Tilti 'AiAAAXCti ifttftALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1920 .... j ... til Q Q Z A CO o o fin Comment. - - and Discomment jj j Hack In our university da8, there ; was one professor, then In the prime of life, who was continually inferring to books that he had purchased, but I hadn't read. He had the usual pro fessional desire to accumulate a library of pood books,' but his time was so occupied with classes and lec tures and other regular dutlos that It required nearly all his reading hours to read the new books in his line. Every time a new book was recom mended to him, however, he trotted down to the book shop and purchas ed It. The prof, used to explain to us that he was buying all these books against the time when he should be too old to teach. He was storing up pleasures for his old age, he said, and when he got to the point where a crowd of students annoyed him be yond endurance, he would sever his connection with the faculty and re tire to his library and his fireside and read good books until the time o draw the curtains. Edward Bok, In the September At lantic Monthly, presents his ideas of the way to spend an old age. Mr. Dok surprised his friends and his publishers some months ago by re-I tiring. His acquaintances believed j that he was ill, and sent him polite i notes hoping that he "would soon i ci t well." And now he tells them inai ue uiis reureu, ana pians 10 en Joy the results of a lifetime of work while the capacity Is still there with which to enjoy them. The Europe an, with an older civilization and a larger experience behind him, has learned this," says Mr. Dok; "the Englishman has felt It; but the American has still to learn that the great adventure of life is something more than work and money. "One of the most pathetic sights In our American business life is the inability of men to let go, not only for their own good, but to give the younger men behind them a chance. They hang on beyond their years of greatest usefulness and efficiency: convince themselves that they are in fiispt usable to their business, while, in scores of Vases, the truth Is ex actly the opposite: the business would be distinctly benefited by their retirement and the resultant coming to the front of the younger blood in affairs. A great ninny men in pivotal positions apparently do not see that they often have it within their power to advance the fortunes of a number of younecr men bv stepping put when they have served their time; while by refusing to let go they often work dire injustice and even disaster to their younger associates. "The real trouble with the Amer ican business man is that in many In stances he Is actually afraid to let co because, out of business, he would not know what to do. For years he has so immersed himself In business to the exclusion of all other inter ests, that at fifty or sixty he finds himself a slave to his business, with positively no inner resource. Retire ment from the one thing that he does know would naturally leave such a man useless to himself, his family, and his community: worse than use less, as a matter of fact, for he would become a burden to himself and a nuisance to his family. You rarely ever find a European or Eng lish business man reaching a mature age devoid of outside interests: he always lets the breezes of other worlds blow over his mentality when he is in affairs, with the result that, when he is ready to retire from bus iness, he lias other interests to fal btfck upon. This is rarely the case with the American- business man. It is becoming more frequent that wt see American men retiring from bus iness and devoting themselves to other interests, and their number will undoubtedly increase as tl.:n goes on and we learn the lessons of life with a richer, background. But one cannot help feeling regretful that the number is not growing larg er more rapidly. "A man must unquestionably pre pare years ahead for his retirement. I do , not mean alone financially, which naturally is paramount, but mentally as well. I have been in terested to note that. In nearly every rrp where a business man hss told ; me thnt I have made a mistake In , my retirement, and that the proper life for a man Is to stick to the game and see It through, to 'hold I h r nozile agin the bank,' as Jim Bludfo would say, It has been a man with no resource outside of his business. Naturally, my action Is a mistake In the eyes of such a man; but think of the pathos of such a I option, where, In a world of so much Interest and an age so fasci natingly full of worth-while thh-.g. a man has allowed himself to become so absorbed In his business that he has become a slave to It and to it alone, and cannot imagine another man happy without the same bone at which to gnaw. "It 13 this lesson that the Ameri can business man has still to learn: that h" Is not living a four-tquared life if he concentrates every waking thought on his material affairs. He has still to learn that man cannot live by bread alone. The makiiu- o money, the accumulation of material power, Is not all there is to living. Life Is something more than those two things, and the man who misses this truth misses the greatest Joy and satisfaction that can come Into his life that Is, from service for others. "Some men argue that they can give service and be In busin'-ss too. But "service' with such men generally means the drawing or a check for some worthy cause and letting it go at that. I would not for a moment belittle the giving of contributions, but it is a poor nature that can sat isfy itself that It is serving human ity by the mere signing of a check. There is no form of service so easy F.nd so cheap as to give a check to cin object with the interest stopping there. Heal service is where a man rives himself with his check, and 'hat the average business man can not do If he remains in affairs. Par ticularly true is this or today, when every problem of business is so en grossing, demanding a man's fullest time and thought. It is the rare i man who can devote himseir to busi-j ness and be fresh tor the service of! others atterward. No man can, with' efficiency to either, serve two mas ters so exacting as are these. He can do one or the other effectively; both, he can do only Ineffectively." Get What You Hit S (ills wanted, Alliance Steam j I jin nil ry, 30c per hour. 80tf, It is a curious that most every ! time t' e production cost of an article gne up 5 cents the selling price goes j up 50 cents. Ap SHOT GUN SHELLS P VTow for hunting! Be ready with a good supply of your favorite shells Ideal or Target. You will need them, for you get what you hit with the Peters We sell Remington and Winchester shot guns and Rifles. Our prices are the sam6 as the Mail Order Houses. You don't have to wait prompt service. Every time you go hunting take along a supply of Peters Shells They Hit Hard. WE SELL LICENSE TO HUNT WE SELL LICENSE TO HUNT UAWJAIX IS A PIAVO AND A PLAYER PIANO If you are a lover of, music and expect to own a piano or a player piano within the next five years, send us your name and address, and we will return Information regarding a fine piano and a pianoplayer which we are holding in the vicinity of Alliance. To avoid the expense of storage, handling, and the freight to Denver, we offer these instru ments at a tremendous bargain, with in the reach of any purse, however modest its purse limitation, and on terms that will make ownership a pleasure. Bargains like these are being snapped up now days. If you are In terested, therefore, please write at once, stating whether you want a player or a playerplano. KNIGHT CAMPBELL MUSIC CO, (Largest In the West) Use Dependable Good Gasoline and Motor Oils Insure Smooth Operation of Your Machinery Attention to these Matters will Mean Many Dollars to You in a Year Patrons find a wonderful difference in motor performance when they use selected gasoline and oils. In a multitude of ways machinery "works" better. It saves you time and annoyance, as well as costly repair bills. Dealers lind it much easier to sell satisfactory goods. No kicking from customers and easy collections make selling a positive pleasure. Mutual Oil Company OF KANSAS CITY, MO. ( , The oil stations formerly conducted by Vaughn & Son in Alliance, Ilemingford and Antioch have been taken over by the Mutual Oil Company of Kansas City, Mo. Our agent, Mr. I). McNitt, will have charge of the business in these towns for the time being. The Same Phone No. 5 We will confine our efforts to a strictly wholesale business and want to interest new dealers in our proposition. We will handle the following products: . . SAMPSON GASOLINE TRACTOR OILS RADIANT KEROSENE STEAM CYLINDER OILS Complete Line of Lubricating Oils and Greases of All Kinds Call Phone 5 for your next order. MUTUAL OIL GO HEMINOFORD D. McNITT, Agent ALLIANCE ANTIOCH Denver, Colorado. 81