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458 CITY OF BALTIMORE. [ART. 4.
to keep the peace; and the judge of the said court shall have
full power to review the said commitments; and upon examina-
tion of the various cases so reported to him by the warden of the
jail as aforesaid, he shall discharge or recommit the said parties
for a term not to exceed six months, as in his discretion may be
most conducive to the preservation of public peace and order.
The justices of the peace of the city of Baltimore are prohibited
from charging costs in the cases above named, unless the parties
are recommitted by order of the judge of said court.
1880, ch. 51.
571. When any person arrested in the city of Baltimore shall
be held in custody until such person can give surety to keep the
peace, or shall be committed to jail or the house of correction in
default of such surety, such person shall be chargeable with and
shall pay all the costs prescribed by the laws of this State for such
arrest, commitment, or giving of surety to keep the peace, and
in default of the payment thereof shall be committed to jail until
such costs and the cost of his release shall be paid, or until thence
discharged by due course of law; and said costs shall be ac-
counted for and paid over by said respective justices of the
peace so sitting at the respective station houses in the manner in
which all costs paid to such justices of the peace so, respectively,
sitting at such station houses in the city of Baltimore, are now
or may hereafter be required by law to be accounted for and
paid over.
1886, ch. 373.
572. Whenever any person has been committed to the Balti-
more city jail on the charge of intemperance or disorderly conduct,
and he is deemed by the physician in charge of said jail a proper
subject for Bayview asylum, the board of visitors to said jail shall
have power to transfer said person to Bayview.
Ibid.
573. Whenever any person has been committed to the Balti-
more city jail on the charge of intemperance or disorderly conduct
who is affected with any form of disease that, in the judgment of
the physician of said jail would require a longer time than the
term of sentence to cure, or any case where the accommodation,
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