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Investors who are unfamiliar with work of
this kind will be well advised to have such a
table prepared for them by an expert, as it is
of indispensable importance that this table
should be correctly made out in every detail.
As soon as the Table is complete, the
investor should examine the examples of
investment objects given in the preceding
chapter, ascertain which of these examples
represent his own case the most accurately,
and then compare his own list of holdings (as
shown by the Table of his own investments)
with the recommendations given in such
example.
The investor will now have two pictures
before him, the one showing how his money
is actually invested, the other how it ought
to be invested so that his capital may be safe
and his investment objects obtainable. When
ever it is found that an investor’s own list
differs widely from our example, then prompt
and drastic action should be taken, and the
list rectified without delay. Our examples
are based on a life-long experience, and have
proved themselves in practice to be correct.
On the other hand, we have hardly ever known
a case in which a badly-constituted list has
produced the results which the investor
himself has desired.