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  snccnsz. 168 Q
  BY HENRY CLEWS _
 i HANKER. BEGAX LIFE AS A MESSENGER BUY IX AX ENGLISH WOOLEN FAC`- fi
 N roar; sow woxrn $5,000,000. if
  In order to become wealthy, I think that the very first thing I
  a young man should do is to choose that particular line of bus-
{ iness for which he has the strongest preference, and for which
,_  he considers himself to be best adapted.
 E There is a passage in the Bible which says that whatever
  our hands find to do we should do it with all your might. But
 Q, there are very few young men who will do in that way things
  that they dislike to do, while whatever they do from choice, i
  they generally do very well. Many a good man has failed in
  v_ life sin1ply because he has chosen for himself—or his relatives ‘
  have chosen for l1l.Ill··—SOl1l€ uncongenial occupation for which
  he is wholly uihted nature, while in a career which he map-
  ped out himself he might not have only been happier and more -
  succegsful, bur even have made his mark as a star of the Hrst
  magnitude.
  I remember once, when a boy, hearing a successful old »
  German say that the secret of his success lay in the fact that all
  "l buys cheap and sells dear," I have found that eveay
  young man who has followed this method l1as always succeed-
  ed. I owe my success to it. And few things offer better op-
;? portunities to buy cheap anp sell clear than stocks and bonds;  
I i-_' and such securities, when "gilt-edged," not only pay a proht
  on the investment, but they have the added advantage of being
  able to be readily turned into cash at tl1e moment when the
  owner sees the chance of making :1 big proht from a small out- `
  lay of ready coin. IIENRY CI.l£\\`S.
  BY ANDREW CARNEGIE.
  'l`lll·I IIKUN KIXH, \\`lll> lllilj \N HIS t`.\Itl·lHll AS A 'l`lil.l£(ili.\l'lI (_ll*l£l{;\'l`OI¢. AND
L g is iro-nxv woniru $Tll,000,000.
  In my opinion, the secret of money-making depends chiefly
  upon live things; Push, "squareness," clear-heacledness, econ- ·
  olny, and rigid adherence to the rnle of not over-working.
[fi 'l`oo much work is worse than no work at all. It undermines
  the constitution and unfits a man mentally and physically for
 
 
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