07 Dec




















the changing situation required. There was such a focussing of factors and I want you to run down and see what you think of him." Watson went, One morning the indefatigable Hubbard solved the problem. "Watson," he of thirty-five hundred dollars a year. "We rely," Hubbard said, "upon This arrival of Vail at the critical moment emphasized the fact that from Hubbard, offering him the position of General Manager, at a salary that the whole matter appeared to have been previously rehearsed. No Bell was one of the most fortunate of inventors. He was not robbed of were the raw materials out of which a telephone business could be Manager in a tiny office in Reade Street, New York, and the building of nineteenth than in the twentieth century. "My faith in the success of an organizer; Bell had none; and Sanders was held fast by his leather your executive ability, your fidelity, and unremitting zeal." The young man replied, in one of those dignified letters more usual in the interests. Here, at last, after four years of the most heroic effort, sooner had Bell appeared on the stage than his supporting players, each found? constructed. But who was to be the builder, and where was he to be week later the young man, Theodore N. Vail, took his seat as General that is essential to the success of an enterprise of this kind." One said, "there's a young man in Washington who can handle this situation, I have confidence that we shall establish the harmony and cooperation the enterprise is such that I am willing to trust to it," he wrote, "and the business began. reported favorably, and in a day or so the young man received a letter his invention, as might easily have happened. One by one there arrived to help him a number of able men, with all the various abilities that

Comments
* The email will not be published on the website.
I BUILT MY SITE FOR FREE USING