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ACT 2593.

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TITLE 351.

ORPHAN ASYLUM.

Appropriation for relief of. [Stats. 1871-2, p. 903.]

Apparently superseded by 1880, 13.

ACT 2594.

In relation to the care of orphan and abandoned children. [Stats. 1873-4, p. 297.]

Amended 1877-8, 72.

This act required the quarterly publication of the names of children admitted and also provided as to what constituted an abandonment of children.

ACT 2595.

Appropriating money for support of orphans, half orphans, and abandoned children. [Stats. 1880, p. 13.] Amended 1883, 57.

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ACT 2596.

To authorize managers of orphan asylums to give their consent to the adoption of certain children under their care. [Approved April 1, 1878. Stats. 1877-8, p. 963.]

Amended 1895, 39.

See Civil Code, sec. 224.

ACT 2597.

To provide for the appointment of guardians of children in orphan asylums maintained in any orphans' home or orphan asylum in this state. [Stats. 1893, p. 203.] This act appears in full in Civil Code, Appendix, p. 723.

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An act to regulate the practice of osteopathy in the state of California, and to provide for a state board of osteopathic examiners, and to license osteopaths to practice in this state, and punish persons violating the provisions of this act.

[Became a law under constitutional provision without governor's approval, March 9, 1901. Stats. 1901, p. 113.]

The people of the state of California, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. That any person practicing osteopathy in this state shall possess the qualifications required by this act..

Sec. 2. The Osteopathic Association of the State of California, incorporated under the laws of the state of California, shall appoint a board of examiners as soon as possible after the passage of this act, to be known as the state board of osteopathic examiners. This board shall consist of five (5) qualified practicing resident osteopaths, each of whom shall be a graduate of a legally authorized college of osteopathy. Each member of said board shall serve thereon for a term of two years, and until his successor is appointed, except in case of the first board, on which two (2) members shall serve for two (2) years, and three (3) for three years, as specified in their appointment. In case of a vacancy by death or otherwise, there shall be appointed in like manner a person to serve through such unexpired term.

Sec. 3. Said board of osteopathic examiners shall elect a president, secretary, and treasurer, and shall have a common seal, and its president and secretary shall have power to administer oaths. Said board shall hold meetings for examination at the state capitol, or at some regularly conducted and legally authorized college of osteopathy, within the state, on the third Tuesday of February and July of each year, and such other meetings as may be deemed necessary, each session thereof not to exceed three days, and shall issue a certificate of qualification to all applicants having a diploma, or who pass the required examinations, as provided by section four (4) of this act; said certificate shall be signed by the president and secretary of said board, and attested by its seal, and shall be conclusive as to the rights of the lawful holder of the same to practice osteopathy in this state. Said board shall keep a record of all its proceedings, and also a register of all applicants for a license, together with his or her name and age and time spent in the study and practice of osteopathy, and of the name and location of the college of osteopathy from which said applicant holds a diploma, and shall keep a register which shall show the names of all applicants licensed, or that are rejected under this act.

Sec. 4.

It shall be unlawful for any person to practice

osteopathy in this state without a license from said board. All persons practicing osteopathy within this state prior to the passage of this act and holding a diploma from a legally authorized college of osteopathy, of good repute, may be licensed to practice osteopathy in this state, by submitting to said board of osteopathic examiners such a diploma, and satisfying such board that they are the legal holders thereof, or by undergoing an individual examination in the following branches, to wit: Anatomy, physiology, chemistry, histology, pathology, gynecology, obstetrics, and theory and practice of osteopathy, and such other branches as the board shall deem advisable.

All persons, after August first, nineteen hundred and one, desiring to commence the practice of osteopathy in this state, shall apply to said board for a license to do so, and such applicant at the time and place designated by said board, or at a regular meeting of said board, shall submit a diploma from a legally incorporated college of osteopathy, recognized by the board of examiners. Having complied with the requirements of this act, said board shall grant a license to such applicant to practice osteopathy in the state of California, which license shall be granted by the consent of not less than three members of said board and attested by the seal thereof. For the support and maintenance of said board the fee for such examination and license shall be ten ($10) dollars, not re turnable, which shall be paid in advance to the treasurer of said board, and shall be applied by said board to defray all the expenses thereof.

Sec. 5. The certificate provided for in section four (4) of this act shall not authorize the holder thereof to prescribe or use drugs, nor to perform major surgery.

Sec. 6. The person receiving said license shall have it recorded in the office of the county clerk of the county in which he or she intends to practice, and the record shall be indorsed thereon. In case a person so licensed shall remove to another county to practice, the holder shall record his license in like manner in the county to which he or she removes.

Sec. 7. Any person practicing osteopathy within the state without first having obtained the license herein provided for, or contrary to the provisions of this act or who, for the purpose of obtaining such license, shall

falsely represent himself or herself to be the holder of a diploma as herein provided, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine of not less than fifty ($50) dollars, nor more than one hundred ($100) dollars, or by imprisonment in the county jail for a period of not more than ninety days for each and every such offense.

Sec. 8. Any such certificato may be revoked by said board upon satisfactory proof of fraud or misrepresentation in procuring the same, or for any violation of the provisions of the certificate, or any gross immorality by the holder thereof.

Sec. 9. The system, method, and science of treating diseases of the human body, commonly known as osteopathy, is hereby declared not to be the practice of medicine or surgery, within the meaning of an act entitled "An act to regulate the practice of medicine in the state of California," approved April third, eighteen hundred and seventy-six, or any of the acts amendatory thereof.

Sec. 10. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.

ACT 2607.

TITLE 353.

OYSTERS.

[Stats. 1851, p. 432.]

Concerning oysters.

Continued in force by codes,-Penal Code, sec. 23, Political Code, sec. 19,-and later repealed, Stats. 1873-4, 941.

ACT 2608.

Concerning oyster beds. [Stats. 1865-6, p. 848.]
Repealed 1873-4, 940.

ACT 2609.

Encouraging planting and cultivation of. [Stats. 1873-4,

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An act to prevent fraud in the sale of Paris green used as an insecticide.

[Became a law under constitutional provision without governor's approval, February 28, 1901. Stats. 1901, p. 69.]

The people of the state of California, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. It shall be the duty of each and every manu facturer of Paris green (commercial aceto-arsenite of copper) to be used as an insecticide within this state, and of every dealer in original packages of said Paris green manufactured outside of this state, before the said Paris green is offered or exposed for sale, or sold within this state as an insecticide, to submit to the director of the California agricultural experiment station at Berkeley, samples of said Paris green, and a written or printed statement setting forth: First, the brands of said Paris green to be sold, the number of pounds contained in each package in which it is put on the market for sale, the name or names of the manufacturers and the place of manufac turing the same; second, the statement shall set forth the amount of combined arsenic which the said Paris green contains, and the statement so furnished shall be consid ered as constituting a guarantee to the purchaser that every package of such Paris green contains not less than the amount of combined arsenic set forth in the state ment.

Sec. 2. Every purchaser of said Paris green in original packages, which is manufactured outside of this state, who intends to sell or expose the same for sale, and every manufacturer of said Paris green within this state, shall, after filing the statement above provided for, with the director of the California agricultural experiment station at Berkeley, receive from the said director a certificate stating that he has complied with the foregoing statement, which certificate shall be furnished without charge therefor; said certificate when furnished shall authorize the party when receiving the same to deal in this state in the said Paris green. Any person who fails to comply with the terms of section one of this act shall not be entitled to such certificate and shall not be entitled to deal in said Paris green within this state. Nothing in this section shall be construed as applying to retail dealers selling said Paris green which has already been labeled and guaranteed.

Sec. 3. Paris green, when sold, offered or exposed for sale, as an insecticide, in this state, shall contain at least fifty per centum of arsenious oxide and shall not contair

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