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pleasure of said council. He shall perform in his city the duties of a town sealer in a town. Where it is provided by law that some other city officer shall perform the duties of a sealer, the provisions of this article shall apply to such officer, so far as the same are not inconsistent with the law under which he acts.

§ 16. Weights and measures to be sealed; fees.-Whenever the sealer of a city, county or town compares weights and measures and finds that they correspond or causes them to correspond with the standards in his possession, he shall seal and mark such weights and measures with the appropriate devices.

Each sealer shall receive for his services the following fees: For sealing and marking every beam, ten cents.

For sealing and marking measures of extension, ten cents per yard, not exceeding fifty cents for any one measure.

For sealing and marking every weight, five cents.

For sealing and marking liquid and dry measures, ten cents for each measure.

He shall have a reasonable compensation for making weights and measures conform with the standards in his possession.

§ 17. Delivery of standards to successor in office. Whenever the state superintendent of weights and measures resigns, is removed from office or removes from the city of Albany, or when any city, county or town sealer resigns, is removed from office or removes from the city, county or town in which he has been appointed or elected, he shall deliver to his successor in office all the standard beams, weights and measures in his possession, and on the death of any such sealer of weights and measures his representatives shall in like manner deliver to his successor in office such beams, weights and measures. In case of refusal or neglect to deliver such standards entire and complete, as in this section required, the successor in office may maintain an action against the person or persons so refusing or neglecting, and recover double the value of the standards not delivered and double costs. One-half of the damages recovered in every such action shall be retained by the person so recovering, and the other shall be applied to the purchase of such standards as may be required in his office.

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23. Standard test and storage of refined petroleum and kerosene oils.

24. Standard and storage of illuminating oils.

25. Inspectors of storage.

26. Fire and light within one hundred and fifty feet of warehouses in the counties of New York, Kings and Queens prohibited.

27. Penalties and the enforcement thereof.

28. Trade-marks.

29. Unlawful detention of milk cans.

30. Canned and preserved food.

31. Oysters in kegs and cans, how marked and branded.

32. Fees and charges for elevators and warehouses.

33. Analysis of commercial fertilizers to be furnished.

34. List and analysis of fertilizers to be furnished the director of the state agricultural experiment station at Geneva.

35. When statement shall not be deemed false; application of sec

tions.

36. Inert nitrogenous matter to be stated.

37. Penalties.

38. Duties of the director of New York state agricultural experiment station relating to fertilizers.

39. Sale of agricultural products on commission.

40. Duty of hotel keepers to provide fire-escapes.

41. Bills of lading to be issued by vessels transporting merchandise within the state.

§ 20. Standard of domestic distilled spirits.-Domestic distilled spirits, at a temperature of sixty degrees Fahrenheit, which have a specific gravity of nine thousand three hundred and thirtyfive as compared with the gravity of pure distilled water at the same temperature estimated at ten thousand, shall be deemed first proof.

The strength of any such spirits below or above first proof shall be calculated decimally, or by the percentage in reference to such standard, and shall be denoted as so many per centum below or above first proof as the actual difference in strength shall be.

§ 21. Sperm oils.-Pure sperm oil, at the temperature of sixty degrees Fahrenheit, shall have the same specific gravity as domestic distilled spirits of forty-eight per centum above first proof

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at the same temperature; and whale oil, at that temperature, shall have the same specific gravity as such spirits of eight per centum above first proof, as established by this article. The specific gravity of such oils may be tested by a hydrometer or an oleometer. The secretary of state shall furnish, at the expense of the state, to the clerk of each county, a correct oleometer, graduated to show the difference between pure sperm oil and whale oil, which shall be kept by such clerk for public use as a standard and true test of pure sperm oils. All oils under the name of sperm, lamp, summer, fall and winter oils shall be deemed to be sold as and for pure sperm oil. All oils sold under the name of sperm, lamp, summer, fall or winter oils, which shall be adulterated from pure sperm oil, shall be deemed whale oil, and the vendor shall be liable to the purchaser for the difference in value between pure sperm and crude whale oil.

22. Storage of petroleum.-Crude petroleum, earth or rock oil, or any of its products, shall not be kept on sale or stored in any place or building within the corporate limits of any city in this state, except in the city of New York, unless in detached and properly ventilated warehouses, the exterior walls of which are stone, brick or iron, specially adapted to that purpose, with raised sills at least two feet high, or the ground floor of which is at least two feet below the level of the street or adjoining land, so as to effectually prevent the overflow of such substances beyond the premises where kept or stored.

No part of such warehouses shall be occupied as a dwelling, and if less than fifty feet from any adjacent building, such warehouse must be separated therefrom by a brick or stone wall at least ten teet in height and sixteen inches thick.

None of such articles shall be allowed to remain on the sidewalk beyond the front line of any building or in the street, a longer time than is actually necessary for the storage, shipment or delivery of the same, nor after sunset.

§ 23. Standard test and storage of refined petroleum and kerosene oil. ---Refined petroleum or kerosene oil shall not be kept on sale or stored in any such city, the fire test of which shall be less than one hundred and ten degrees Fahrenheit, determined by authorized inspectors using G. Tagliabue's or other improved instruments; and the barrels or packages containing the same shall be legibly stamped or marked with the inspector's official stamp or mark. If stored above the cellar or basement of any

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building and in barrels of not over forty-five gallons each, or in metallic vessels or tanks for the convenience of retailing, the quantity so stored shall not exceed the contents of ten barrels, unless packed in hermetically sealed metallic packages when such quantity shall not exceed one hundred barrels. If stored in cellars or basements surrounded by walls of brick or stone, and at least two feet below the level of the sidewalk, street or adjacent land, such quantity shall not exceed the contents of one hundred and fifty barrels, unless stored in warehouses specially adapted for the purpose pursuant to this article. No more than five barrels thereof shall be kept or stored in any building occupied wholly or in part as a dwelling.

Not more than ten barrels of benzine or naphtha shall be kept or stored in any building, and not more than three barrels thereof in any building any part of which is occupied as a dwelling.

This and the preceding section shall not prevent the storage of crude or refined petroleum in wrought-iron tanks detached from any building and specially adapted for that purpose, or in other tanks so constructed that the top is at least two feet below the street or the adjoining land and covered with at least one foot of earth, and appurtenant to or connected with a refinery, with the approval of the inspectors of buildings, fire marshal or other proper authorities.

24. Standard and storage of illuminating oils. -No person shall manufacture or have in his possession or sell or give away for illuminating or heating purposes in lamps or stoves within this state, any oil or burning fluid wholly or partly composed of naphtha, coal oil, petroleum or products thereof, or of other substances or materials emitting an inflammable vapor which will flash at a temperature below one hundred degrees Fahrenheit, according to the instruments and tests approved by the state board of health.

No such oil or fluid which will ignite at a temperature below three hundred degrees Fahrenheit shall be burned or be carried as freight in any passenger or baggage car or passenger boat moved by steam or electric power in this state, or in any stage or street car, however propelled, except that coal oil, petroleum and its products may be carried, when securely packed in barrels or metallic packages, in passenger boats propelled by steam when there are no other public means of transportation.

The state board of health shall prescribe the tests and instru

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ments by which such oils and fluids shall be tested, and shall adopt such measures to enforce the provisions of this section and such rules and regulations for collecting, examining and testing samples of such oils and fluids as to them may seem necessary. The public analysts employed by or under the direction of such board shall test the samples of such oils and fluids as may be submitted to them under the rules of the board, for which they shall receive such reasonable compensation as the board may allow.

Naphtha and other illuminating products of petroleum which will not stand the flash test required by this section, may be used for illuminating or heating purposes only in the following

cases:

1. In street lamps and open air receptacles apart from any building, factory or inhabited house in which the vapor is burned.

2. In dwellings, factories or other places of business when vaporized in secure tanks or metallic generators made for that purpose, in which the vapor so generated is used for lighting or heating.

3. For use in the manufacture of illuminating gas in gas manufactories situated apart from dwellings and other buildings. Any person violating any provision of this section shall forfeit to the city or village, or if not in a city or village to the town in which the violation occurs, the sum of one hundred dollars for every such violation, and for every day or part of a day that such violation occurs.

This section shall not apply to the city of New York, and shall not supersede but shall be in addition to the ordinances or regulations of any city or village made pursuant to law for the inspection or control of combustible materials therein.

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§ 25. Inspectors of storage.-The inspectors of buildings or other proper authorities in every such city shall make an examination of all the premises where any of the articles or substances specified in the preceding sections of this article are kept or stored, and report any violation thereof to the authorities of the city whose duty it is to enforce the provisions thereof.

§ 26. Fire and light within one hundred and fifty feet of warehouses in the counties of New York, Kings and Queens prohibited. No person shall bring, have, keep or use or suffer or permit to be brought, kept, had or used on board of any ship,

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