Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 08, 1913, Image 2

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    po was
Bellefonte, Pa., August 8, 1913.
FROM INDIA.
By One on Medical Duty in that Far Eastern
Country. Intense Heat and Torrent-Like Rains.
Beautiful Sunsets. Phenomenal Growth of
Vegetation, The Sick All Cared For.
Dear Home Folk:
! have the tonga stop and
| your nurse carrying basin, kettle of
| water and a small bag with soap and tow-
el. You walk down a few narrow
| 28d asvand 3 Sew Corgers 1 be shown
lino a room in which are about fifty
g
JHANSI, AUGUST 2nd. | men, seemingly doing nothing, and ona |
The days of my India living are most-
ly one long continuous line of humorous
happenings, and many times I have (in
feelings) gone over in the corner and
laughed to see myself as my western
friends might see me. This isa queer,
queer place in which to live and were it
not for the pesky weather and mosqui-
toes, it might be a rather nice place; but
those two things are typical of india, at
least central India. 1 for one could
never truly enjoy myself where the very
sight of a pretty day makes the water
trickle from every pore in body in
anticipation of later heat, and a sing in
my ear makes my hand fly upward in a
vain attempt to slaughter the animal,
while visions of all sorts of malarial bugs
dance before my eyes.
The very first snake that has had the
pleasure of making me jump, flew across
my path yesterday; he was a long, black
beauty, out for a call on his lady love,
for nothing else could have made him
move so quickly. I also was moving
quickly, as I was angry at having to be
kept waiting for something I wanted
from the hospital. We came from paths
at right angles and I must confess for
once the lady retired and that most hur-
riedly while the gentleman, with scarce-
ly a wriggle in my direction (for which I
| gloriously cool day, (comparatively
| speaking) shown into a little dark room
| (not a ray of light) about eight by six
i feet, to find your patient and two other
women, tw" men, a lamp and a
stove full ¢’ red-hot coals, the pa
covered with a blanket and all of
outside fifty that could crowd in
sit
:
them to bring her to the hospital, which
they agreed to do but I guess they were
| afraid of too much fresh air for she has
i not arrived yet and so is either much
better or dead for she was in a critical
condition when I saw her; but one can
only suggest what to do in this country,
not force anything, and you finally
g
¢
mit to the “dastur” (rule) of the coun:
try, for they generally do as they please
regardless of what is good for them.
The mosquitoes are singing a good.
night lullaby and it is so plain I wonder
that you cannot read this set to their mu-
sic, but I am afraid of the bugs, they are
| such good malarial carriers.
(Continued next week.)
Candy Kept the Baby Partners Quiet
During the Ceremony.
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§8
|
| Four hundred marriages were per- human
was thankful) tore on to keep his ap. | formed simultaneously at the last wed- |
pointment. [I hope she don't live on our
compound and they will soon go to
house-keeping at her home. (To con-
fess, I think I let out a shriek like an In-
dian and jumped back three feet, maybe
more, but I surely didn't wait to measure
the distance to see whether I had broken
any records.)
The sun-sets these watery days are
truly magnificent; masses of gray, blue
or purplish clouds line the west, then the
sun sends out a touch and lo, a brilliant
rose-pink edging witha long streak
showing along the horizon, changes the
dull sky; a bit of gold and pale green is
added just beyond and overhead, the
white fleecy clouds against the pale blue
vault seem almost commonplace. The
colors are so different to the ones we see
at home that I wish for an artist's brush
and talent, to show them to you; but
they pale even as I write this and the
evening twilight seems to make the na-
tive's drumming and game-playing noises
come to my ears with greater distinct-
ness for as you know, this bungalow is
but a short distance from the city and
Sunday seems to be the one especial
game-day of the native. They have
adopted many of the English customs
and with them, their games of hockey
and football.
ding celebration at Surat among mem-
bers of the Lewa Kunbi caste.
i
None of the brides was more than
| twelve years of age. the majority be-
| ing from one to seven years oid. while
| the bridegrooms varied from three to
! nine. Most of the contracting parties
| sat or lay on the laps of their parents |
during the ceremony and were given
sweets to keep them quiet.
twelve years.
These baby brides, of course, do not
join their husbands when they are
married. They wait until they reach
| the age of ten or eleven. when there
is a second marriage. Should a baby
bride's husband die before she reaches
the age for the second marriage she
becomes a widow and has to remain
so all her life. In such cases the
widow at once loses caste. Her orna-
ments are taken off her, and she he-
comes a sort of outcast. hardly treat-
ed, looked down upon and generally
made a household drudge.
The husband. on the other hand.
should his baby bride die before the
second marriage, may marry again. In
fact. he is expected to do so within a
Bombay Cor. Philadelphia Ledger.
A Sincere Provider.
{| Bobbie A. was visiting with a neigh-
i
few months of the death of the bride.—
bor while his mother was in the city i
I don’t believe the East Indian is ever | on a shopping trip. Bobble and two
quiet; he is about as noisy as a lot of | other children played at housekeeping
college boys while he is playing games | in the backyard, and in the course of |
and the other night as we walked along | the housekeeping Maria believed she
the road one man came down another | needed supplies. :
way all alone, talking at the top of his| “Bobbie. you go for some ice cream’
voice; Miss Morrison said he was scold- | and lemons at the grocery,” command. .
ing about something and as far as we ed Maria, and Bobbie obediently trot-
ted into the alley at the rear, as Maria
could hear the scolding went on. Such believed. “jes’ playin’ he was goln® to
a funny waste of energy, and there is the ve
grocery. '
mighty little of that commodity to waste Ten winutes later. Mrs. 8. with’
in this country. I have never loved my | whom Bobble was visiting, went to
bed, hot though it is, half as much in| the telephone, and the voice of her |
any other country and I don't know but
grocer inquired:
thatit is all real laziness, or maybe a| I guess Bobbie has lost the money
mere following of a bad example.
for the ice cream and lemons he came
Last week the tea party come on a too
hot day and I decided to refuse with
thanks; you can imagine my delight when
the two nurses who had gone came in
with a huge tray of things for me, four
apples, three pears, bananas, candy,
cake, crackers, bread and butter and
lastly, a gift—of a sailor hat (because I
nearly always wear my sailor in the aft-
ernoon) about large enough for a ten.
year-old child and having the effect of
making one look like a monkey. Ichuck-
led and sent back a “salaam” gave the
various things to the servants and will
donate the hat to the first worthy per-
son] meet. This was all covered up
with a Turkish towel which I would not
say was particularly clean. Entirely too
European to be interesting.
Tuesday morning.—There is too much
rain for comfort; not gentle rains, but
mad, torrent-like down-pours happening
all the time, either day or night, and al-
most always just when you mostly want
to go some place in decent looking
clothes or wanting to play tennis. The
tennis court after five minute's rain looks
like a fishing pond, and the back garden
made me long for a boat, so nice and
deep was the water in a few minutes,
but it all runs away almost as fast as it
comes, and the only thing I see perma.
nent is the almost phenomenal growth
of vegetation; one could scarcely imag-
ine such profuse leafing and flowering
could result in such a short time.
I must not forget to tell you that for
the past two days I have been able to
wear clothes with comfort and it surely
makes you truly desire to accomplish
things when so nice and cool, and that is
unusual in India.
I went out on a sick call this morning,
and wish you could have gone with me,
I know that overlooking flies, etc., the
drive through the largest of the native
after.
pockets. Or did you want the things
charged?" —Indianapolis News.
“Stagger” Oil.
until November a small fish called
stickleback is caught in considerable
quantities off the island of Duna-
munde, at the mouth of the Dwina
river. In the gulf of Riga, and also
near the island of Semgallen, in the
Dwina river, near Dunaberg. Russia.
The fishermen make an oil from this
fish which is very useful In the leather
and harness industry as a preserva-
tive. The name of this fieb is “Stich-
ling” in German. the common name is
“kaserage.” and in some communities
| tt is called “stagger.”
'
Wisdom and Love.
How shal. we help the life of the
future? Simply by putting wisdom
and love into our own life and into
human affairs. All genuine virtue is
vital and vitalizing. It carries in it
the power of God to conquer evil and
establish righteousness, It is a Hving
seed. holding in itself interminable
harvests of its own kind. Planted in
human society. it will bear fruits of
welfare through the centuries.—Charles
G. Ames.
Stood by His Theory.
Thales, the ancient philosopher, de-
clared that there was no difference be-
tween life and death. “Why. then.”
eried one of those to whom the remark
was made. “don't you put an end to
your life?" “Because.” was the reply.
“there is ne difference.”
———
His Mind Occupied.
“Sir!” she exclaimed when he kissed
ager. "You forget yourself.”
“Possibly.” he replied calmly. “But
I can think of myself any old time.
Just now you are accupying my undi-
vided attention.” ‘Hoston Transcript
I can't find any change in his' gents itself. Its ana
From the beginning of September
F. NOTES.
-The silo today furnishes the most
economical, the safest the best
for feed-
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the usiness they would think it a waste
of time. For reason they are always
“branching out” on a grander scale, not
giving red to he |sakage that is so con-
stantly goingon. The fable that for
the want of the nail the shoe was lost,
for the want of the shoe the horse was
lost, and for the want of the horse the
rider was lost, is applicable to all kinds
of business. A loose screw may wreck a
train; cause the loss of a
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“Convince a man against his will and
be je of the (Sune opinion Sei
t mportant that hogs have a
mixed ration, and in feeding a balanced
ration not only is profit realized, but the
The caste only celebrates every ten or hog’s health and happiness are protected.
A reccommended ration for hogs is
composed of two parts whole corn, one
part shorts and one part ground corn,
with about one-eighth of entire ration,
by weight, of oil meal, To this add about
ju a pound of tankage daily for each
It is conclusive that the use of some
product, like tankage or oil meal, that is
rich in protein does lessen the cost of
making gains, and under certain circum-
stances it will lessen it even to a greater
extent than generally estimated—a sav-
15g 0F.40 Suite pot 100 pounds gained by
ng tankage. Especially is this true
are started on a heavy ration
at an ea y age. If they are growing and
fattening at same time it will pay,
and pay well, to use anywhere from 5 to
10 per cent. of protein feed in conjunc-
tion with corn.
Sheep and Their Care.—While
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' what news the vessel brought.
Arizona's World Wonder.
A Little Lesson In Lawn Mowing.
! oe
What Makes Flowers Blue.
The Grand canyon cannot be deserfd- ~~ Grass should never be cut shorter Of all the wany substances that are
ed in weasured terms. Every beholder
sees it in au different form. just as the
rolling clouds suggest different resem-
blances to the eyes of the beholder. Be.
gin with the thought of the canyon
thirteen miles wide. a mile deep. the
Colorado river 200 feet wide imprison-
od down in the depths between lofty
walls of weather stained granite and
rushing wildly on its way.
$0 deep that only now and then can
you get a glimpse of what looks like a
little dark ribbon of gray. Above the
black granite walls of the river you
see what you can easily imagine to be
row after row of red brick skyscrapers
projecting from the sides of the canyon
at acute angles and always pinnacled
by Imposing towers. :
The beight of those prodigious sky-
scrapers and towers cannot be meas-
ured Ly the imagination. They seem
to rise a few hundred feet. In reality
they tower thousuuds of feet from the |
foundation walls. The colors are mar- |
velous.— Leslie's. |
|
Bell of the Old Oregon.
The old bell which on Oct. 22, 1850,
tolled from the sidewheel steamer Ore-
gon the news to San Francisco that
Californian bad been admitted to the
Union ix now a part of the exhibit in
the pioneer room of the Golden Gate
park museum. This heirloom of Cali-
fornia history was the ship's bell of the
steamer Oregon. which sailed from
Panama for Sun Francisco soon after
this state had been admitted to the
Union. Sept. 9, 1850. When the steam-
er sailed through the Golden Gate on
the morning of Oct. 22, 1850. and ap-
proached Meiggs wharf a sailor tolled
the bell incessantly until scores of
small boats came alongside and learned
The
people of San Francisco then heard for
the first time that their state had been
admitted into the federal union. and
festivities ensued. The bel! bears the
inscription “Oregon, 1848. New York.”
: =Argonaut. |
|
China and the Telegraph.
China wus confronted with a stiff
problem at the introduction of the tele-
graph. It was hopeless to think of
combining the western Morse dots and
dashes in sufficient variety to express '
the 3.000 or 4.000 characters used by i
a fairly literate Chinese. not to speak |
of the entire 40.000 or so known to the |
highly educated men of that race. Aj
phonetic system was barred by the
fact that the same Chinese monosylla- |
ble means different things. according |
to the context or intonation and also |
by the diversity of dialects. A Dane,
Professor Schellerup. found the solu- |
tion, The 7.000 characters most com- |
monly used are given their equivalents
in a code of numerals and these nu-
merals are telegraphed. Thus. “cash”
in the code Is 6.030. If any one want-
ed to telegraph the number 6.030 itself
be would send the code equivalents |
of the words “six,” “thousand” and
‘thirty.”
Animals and Earthquakes. |
One of the mysteries still unsolved |
is that of the sense by which the low-
er animals become aware of the ap- |
proach of earthquakes. For three or
four days before a series of earth.
quakes at Guadalajara, Mexico, the
many parrots of the city showed
: great and unusual restlessness, and
| during the period of disturbance the
| increased cries of the birds gave warn- |
i
r of Rats also became alarmed. fleeing
i
——
. | mie.
ing of the nearness of the worst shocks,
from the city before the earthquakes |
came. Supersensitiveness to faint
shocks hardly give satisfactory expla.
nation, for modern selsmographs are
very sensitive, and it is quite unlikely
that tremors too slight to be recorded
would be feit so strongly as to give
alarm.
Forgot His Troubles.
As a rule, in Inter years we remem-
ber our pleasant experiences more eas-
fly than our troubles. | once visited
a village where 1 found the oldest in-
habitant. a frail old man, who regaled
me for an hour with quaint and com-
fcal reminiscences of kis youth. With
each fresh anecdote his reedy laugh
broke out. It appeared as though his
life had been one long comedy. “Did
you never have any troubles?" I asked.
“Whoy. yes. to be sure,” said the pa-
triarch, “but Of've forgotten all they,
‘cept there was anything funny about
im." —London Standard. ;
Obeyed the Order.
Bobbie — 1 beard you got a letter
from your brother? Joey—Indeed I
did! Bobble—Was there anything im-
portant in the letter? Joey—Well, I
didn’t open it. for on the outside of
the envelope was printed. “Please re-
turn in five days.” so | sent it back to
him.—New York Globe.
Heard Obscurely,
“What does Harold call his motor
boat?" asked Maude.
“1 can't say exactly.” replied May-
“But I'm sure what he called it
when be was trying to start the engine
wasn't the name painted on the bow.”
- Washington Star.
Seasickness. :
An Italian physician, who claims
know, says that “people who are sub-
ject to seasickness should use atropine.
The injection of one milligram of atro-
pinum sulfuricum will keep seasick
subjects well and free from the un-
pleasant symptoms.”
A Climber.
“Miss Nurich appears to be quite a
society bud.”
“Yes: a bud of one of the climbing
varieties of plants.”—Buffalo Express.
Men prize the thine nngained@ more
than It is. Shakespeare, {
It is buried
than two inches on either new or old
lawns, for its roots are left unprotect-
ed from the scorching sun when it is
shorter, and this means that dry or
very hot weather will burn it sear and
brown. Mow often. even as often as
every fourth or fifth day. if necessary
to keep it at this height. especially on
8 new lawn. and never rake away the
clippings. They form the best possible
mulch and fertilizer and are so short
when mowing is done as often and as
regularly as it should be that they sift
down among the standing grass Im-
mediately and are lost to sight. Re-
seed all bare spots every sprirg and
take out weeds as fast as they appear.
peppering the space which is thus left
bare with seed. whatever the season.
This is the sort of care and watchful-
ness that achieve perfection with the
minimum of labor. promptness being
its chief feature.—From “Suburban
Gardens.” hy Grace Tabor.
Stars and Stripes In the Flag.
The flag of thirteen stars and thir
teen stripes was adopted by congress
on June 14. 1777. The stars were at
first arranged in a circle. but a few
years later were placed in rows. After
the admission of Vermont and Ken-
tucky to the Union the number of
stars and stripes was increased to fif-
teen each on May 1. 1795. the law to
that effect heing signed by President
Washington Jan. 13. 1794. The flag re-
mained in that form through our wars
with France. with Tripoli and with
England. on the first voyage of an
American warship around Cape Horn
and the Cape of Good Hepe and in the
writing of Key's “Star Spangled Ban- |
ner.” On April 4, 1818, President Mon- |
roe signed the present flag law, and
on July 4. 1818, the national ensign
was made to consist. as at present. of
thirteen stripes and of a number of
stars equal to the number of states.—
New York Tribune.
Tanbark as a Fuel. |
Perhaps the most important of waste
fuels in the United States has been
spent tanbark. A rough estimate would
indicate that this material generated
a few years ago an amount of steam
that would have otherwise required
the yearly consumption of about 2,000,
000 tons of high grade coal. Yet this
valuable fuel was at one time consid-
ered a mere detriment and an expense
to the leather industry. It was dis-
posed of by dumping it into rivers, fill
ing in waste ground and by making
roads with it, often necessitating the
paying out of large sums for its dispo-
sition. This strikingly Ilillustrates a
case of how the improvement of a fur
nace converted a hitherto supposed
combustible into a valuable waste fuel,
of the autocombustible class and
shows how an enormous waste was
converted into an equally great econ-,
omy.—Engineering Magazine.
1
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|
Fooling the Fox. i
The expression “as cunning as a fox”
has passed into the language: but. as;
is the case with most extra cute gen-
tlemen. there are ogcasions when Mas-
ter Reynard overreaches himself. Any
visitor to the country who has ever,
examined a chicken house in the wid-|
dle of a field has probably noticed two
or three short pieces of chain hanging
over the hole by which the fowls en-
ter. Although they form no obstacle
to the birds. who push their way in|
without the faintest difficulty. they will|
fnfailibly prevent a fox from raiding.
the house. The latter in his superior]
wisdom takes them to be a trap for his
eapture, and although he may sit out-
side hungrily “licking his chops” noth-|
ing will induce him to put his head
through the chains. Truly a case of
a little learning being a dangerous
thing.— Pearson's Weekly.
Caesaria, or New Jersey.
What is now the state of New Jer-
sey was part of the territory claimed
by the Dutch under ihe name of New
Netherlands, Before the English seiz-
ed the country something had been
done to settle this part. although it
had not developed as might have been
expected in the fifty years of Dutch
occupancy. The Duke of York, as pro-
prietor of the territory newly acquired.
ceded in 1664 this southern portion ly-
ing between the Delaware river and
the sea to Lord John Berkeley and Sir
Carteret. The new province
named Caesaria. or New Jersey,
honor of Carteret. who as governor
the island of Jersey had heroically
nded it against the parliamentari.
during the great rebellion.
+
cd
in
oo Dainty to Wed.
was a curious reason that moved
u Brummel to cancel his engage-
to marry. A friend asked him
he had ken off the match.
“What could I do, my dear fellow.”
the exquisite replied. “but cut the con-
nection? 1 discovered that Lady Mary
actually ate cabbage.”
Te
Not an Added Attraction.
Neither does it make any difference
how brilliant a woman may be, she
can't make much of a success at en-
tertaining a young man who has come
to see her daughter.—Galveston News.
If They Could See It.
If people could see stagnant air as
they can see stagnant water, with the
slime and disease obvious to the naked
eye, the fresh air fad would be uni-
versal.—Collier's.
Fine Combination.
The sweetest music in the world is a
duet played upon the horn of plenty
and the trumpet of fame.--Philadel-
phia Record.
The events of fortune are unexpect-
ed and therefore can never be gnarded
against by men Asioniens
rombived to make a flower. what is
the particular one to which is due the
blue. red or yellow color? Why, for
example. are gentinus blue and roses
red. und why hus no one ever seen a
red gentian or a blue rose? The chem.
ist can tell us. Tukiug the plants that
produce really blue—unot violet—flow-
ers. he considers which of their con-
stituents Is peculiar to them. True
blue exists in veronicus, salvias, ver-
benius. basil, solanum, penstewon, ne-
mophila. convolvulus, borage. hound’'s
tongue und in all the orders allied to
the geuntiunaceae and compositae. but
never in lupins. vetches. peas, gerani-
ums, hollyhocks, primuilas, roses, bal-
sams, flax, etc. All the blue produe-
ing plants just named have a tannin in
them which does not exist in the oth.
ers. This is called caffetannin. It is
found in coffee. but not in tea. Tea
contains another form of tannin, which
‘is the sume us that which makes ca-
mellins red. —Exchange.
Caring For His Health,
Not muny people guard their health
so carefully as Sir Tatton Sykes. who
in winter wore five or six coats when
out riding und shed some of them as
he became warmer. Prince Poutiakine,
however, took even stronger precau-
tions uguinst illness. If there was a
touch of cold in the air he had fires lit
in his grounds before .venturing to
stroll in them. His waistcoats were
made in two separate pieces, joined at
the sides by buttons, so that he could
take them off or put on additional ones
without removing his coat. If caught
in a shower he sheltered himself with
an umbrella nearly two feet wide,
which came down below his waist and
was pierced with little windows. In
very hot weather the prince wore boots
coated with tin as a protection against
mad dogs, and carried sponges soaked
with vinegar in his shirt front to ward
off unpleasant smells. — Manchester
Guardian,
Moon Blunders,
The moon. it seems, is responsible
for more authors’ “howlers” even than
nightingales. Buroness Orezy in “Pet-
ticoat Government” draws a beautiful
picture of a crescent moon rising over
the treetops in the far eastern sky at
11 o'clock on a June evening. The pie-
ture is so nice that it is a pity to de-
stroy it. but the invention is prepos-
terous. Lucas Malet errs in a similar
fashion in one of her novels. Miss
Stevens in “The Veil" speaks of the
new moon being seen at sunset pray-
er, “a thin slip in the east.” A little
study would show that when the moon
rises at sunset it must necessarily be
a full moon or nearly so. In the same
book the i'ull moon rises and sets again
within a period of two hours. whereas
the full moon is. of necessity, an all
night moon.—Book News Monthly.
Little Economies.
A postage stamp will purchase you
the use of a dollar for 122 days. Three
stamps equal the interest on a dollar
for one whole year. Little economies
rarely enter into the calculations of the
average man or woman — those who
earn from $500 to $5.000 a year,
Men who smoke cigars easily con-
sume three a day. costing not under 30
cents—enough to pay for the use of
$1.825 for that day! If that $1.825 were
put to work in an intelligent way it
might help win bread for the rest of
the family.
Mr. Common Man might take a les-
son from Big Business in trivial econo-
mies. As Franklin quoted:
A penny saved is twopence clear;
A pin a day's a groat a year.
—Philadelphia Ledger.
The Bath as a Tonic.
The bath recommended by Uncle
Sam to the army boys as a means of
invigorating tired nerves and muscles
and promoting an appetite after a hard
day's drill immedintely suggests itself
as the very thing for women. It
should be preceded Lr; brushing the
teeth and drinking half a pint of cold
water, so that the body may be clean
within as well as without. This done,
the body from head to waist is rapid-
ly swabbed with a sponge. repeatedly
wrung out of cold water, after which
ft is vigorously rubbed with a Turkish
towel. This completed, the upper part
of the body is dressed and the lower
part is given the same treatment.
Such a bath is equal to a tonic.—Kan-
sas Farmer.
Cook In Small Vessels.
Meats of all kinds, unless intended
for soup. should be cooked in small
vessels. To put a small roast in a large
pan is wasteful. as there is rapid loss
by evaporation. and a large proportion
is dried too much. A stew in too large
a kettle will require more water to
cover than should be used.—Exchange.
Couldn't Lose Him.
“I refused my husband more than a
dozen times before he finally persuaded
me to be his.”
“How did he get you at last?’
“Why. you see. he got an offer to go
to another city and had made up his
mind to accept it." — Chicago Record-
Herald.
The Doctor's Dues.
“The world owes a great deal to
medical science.”
“And it will be the last debt paid,”
declared the doctor somewhat bitterly.
~Louisville Courier-lournal.
Wise Girl.
He—What would you say if I weve
to kiss you? She-1 don't know. That
sort of speech should always be extem-
poraneous. — Boston Transcript,
What an inferior man seeks is im
others. What a superior man seeks is
in himself. —RBulwer Lytton.