Before any person can lawfully engage in the practice of medicine, surgery, or obstetrics, or who has not a diploma as provided in sec. 2, he must make an affidavit under oath, or affirm before the prothonotary of the county in which he intends to practise, setting forth the time of continuous practice and the place or places where such practice was pursued in the commonwealth, and it shall be entered of record (ib., s. 3).

Transient Practitioner.—Any person attempting to practise medicine or surgery for a valuable consideration by opening a transient office within the commonwealth, or by handbill or other form of written or printed advertisement, assigning such transient office or other place to persons seeking medical or surgical advice, or prescribing or itinerating from place to place or from house to house and proposing to cure any person sick or afflicted, by the use of any medicine, means, or agency whatsoever, for a valuable consideration, shall before being allowed to practise in this manner appear before the clerk of the court of quarter sessions of the county where he desires to practise and furnish satisfactory evidence to such clerk that this act has been complied with, and shall take out a license for one year and pay $50 therefor (ib., s. 4).

Penalty.—To violate this act is a misdemeanor punishable with a fine of from $200 to $400 for each offence (ib., s. 5).

Qualification.—Every person who shall practise medicine or surgery, or any of their branches, for gain, or shall receive or accept for his services any fee or reward directly or indirectly, shall be a graduate of a legally chartered medical college or university having authority to confer the degree of doctor of medicine (except as provided in sec. 5), and shall present to the prothonotary of the county in which he resides or sojourns his medical diploma as well as a true copy of the same, including any indorsements thereon, and make affidavit before him that the diploma and indorsements are genuine; thereupon the prothonotary shall enter in the register the name in full of the practitioner, his place of nativity, place of residence, the name of the college or university that has conferred the degree of doctor of medicine, the year when it was conferred, and in like manner any other degree or degrees that the practitioner may desire to place on record; to all of which the practitioner shall make affidavit before the prothonotary and the prothonotary shall place the copy of the diploma and indorsements on file (Act June 8th, 1881, s. 2).

Any person whose medical diploma has been destroyed or lost shall present to the prothonotary of the county in which he resides or sojourns a duly certified copy of his diploma, but if the same is not obtainable a statement of this fact, with the names of the professors whose lectures he attended and the branches of study upon which each professor lectured, to all of which the practitioner shall make affidavit before the prothonotary; after which the practitioner shall be allowed to register and the prothonotary shall place such certificate or statement on file (ib., s. 3).

Any person desiring to commence the practice of medicine or surgery, having a medical diploma issued by any college, university, society, or association in another State or foreign country, shall lay the same before the faculty of one of the medical colleges or universities of this commonwealth for inspection, and the faculty being satisfied as to the qualifications of the applicant and the genuineness of the diploma shall direct the dean of the faculty to indorse the same, after which such person shall be allowed to register as required by sec. 2 (ib., s. 4).

The act extends the privilege of continuing to practise to those who have been in the continuous practice of medicine or surgery in the commonwealth since 1871, but such a person must make affidavit to a written statement of the facts before the prothonotary of the county in which he resides; and the prothonotary shall enter in the register the name in full of the practitioner, his place of nativity, place of residence, the time of continuous practice in the commonwealth, and the place or places where such practice was pursued, to all of which the practitioner shall make affidavit, and the prothonotary shall place the certificate or statement on file in his office (ib., s. 5).

Penalty.—Presenting to the faculty of an institution for indorsement or to the prothonotary a diploma which has been obtained by fraud, or in whole or in part a forgery, or making an affidavit to a false statement, or practising without conforming with the act, or otherwise violating or neglecting to comply with the act, is a misdemeanor punishable with a fine of $100 or imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one year, or both, for each offence (ib., s. 7).

Exception.—The act does not prevent any physician or surgeon, legally qualified to practise medicine or surgery in the State where he resides, from practising in the commonwealth, but a person opening an office or appointing a place to meet patients or receive calls is a sojourner and must conform to its requirements (ib., s. 8).

Fees.—To the prothonotary, for affidavit of continuous practice, $2 (Act March 24th, 1877, s. 3).