MEDICAL ACT. 
41 
or examinations, or the mode of conducting 
such examinations, to revoke any such 
order. 
XXVII. The Registrar of the General 
Council shall in every year cause to be 
printed, published, and sold, under the 
direction of such Council, a correct Regis¬ 
ter of the names in alphabetical order 
according to the surnames, with the re¬ 
spective residences, in the form set forth 
in Schedule (D) to this Act, or to the like 
effect, and medical titles, diplomas, and 
qualifications conferred by any Corpora¬ 
tion or University, or by Doctorate of the 
Archbishop of Canterbury, with the dates 
thereof, of all persons appearing on the 
General Register as existing on first day 
of January in every year ; and such re¬ 
gister shall be called ‘ The Medical Re¬ 
gister and a copy of the ‘ Medical Re¬ 
gister’ for the time being, purporting to 
be so printed and published as aforesaid, 
shall be evidence in all Courts and before 
all Justices of the Peace and others that 
the persons therein specified are registered 
according to the provisions of this Act; 
and the absence of the name of any per¬ 
son from such copy shall be evidence, until 
the contrary be made to appear, that such 
person is not registered according to the 
provisions of this Act: provided always, 
that in the case of any person whose 
name does not appear in such copy, a 
certified copy, under the hand of the 
Registrar of the General Council, or of 
any Branch Council, of the entry of the 
name of such person on the General or 
Local Register, shall be evidence that such 
person is registered under the provisions 
of this Act. 
XXIX. If any registered medical prac¬ 
titioner shall be convicted in England or 
Ireland of any felony or misdemeanour, or 
in Scotland of any crime or offence, or 
shall after due inquiry be judged by the 
General Council to have been guilty of in¬ 
famous conduct in any professional re¬ 
spect, the General Council may, if they see 
fit, direct the registrar to erase the name 
of such medical practitioner from the re¬ 
gister. 
XXXI. Every person registered under 
this Act shall be entitled, according to his 
qualification or qualifications, to practise 
medicine or surgery, or medicine and sur¬ 
gery, as the case may be, in any part of 
her Majesty’s dominions, and to demand 
YOL. Y. 
To Sect. XXVII.—After the words 
“ Provisions of this Act,” add the words as 
proposed in the Tabular Statement, viz.:— 
“ And that he is not possessed of any 
qualification which would entitle him to 
be registered in accordance with the pro¬ 
visions of this Act.” 
For Sect. XXIX.—The clause, as sug¬ 
gested by M. Ouvry, and printed in the 
Tabular Statement approved of, viz.: — 
The Council may refuse to register any 
person who may have been convicted, in 
England or Ireland, of any felony or mis¬ 
demeanour, or in Scotland of any crime or 
offence; and if any registered person shall 
be so convicted, or shall, after due inquiry, 
be judged by the General Council to have 
been guilty of infamous conduct in a pro¬ 
fessional respect, whether before or after 
registration, the General Council may, if 
they see fit, direct the registrar to erase 
the name of such person from the register. 
Sect. XXXI. Every person registered 
under this Act shall be entitled, according 
to bis qualification or qualifications, to 
practise medicine, or surgery or pharmacy 
or medicine, and surgery and pharmacy 
as the case may be, etc. 
E 
