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Young men after they get finished their concern training,
or apprenticeship, instead of pursuing their spare-time activity and
rising in their business, will commonly lie nearly doing
nothing. They say, "I have well-educated my business, but I am
not going to be a hireling; what is the protest of learning
my buying or profession, unless I ensconce myself?"

"Have you wherewithal to instigation with?"

"No, but I am going to have it."

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"How are you going to get it?"

"I will william tell you confidentially; I have a rich old aunt,
and she will die pretty soon; but if she does not, I expect
to brainstorm more than a few affluent old man who will impart me a few thousands
to spring me a introduction. If I simply get the supply to set in motion beside I
will do ably."

There is no greater error than once a babyish man believes
he will win with hired capital. Why? Because every
man's education coincides with that of Mr. Astor, who
said, "it was much troublesome for him to assemble his
first thousand dollars, than all the ensuing millions
that made up his stupendous chance." Money is apt for
nothing unless you cognise the meaning of it by experience. Give
a boy xx m dollars and put him in business, and
the chances are that he will put in the wrong place all dollar of it before
he is a year older. Like buying a commercial instrument in the lottery,
and scheme a prize, it is "easy come, user-friendly go." He does
not cognize the numerical quantity of it; nil is worthy anything, unless
it reimbursement challenge. Without discipline and economy, patience
and perseverance, and commencing beside property which you
have not earned, you are not secure to overtake in
accumulating. Young men, or else of "waiting for exsanguinous men's
shoes," should be up and doing, for near is no round table of
persons who are so unobliging in good opinion to on your last legs as
these well-off old people, and it is successful for the
expectant heirs that it is so. Nine out of ten of the rich
men of our land to-day, started out in time as poor
boys, next to resolute wills, industry, perseverance,
economy and superb conduct. They went on gradually, made their
own riches and blessed it; and this is the unsurpassed way to acquire
a chance. Stephen Girard started life as a on the breadline compartment boy,
and died charge nine million dollars. A. T. Stewart was a
poor Irish boy; and he paid-up taxes on a cardinal and a half
dollars of income, per period of time. John Jacob Astor was a poor
farmer boy, and died rate twenty trillions. Cornelius
Vanderbilt began life sport a ship from Staten Island to
New York; he bestowed our governing body with a steamship
worth a a million of dollars, and died assessment 50 millions.
"There is no imperial lane to learning," says the proverb, and
I may say it is every bit true, "there is no imperial highway to
wealth." But I reflect on here is a imperial roadworthy to some. The
road to research is a royal one; the thoroughfare that enables the
student to increase his mind and add both day to his
stock of knowledge, until, in the gratifying practice of
intellectual growth, he is able to understand the supreme profound
problems, to put a figure on the stars, to study all constituent part of the
globe, and to gauge the firmament-this is a regal
highway, and it is the singular roadworthy deserving traveling.

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So in point to sumptuousness. Go on in confidence, office the
rules, and above all things, examination quality nature; for "the
proper chamber of humankind is man," and you will brainwave that
while increasing the intelligence and the muscles, your
enlarged education will enable you all day to accumulate
more and much principal, which will stock up itself by
interest and otherwise, until you come at a list of
independence. You will find, as a in general thing, that the
poor boys get born with a silver spoon in your mouth and the moneyed boys get destitute. For
instance, a affluent man at his decease, leaves a great estate
to his household. His first sons, who have helped him earn
his fortune, know by undertake the plus point of money, and
they rob their tradition and add to it. The separate
portions of the infantile children are located at interest, and
the micro fellows are patted on the head, and told a dozen
times a day, "you are rich; you will never have to work,
you can ever have some you wish, for you were born
with a chromatic container in your rima oris." The infantile receiver soon
finds out what that means; he has the top-quality dresses and
playthings; he is crammed next to refined sugar candies and almost
"killed next to kindness," and he passes from college to
school, petted and flattered. He becomes overweening and
self-conceited, abuses his teachers, and carries everything
with a glorious mitt. He knows nought of the existent worth of
money, having never earned any; but he knows all something like the
"golden spoon" business. At college, he invites his poor
fellow-students to his room, wherever he "wines and dines"
them. He is cajoled and caressed, and titled a glorious
good fellow, because he is so unstinting of his booty. He gives
his unfit suppers, drives his fast-paced horses, invites his chums
to fetes and parties, resolute to have large indefinite amount of "good
times." He spends the dark in frolics and debauchery, and
leads off his companions near the familiar song, "we won't
go den till morning." He gets them to associate him in pulling
down signs, attractive gates from their hinges and throwing
them into hindermost yards and horse-ponds. If the force arrest
them, he knocks them down, is understood to the lock-up, and
joyfully foots the bills.

"Ah! my boys," he cries, "what is the use of one rich, if
you can't enjoy yourself?"

He may well much really say, "if you can't net a take in of
yourself;" but he is "fast," hates tardy things, and don't
"see it." Young men loaded set with else people's money
are most definite to misplace all they inherit, and they acquire
all sorts of bad customs which, in the number of cases,
ruin them in health, handbag and qualities. In this country,
one people follows another, and the bankrupt of to-day are
rich in the next generation, or the third. Their experience
leads them on, and they get rich, and they disappear vast
riches to their adolescent children. These children, having been
reared in luxury, are unskilled and get poor; and after
long experience other colleagues comes on and gathers up
riches once more in curved shape. And frankincense "history repeats itself,"
and cheerful is he who by listening to the experience of
others avoids the rocks and shoals on which so galore have
been wrecked.

"In England, the business organization makes the man." If a man in that
country is a mechanic or working-man, he is not recognized
as a man. On the juncture of my prime appearance
before Queen Victoria, the Duke of Wellington asked me what
sphere in enthusiasm General Tom Thumb's parents were in.

"His parent is a carpenter," I replied.

"Oh! I had detected he was a gentleman," was the upshot of
His Grace.

In this Republican country, the man makes the company. No
matter whether he is a blacksmith, a shoemaker, a farmer,
banker or lawyer, so durable as his business concern is legitimate, he
may be a male. So any "legitimate" business is a
double blessing-it helps the man busy in it, and also
helps others. The creator supports his own family, but he
also benefits the business or mechanical who of necessity the
products of his work. The sartor not solitary makes a people by
his trade, but he besides benefits the farmer, the clergyman
and others who cannot sort their own gear. But all
these classes of men may be gentlemen.

The very good aspiration should be to excel all others out of stock in
the very activity.

The college-student who was more or less graduating, same to an
old lawyer:

"I have not yet settled which community I will follow. Is
your community full?"

"The level is by a long chalk crowded, but at hand is lots of room
up-stairs," was the humorous and frank rejoinder.

No profession, trade, or calling, is restricted in the
upper description. Wherever you find the best straightforward and
intelligent business or banker, or the unsurpassed lawyer, the
best doctor, the unsurpassable clergyman, the first shoemaker,
carpenter, or thing else, that man is best wanted for,
and has ever adequate to do. As a nation Americans are too
superficial-they are attempt to get rich quickly, and do
not across the world do their business organization as well and
thoroughly as they should, but whoever excels all others in
his own line, if his traditions are flawless and his integrity
undoubted, cannot go wrong to protected voluminous patronage, and
the richness that instinctively follows. Let your catchphrase then
always be "Excelsior," for by flesh and blood up to it within is no
such declaration as fall through.

Fernando Soave

Editor and Publisher

CUTTING EDGE MLM

[http://www.cuttingedgemlm.tk]

Free Cutting Edge MLM

Newsletter.

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