Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 240, Decatur, Adams County, 11 October 1956 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

- 'J- - • ' — i . | I v, W jL £i ~ TOK \'.T' Mr MMk & H wßSlwl •B ■ J I 'I f Tipi 4 '* Bl jßC**,* 1 I*ll i I M A<■ i <|J K IS <■ i IL Iwf *-- kh fflSlii it™ fEBjl ■ II HHMHnmw Xw Jr z tnWwßKl' -* MHmßwWas i WrMrW I £ , x . .. ': X; --• Ja PRINCESS MARGARET smiles chuuningiy as she is escorted by the Sultan of Zanzibar in hia royal palace. The princess is touring

Code Os Medical Ethics Is Scored Hit By Head Os —~ Surgeons College SAN FRANCISCO (UP) — An official of the American college of

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surgeons believes Emily Post could have written a ‘‘much better” code of medical ethics than the American Medical Assn. This observation came Tuesday from Dr. Paul H. Hawley of Chicago. outspoken director of the college, in the course of talks to two groups attending the 42nd annual congress of the ACS. At the same time. Hawley also attacked the “questionable activities” of Blue Shield plans throughout the nation and criticised “scal-pel-wielding” general practitioners. Hawley charged that the AMA code is like the traditional Mother Hubbard dress. * “It covered everything, but touched upon very few points,” he said. “It overlooked the most important person in the medical practice —the patient” The code, he said, is “largely a code of etiquette among physicians, which Emilg Post could have written much better,” J—. Hawley said Blue Shield plans, which covers 37 million Americans, have failed to provide a fair and justifiable solution to health insurance problems. He claimed that the American Medical Assn, long opposed Blue Shield plans, but accepted them at last only to “stop the clamor" for socialised medicine. Hawley also claimed "far too many” doctors are trying ■to do surgical operations for which they have no training. Still too many doctors, he continued, are splitting fees, getting unethical rebates, performing unnecessary operations, doing ghost surgery and charging exorbitant fees. The best buiding precept for a doctor, he said, is the golden rule. DONATION <Co»tlnueO rrtiw, P«Ke One) had closed the bank's predecessor in a scheme to gain an interest in it. Mensik said $4,000 of the $6,800 political contribution in last April’s primary was earmarked by Hodge for “getting out the vote of young people" in the primary, in which there were few Republican contests. Mensik said he thought Hodge was interested In getting out new voters- “as a public service."

Adlai Scores • I Big Business Tie With Ike Making Determined Bid On California's Votes By UNITED PRESS Adlai E. Stevenson, stepping up personal attacks against President Eisenhower, made a determined bid today for California’s 32 presidential electoral votes. The Democratic presidential nominee Wednesday night pictured the President as a man es good intentions, but one whose campaign statements reflected the voice of Madison Avenue. ** ~ In Washington. Mr. Eisenhower considered more campaign trips, poseibly one California, in the face of the Tlew Democratic attacks. He was certain to face questioning at his news conference on the Stevenson charges. Vice President Richard M. Nixon was soaked in the rain Wednesday night- at Chinatown's “Double Ten” celebration in San Francisco. But he was probably the first national candidate to be serenaded by a Chinese high school drum and glockenspiel corps playing “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling." He was also Misled by a 250-foot cloth dragon ablaze with electric lights. Sen. Estes Kefauver told an lowa farm audience that the Eisenhower administration has fostered a hero worship of big business. “They are the golfing companions of the President and the men who came to dinner at the White House,” he said. In Alaska. Democrats led in most major races in the territory’s general election “barometer” balloting. » With returns trickling in from the territory's 586,000 square miles the Democrats were ahead in two of the token elections of two U. S. senators and one representative to go to Washington and stump for statehood. Republican John Butrovich of Fairbanks held a 9.503 to 9,322 edge oper former Alaska Gov. Ernest Gruening for one—unofficial Senate seat. Democrats looked, however, for normally Democratic areas still unreported to pull Gruening through. Territorial house and senate races apparently were ii the Democratic bag with about half of 271 precincts reporting. . . Stevenson planned to stump California from Oakland to San Diego. It was his second California campaign trip and he will probably make a third before the November election. His current speeches are aimed directly at the President himself in contrast to his earlier oblique approach made soon after his nomination in Chicago. Stevenson’s direct blasts at the President already looked as if they would be returned in kind. Paging Horatio Alger PORTLAND, Me. — (UP) — J. Fred Cheney, 69, who took dictation at the huge Mequier and Jones Co., structural steel fabricating firm in 1912 at $2 a day, is giving the dictation now. Cheney bought the firm. Heat Hint AMES, la — (UP) — The difference in temperature from ankle level to head top in an ideally heated house should be less than three degrees when it is 30 degrees outdoors, according to extension engineers at lowa State College.

THE DECATUR DAILT DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

hr EWoaMISL . : THE INFORMATION on the marquee fails to stifle former President Truman’s enthusiasm as he campaigns through the Pittsburgh area on behalf of the Stevenson-Kefauver ticket. (International)

Increase In Farm ‘ Income Foreseen Farm Outlook Meet Held Last Evening “Net income of U. S. farmers in 1957 is expected to be 5 to 10 percent above 1956 with most of the increase coming from larger government payments.” That is what Dr. Les Arnold. Purdue University agricultural economist, told farmers at Monroe Wednesday night. The meeting was one of 79 economic outlook meetings being held throughout Indiana from October 8 to 18. “demand for farm. products is expected to continue strong and prices received by lj. S. farmers-' will strengthen moderately. However, prices paid by farmers will rise also with the parity ratio for 1957 averaging near 83, about the same as for the first eight months of 1956, Arnold said. Prices of machinery, building and fencing materials and farhi supplies are expected to be higher that average 1956 prices. Total farm production costs will be about three to five percent higher in the year ahead. Fertilizer prices, feed prices and perhaps used fa rm machinery prices are expected to remain stable as compared to last year. Dr. Arnold forecasts hog prices to average $2 to $3 above the past year, which should result in a hogcorn feeding ratio of near or slightly below average. The Purdue economist looks for the price of corn to average near $1.25 a bushel, with the 1956 harvest time price, No. 2 basis, $1.05 to $1.15. Oats and barley prices are likely to average slightly higher than last year, but soybeans will probably not average much above the loan rate of $2.15. The price of wheat is predicted to average near the $2 loan rate. No significant changes in price levels for beef cattle are seen for the coming year except as supplies of highly finished fed cattle are reduced next year. Fori local dairymen, Arnold said prices for dairy products Will remain the same or slightly higher in the year ahead but will be strongly influenced by support levels. ■ W Poultry and egg prices are expected to average below a year ago for the first six months of 1957. Farm land prices in Indiana are expected to change little from current levels during the next year or two. No relief is expected for family living costs. Goods and services will be available in adequate sup : ply but at prices somewhat higher than in 1956. Chicken Journey SHIRLEY, Mass. — (UP) — Chicken thievery is still rated as a serious crime In Massachusetts. Police Chief Donald R. Morse of this town and a state trooper traveled 3,000 miles to California to bring back for trial a fugitive accused of staling $1,850 worth of chickens. Bacterial Experiment DETROIT —,(UP) - The Ford "Motor Co. is using bacteria to cleanse waste industrial water poi-” soned by phenol. Tests are underway to determine the amounts of phenol waste the bacteria will eat and whether it would be practical to build a large facility employing the bacteria as a cleansing agent.

State Tomato Pack Good This Season frigget Pack For Past Three Year INDIANAPOLIS (UP) —Hoosier tomato growers wound up operations this week on the biggest torn* to pack in three years. “Indiana was fortunate in receiving high quality tomatoes, a greater volume, and greater tons per acre and cases per ton yield," said Warren Spangle, executive director of the Indiana canners’ association. The crop ran 10 days to two weeks behind schedule because of early spring rains which delayed setting plants. But indications this week were that, only a few scattered termers suffered serious loss because of a glut on the market. Canners contracts with the growers commit the 71 canners operating In the state to accept only the tomatoes grown in a certain period of time. Most growers managed to get their crops In before the contracts ran out. Tomatoes grown in Hoosier soil this year were expected to exceed 300,000 tons for the first time since 1953. Last year the total tonnage was about 253,600. Growers averaged 340,900 tons a year between 1944 and 1953, but since the start of the 1950 s the pack has dropped steadily. This year a glut hit between the Bth and 22nd of September, and at the end of contract periods a number of fields were still coming •through. But even if the season had been later the canners would have halted most operations at the beginning of October because the quality generaly decreases at the end of the season. More tomatoes were planted this year because canners announced early that their stocks of tomato products were low. All canners

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were winding up operations this week, but it was still too early to tell Just how many farmers would be left with an excess on thejr hands. Normally a killing frost halts operations by Oct. 10 in any case. The weather bureau was right on schedule with a prediction tor tressing temperatures Tuesday night, but the frost hit only the north portion, and it was light. Only California surpasses Indiana among tomato producing states. IKE PLAN (Coettavea from !*■*« Oee) not be published the day the ship sails. This comment was in response to a question about reports that members of congress by the score have been taking free Caribbean cruises on ships of the publicly owned Panama Line. Said be believes that the management of U, 8. domestic affairs is the main issue in the present political campaign. Said ha. will jtave his promised general medical checkup sometime before the end of this months Again urged all eligible Americans to register to vote 1h the Nov. 6 election. Indicated he hasn't yet. made up his mind on continuing aid. to Yugoslavia. He must decide by Oct. 16. On the political front, Mr. Elsenhower said he is not ready to write off the South as far as Republicans are concerned in the Nov. 6 election. He said that would be like saying there Is a section of the country in which he has no interest. But he said he has no definite plans at present to campaign in the South where four states went R# publican in 1952. He said his heart had been warmed by the crowds and receptions he had received on his campaign trips by his job as president. He said that he could move his staff and continue to carry out the presidential duties on vacations at Augusta, Ga., and at Denver. Colo., but that it was impossible to do that when he was out campaigning. The ruler of Rei Bouba, a domain of some 36,000 people in Africa’s French Cameroons, maintains royal cavalry garbed in chain mail, the National Geographic Sosiety says.

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TRADE IN DECATUR - ."’l - ■.. — * - ■ ll I —~ I • F ® Mbv* '>’>■>'. jq■ * LJ >v " ! ! Biii ,Ai ,i .... HEM ARI Soviet party boss Nikita Khrushchev (left), Yugoslav President Tito and Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin strolling at Yalta, a gathering that is billed as a vacation. Reports have it, however, that their heads are together over weakening of Khrushchev’s hold in the Soviet (International Radiophoto)

WAIT A FEW DAYS... BE 3 YEARS AHEAD! PLYMOUTH

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1958