Show p I Professional Etiquette I I. I IT T is indeed true huo that the large flat feet of or the I average gu police offic officer r often conceal a soul which I overflows o with the gentler emotions It is still more I true that members of or investigating boards may frequently fre Ire work ork their superior intelligence into a state I of hopeless e exhaustion h in the expectation of getting from the large flat minds of patrolmen an nn inkling as ast asto asto t to what is wrong with police departments generally and some one department in ill particular and only find I in 11 the end that policemen who wh know and auel policemen who know w dont don't talk blk After all the police are arc only following in t this 1 5 I matter the precedent established years yeal'S ago by br the theother other learned professions A ph physician h holds it a I point of honor never nc to let the ingenuous public know if a confrere makes some scintillating and colossal I error If this thio is not to be found in the oath of lapius lalUs it is only because even at that early day there was no need to put it there A lawyer will not take a case SQ against another lawyer except in cases of c extreme provocation or great hunger An architect would almost as soon think well of another architect as 38 let the public know in what ill iII esteem he should rightfully be held Why then should not our faithful faithful faith faith- f ful l police adopt this code of honor a and ul hide the V grizzly secrets of their profession from the public Montreal Star I Ji t Even the most belligerent of the Turks who know anything about their country's desperate plight would have hare no appetite for more fighting if the they could escape with enough of their European possessions possessions pos pos- 1 sessions to keep the frontier well out of sight from i the hilltop in Constantinople t I Iia Colonel Munsey apparently is not among the thc I pc rs c n rf that tha are blessed 1 I i I I C 1 H 1 |