;
and every person who leads a dissolute or disorderly course of life, and
cannot give an account of the means by which he or she procures a legiti-
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