Penalty.—The penalty for violation of the act is a fine of from $50 to $300, or imprisonment in the county jail from ten days to thirty days, or fine and imprisonment for each offence; filing or attempting to file the diploma or certificate of another, or false or forged evidence, is a felony punishable the same as forgery (ib., s. 3,558).

System of Medicine.—Certificates are issued without prejudice, partiality, or discrimination as to schools or systems of practice or medicine, including the electropathic school (ib., s. 3,561).

Fees.—To treasurer of board by graduates and practitioners of ten years’ standing, $5. By candidates for examination, $10 (ib., s. 3,552).

To county clerk, for recording certificate, $1 (ib., s. 3,554).

Connecticut.

Qualification, Exceptions.—After October 1st, 1893, no person shall for compensation, gain, or reward, received or expected, treat, operate, or prescribe for any injury, deformity, ailment, or disease, actual or imaginary, of another person, nor practise surgery or midwifery unless or until he has obtained a certificate of registration, and then only in the kind or branch of practice stated in the certificate, but the act does not apply to dentists practising dentistry only, nor to any person in the employ of the United States Government while acting in the scope of his employment, nor to medical or surgical assistance in cases of sudden emergency, nor to any person residing out of the State who shall be employed to come into the State to assist or consult with any physician or surgeon who has been registered in conformity with the act, nor to any physician or surgeon then actually residing out of the State who shall be employed to come into the State to treat, operate, or prescribe for any injury, deformity, ailment, or disease from which any person is suffering at the time when such non-resident physician or surgeon is so employed, nor to any actual resident of this State recommending by advertisement or otherwise the use of proper remedies sold under trade-marks issued by the United States Government, nor to any chiropodist or clairvoyant not using in his practice any drugs, medicines, or poisons, nor to any person practising the massage method or Swedish movement cure, sun cure, mind cure, magnetic healing, or Christian science, nor to any other person who does not use or prescribe in his treatment of mankind drugs, poisons, medicine, chemicals, or nostrums (Act 1893, c. 148, s. 1).

Any resident of the State who, at the time of the passage of the act, was or previously had been actually engaged in the State in the practice of medicine, surgery, midwifery, or any alleged practice of healing, may, before October 1st, 1893, file with the State board of health duplicate statements subscribed and sworn to by him upon blanks furnished by said board, giving his name, age, and place of birth and present residence, stating whether he is a graduate of any medical college or not, and of what college, and the date of graduation, and if practising under a license from any of the medical societies of the State, which society and the date of such license and the length of time he has been engaged in practice in the State, and also elsewhere, and whether in general practice or in a special branch of medicine or surgery, and what branch. On receipt of such statements, the board shall issue a certificate of registration which shall state the kind or branch of practice in which he is engaged (ib., s. 2).

Any person who shall, subsequent to October 1st, 1893, file with said board such duplicated statements, showing that he is a graduate of a medical college recognized as reputable by any chartered medical society of the State, shall receive a certificate of registration which shall state the kind or branch of practice in which the person named therein is engaged or is to be engaged (ib., s. 3).

Any person residing in any town in another State which town adjoins the boundary line of Connecticut, who was actually engaged in such town, at the time of the passage of the act, in the practice of medicine, surgery, or midwifery, or any branch of practice, may before October 1st, 1893, obtain from the said board a like certificate on filing such duplicated statements also showing that he is entitled to such certificate under this section (ib., s. 4).

Except as above provided, no person shall after October 1st, 1893, obtain a certificate of registration until he has passed a satisfactory examination before a committee appointed by said board, nor until he has filed with the said board duplicate certificates as aforesaid, signed by a majority of one of said examining commissioners, stating that they have found him qualified to practise either medicine, surgery, or midwifery, and any person filing said certificates shall receive from said board a certificate of registration (ib., s. 5).