An Act to amend and reenact § 46.1-299, as amended, of the Code of Virginia, relating to devices signalling intention to turn or stop and rules therefor.
Volume 1968 Law 99
Law Body
Chap. 95.—An ACT to amend and re-enact Sections 3 and 5 of an act approved
March 29, 1923, entitled an act to amend and re-enact an act to provide for the
registration of voters in cities having a population of fifty thousand or more,
approved March 2, 1922, in relation to the maintenance of offices in cities
containing more than one hundred and ninety thousand population according to
the last United States census for the registration of voters. [H B 97]
Approved March 2, 1942
1. Beit enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia, That sections
three and five of an act approved March twenty-ninth, nineteen hundred
and twenty-three, entitled an act to amend and re-enact an act to provide
for the registration of voters in cities having a population of fifty thousand
or more, approved March second, nineteen hundred and twenty-two, be
amended and re-enacted so as to read as follows :
Section 3. It shall be the duty of said general registrar to maintain
in the city hall, or other municipal building, of the city for which he 1s
appointed, an office wherein all qualified voters of such city may be
registered. The said general registrar in cities containing more than one
hundred and ninety thousand population according to the last United
States census, may maintain such other temporary or permanent offices
in other places in such cities, as he may deem necessary or desirable for
the convenient registration of voters.
Section 5. The city for which he is appointed shall furnish the
general registrar a suitable office in the city hall, or other municipal
building, of said city, and cities containing more than one hundred and
ninety thousand population according to the last United States census,
shall furnish such registrar with such other temporary or permanent
offices in other places in such cities, as such registrar may deem necessary
or desirable for the convenient registration of voters. All fees collected
by the general registrar, or any of his assistants, shall be paid into the city
treasury, and the council of the city shall allow said general registrar an
annual salary for performing the duties required of him.