Definition, Exception.—Any person is regarded as practising medicine who professes publicly to be a physician or habitually prescribes for the sick, or appends to his name “M. D.,” but the act does not prohibit gratuitous services in cases of emergency; nor apply to lawfully commissioned surgeons and assistant surgeons of the United States army and those who were commissioned and mustered into the United States service in the great rebellion, or physicians or surgeons who have been in active practice for ten years and at least three years in the Territory, nor prevent practice and receiving pay in localities fifteen miles or more from the residence or office of a regular physician (ib., s. 620).

Offence.—Violation of the act is a misdemeanor (ib., s. 621).

Fees.—To the county recorder, for registration, $5 (ib., s. 619).

Arkansas.

Qualification.—It is unlawful for any one to engage in the practice of medicine and surgery, or either, as a calling except as provided in the statute (Act April 14th, 1893, s. 1).

A person engaging in the practice of medicine or surgery must be of good moral character, twenty-one years of age, and a graduate of some reputable college of medicine and surgery that requires for graduation not less than two courses of lectures, each in a different year (ib., s. 2).

Before engaging in practice, such person must exhibit his diploma to some county clerk of the State and have it recorded. The clerk must give him a certificate of record, which may be attached to the diploma (ib., s. 3).

In all cases of doubt as to the reputability of a college, it is the duty of the clerk of the county court, when a diploma is offered for record, to make inquiry of the Secretary of the State where the said college exists as to its reputability and requirements for graduation, and if the said clerk shall find that the said college does not conform to the requirements of this article, he shall not receive the diploma and the holder shall not be allowed to practise in the State. The aggrieved applicant may apply to the State board of medical examiners, whose decision shall govern the clerk in his action (ib., s. 4).

If after recording any diploma it shall come to the knowledge of the clerk making the record, or any other judicial or executive officer of the State, that the record was obtained by fraud or misrepresentation, it shall be his duty to institute before the said court of record proceedings to have such record reversed, and the holder of the diploma shall be judged guilty of a misdemeanor (ib., s. 5).

Exceptions.—The act does not affect the standing of any one practising at the time of its passage by virtue of a license under the then existing law, nor any one then legally engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery, nor does it prevent midwives from practising their calling or any one else from giving such simple domestic remedies as they are in the habit of using (ib., s. 6).