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Code of the Public Local Laws of Maryland, 1930
Volume 377, Page 1238   View pdf image (33K)
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1238 ARTICLE 4.

1902, ch. 615, sec. 2.

792B. In issuing or selling all tickets for passage in this State through
the City of Baltimore, or making agreements with other railroad com-
panies outside of this State to issue or sell tickets for passage through
the City of Baltimore, the said tickets shall permit the holders thereof to
a stop-over privilege of at least forty-eight (48) hours in the City of
Baltimore; provided, that nothing in this section shall prohibit railroad
companies from issuing and selling tickets without this stop-over privilege
in the City of Baltimore, for special occasions, when the tickets for passage
are good only on excursion trains not on the regular schedule of the rail-
road.

1902, ch. 615, sec. 3.

792C. All passenger trains passing through the City of Baltimore
must stop at least three minutes at the principal station of the company
operating said trains, and the stoppage of all trains must be announced
in such manner as will give passengers ample opportunity to get off.

1902. ch. 615. sec. 4.

792D. Any manager, officer, agent, conductor, or employee, who shall
violate any of the provisions of this Act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor
and upon indictment and conviction thereof shall be fined not less than
one hundred dollars, nor more than five hundred dollars for each offense,
one-half of said fine to go to the informer.

HOURS OF LABOR.

1886, ch. 163. P. L. L. (1888), Art. 4, sec. 765.

793. No street railway company incorporated under the laws of this
State, and no officer, agent or servant of such corporation, and no person
or firm owning or operating any line or lines of street railways within
the limits of this State, and no agent or servant of such firm or person
shall require, permit or suffer its, his or their conductors or drivers, or any
of them, or any employees in its, his or their service, or under his, its
or their control, to work more than twelve hours during each or any day
of twenty-four hours, and shall make no contract or agreement with such
employees, or any of them, providing that they or he shall work for
more than twelve hours during each or any day of twenty-four hours.

1886, ch. 163. P. L. L. (1888), Art. 4, sec. 766.

794. Any corporation which shall in any manner violate any of the
provisions of the preceding section shall be deemed to have misused or
abused its corporate powers and franchises, and the Attorney General of
the State, upon the application in writing, made by any citizen of this
State, accompanied by sufficient proof of such violation, shall forthwith,
without further authorization, institute proceedings for the forfeiture of
the charter of such corporation, by petition in the. name of the State, in

 

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Code of the Public Local Laws of Maryland, 1930
Volume 377, Page 1238   View pdf image (33K)
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