Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 278, Decatur, Adams County, 25 November 1958 — Page 15

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER is, INI

Philip D. Armour, founder of the meat packing empire which bears his name, was born on a small farm near Oneida, N.Y., in 1832.

ca, buster brown a * Haflich & Morrissey !b ■>—.. K.. or '. >».“ ’ / IM / MB k ! /gOI j«S ■. l i ■ML * I ■ i r s 5 I .•... '*yW2.' f W ’ =#i / ,< "'U— nil 5 i ' v s ’ iirw V J/t r r i ' ' J 'M- ft< >•: - A' * yl , k * tV/ F * v *~* 3< ~~ »~ -i_ i a aiBA. w ? Bußi * a>2 mMSh' x w ■ I ■ - ...'.. »t G 5 Just what they wanted, ™ z ' w k a * they need... t perfect-fitting Buster Brown shoes E ' When your children wear Buster Browns * —“J you have confidence from knowing their * 18k growing feet are getting perfect fit and com- * fort, and we fit accurately with our 6 -p° int £ fitting plan. ?.I B ■ J * $2.99 AS ADVERTISED IN I "■■■J * To | $9.99 According to Size ■ 5 .- * B RBVT BMM ■ I p« BBCATUR - BLUFFTON 5 * SHOP FRIDAY & SATURDAY TILL 9 P. M. Lt

s • I I I I t 7 S A ”Cjn i / flEKanik / wl g P Here merry news for girls and '&■ b °y s ’ Santa's here with a bagfull of toys, ' W $ i iSPSBIIBBb .r // S W. f with dolls and bikes and games galore, for wonderful / / S \ f J' / 5 \ presents by the score. So hurry to Toyland, every- Jr A\' T) one « We're sure you'll have a lot of fun. . ZKr>/I - A \ 1 Nfej I BOWERS HARDWARE CO. 236 WEST MONROE STREET . DECATUR, IND. | “FREE PARKING FOR OUR CUSTOMERS ON EAST SIDE OF BUILDING”

1 Thare are about 40,000 individ-l ual companies in the U.S. which supply the nation’s homes, businesses and factories with fuel oil for heating.

The first automobile to travel more than a mile a minute sped down a straightway course on Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y., on Nov 16, iwi.

THE DECATUR DAttV DIfiMdCRAT, DtcATUA,

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Physicians Forget Patients Humans Values Os Humility And Human Touch By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor NEW YORK fUPD-In this day of wonderful scientific know-how physicians can become so enraptured with their knowledge of diseases and of fancy medications with which to cure them, that they forget their patients are human beings. Thus spoke Dr. David Woolfolk Barrow of the Kaiser Foundation Hospital. San Francisco, in lecturing his fellows on the values of humility and the human touch in the practice of a highly scientific medicine. “The human body has a prodigious capacity for recovery,” he told them. “This, added to the seSf-limited nature of many diseases, means that almost any therapeutic regime—in fact none at all—will often eventuate in the patient’s recovery.” Beware of Drugs As a matter of fact, he continued, there is "a real danger in the administration of some generally harmless agent (drug) alleged to shorten morbidity or pre- ■ vent complications to which any 'specific patient may be unduly sensitive.” i He cited some of the grave I “side effects” which can be

caused by some of medical science’s potent new drugs in the “unduly sensitive,” and added: “The number of such tragedies is small, but if the agent is not really needed, why use any? When the patient’s comfort is the sole consideration, simple medications suffice.” Scientific doctors were also warned against "the little joke.” It is all very well to put patients at their with a joke, but jokes go astray. “Interest, concern and kindliness can all be expressed with some formality and are then less apt to be misinterpreted.” he said. Enlighten Fatient He took no positive stand on the question of what a doctor should tell a patient about the patient's condition. “Where the disease is a simple one and the patient’s reasonable co-operation can be anticipated, it doesn't make very much difference what the patient is told—except that every patient likes to be told something,” he said. . “When relief of the requires the patient’s co-opera-tion, it is impossible to know whether this can be obtained better by a detailed explanation of the disease and all its complications, or by a direct order.” But when any patient refuses treatment for a condition that could be fatal without treatment, that patien "should be told the truh as the physician believes it ■to be.” And the doctor should . keep after him until he does aci cept treatment, and "not leave him derelict.”

LORDS Christmas SALE NOW ON! t 299 .».. SENSATIONAL VALUES IN Holiday <1 DRESSES .1 HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM Selection Sizes 7-15, 10-20, 14*2 to 44Y 2 Repeating A Sell Out! tNEW 100% ALL WOOL QQ WINTER I J COATS |/| up 1 e FLEECES • SPLASHES Values to •Fl BREN ES SSO I GIFT SUGGESTIONS At Lords Famous Low-Low Prices | LOVELY fI.OO ORLON .99 SLIPS I „ Sweaters 1- j j! ELEGANT ■ Newest Holiday :? Gowns | Blouses ooC CHILDRENS GIFT WONDERS j *• GIRLS BLOUSES •GIRLS POLO SHIRTS XX(* •LOVELY GLOVES WV BEAUTIFUL dj .99 DRESSES 1DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON ALL CHILDREN'S WINTER COATS BUY NOW AND SAVE! MAKE SOME LITTLE GIRL HAPPY*" WITH A LOVELY TOY FROM LORDS Doll N’ Toy Riot 88c I VI VV V ■ 127 2nd LUnUd Decatur ’ r

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