582 Oxidases [June 



The only way to learn to do great thiiigs is to do small things 

 well, patiently, loyally. — Jordan. 



TL.-- greatest joy of those who are steeped in work and who have 

 succeeded in finding new truths and in under- 

 Standing the relations of things to each other. 

 lies in work itself. — von Voit. 



Men are not young-hearted because they succeed; they succeed 

 because they are young-hearted. The successful man is only a boy 

 with a man's experience. America's most successful public man is 

 also its biggest boy. — Bili Ruhin. 



The scientific temperament is in eternal conflict with the legal 

 temperament. The one cares only for results ; the other insists upon 

 methods. The former is striving for something new; the latter 

 sticks to precedents. — Independent. 



Don't waste time patting yourself on the back. Don't get the 

 fatal habit of believing a job is all right because you have done it. 

 Don't let yourself believe that you are bigger than any one eise in 

 any particular line of human activity. This is a big world and there 

 are a lot of very capable people in it. Above all things, don't admit 

 publicly that you are more clever, honest or efficient than your 

 neighbor. The siren that lures the average man to the rocks is the 

 one that speaks with his own voice. — AI K. Li. 



In fact men of science form, as it were, an organized army, 

 laboring on behalf of the whole nation, and generally under its 

 direction and at its expense, to augment the stock of such knowledge 

 as may serve to promote industrial enterprise, to increase wealth, 

 to adorn life, to improve political and social relations and to further 

 the moral development of individual Citizens. After the immediate 

 practical results of their work we forbear to inquire; that we leave 

 to the uninstructed. We are convinced that whatever contributes 

 to the knowledge of the forces of nature or the powers of the human 

 mind is worth cherishing, and may, in its own due time, bear prac- 

 tical fruits, very often where we should least have expected it. — 

 Heimholte. 



