2246 VETOES.
of the Code. Both bills apparently passed on the same day.
If this bill is signed it will prevent the playing of bingo for
charitable purposes in Kent County.
For that reason the bill will be vetoed.
HOUSE BILL 561
AN ACT to repeal and re-enact, with amendments, Section
14 (5) of Article 21 of the Annotated Code of Maryland
(1939 Edition), title "Conveyancing", sub-title "Convey-
ances in General", as said Section 14 (5) was amended by
Chapter 385 of the Acts of 1945, exempting Allegany Coun-
ty from certain requirements relating to the certificate of
tax collectors on deeds before they can be recorded.
Chapter 385 of the Acts of 1945 requires the transfer on
the assessment books of all real estate and the payment of
all property taxes due thereon as a condition precedent to the
recording of a deed. This bill seeks to exclude Allegany
County from the provisions of that Act. If it should become
law, it will start the breakdown of the 1945 Act, which has
proved to be of great assistance to the State and local author-
ities in the administration of the tax laws.
At the request of the State Tax Commission the bill will
be vetoed.
SENATE BILL 386
AN ACT to add 16 new sections to Article 1 of the Code of
Public Local Laws of Maryland (1930 Edition), title "Alle-
gany County", to be under a new sub-title "Board of Barber
Examiners", said new sections to be known as Sections 39
to 54, inclusive, and to follow immediately after Section
38 of said Article, to license and regulate the practice of
barbering in Allegany County, and to repeal Sections 304
to 317, inclusive, of Article 43 of the Annotated Code of
Maryland (1939 Edition), title "Health", sub-title "State
Board of Barber Examiners", insofar as they relate to
Allegany County, to exempt Allegany County from the
State-wide barber law.
This bill imposes the requirement that a person engaging
in the barbering business have, among other things, an eighth
grade education or its equivalent, In Schneider v. Duer, 170
Md. 326, in dealing with Chapter 371 of the Acts of 1935, re-
lating to the trade of barbering, the Court of Appeals held
that the requirement that an applicant for a license be a
graduate of the eighth grade, and to have completed a two
year course in a barber shop or a barber school, was manifest-
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