PLAN No. 674. ATTORNEY RUNS FARM

This attorney was practicing in a city, but felt that, in order to be assured of a permanent success in that community, it was best for him to have a farm close to the city. He secured a farm and made it his home. It was on an electric line, and this made it easy for him to go to and from the city, to attend to his business. His farm guaranteed him a living each year, and during the time when wheat was up, he made big profits from the sale of it. His living expenses were defrayed by the farm, and, besides he was enabled to save some money each year, and everything that he made from the practice of law was clear profit. This enabled him to champion various causes that otherwise he could not have afforded to do. It placed him in the position of an attorney with a fixed income, and enlarged his field of activities, so that he could build for years along certain lines, which is essential to any professional man’s success. He did not have much capital in the beginning, but he secured the farm on easy terms and was able to pay for it in about five years, and had the farm clear of all debt. He understood well the science of farming, took all the government reports on farming and made himself proficient in that line. He secured many clients in the community where he was farming. This gave him a great advantage over his fellow-members at the bar.

The great trouble with the average lawyer is inactivity, and if he is not active, he is like any other dead man—nobody knows of his whereabouts and cares less, but if he is engaged in doing some collection work, coming in contact some way or other with the public generally, he will have business and it will continue to grow from year to year.