Adam Allington
Associated Press - Earl Johnston was 12 when he got his first job, a paper route that he quickly expanded by "buying out" additional routes from other, less industrious boys. After high school, he enrolled in a program to become an industrial electrician. "With that journeyman's card in my back pocket, I had never had trouble finding work — ever," he said. Like many people in the prime of their working life Johnston, now 56, always thought he would have plenty set aside for retirement, and if he didn't, he
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