All examinations are made directly by the board, and the certificates authorize the possessor to practise medicine and surgery in the State (ib., s. 6,874).

The certificate must be recorded in the office of the county clerk of the county in which the holder resides and the record must be indorsed thereon; a person moving to another county to practise must procure an indorsement to that effect on the certificate from the said clerk, and have the certificate recorded in the office of the clerk of the county to which he removes (Ib., s. 6,875).

Examinations may be made wholly or partly in writing and must be of an elementary and practical character, but sufficiently strict to test the qualifications of the candidate as a practitioner (Ib., s. 6,877).

The board may refuse a certificate to an individual guilty of unprofessional or dishonorable conduct, and may revoke a certificate for like causes after giving the accused an opportunity to be heard (Ib., s. 6,878).

Definition, Exception.—A person is regarded as practising medicine who professes publicly to be a physician and to prescribe for the sick, or who appends to his name “M.D.,” but students are not prohibited from prescribing under the supervision of a preceptor, and gratuitous services may be rendered in case of emergency, and the act does not apply to commissioned surgeons of the United States army or navy or marine hospital service (ib., s. 6,879).

Itinerant Venders.—Every itinerant vender of any drug, nostrum, ointment, or appliance intended for the treatment of disease or injury, or who publicly professes to cure or treat disease, injury, or deformity by any drug, nostrum, manipulation, or other expedient, must pay a license fee of $100 per month; the violation of this section is a misdemeanor, punishable with a fine not exceeding $500 or imprisonment in the county jail not to exceed six months, or both (ib., s. 6,880).

Penalty.—The violation of the provisions of this act is a misdemeanor punishable with a fine of from $50 to $500, or imprisonment in the county jail for from thirty to three hundred and sixty-five days, or both, for each offence; filing or attempting to file the certificate of another, or a forged affidavit or identification, is a felony punishable as forgery in the second degree, but the provisions of this article do not apply to persons who had been practising five years in the State prior to 1883 (ib., s. 6,881).

Fees.—To the secretary of the board, for examining a genuine diploma, $1.