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ing, or laying up in ftore, for the prudential 

 purpofes mentioned 3 fomething more, or 

 lefs at every year's end — Or what is every 

 whit as poffible, againft any further fub- 

 duftion out of his private income, to fup- 

 ply the exigencies of the ftate. Now of 

 all favings in a gentlemanlike way, fure 

 that of timber-faving is ordinarily for fuch, 

 the Eafieft— Sureft— and the Delightfulleft 

 — ^If it makes me not too oftenfively guilty, 

 as perhaps many times before, of inappro- 

 priate initial capital letters, and of lines, 

 which however in part, I am not without 

 prefent great authority for. Being yet, by me 

 defign*d as Breaks chiefly to a hafty reader. 



None fure, of that worthy fet of men 

 laft addrefs'd to, that are advanced in life ; 

 need be admoniili^d by me, that fpecie left 

 by a parent at his deceafe, is too frequently 

 carried oif, by one needlefs invention, or 

 other, in cafe the heir be young ; while in 

 the time it will neceffarily take him to turn 

 timber into calh (unlefs he is infatuated e- 

 nough to lump it away) and fome of his 

 friends intervening ; there is a very great 

 probability of the young goiitleman's get- 

 ting rid of his unadvised defires : At leaft 



he 



