As in his public affairs, so in his private life the American rarely prepares himself for the future. He is wholly unwilling to have anything transmitted to him by water that he can get by rail. It irks him to wait the slow process of freighting when there is an express car coming to his town, and if somebody will soon discover how to deliver by aeroplane, that is the way he will obtain what he wants. He never wants it until he wants it, and when he wants it, he wants it at once. The farmer does not look over his machinery in the winter time to ascertain what it needs in the way of repair; but waits until a week or ten days before he needs it and then telegraphs for the repair parts to be sent by express.


Recollections of Thomas R. Marshall: A Hoosier Salad (1925) - Chapter XXI


As in his public affairs, so in his private life the American rarely prepares himself for the future. He is wholly unwilling to have anything...

As in his public affairs, so in his private life the American rarely prepares himself for the future. He is wholly unwilling to have anything...

As in his public affairs, so in his private life the American rarely prepares himself for the future. He is wholly unwilling to have anything...

As in his public affairs, so in his private life the American rarely prepares himself for the future. He is wholly unwilling to have anything...