Page:About people (IA aboutpeople00well).pdf/123
better than any mental results which may follow from careful, individual work in a Western or Southern college; the graduates from such an one, on the other hand, are sometimes anxious to conceal the name of their Alma Mater.
And is there nothing to be said about the illiberality of those of the regular school toward homeopaths, and of the latter towards the former? Surely each man honestly believes he is right. Does loyalty to a conviction that a "pathy" is wrong compel quibbles in order to escape coöperation in social or benevolent work? Does it justify the charge of "intellectual dishonesty"? Another school may be stupid, but not immoral. Personal morality, as affecting his mental or medical uprightness, should, at least, be granted to an opponent.
There is a liberality to be observed in personal habits, even in food. If children are trained to take what is on the table, they are