1917
If you wish to be or do anything great in this world you will find every hour and every day an opportunity in some way. If nothing else the lull in routine is opportunity to study up for future reference and use.
If your mind is full of plans and ideas for carrying them out you can make almost any situation or circumstance work in to help you.
It is not so much how you go at a thing as to get at it.
Begin by doing something. Do and think at the same time. That think will help in the next do, and by always doing what you know how to do, first, you will find the next step easier.
It is not the talkers and the arguers who accomplish the most in this world.
Try some plan while the next one is talking about it, and you will be surprised at how easy it is to keep in the front row of the procession. — Minneapolis Tribune.
Saturday, July 28, 2007
Do and Think
Thursday, July 12, 2007
No Monopoly of Brains
1905
Hopeful Sign That Proves This the Age of Opportunity
One of the most hopeful signs of the times is the apparent decay of the breed of so-called great men — those mighty personalities that in former times stood out like a solitary tree in a vast prairie.
The reason for it, of course, is the distinction of all those old-time monopolies of brains which stunted all human beings except a few who, by chance rather than by superiority of fibre, grew and developed. There are thousands, literally thousands, of men now living who, if they had lived a century or so ago and had done a work similar to which they are doing without any very sonorous fanfare upon the trumpets of fame, would have been the talk of the world and the main topic of history.
And how many of the so-called great achievements of so-called great statesmen, soldiers and thinkers of former times would be impossible to-day, because those achievements depended chiefly upon the ignorance and incapacity of the overwhelming mass of the men of their day!
Truly, this is the age of opportunity. — Saturday Evening Post.
Saturday, June 9, 2007
Rides to His Death in Locomotive Cab
1920
Engineer Stakes His Life in Effort to Save Train
MUSKOGEE, Oklahoma — Joe Lambert of Denison, Texas, engineer on Missouri, Kansas & Texas southbound passenger train No. 7, was killed when his train crashed into the rear of a southbound freight which had been forced to stop when it struck a company motor car in a heavy fog one and a quarter miles south of Muskogee.
Lambert stayed with his engine when he saw the caboose of the freight loom up out of the fog and was crushed between the tender and dock of the engine, as the cab crumpled up in the impact. His fireman jumped and was uninjured.
No one else was injured, but passengers on the passenger train, a thru fast train from Kansas City to Dallas, were severely jolted.
1915
Self-Control
One valuable way of practicing self-control is in checking grumbling, and in unnecessary display of vexation at petty inconveniences.
A workman has fulfilled his task imperfectly, some order is wrongly executed, some one keeps you waiting unreasonably; people are careless or forgetful, or do what they have in hand badly. Try not to be disturbed, be just, and show the persons to blame where they are wrong, even (if it be needful) make them do the thing over again properly; but refrain from diffuse or vehement expressions of displeasure.
A naturally quick, impetuous person will find that to cultivate a calm external habit is a great help towards gaining the inward even spirit he needs. — H. Sidney Lear.
Sunday, June 3, 2007
Great Influence of Beauty
1914
Though Too Often Ignored, It Is as Deep and Useful a Part of Life as Utility
Beauty is as deep and as useful a part of our general life as is what we term utility. It has just such a reason for being; it has a similar force; it has a set place in the scheme of the world. Eyes not fully opened to the beautiful are not wholly alive to the influence of beauty upon our lives and our actions. Alas! sometimes we scoff at the highest expressions of beauty. That is to say, the highest human expression.
Those even greater beauties, which are divine expressions, we ignore.
Just think for a moment. Take yourself away from yourself and contemplate yourself and your living, set against the background of the universal scheme of things. Think of the myriads of infinitely petty, wasteful and useless thoughts and actions, desires and dislikes which occupy your day. At the moment you read this, take yourself back two years ago. Of course, you have not the slightest conception of what happened. But let me tell you that on that day, two years ago, were happening too, a dozen or a hundred things which seemed to you to be supreme importance. Do you understand how we fill our lives to the brim with millions of such trifling inconsequences? — Kansas City Star.
Saturday, June 2, 2007
Do We Hurry Too Much?
1914
Some learned doctors tell us periodically that we all eat too much meat nowadays considering how sedentary are the lives we lead; others affirm that no diseases would be known were we to live — or to exist — on morsels of nearly raw meat, washed down, by copious draughts of hot water.
There are those who commend cheese, milk, nuts and greens. There are others who find peace in chewing whatever it is they eat for hours and hours. Smoking is the alleged destruction of some; others find in it their salvation. Alcohol embalms one section of humanity unto extreme old age, preserving them; another section is brought to horrid death by means of alcohol.
We know these divergences in medical opinion and conceive that there can be no reconciliation between them, and that therefore the one thing to do is to toss up and follow a single course, which, on the whole, had better be the thing you best like. If you enjoy nuts and proteid, why, enjoy them.
A General Opinion
Meanwhile, there is, we find, one point upon which pretty nearly all our experts are agreed. It is that, whatever we eat, we all hurry too much.
A nerve specialist at an instructive conference has recently renewed the accusation. He has repeated it for the ten thousandth time. He has run two words together to name the malady of it; he has called us all "can't-waiters," because of our fever to get on to the next thing in the day's work.
How is it that we suffer from an inability to believe a thing that is too often repeated?
The more we hear a certain truth, somehow, the less true it is apt to become for us. Now, do we, indeed, hurry so much? Are we most of us "can't-waiters"?
Taking It Easy
Observe. Follow, with feet anxious to progress, the throng of moving creatures on some fine spring day when, as the poet tells us, the feet are eager to wander. Let us get on quickly. We have much to get through.
How is this? Nobody else, apparently, is in a similar case. They all move slowly. They stop. They stop and gaze at anything there is to gaze at. They stop in the middle of the pavement. They are in no hurry. They have the day before them — the day to talk in, to dream in, to gaze open-mouthed in, to moon about in the subways and in the trains and in the streets, supposed to be "busy."
Try, if you really are in a hurry, to get past them. You cannot. Where all (apparently) have leisure, what are one or two with something to do? A minority of "can't-waiters" are nothing to the vast majority of those who apparently have nothing to do. The neologism is ugly enough. There seem to be thousands who are nowadays in no hurry to get anywhere, who destroy the nerves of the "can't-waiters" far more successfully than the mere fact of not waiting does for the insignificant few.
Thursday, May 31, 2007
Eight Rules For Popularity
1902
First — Remember that a good voice is as essential to self-possession as good ideas are essential to fluent language. The voice should be carefully trained and developed. A full, clear, flexible voice is one of the surest indications of good breeding.
Second — Remember that one may be witty without being popular, voluble without being agreeable, a great talker and yet a great bore.
Third — Be sincere. One who habitually sneers at everything not only renders herself disagreeable to others but will soon cease to find pleasure in life.
Fourth — Be frank. A frank, open countenance and a clear, cheery laugh are worth far more even socially than "pedantry in a stiff cravat."
Fifth — Be amiable. You may hide a vindictive nature under a polite exterior for a time, as a cat masks its sharp claws in velvet fur, but the least provocation brings out one as quickly as the other, and ill-natured people are always disliked.
Sixth — Be sensible. Society never lacks for fools, and what you consider very entertaining nonsense may soon be looked upon as very tiresome folly.
Seventh — Be cheerful. If you have no great trouble on your mind you have no right to render other people miserable by your long face and dolorous tones. If you do you will generally be avoided.
Eighth — Above all, be cordial and sympathetic. True cordiality and sympathy unite all the other qualities enumerated, and are certain to secure the popularity so dear to every one. — New York World.
Monday, May 28, 2007
Nuggets — "Genius is Inspiration"
1907
Genius is inspiration. Talent is perspiration.
Do not measure your enjoyment by the amount of money spent in producing it.
Education turns the wild sweetbrier into the queenly rose.
A vigorous initiative and strong self faith make up the man of power.
Be sure that the honors you are striving for are not really dishonors.
What men get and do not earn is often a curse instead of a blessing.
You can purchase a man's labor, but you've got to cultivate his good will.
Ignorance itself is a disease, the deepest, most treacherous and damning malady of the soul.
Worry poisons the mind just as much as a deadly drug would poison the body and just as surely.
While you stand deliberating which book your son shall read first, another boy has read both. — Success Magazine.
Saturday, May 12, 2007
Evangeline Weed — Making Personality to Order
1922
BOSTON — A medley of public officials, business men, manufacturers, debutantes and society matrons have worn a path to the studio of a modest and demure young woman in Beacon St.
They go to her filled with worldly knowledge and material experience of years but conquered by one of the greatest of man's weaknesses — self-consciousness.
She diagnoses their cases like a physician, cures them and endows them with man's greatest boon — personality.
She is Miss Evangeline Weed, proprietor of the Personality Institute, the first project of its kind.
Miss Weed numbers among her clients three mayors, two state senators, three representatives and many business men. These men, though successful, are handicapped by self-consciousness and unable to realize their full powers because of undeveloped personality.
—The Lima News, Lima, Ohio, Aug. 26, 1922, p. 1.
Friday, May 11, 2007
Grafting In a New Root — Renew Your Old Life, Do Something New
1921
By DR. WM. E. BARTON
IF THE top of a tree dies down, or does not bear a satisfactory kind of fruit, new branches can be grafted in. But what if it be the root that dies? Is there any way of grafting in a new root?
In Riverside, California, stand the two parent navel orange trees. If I have the information correctly, the entire navel orange industry on the Pacific coast began with the successful propagation of that kind of orange from these two trees.
One of them stands on Magnolia avenue, and the other was transplanted by President Theodore Roosevelt, and stands in front of the Mission Inn.
Both these trees are very old and manifestly dying. But they are trying the experiment of creating a new root for one of them. If that succeeds, I presume they will do the same for the other.
They take a vigorous young tree, cut off its top, plant it as close to the old tree as possible and at an angle, and graft the top into the side of the old tree a little above the root.
They have grafted in several such young roots, and they appear to be growing and to be saving the life of the old tree.
Such an undertaking lends itself to reflection. There are men who are dying at the top because they have not sufficient root. Why not dig down near the root, and put in a new one?
You can learn Greek at forty, or study Browning at fifty, or become an expert on psychoanalysis at sixty, or make yourself either a learned man or a fool at seventy.
Maybe you do not care for those particular studies — in that case there are others.
Why should not a man who lacked opportunities, in his youth for higher education, set about it in middle life, and pursue a course of good reading? Why not study astronomy, or botany, or literature?
Many men die a good many years before the undertaker carts them away. A man begins to die when he ceases to grow. Why not graft in a new root?
Friday, May 4, 2007
Advice Worth Reading, Heeding for Good Business, Success
1878
It is easier to be a good business man than a poor one. Half the energy displayed in keeping ahead that is required to catch up when behind will save credit, give more time to business, and add to the profit and reputation of your work. Honor your engagements. If you promise to meet a man, or do a certain thing at a certain moment, be ready at the appointed time.
If you go out on business, attend promptly to the matter in hand, and then as promptly go ahead on your own business. Do not stop to tell stories in business hours. If you have a place of business, be found there when wanted. No man can get rich by sitting around stores and saloons. If you have to labor for a living, remember that one hour in the morning is better than two at night.
If you employ others, be on hand to see that they attend to their duties, and to direct with regularity, promptness and liberality. Do not meddle with any business you know nothing of. Time is money. Never use quick words, or allow yourself to make hasty or ungentlemanly remarks to those in your employ, for to do so lessens their respect for you and your influence over them.
Help yourself and others will help you. Be faithful over interests confided to your keeping, and in all good time your responsibilities will be increased. Do not be in too great haste to get rich. Do not build until you have arranged and laid a good foundation. Do not — as you hope to work for success — spend time in idleness. If your time is your own, business will suffer if you do; if it is given to another for pay, it belongs to him, and you have no more right to steal it than you have money.
Be obliging. Strive to avoid harsh words and personalities. Do not kick every stone in the path; many miles can be made in a day by going steadily on. Pay as you go. A man of honor respects his word as he does his bond. Ask but never beg. Help others when you are able; but never give when you cannot afford to, simply because it is fashionable. Learn to say "no." No necessity for snapping it out; but say it firmly and respectfully.
Have but few confidants, and the fewer the better. Use your own brains rather than those of others. Learn to think and act for yourself. Be vigilant. Keep ahead rather than behind the times.
Wednesday, May 2, 2007
Words of Wisdom
1878
Go among great folks for great sinners.
Love drifts into hate more easily than indifference into animosity.
He is no true friend who has nothing, but compliments and praise for you.
Sharp and intelligent rascals are more respected by the world than virtuous fools.
Many people find their only happiness in forcing themselves to be unhappy.
Ennui is a malady for which the only remedy is work; pleasure is only a palliative.
He who has no desire to improve upon his present condition, is usually one who most needs improvement.
Adverse criticism is cheaper than noble attempts to improve upon existing models.
We could not endure solitude were it not for the powerful companionship of hope or of some unseen one.
It is not difficult to do good for the means are constantly clustering about every man's lips and hands.
Pride is like the beautiful acacia, that lifts its head proudly above its neighbor plants, forgetting that it too, like them, has its root in the dirt.
We shall never learn to feel and respect our real calling and destiny unless we have taught ourselves to consider everything as moonshine compared with the education of the heart.
The great blessings of mankind are within us and within our reach, but we shut our eyes and, like people in the dark, we fall foul upon the very thing we search for without finding it.
Evils in the journey of life are like the hills which alarm travelers upon their road; they both appear great at a distance, but when we approach them we find that they are far less insurmountable than when we had conceived them.
Manners are the shadows of virtues; the momentary display of those qualities which our fellow creatures love and respect. If we strive to become, then, what we strive to appear, manners may often be rendered useful guides to the performance of our duties.
Among the many arguments, while others have been refuted, this alone remains unshaken, that we ought to beware of committing injustice rather than of being injured, and that, above all, a man ought to study not to appear good, but to be so, both privately and publicly.
It is resignation and contentment that are best calculated to lead us safely through life. Whoever has not sufficient power to endure privations and even suffering can never feel that he is armor proof against painful emotion — nay, he must attribute to himself, or at least to the morbid sensitiveness of his nature, every disagreeable feeling he may suffer.
Sunday, April 29, 2007
Hold Up Your Head, For Mental, Physical Stimulation
1916
HOLD UP YOUR HEAD.
It Will Stimulate You Mentally as Well as Physically.
In a letter to Robert Grimshaw of the New York University William Muldoon gives advice that it would be well for every man and woman, boy and girl in America to take to heart. He says:
"I was taught in early manhood not to throw my shoulders back, stick my chest out, draw my stomach in or hold my chin down like a goat preparing to butt, but to always try and touch some imaginary thing with the crown of my head. If one tries to do that — first understands how to try and then tries — he doesn't have to pay any attention to the rest of his physical being. That effort to touch something above him not with his forehead, but with the crown of his head, will keep every particle of his body in the position that nature intended it should be.
"And as a boy I was advised to frequently back up against the wall and make the back of my head, my shoulders, hips, heels all press against the wall at the same time, and in that way get an idea of what was straight, or, in other words, how crooked I was becoming by drooping."
Both to young and old Mr. Muldoon's "hold your head up" suggestion is inspiriting. Try it. The effect physically and mentally is immediate. When the head goes higher the impulse is to deeper breathing. A man finds more elasticity in his limbs. He steps out with more ease. There is more spring to his gait. He isn't a lumbering, shambling creature, but a man alive. With the elevation of the crown of the head there seems to come clearer thinking, a more buoyant feeling and a brighter outlook. — Commerce and Finance.
Friday, April 27, 2007
How to Improve Ears That Project Far From Head
1908
Because of the number of inquiries as to whether it is possible to improve projecting ears, I am writing this special advice. Such a deformity — for ears that stick far out from the head can scarcely be termed otherwise — is one for which there is no remedy after years of maturity are reached. For when one advances beyond the period of early youth the cartilage becomes hard and unyielding, and only a surgical operation has any effect. Such treatment is expensive, and so few persons can avail themselves of its benefits.
It is barely possible that months of bandaging might accomplish a reduction in the distance from the head, but of this I am rather doubtful. If it were possible to soak the ears so thoroughly in oil as to soften the hard substances and at the same time hold them close to the head, the protruding might become less. Theoretically this is undoubtedly so; practically, I doubt if the longest course of this treatment would be effective. It is the surgeon's knife or the continuance of projecting ears.
The most annoying part of homely ears is that proper care in youth would have kept them inconspicuous, if it did not make them pretty, and even a natural tendency to projection, if taken in time, could have been checked.
—MARGARET MIXTER.
Friday, April 20, 2007
Have Confidence in Yourself and You Will Succeed
1920
TWO ONE-LEGGED MEN
By Napoleon Hill
In the town of Wichita Falls, Texas, I saw a one-legged man sitting on the side-walk begging for alms.
A few questions brought out the fact that he had a fair education. He said he was begging because no one would give him work. "The world is against me and I have lost confidence in myself," he said.
Ah, there was the rub!
"I have lost confidence in myself."
Across the hall from my office is another one-legged man. I have known him for several years and I know that his schooling was slight. He has less training than the one-legged beggar.
But he is earning a thousand dollars a month. As Sales Manager of a manufacturing concern he is directing the efforts of fifty men.
The beggar displayed the stump of his amputated leg as evidence that he needed alms. The other one legged man covered up the stump of his lost leg so it would not attract attention.
The difference between the two men exists merely in viewpoint. One believes in himself and the other does not! The one who believes in himself could give up the other leg and both arms and still earn a thousand dollars a month. He could even give up both eyes, to boot, and still earn the money.
The world never defeats you until you defeat yourself. Milo C. Jones, of "Little Pig Sausage" fame, became a wealthy man out of the sausage business after paralysis had stricken him down and taken away the use of nearly every muscle in his body. He couldn't turn over in bed without aid.
As long as you have faith in yourself and that wonderful mind of yours continues to function properly, YOU CANNOT BE DEFEATED IN ANY LEGITIMATE UNDERTAKING. This statement is made without qualifications, because it is true.
—The Ada Evening News, Ada, Oklahoma, February 13, 1920, page 6.
Note: $1,000 a month in 1920 was a tremendous amount. It meant doing really really well.
Monday, April 9, 2007
Don't Wear Pads, Enlarge Busts with The National
Advertisement, 1920
Don't Wear Pads Use The NATIONAL and enlarge your busts to their natural size and beauty.
The National is the special Developer Dr. C. S. Carr formerly recommended in the Physical Culture Magazine, as the only safe, reliable Method known for enlarging the bust in a natural way. Of this method Dr. Carr said: "Indeed, it will bring about a development of the busts quite astonishing."
--The Saturday Blade, Chicago, May 22, 1920, page 4. The graphic is an antique advertisement, the offer is no longer valid. Pretty girl, though, isn't she? The little circle on her cheek is not part of the original artwork. That is a place where the lead on the printing cut wasn't routed out completely. Same thing around the hair.