﻿Commissioner 
  of 
  Agriculture. 
  785 
  

  

  Whoever 
  furnislies 
  any 
  hotel, 
  restaurant 
  or 
  lunch 
  counter, 
  oleo- 
  

   margarine 
  or 
  biitterine 
  to 
  any 
  guest 
  or 
  patron, 
  instead 
  of 
  butter, 
  

   must 
  notify 
  him 
  that 
  the 
  substance 
  so 
  furnished 
  is 
  not 
  butter. 
  

  

  'No 
  person 
  shall 
  render, 
  manufacture, 
  sell, 
  or 
  offer 
  to 
  sell 
  or 
  

   take 
  orders 
  for 
  future 
  delivery 
  any 
  article, 
  product 
  or 
  compound 
  

   made 
  wholly 
  or 
  partly 
  out 
  of 
  any 
  fat, 
  oil 
  or 
  oleomarginous 
  sub- 
  

   stance 
  or 
  compound 
  thereof, 
  not 
  produced 
  from 
  pure 
  unadulter- 
  

   ated 
  milk 
  or 
  cream 
  from 
  the 
  same, 
  which 
  shall 
  be 
  in 
  imitation 
  of 
  

   yellow 
  butter, 
  provided 
  nothing 
  shall 
  prohibit 
  the 
  sale 
  of 
  such 
  

   substance 
  if 
  made 
  in 
  a 
  separate 
  and 
  distinct 
  form 
  and 
  in 
  such 
  

   manner 
  as 
  will 
  advise 
  the 
  consumer 
  of 
  its 
  real 
  character, 
  free 
  

   from 
  coloration. 
  (Pub. 
  St. 
  1894, 
  chap. 
  280.) 
  

  

  Whoever 
  sells 
  or 
  offers 
  to 
  sell 
  to 
  any 
  person 
  who 
  asks, 
  sends 
  or 
  

   inquires 
  for 
  butter, 
  any 
  oleomargarine, 
  butterine, 
  or 
  any 
  sub- 
  

   stance 
  made 
  in 
  imitation 
  of 
  or 
  semblance 
  of 
  pure 
  butter 
  not 
  made 
  

   entirely 
  from 
  the 
  milk 
  of 
  cows 
  with 
  or 
  without 
  coloring 
  matter, 
  

   shall 
  be 
  guilty 
  of 
  fraud 
  and 
  fined. 
  (Laws 
  1894, 
  chap. 
  280, 
  

   sec. 
  2.) 
  

  

  Inspectors 
  of 
  milk 
  shall 
  institute 
  complaints 
  for 
  the 
  violation 
  

   of 
  this 
  act; 
  they 
  shall 
  take 
  specimens 
  of 
  suspected 
  butter 
  and 
  

   imitations 
  thereof 
  and 
  cause 
  them 
  to 
  be 
  analyzed, 
  the 
  result 
  of 
  

   which 
  shall 
  be 
  recorded 
  and 
  preserved 
  for 
  evidence. 
  The 
  expense 
  

   of 
  such 
  analysis, 
  not 
  exceeding 
  twenty 
  dollars, 
  may 
  be 
  included 
  in 
  

   costs 
  of 
  prosecution. 
  (Laws 
  1891, 
  chap. 
  58.) 
  

  

  MICHIGAlSr. 
  

  

  The 
  use 
  of 
  oleomargarine, 
  butterine, 
  or 
  any 
  other 
  substitute 
  

   for 
  butter, 
  in 
  any 
  of 
  the 
  public 
  institutions 
  of 
  the 
  state 
  is 
  prohib- 
  

   ited. 
  (C. 
  L. 
  2243.) 
  

  

  No 
  person 
  shall 
  sell, 
  offer 
  to 
  sell 
  or 
  have 
  in 
  possession 
  any 
  

   skim-milk, 
  butter-milk, 
  cream 
  and 
  milk 
  in 
  its 
  natural 
  state 
  as 
  

   drawn 
  from 
  cows 
  into 
  which 
  water, 
  chemicals 
  or 
  preservatives, 
  or 
  

  

  50 
  

  

  