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which the defendant was sentenced or might have been imprisoned, whereupon the sentence or judgment shall be in full force and effect, and the person shall be delivered over to the proper officer to serve the same, and no period of probation shall be considered as part thereof, or deducted therefrom.

2. The court shall have power at any time, after the termination of probation, to again parole the defendant and stay execution of judgment or sentence on the same terms and conditions as it could originally have done, and it may at any time when the ends of justice will be subserved thereby, and when the good conduct and reform of the person so held in probation shall warrant it, terminate the period of probation and discharge the person so held, and in all cases, if the court has not seen fit to revoke the order of probation, or discharge him from custody, the defendant, at the end of the term of probation, shall be discharged from custody, and said judgment or sentence be deemed fully satisfied,

SECTION 6. This act shall take effect upon passage and publication.

Approved March 12, 1919.

No. 64, S.]

[Published March 15, 1919.

CHAPTER 31.

AN ACT to create subsection (16a) of section 35.84 of the statutes, relating to distribution of supreme court reports and making an appropriation.

The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:

SECTION 1. There is added to section 35.84 of the statutes a new subsection to read (35.84) (16a) The superintendent of public property shall provide the judge of any circuit court with copies of such volumes of the supreme court reports as were never previously furnished him or his predecessors in office.

2. There is hereby appropriated from any money in the general fund not otherwise appropriated a sufficient sum to carry out the provisions of subsection (16a) of section 35.84 of the statutes.

SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage and publication.

Approved March 12, 1919.

No. 343, S.]

[Published March 15, 1919.

CHAPTER 32.

AN ACT to amend paragraph (c) of subsection (8) of section 5.26 of the statutes, relating to independent or nonpartisan nominations.

The people of the State of Wisconsin, represented in Senate and assembly, do enact as follows:

SECTION 1. Paragraph (c) of subsection (8) of section 5.26 of the statutes is amended to read: (5.26) (8) (c) Except as otherwise provided in this section the general law relating to nomination of candidates at September primaries shall apply to nomination of judicial candidates under subsection (8) of this section, and the general law relating to nomination of candidates at city primaries shall apply to nomination of school directors pursuant to subsection (8) of this section.

SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage and publi

cation.

Approved March 14, 1919.

No. 5, S.]

[Published March 21, 1919.

CHAPTER 33.

AN ACT to relocate, consolidate and amend certain sections of the statutes, relating to the University of Wisconsin.

The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in Senate, and Assembly, do enact as follows:

SECTION 1. Section 36.06 of the statutes is amended to read: 36.06 DUTIES OF REGENTS; ADDITIONAL POWERS. (1) The board of regents shall enact laws for the government of the university in all its branches; elect a president and the requisite number of professors, instructors, officers and employes, and fix the salaries and the term of office of each, and determine the moral and educational qualifications of applicants for admission to the various courses of instruction; but no instruction, either sectarian in religion or partisan in politics, shall ever be allowed in any department of the university; and no sectarian or partisan tests shall ever be allowed or exercised in the appointment of regents or in the election of professors, teachers. or other officers of the university, or in the admission of students thereto or for any purpose whatever.

(2) The board

shall have power to remove the president or any professor, instructor or officer of the university

the judgment of the board, the interests of

the university require it.

(3) The board may prescribe rules and regulations for the

management of the libraries, cabinet, museum, laboratories and

all other property of the university and of its several depart-

ments, and for the care and preservation thereof, with penalties

and forfeitures by way of damages for their violation, which

may be sued for and collected in the name of the board before

any court having jurisdiction of such action.

(4) In the use of men's and women's dormitories at the uni-

versity, preference as to rooming and boarding facilities shall be

given to students who are legal residents of this state; but in

case additional facilities remain after such preference, the above

mentioned rooming and boarding facilities may be extended to

nonresident students. The
board shall make suitable

rules and regulations for carrying such dormitory preferences

into effect. All salaries and compensations provided for in this

section shall be charged against the proper appropriation for the

board of regents of the university.

(5) Said board may acquire by condemnation proceedings such

parcels of land as it deems necessary for the use of any institu-

tion under its control whenever the board is unable to agree with

the owner upon the compensation therefor, or whenever the ab-

sence or legal incapacity of such owner, or other cause, prevents

or unreasonably delays such agreement.

SECTION 2. Subsection (8) of section 36.13 of the statutes is

withdrawn therefrom and subsections (6) and (7) thereof are

amended to read:

Such other colleges, schools or departments as

are now or may from time to time be added thereto or connected

therewith. No new school or college shall be established unless

authorized by the legislature.

SECTION 3. Subsection (8) of section 36.13 is renumbered to

be section 36.18, TRAINING FOR PUBLIC SERVICE, and
is amended by striking out the paragraph designations (a), (b),
(c), and (d) and by substituting for them, respectively, the
subsection designations (1), (2), (3) and (4).

SECTION 4. Section 36.17 and section 1494j of the statutes
are consolidated and amended to read:

36.17 SUMMER SESSION, EDUCATIONAL EXTEN-
SION, CORRESPONDENCE TEACHING. The board of re-
gents may maintain

a summer session

and

is directed to carry on educational extension and correspondence teaching.

SECTION 5. Sections 36.18, 14946 and 1494-12m are consolidated, renumbered to be section 36.215 and amended to read: 36.215 AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENTS AND DEMONSTRATIONS, FARMERS' INSTITUTES. (1)

board of regents.

is authorized to

The

do or

cause to be done experimental work in agriculture at such points within the state as may in * its judgment be advisable,

and

to carry on, under the supervision of the dean of the college of agriculture, demonstrations and such other extension work as they may deem advisable for the improvement of agricultural knowledge, and to conduct

extension schools

and courses which may be held in

conjunction with the county schools

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of agriculture and domestic economy, and to provide for the compensation and traveling expenses of instructors

whose functions

shall be to assist in the improvement of agricultural education and the dissemination of agricultural knowledge.

(2)

Said board

and places as

struction of *

of agriculture,

shall hold, at such times it may determine, institutes for the incitizens in the various branches including the results of the most re

cent investigations and experiments in theoretical and practical

agriculture. •

The board may make such rules and regulations as may be deemed proper for organizing and conducting such institutes and may employ an agent or agents to perform such work in connection therewith as they may direct. The expense of such institutes shall be charged to the appropriation for the board of regents of the university for farmers' institutes.

SECTION 6. Section 1406m of the statutes is renumbered to be section 36.225 and subsection 1 thereof is amended to read: 36.225 STATE LABORATORY OF HYGIENE. (1) The state hygienic laboratory ⚫ heretofore established in connection with the university is continued and shall be known as the "State Laboratory of Hygiene." SECTION 7. This act shall take effect upon passage and publication.

Approved March 18, 1919.

No. 16, S.]

[Published March 21, 1919.

CHAPTER 34.

AN ACT to legalize the investment of certain moneys of the Teachers' Insurance and Retirement Fund in bonds of the United States.

The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

SECTION 1. The investment on November 15, 1917, of five thousand dollars of the Teachers' Insurance and Retirement Fund by the board of trustees of the said Teachers' Insurance and Retirement Fund, in bonds of the United States, is hereby legalized and validated to the same extent and with like effect as if the said investment were made pursuant to full authority of law.

SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage and publication.

Approved March 18, 1919.

No. 33, S.]

[Published March 21, 1919. CHAPTER 35.

AN ACT to amend sections 4736, 4737, and 4738, and to create section 4738a of the statutes, relating to judgments in criminal actions.

The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

SECTION 1. Sections 4736, 4737, and 4738 of the statutes are amended to read: Section 4736. When any person is convicted of any offense punishable only by imprisonment in the state prison and it is alleged in the indictment or information therefor and proved or admitted on the trial or ascertained by the court after conviction that he had been before sentenced to punishment by imprisonment in any state prison, or state reformatory, by any court of this state, or any other state or of the United States, and that such sentence remains of record unreversed, whether pardoned therefore or not, he may be punished by imprisonment in the state prison not less than the shortest time fixed for such offense and not more than twenty-five years.

SECTION 4737. When any person is convicted of any offense punishable by imprisonment in the state prison or in the county jail, in the discretion of the court, and it is alleged in the indictment or information and proved or admitted on the trial or ascertained by the court after conviction that he had been before

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