| Virginia Bar Association, Virginia State Bar Association - Bar associations - 1901 - 468 pages
...great trust as upon the fidelity and learning of courts or the honesty and intelligence of juries. '' There is, perhaps, no profession, after that of the...many temptations beset the path to swerve from the line of strict integrity; in which so many delicate and difficult questions of duty are constantly... | |
| Virginia Bar Association, Virginia State Bar Association - Bar associations - 1900 - 422 pages
...great trust as upon the fidelity and learning of courts or the honesty and intelligence of juries. "There is, perhaps, no profession, after that of the...certainly, without any exception, no profession in which 90 many temptations beset the path to swerve from the line of strict integrity; in which so many delicate... | |
| Virginia State Bar Association - Bar associations - 1905 - 324 pages
...and intelligence of juries. "There is, perhaps, no profession, after that of the sacred mininstry, in which a high-toned morality is more imperatively...many temptations beset the path to swerve from the line of strict integrity; in which so many delicate and difficult questions of duty are constantly... | |
| Jahan Ramazani - Literary Criticism - 1994 - 436 pages
...undertaker. In its first code of ethics (1884), the National Funeral Directors' Association stated: "There is, perhaps, no profession, after that of the...morality is more imperatively necessary than that of a funeral director's."8 As the "sacred ministry" began to lose its monopoly over the dead, the elegist... | |
| Bruce A. Kimball - Business & Economics - 1996 - 462 pages
...Lecturing to the law department at the University of Pennsylvania in 1854, George Sharswood stated: "There is, perhaps, no profession, after that of the...more imperatively necessary than that of the law." Unwilling to concede higher moral aspirations even to the clergy, a future Chief Justice of the Wisconsin... | |
| Brenton D. Faber - Business & Economics - 2002 - 236 pages
...directors as professionals. In 1884, funeral directors adopted their first code of ethics, which boasted, "There is perhaps no profession after that of the sacred ministry in which high toned morality is more imperatively necessary than that of funeral directors."1 Yet, as Jessica... | |
| Gary Laderman - Social Science - 2003 - 306 pages
...mission and solemnity. In the original text of the code, the closing section states: "There is, pethaps, no profession, after that of the sacred ministry,...morality is more imperatively necessary than that of a funeral director's. High moral principles are his only safe guide.'"' Although details of this code... | |
| Virginia Bar Association, Virginia State Bar Association - Bar associations - 1889 - 198 pages
...great trust, as upon the fidelity and learning of courts, or the honesty and intelligence of juries. "There is, perhaps, no profession after that of the...integrity ; in which so many delicate and difficult qustions of duty are constantly arising. There are pitfalls and man-traps at every step, and the mere... | |
| Maryland State Bar Association - Bar associations - 1899 - 198 pages
...counselors and advocates. Their character must not only be without a stain, but without suspicion. In short, there is, perhaps, no profession, after that of the...more imperatively necessary than that of the law." Of every member of the Bar Shakespeare's encomium should be well deserved: "First his integrity Stands... | |
| Canada. Parliament. House of Commons - Canada - 1888 - 792 pages
...giving the order, and it should be considered a professional obligation, and payment made at once. There is, perhaps, no profession after that of the...morality is more imperatively necessary than that of a funeral director's. High moral principles are his only safe-guide. CONSTITUTION. ' Section 1. This... | |
| |