The evidence shows that defendant is a physician, authorized to practice medicine. There is some evidence tending to show that he sold intoxicating liquors contrary to law, but the questions involved in this appeal have been reduced to one, which is stated by counsel for appellant to be “whether a practicing physician in this state has the right to dispense as medicine, to a patient, in good faith, according to his needs, intoxicating liquors.” The question was raised, but not determined, in State v. Cloughly, 73 Iowa, 628. Chapter 75 of the Laws of 1880 was enacted to regulate the sale of medicine and poisons, and section 12 thereof contained the following: “This act shall not apply to physicians putting up their own prescriptions.” That provision was repealed by section 4, chapter 83, of the Laws of 1886, and the following was enacted in lieu of it, to-wit: “Physicians dispensing their own prescriptions only are not required to be registered pharmacists.” The claim of appellant seems to be that, since the acts of the general assembly relating to the practice of pharmacy provide for the sale of intoxicating liquors by pharmacists, and the provision quoted is found in one of those acts, it,, in effect, constitutes physicians exceptions to the general rule, and authorizes them to sell intoxicating liquors to their patients,
Aeeiemed.
