The object of this paper is to discuss money-making; to examine its prevalence as an aim among people generally and the moral standards which obtain among those who consciously seek to make money. The desire to make money is common to most men. Stronger or weaker, in some degree it is present in the mind of nearly every one. Now, how far does this desire grow to be an aim or object in our lives, and to what extent is such an aim a worthy one?
How to Live on 24 Hours a Day
Arnold Bennett
bookPragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking
William James
bookLiterary Taste: How to Form It
Arnold Bennett
bookCreating Capital: Money-making as an aim in business
Frederick L. Lipman
bookThe Early Bird
George Randolph Chester
bookMental Efficiency And Other Hints
Arnold Bennett
bookHow to Get on in the World: A Ladder to Practical Success
A. R. Calhoun
bookJournalism for Women: A Practical Guide
Arnold Bennett
bookThe Book of Business Etiquette
Nella Braddy Henney
bookThe Art Of War
Sun Tzu
bookBusiness Hints
A. R. Calhoun
bookThe Age of Big Business: A Chronicle of the Captains of Industry
Burton J. Hendrick
book