Pharmaceutical formulas being a supplementary volume comprising a consolidation of the Medicine-stamp Acts (with historical notes), formulas for known, admitted, and approved remedies, an Australian hospitals formulary and many other recipes.
- Date:
- 1904
Licence: In copyright
Credit: Pharmaceutical formulas being a supplementary volume comprising a consolidation of the Medicine-stamp Acts (with historical notes), formulas for known, admitted, and approved remedies, an Australian hospitals formulary and many other recipes. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by UCL Library Services. The original may be consulted at UCL (University College London)
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![when and as soon as the same shall be made ready for sale, and shall be kept ready for sale, and before the same are uttered, vended, or exposed to sale by any person or persons whatsoever, to any person or persons whatsoever, either wholesale or retail, shall have well and sufficiently pasted, stuck, fastened, or affixed thereto such covers, wrappers, or labels, stamped, marked, impressed, or distinguished as aforesaid, m such manner as the said Commissioners shall direct; and the said Commissioners shall from time to time devise and direct the manner in which such covers, wrappers, or labels shall be pasted or affixed to the said wares or other article or articles aforesaid, or to the papers, thread, or other thing inclosing or which shall be directed by the said Commissioners to inclose the same, and to make such rules and regulations in that behalf as they shall think fit and necessary to prevent any such covers, wrappers, or labels aforesaid from being made use of again after they shall have been sold and disposed of; which rules, regulations, and directions shall be delivered to all and every owner, proprietor, maker, compounder, and vendor aforesaid, at the time of his, her, or their taking out his or her first licence directed to be taken out by this Act, and so from time to time with every future licence which shall be granted, if any variation or alteration shall have been made in such rules, regulations, or directions. XXI. [1891. Sec. 9.]-Procedure for obtaining allowance for spoiled stamps Subject to such regulations as the Commissioners may think proper to make, and to the production of such evidence, by statutory declaration or otherwise, as the Commissioners may require, allowance is to be made by the Commissioners for stamps spoiled in the cases hereinafter mentioned — that is to say . . . ■ • Any adhesive stamp which has been inadvertently and undesignedly spoiled or rendered unfit for use, and has not, in the opinion of the Commissioners, been affixed to any material. Provided as follows :— (a.) That the application for relief is made within [two years (1898 Act, Sec. 13)] after the stamp has been spoiled or become useless. ... (e.) That in the case of stamps used for medicines . . . the medi- cines . . . bearing the stamps are produced to an officer, and the stamps are removed therefrom in his presence. XXII. [1891. Sec. 11.]—How allowance is to be made In any case in which allowance is made for spoiled or misused stamps the Commissioners may give in lieu thereof other stamps of the same denomination and value, or if required, and they think proper, stamps of any other denomination to the same amount in value, or in their discretion the same value in money, deducting therefrom the discount allowed on the purchase of stamps of the like description. XXIII. [1891. Sec. 12.]—Stamps not wanted may be repurchased by the Commissioners When any person is possessed of a stamp which has not been spoiled or rendered unfit or useless for the purpose intended, but for which he has](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21687444_0033.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)