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512
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LAWS OF MARYLAND.
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CHAP. 291
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SEC. 6. And be it further enacted, That this Act shall
take effect from the date of its passage.
Approved April 2, 1906.
CHAPTER 292.
AN ACT to amend the charter of the town of Gaithersburg,
in Montgomery County, as said charter was enacted by
Chapter 526 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Mary-
land at the Session of 1898, as amended by Chapter 7 of
the Acts of the General Assembly of 1904.
Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Mary-
land, That Chapter 526 of the Acts of the General Assembly
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Repeal and
re-enact.
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of Maryland of the Session of 1898, entitled "An Act to
incorporate the town of Gaithersburg, in Montgomery
county," and Chapter 7 of the Acts of the General Assembly
of Maryland of 1904 be and the same are hereby repealed
and re-enacted with amendments, so as to read as follows :
1. The inhabitants of that district of county situate in
Montgomery county, in the State of Maryland, embraced
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Body corporate
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within the limits prescribed in the next succeeding section
shall be and continue to be a body politic and corporate by
the name and style of the town of Gaithersburg, and by that
name shall have perpetual succession, sue and be sued, and
have and use a common seal.
2. That the limits of said town shall be as follows :
Beginning at a stone planted on the dividing line between
Ignatius T. Fulks and Etting M. Hinckley, and run thence
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Limits of town
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with a straight line across the lands of John W. Walker and
others to a stone planted on the northeastern corner of
Nathan H. Darby's lot; thence with a straight line to a
stone planted on the dividing line between George E. Noyes
and Mary Augusta Hutton; thence with a straight line
across the Latonsville road, Metropolitan Branch Railroad,
the lands of the said Mary Augusta Hutton and George-
town and Frederick road, to a stone planted on the land of
Ignatius T. Fulks; thence with a straight line across the
lands of the said Ignatius T. Fulks, Philemon M. Smith,
the Fitzgerald road, and the lands formerly belonging to
Martha A. Meem, to a stone planted on the land formerly
belonging to Henry C. Ward; thence with a straight line
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