North Dakota

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The North Dakota Repository serves for historical, academic, and cultural materials related to the state of North Dakota. This repository includes research studies, historical documents, and scholarly works that explore North Dakota's development, culture, and contributions to regional and national history.

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    1919 N.D. Laws 173-74, ch. 134, § 8.
    (General Publisher, 1919)
    Any person traveling in any manner in any part of this state off the public highway, outside the immediate bounds of the inhabited parts of any village, town or city in possession of any kind of a shot gun, with or without a dog or dogs commonly used or kept for the purposes of hunting any game birds mentioned in this Act, from the first day of July to the fifteenth day of September (both inclusive) each year, shall be presumed to have violated or attempted to so violate the provisions of this Act as to unlawful hunting, shooting or taking of game birds, as mentioned in this Act, the hunting, taking, or shooting of which is prohibited during said time.
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    1915 N.D. Laws 96, ch. 83, §§ 1-3, 5
    (General Publisher, 1915)
    Prohibited the concealed carrying of any instrument or weapon usually known as a blackjack, slungshot, billy, sandclub, sandbag, bludgeon, metal knuckles, or any sharp or dangerous weapon, any gun, revolver, pistol, or “other dangerous fire arm,” nitroglycerin, dynamite, or any other dangerous or violent explosive.
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    1915 N.D. Laws 225, ch. 161, § 67
    (General Publisher, 1915)
    Prohibited noncitizens from owning or possessing any shotgun or rifle; violators subject to fine, imprisonment, confiscation of weapon.
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    1909 N.D. Laws 203, ch. 165, § 1
    (General Publisher, 1909)
    No body of men, other than the regularly organized corps of the national guard and militia and the troops of the United States, shall associate themselves together as a military company or organization, or parade in public with firearms in any city or town of this state.
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    1907 N.D. Laws 179, ch. 124, § 1.
    (General Publisher, 1907)
    Any person who with intent to commit any crime, breaks into or enters a building and commits or attempts to commit a crime by the use of nitro-glycerine, dynamite, gunpowder or any other high explosive, is guilty of a felony. Any violation of this act is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary of this state for not less than twenty years, and not more than forty years.
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    1905 N.D. Laws 103, ch. 62, art. 4, § 47, pt. 50.
    (General Publisher, 1905)
    To regulate and prevent the storage of gunpowder, tar, pitch, resin, coal oil, benzine [sic], turpentine, hemp, cotton, nitroglycerine, petroleum or any of the products thereof, and other combustible or explosive material[.]
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    1901 N.D. Laws 133-34, ch. 106, § 1, pts. 5, 6.
    (General Publisher, 1901)
    Every person who either . . . 5. Shall at any time catch or kill any of the birds permitted to be killed by this act at any time in any other manner than by shooting them with a gun held ot the shoulder by a person discharging the same; or 6. Shall at any time set, lay or prepare any traps, snare, net, bird line, medicated, drugged or poisoned food or grain, or swivel gun or any contrivance or device whatever with intent to catch, take, or kill any of the birds in this act mentioned, whether the same are caught or not . . . is guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof before any justice of the peace of the county, is punishable by a fine of not exceeding ten dollars . . . for each violation of subdivisions 5 or 6 of this section[.]

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