
I'll quote some of it, though you'll know what's coming if you've read the book. His philosophy was written in stone. "Not many 75-year-old men play tennis three times a week. J.W. Kellogg does, and his arduous schedule tells a lot about the man."
" 'I hadn't played in more than 35 years, didn't have the time. After I retired, I took lessons and it all came back, ' said Kellogg, a member of the Clearwater Tennis Club. ' " Note: He did play with Ken and a little with me when I was in grade school, but maybe that didn't count.
"Although his game is slower now, he plays it with the same dedication and seriousness with which he has tackled work and play all of his life. Dedication to a goal and extra effort to 'make each job successful plus' pay big dividends, Kellogg said. With that in mind, he is leaving his five grandchildren a double legacy: several thousand dollars in bonds for each and the story of how one man toppled from the lap of luxury as a child, working his way from poverty to riches."
"He inched his way toward the edge of his chair. The crow's feet deepened around his gray eyes as he recalled the first work room for his big manufacturing venture, SealTex, an adhesive bandage. 'It was a basement room next to the boiler with one window and one pigtail light.' he said, squinting at the still-remembered glare. But the rent was only $10 a month, that was the important thing."
"It is the story of a self-made man. It is also the story of a growing, industrialized nation and an era now almost lost in the mesmerizing hum of a computerized society. Kellogg's father, a graduate of M.I.T. and a builder of bridges, died when the youth was about 11 years old. Kellogg set his goal of financial security early. He has attained that goal and is satisfied. But perhaps the best legacy, after all, and one that any grandparent can leave, is a first-hand account of days that are gone forever. "
Note: It seems that Charles Kellogg, John's father, did not go to M.I.T., but he and his father did build bridges all over the eastern part of the United States. Also, John was 13 1/2 when his father died, not 11.
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