of the seller, and the ingredients thereof be entered, with the name of the person to whom it is sold or delivered, in a book to be kept by the seller for that purpose, and nothing in this Act contained shall repeal or affect any of the provisions of an Act of the Session holden in the fourteenth and fifteenth years in the reign of her present Majesty, intituled ‘An Act to regulate the Sale of Arsenic’ (Clause 17).

Schedule (A).

Part 1.

Arsenic and its preparations. Prussic acid. Cyanide of potassium and all metallic cyanides. Strychnine and all poisonous vegetable alkaloids and their salts. Aconite and its preparations. Emetic tartar. Corrosive sublimate. Cantharides. Savin and its oil. Ergot of rye and its preparations.

Part 2.

Oxalic acid. Chloroform. Belladonna and its preparations. Essential oil of almonds, unless deprived of its prussic acid. Opium and all preparations of opium or of poppies.

By virtue and in exercise of the powers vested in the council of the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain, the said council do hereby resolve and declare that each of the following articles, viz.—

Preparations of prussic acid, Preparations of cyanide of potassium and of all metallic cyanides, Preparations of strychnine, Preparations of atropine, Preparations of corrosive sublimate, Preparations of morphine, Red oxide of mercury (commonly known as red precipitate of mercury), Ammoniated mercury (commonly known as white precipitate of mercury), Every compound containing any poison within the meaning of ‘The Pharmacy Act, 1868,’ when prepared or sold for the destruction of vermin, The tincture and all vesicating liquid preparations of cantharides,

—ought to be deemed a poison within the meaning of the ‘Pharmacy Act, 1868,’ and also that of the same each of the following articles, viz.—

Preparations of prussic acid, Preparations of cyanide of potassium and of all metallic cyanides, Preparations of strychnine, Preparations of atropine,