Conrad Hilton really wanted to be a banker. Instead, he successfully changed the 1purchase of a Texas low-end hotel into a multimillion-dollar hotel empire that earned him the 2"innkeeper to the world." Born in New Mexico in 1887, Hilton was 19 when his parents began renting out rooms in their home. The business didn't interest him, however, so he became a 3legislator (立法者), founded a bank and went off to war. In 1919, after Hilton's father died, a friend suggested he go to Texas to make his 4. Hilton ended up in Cisco: when his bank deal there 5, he headed to a nearby hotel, the Mobley. It 6to oil-field workers, so its 40 rooms turned over every eight hours. A week later, Hilton owned it He soon acquired more hotels—and started to build new ones. His first, the Dallas Hilton, opened in 1925. By the late 1940s, Hilton's list included the Town House in Beverly Hills and Chicago's Palmer House, as well as 7nightclubs featuring A-list stars. He also expanded 8. And in 1949, he bought the "greatest of them all": New York City's magnificent Waldorf Astoria Typically American, Hiltons were creative too: the first to have rooms with air-conditioning, TVs, ironing boards and sewing kits. Even modern hotel-reservations systems 9from one Hilton which was established in 1948. Today the Hilton Hotels Corp. owns some 3,300 10in 78 countries. Last year more than a quarter-billion guests checked in.A) casual E) fortune I) motivated M) severeB) catered F) inherited J) nickname N) souredC) evolved G) internationally K) previously O) stateD) features H) luxurious L) properties