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Concurrent Resolutions

Bion to

§ 2. Resolved (if the Assembly concur), That the foregoing submisamendment be submitted to the people for approval at the genera! people, election to be held in the year nineteen hundred and twenty-one, in accordance with the provisions of the election law.

STATE OF NEW YORK,

IN SENATE, April 8, 1921. The foregoing resolution was duly passed, a majority of all the Senators elected voting in favor thereof.

By order of the Senate,

JEREMIAH WOOD,

President.

STATE OF NEW YORK,

IN ASSEMBLY, April 16, 1921.
The foregoing resolution was duly
passed, a majority of all the members
elected to the Assembly voting in favor
thereof.
By order of the Assembly,
H. E. MACHOLD.

Speaker.

1921.

amend

art. 7, 8.

to be sold

wise dis

certain

cepted.

CONCURRENT RESOLUTION of the Senate and Assembly Proposed proposing an amendment to section eight of article seven of the ment to constitution, in relation to a certain portion of the Erie canal. Section 1. Resolved (if the Senate concur), That section eight Canals not of article seven of the constitution be amended to read as follows: or other§ 8. The legislature shall not sell, lease of otherwise dispose posed of; of the Erie canal, the Oswego canal, the Champlain canal, the canals Cayuga and Seneca canal, or the Black River canal; but they shall remain the property of the state and under its management forever. The prohibition of lease, sale or other disposition herein contained, shall not apply to the canal known as the Main and Hamburg street canal, situated in the city of Buffalo, and which extends easterly from the westerly line of Main street to the westerly line of Hamburg street, nor to that portion of the existing Erie canal in the city of Utica between the westerly line of Schuyler street and the easterly line of Third street, provided that a flow of sufficient water from Schuyler street to Third street to feed that portion of the canal east of Third street be maintained; 1nor shall such prohibition apply to that portion of the existing Erie canal in the county of Herkimer between the easterly portion of the village of Mohawk and the county boundary line between the counties of Herkimer and Oneida. All funds Disposithat may be derived from any lease, sale or other disposition of ton of any canal shall be applied to the improvement, superintendence or repair of the remaining portion of the canals.

funds.

sion to

§ 2. Resolved (if the Senate concur), That the foregoing Submisamendment be submitted to the people for approval at the general people,

1921.

1 Remainder of sentence new.

Proposed amendment to

art. 7, 8,

Concurrent Resolutions

election to be held in the year nineteen hundred and twenty-one, in accordance with the provisions of the election law.

STATE OF NEW YORK,

IN ASSEMBLY, March 7, 1921.
This bill was duly passed, a majority
of all the members elected to the Assem-
bly voting in favor thereof, three-fifths
being present.

By order of the Assembly,
H. E. MACHOLD,

Speaker.

STATE OF NEW YORK,

IN SENATE, April 7, 1921. This bill was duly passed, a majority of all the Senators elected voting in favor thereof, three-fifths being present. By order of the Senate. JEREMIAH WOOD.

President.

CONCURRENT RESOLUTION of the Senate and Assembly proposing an amendment to section eight of article seven of the constitution, in relation to a certain portion of the Erie canal. Section 1. Resolved (if the Senate concur), That section eight of article seven of the constitution be amended to read as follows: § 8. The legislature shall not sell, lease or otherwise dispose to be sold of the Erie canal, the Oswego canal, the Champlain canal, the Cayuga and Seneca canal, or the Black River canal; but they shall remain the property of the state and under its management for

Canals

or other

wise dis

posed of; certain canals excepted.

Disposi

tion of

funds.

Submission to people, 1921.

not

ever.

The prohibition of lease, sale or other disposition herein contained, shall not apply to the canal known as the Main and Hamburg street canal, situated in the city of Buffalo, and which extends easterly from the westerly line of Main street to the westerly line of Hamburg street, nor to that portion of the existing Erie canal between Rome and Mohawk.1 All funds that may be derived from any lease, sale or other disposition of any canal shall be applied to the improvement, superintendence or repair of the remaining portion of the canals.

§ 2. Resolved (if the Senate concur), That the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people at the general election in the year nineteen hundred and twenty-one, in accordance with the provisions of the election law.

STATE OF NEW YORK,

IN ASSEMBLY, February 8, 1921. This bill was duly passed, a majority of all the members elected to the Assembly voting in favor thereof, three-fifths being present.

By order of the Assembly,

H. E. MACHOLD.

STATE OF NEW YORK,

IN SENATE, April 7, 1921. This bill was duly passed, a majority of all the Senators elected voting in favor thereof, three-fifths being present. By order of the Senate. JEREMIAH WOOD, President.

Speaker.

Words "between Rome and Mohawk" substituted for words "in the city of Utica between the westerly line of Schuyler street and the easterly line of Third street, provided that a flow of sufficient water from Schuyler street to Third street to feed that portion of the canal east of Third street be maintained."

AMENDMENT TO RULES OF THE COURT OF APPEALS RELATING TO ADMISSION OF

ATTORNEYS.

STATE OF NEW YORK

IN COURT OF APPEALS

At a Court of Appeals for the State of New York, held at Court of Appeals Hall in the City of Albany, on the twenty-first day of April, A. D. 1921.

Present, Hon. FRANK H. HISCOCK, Chief Judge, presiding.

In the Matter

of

the amendment to Rule VIII of the Rules of the Court of Appeals for the admission of attorneys and counsellors-at-law.

IT IS ORDERED, That Rule VIII of the rules of the Court of Appeals, for the admission of attorneys and counsellors-at-law, be amended so as to read as follows:

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Regulations concerning examination.

The examination held by such State Board of Examiners may be conducted by oral or written questions and answers, or partly oral and partly written, but shall be as nearly uniform in the knowledge and capacity which they shall require, as is reasonably possible. Every applicant shall be given and required to pass a satisfactory examination in the canons of ethics adopted by the American Bar Association and by the New York State Bar Association. An applicant who has failed to pass one examination cannot again be examined until at least four months after such failure.

Amendment to Rules of the Court of Appeals

The State Board of Law Examiners shall be paid as compensation, each, the sum of two thousand dollars per year, and, in addition, such further sum as the court may direct, and an annual sum not exceeding five thousand dollars' per year shall be allowed for necessary disbursements of the Board. Every applicant for examination shall pay to the examiners a fee of twenty-five dollars, which shall be applied upon the compensation and allowance above provided, and any surplus thereafter remaining shall be held by the treasurer of the State Board of Law Examiners and deposited in some bank, in good standing, in the city of Albany, to his credit and subject to his draft as such treasurer, when approved by the Chief Judge."

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