Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

LAW LIBRARY

OF

LOS ANGELES COUNTY

LAWS

OF THE

STATE OF MARYLAND

MADE AND PASSED

At the Session of the General Assembly
Made and Held at the City of
Annapolis on the Seventh day
of January, 1920, and End-
ing on the Fifth day of
April, 1920

PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY

1920

GEORGE T. MELVIN, STATE PRINTER

ANNAPOLIS, MD.

MARYLAND, Set:

At a Session of the General Assembly of Maryland, begun and held in the City of Annapolis on the seventh day of January, Anno Domini one thousand nine hundred and twenty and ending on the fifth day of April of the same year, the Honorable Albert C. Ritchie being the Governor of the State, the following laws were enacted, to wit:

CHAPTER 1.

AN ACT to confirm and ratify the action of the Commissioners of the town of Cambridge, in Dorchester County, State of Maryland, in appropriating and expending from the funds in the treasury of the said town known as the "Sinking Fund," heretofore collected by the Commissioners of Cambridge in the way of taxes upon the taxable property within the corporate limits of the said town under the power and authority of Section 4 of Chapter 486 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland in the year 1910, of the sum of $4108.75, in the year 1919, for fire fighting apparatus.

WHEREAS, By Chapter 486 of the Acts of the General Assembly of Maryland, in the year 1910, the Commissioners of Cambridge were authorized and empowered, subject to a preceding ratification by the people of the said town, to issue bonds and sell the same for the purpose of improving certain streets in the said Act mentioned and to lay sewers under the said streets, and the said Commissioners were authorized and directed by Section 4 of the said Act to levy upon the taxable property within the corporate limits of the said town in year after the issuing of the bonds, such a sum of money as would be necessary to redeem the said bonds and also pay the interest on them when the same should be due, and to keep the said money so collected, in the treasury of the town as a sinking fund; and,

each

« AnteriorContinuar »