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1858 ARTICLE 43
wise, such general rules and regulations for the enforcement of the sub-
title and for the government of the inspectors and employees of the said
Board as may be necessary, and it shall have prepared and printed abstracts
of this law which shall be furnished to any person, firm or corporation in
this State demanding the same; provided, however, that before finally
adopting or enforcing such general rules and regulations hereinbefore
referred to, the said State Board of Health shall give at least 30 days' notice,
by publication, circular or otherwise, informing all persons who may be
interested in the enforcement of said rules and regulations that said Board
of Health will hear such persons on a certain day or days named in said
notice for the purpose of receiving and considering suggestions before the
final adoption of such rules and regulations. The said notice shall contain
a copy of the proposed rules and regulations.
1935, ch. 312, sec. 207A.
212. No person, firm, association or corporation shall buy, accept,
receive, or otherwise acquire or have in possession at or in any estab-
lishment where human and/or animal foods are prepared or manufac-
tured, or shall sell, offer for sale, or expose for sale, or have in possession
with intent to sell for human and/or animal food, or for use in the
preparation of same, any eggs in the shell, in broken-out mass, or in any
other condition whatsoever which are inedible in whole or in part.
Any egg that is mouldy, sour, or musty, or that has an abnormal odor,
blood ring, developing embryo, black rot, red dot, white rot, mixed rot
(addled), a bloody or green white, or any yolk that is seepy, crusted,
stuck or broken, or any egg in which the entire white is cloudy, and any
other egg heretofore or hereafter declared inedible for human food by the
United States Department of Agriculture shall, for the purpose of Sections
212-218, be deemed inedible for human food or for any use in the prepara-
tion of human food.
Any egg that is mouldy, or that has a black rot or crusted yolk, or any
other egg heretofore or hereafter declared inedible for animal food by the
United States Department of Agriculture shall, for the purpose of Sections
212-218, be deemed inedible for animal food or in the preparation of ani-
mal food.
1935, ch. 312, sec. 207B.
213. No person, firm, association or corporation shall sell, offer or
expose for sale, or shall can, freeze or otherwise process any broken out
eggs or shall break out eggs, unless a license shall have first been obtained
from the State Board of Health by the said person, firm, association or
corporation to sell, can, freeze or otherwise process broken out eggs or to
break out eggs.
1935, ch. 312, sec. 207C.
214. Any broken-out eggs inedible in whole or part shall be denatured
at the place and time of the breaking out in the manner prescribed by
the State Board of Health, and said manner shall be that approved or
indicated by the United States Department of Agriculture, and the con-
tainer or containers of such eggs shall be legibly and conspicuously labeled
or marked in the following language: "Denatured Eggs Unfit for Human
or Animal Food." Any such eggs not so denatured nor so labeled and
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