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board of supervisors shall allow and pay the same out of the general fund of the county. Any and all sum or sums so paid shall be and become a lien on the property and premises from which said nuisance has been removed or abated, in pursuance such lien shall be filed and recorded in the office of this act, and may be recovered by an action against such property and premises. A notice of of the county recorder of the county in which the said property and premises are situated, within thirty days after the right to the said lien has accrued. An action to foreclose such lien shall be commenced within ninety days after the filing and recording of said notice of lien, which action shall be brought in the proper court by the district attorney of the county in the name and for the benefit of the county making such payment or payments, and when the property, is sold enough of the proceeds shall be paid into the county treasury of such county to satisfy the lien and costs; and the overplus, if any there be, shall be paid to the owner of the property if he be known, and if not, into the court for his use when ascertained. The county board of horticultural commissioners is hereby vested with the power to cause any and all such nuisances to be at once abated in a summary manner.

Sec. 3. Said county boards of horticultural commissioners shall have power to divide the county into districts, and to appoint a local inspector, to hold office at the pleasure of the commissioners, for each of said districts. The state board of horticulture may issue commissions as quarantine guardians to the members of said county board of horticultural commissioners and to the local inspectors thereof. The said quarantine guardians, local inspectors, or members of said county boards of horticultural commissioners, shall have full authority to enter into any orchard, nursery, place or places where trees or plants are kept and offered for sale or otherwise, or any house, storeroom, salesroom, depot, or any other such place in their jurisdiction to inspect the same, or any part thereof.

Sec. 4. It shall be the duty of said county board of horticultural commissioners to keep a record of their official doings, and to make a report to the state board of horticulture, on or before the first day of October of each year, of the condition of the fruit interests in their several districts, what is being done to eradicate insect pests, also as to disinfecting, and as to quarantine against insect pests and diseases, and as to carrying out all laws relative to the greatest good of the fruit interest. Said board may publish said reports in bulletin form, or may incorporate so much of the same in their annual reports as may be of general interest.

Sec. 5. The salary of all inspectors working under the county board of horticultural commissioners shall be two dollars and fifty cents ($2.50) per day. In the case of the commissioners themselves, their compensation shall be four dollars per day, when actually engaged in the performance of their duties, and itemized necessary traveling expenses incurred in the discharge of their regular duties as prescribed in this act.

Sec. 6. It shall be the duty of the county board of horticultural commissioners to keep a record of their official doings and make a monthly report to the board of supervisors; and the board of supervisors may withhold warrants for salaries of said members and inspectors thereof until such time as said report is made.

Sec. 7. An act entitled "An act to protect and promote the horticultural interests of the state," approved March fourteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-one, and certain acts amendatory thereof, approved March nineteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-nine, and March thirty-first, eighteen hundred and ninety-one, are hereby repealed.

Sec. 8. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.

An act for the protection of horticulture, and to prevent the introduction into this state of insects, etc. Stats. 1899; ch. LXXVI.

TITLE 120.

HOSPITALS.

An act conferring power upon the governing body of municipal corporations of the first class to provide for the erection of a municipal hospital, and to levy a tax therefor.

[Stat. approved February 16, 1897; Stats. 1897, chap. xiii.]

Consult Statutes of 1897 for act.

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Acts relating to, see Penal Code, Appendix, title, House of Correction, p. 566.

TITLE 122.

HUMBOLDT BAY.

Consult the following acts:

An act to grant to the United States certain tidelands belonging to the state of California, for the purpose of improving the harbor of Humboldt bay.

[Approved March 9, 1887; 1887, 59.]

An act to grant to the United States certain tide lands belonging to the state of California, for the purpose of improving the harbor of Hum boldt bay.

[Approved March 15, 1889; 1889, 201.]

An act authorizing purchase of certain lands in Humboldt bay. Stats. 1899, ch. CXXXI.

TITLE 123.

HUMBOLDT COUNTY.

A reference to local acts relating to Humboldt county is contained in Deering's Annotated Penal Code, pp. 593-595.

TITLE 124.

HUNTING ON PRIVATE GROUNDS.

A reference to acts relating to hunting is contained in Deering's Annotated Penal Code, pp. 595 and 596.

TITLE 125.
HUSBANDRY.

an Act providing for the appointment of a commission to make arrangements for the proper reception of the national grange of the patrons of husbandry, and appropriating money to defray the expenses thereof.

[Approved March 6, 1889; 1889, 68.]

The purpose of the act appears from the title.

TITLE 126.

INDIANS.

An act for the government and protection of Indians, passed April 22, 1850, 408, with its amend ments, will be found in the General Laws," secs. 3650 et seq. Without further legislation, or an adjudication by the supreme court, it will be diffi cult to determine how much, if any, of it is in force. It is deemed sufficient in this place to thus call attention to the subject.

Consult also the following:

An Act to provide for the auditing and examination of the claims against the State, of soldiers who served in the Indian wars in California, during the years from 1847 to 1857, to authorize the Adjutant-General to appoint a clerk for that purpose, and making an appropriation for his salary.

[Stat. approved March 31, 1897. Stats. 1897, chap. clxxxvii.]

TITLE 127.

INDIGENT SICK AND INFIRMARIES.

A reference to the acts bearing on this subject is contained in Deering's Annotated Penal Code, pp. 598, 599.

INDUSTRIAL HOME OF ADULT BLIND.
See Home of Adult Blind.

TITLE 128.

INFANCY.

Acts relating to, see Civil Code, Appendix, title Infancy, p. 775 et seq; Penal Code, Appendix, title Infancy, p. 570.

Gen Laws-33.

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