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(15) On...... 1924, The Connecticut Milk Producers' Association shall furnish the Dealer with a statement of all fees, dues (including those for advertising) and assessments payable to said Association from members who appear as Producers in this agreement. The Dealer shall thereupon deduct the total amount shown thereby to be payable from each such Producer from the first payment thereafter becoming due to him and shall remit the same to said Association within twenty (20) days from the receipt of such statement. In connection with and to

such remittance, the Dealer shall add from his own funds the sum of fifty (50) cents per cow for each cow owned by each Producer as shown below. The Dealer's contributions, as aforesaid, and the deductions from each Producer's remittance for advertising purposes shall be forwarded by said Association to the Secretary of The Connecticut Dairy and Food Council, to be expended by it for advertising milk.

(16) The Dealer shall market all of the milk possible in the highest classes set forth in Paragraph 9. No milk shall be purchased by him on or in accordance with this form of agreement, except from members of The Connecticut Milk Producers' Association. He shall have the right, however, to add to this agreement subsequent milk offerings of other members of said Association.

When a dealer is purchasing fluid milk from more than one Producers' Association, or other market, the percentage of the entire product attributable to and coming under this agreement shall be ascertained for each accounting period. The percentage of the total of all receipts and of all sales shall be pro rated between the Producers hereunder and all other sources of supply in determining the amounts to be paid for in the several classes.

(17) If and when a disaster occurs in consequence of "An act of God," such as fire, death, flood, disease in cattle, or other catastrophe beyond the control of the parties suffering therefrom, and while the same continues, the parties hereto shall be respectively relieved pro tanto from the obligations of this agree

ment.

(18) This agreement shall be effective on. ... 1924, and shall terminate on March 31, 1925.

(19) This agreement shall not be binding upon any of the contracting parties until signed by the Producers and the Dealer, and approved in writing by the Manager of The Connecticut Milk Producers' Association.

(20) Each original agreement shall be kept on file in the office of The Connecticut Milk Producers' Association, acces

sible at all reasonable times to the signers thereof; and a copy shall be furnished upon request to any signer.

(21) In witness whereof, the parties to this Agreement have hereunto set their hands, on the dates opposite their names:

DENTISTRY

AMERICAN DENTAL ASSOCIATION

Adopted July 2, 1923:

CODE OF ETHICS

Section 1. In his dealings with patients and with the profession, the conduct of the dentist should be in accordance with the Golden Rule, both in its letter and in its spirit.

Section 2. It is unprofessional for a dentist to advertise by handbills, posters, circulars, cards, signs, or in newspapers or other publications, calling attention to special methods of practice or claiming excellence over other practitioners, or to use display advertisements of any kind. It is also unprofessional to publish reports of cases on certificates in the public prints. This does not exclude a practitioner from using professional cards of suitable size with name, titles, address and telephone number, printed in modest type, nor having the same character of card in a newspaper. Neither does it prevent a practitioner who confines himself to a specialty from merely announcing his specialty on his professional card.

Section 3. It is unprofessional for dentists to pay or accept commissions on fees for professional services, or for radiograms, or on prescriptions or other articles supplied to patients by pharmacists or others.

Section 4. One dentist should not disparage the services of another to a patient. Criticism of operations which are apparently defective may be unjust through lack of knowledge of the conditions under which they were performed. But the welfare of the patient is paramount to every other consideration, and should be conserved to the utmost of the practitioner's ability. If he finds indisputable evidence that a patient is suffering from previous faulty treatment, it is his duty to institute correct treatment at once, doing it with as little comment as possible and in such a manner as to avoid reflection on his predecessors.

Section 5. If a dentist is consulted in an emergency by the patient of another practitioner who is temporarily absent from his office, or by a patient who is away from home, the duty of the dentist so consulted is to relieve the patient of any immediate disability by temporary service only and then refer the patient back to the regular dentist.

Section 6. When a dentist is called in consultation by a fellow practitioner, he should hold the discussions in the consultation as confidential, and under no circumstances should he accept charge of the case without the request of the dentist who has been attending it.

Section 7. The dentist should be morally, mentally and physically clean. He should be honest in all his dealings with his fellow man, as comports with the honor and dignity of a cultured and professional gentleman.

DETECTIVE AGENCIES

INTERNATIONAL SECRET SERVICE ASSOCIATION

PREAMBLE TO CONSTITUTION

Whereas, the profession of a private detective in its highest development is an invaluable adjunct to the community supplementing, as it does, the organized police power, and extending its beneficial influence in channels which, by reason of local and legal impediments, are beyond the jurisdiction of the police. And whereas, we, the undersigned, duly and legally constituted members of the profession of private detectives: in an earnest and sincere desire to elevate the standards of the profession and to prevent abuses; have deemed it essential that we at once combine and organize an association in which only those of established integrity shall be allowed membership; that the best interests of the entire public and of the profession of private detective may, by combined activity, be conserved....

RULES

No member of this association shall employ any person who has been reported by another member of this association as being dishonest.

No member of this association shall resort to dishonorable means of obtaining business, nor shall he make a practice of censuring the business methods or efficiency of competitors who are members of this association, or those who are not members and who are not known or suspected of being dishonest and dishonorable.

The Secretary of the association shall compile a list of dishonorable and dishonest agencies and operatives, which he shall keep up to date, and shall furnish each member of the association with a copy thereof.

Each member shall forward to the Secretary his, or her, photograph, that complete record of all members may be had.

Each applicant for membership in this association must furnish all data concerning his business, as is deemed necessary by the investigating committee, to make the necessary investigation with the view of either accepting or rejecting such application. Each applicant, upon being allowed a membership in the

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