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862 CRIMES AND PUNISHMENTS. [ART. 27
stances involving danger to the public health, with the knowl-
edge that it will or may be thus dealt with, he shall, upon
conviction in any court of competent jurisdiction, be imprisoned
not less then sixty days nor more than one year, and may be
further fined not exceeding one thousand dollars, in the discre-
tion of the court.
1894, ch. 302, sec. 149 C.
247. Any room or apartment which shall not contain at
least 400 cubic feet of clear space for each person habitually
laboring in or occupying the same, or wherein the thermometer
shall habitually stand, during the hours of labor, at or above
80 degrees Fahrenheit, before the first day of May' or after the
first day of October of any year, or wherein any person suffer-
ing from a contagious, infectious or otherwise dangerous dis-
ease or malady, shall sleep, labor or remain, or wherein, if of
less superficial area than 500 square feet, any artificial light
shall be habitually used between the hours oi 8 A. M. and 4
P. M., or from which the debris of manufacture and all other
dirt or rubbish shall not be removed at least once in every
twenty-four hours, or which shall be pronounced ill-ventilated
or otherwise unhealthy by any officer or board having legal
authority so to do, shall be deemed a place involving danger to
the public health, as mentioned in the two preceding sections.
Ibid. sec. 149 D.
248. If any association or society, whether incorporated or
unincorporated, shall furnish, through its officers or agents,
evidence sufficient to secure the conviction of any person crim-
inally prosecuted under the three preceding sections, the said
association or society shall receive one-half of any fine which
may be imposed upon such person so convicted with its assist-
ance, such fines to be paid to the treasurer or other officer with
corresponding powers of the said society or association.
1902, ch. 101, sec. 149 EE.
249. No room or apartment in any tenement or dwelling-
house shall be used except by the immediate members of the
family living therein, which shall be limited to a husband and
wife, their children, or the children of either, for the manu-
facture of coats, vests, trousers, kneepants, overalls, cloaks,
hats, caps, suspenders, jerseys, blouses, waists, waistbands,
underwear, neckwear, furs, furtrimnings, furgarments shirts,
purses, feathers, artificial flowers, cigarettes, or cigars. No
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