Tilt: OMAHA DEK : tthSUAV. AIGUM' I. J92i The Morning Bee MORNING EVENING SUNDAY . THK tCC PUBLISHING COMPANY KEUON i. tPltUK. PiklMktr. . MlttKA. Sa. MIMIC OP THE ASSOCIATtO MUS aaawleaa Pta X M4 TM k It MW. M saHaal W W W P talleaua f aaa IIM Mtllll MUM Mt elai Mlal to uue wo. aM else la brat aee aaauekat aerau a "mm m nwninia aat mriM Nal nn airaulatata al Tfct Oaaaaa Bae, Ju., 19U Dally 71,731 Sunday. . . .77,034 B). BIIKWCK. UjlfM MaaafeT LLMLA t. ROOD, ClnoUliM MuiW iwrm to aa4 awaKriaaal a fere m lata lib aty at Jaljr. I Ml. (Scat) W. H. QUIVIY. Nalar PuklM ImU aalua kf takl af Ik aal Bimt at Ciiealatlaa. Ik i ea niMM aa e Toe to a tlNkitiua U raja. BEE TELEPHONE! frlvata (nwl ataekange. Aik far tna 0vHasnl t r Tv WuM Pot Nigat Calls Afur ! P. M l A J' MMW VVPMIkMOl, ATlanlia 1011 ar 1041. 1000 OFFICES Main Offlea Uta aaaj Fara Ca. BIbK .... II Bootl St. South Sid . . 4111 g. I4tk St New Yera tit Plflk Avsau WMklDCtoa - 411 Star laa-.CKaa . . lilt Stage, Bids, ram, rra 41 Baa St. Hanara Th average paid daily circulation of Th Omaha Bm far Juat. was 71.711. a tain of lil.MT ovr Jun af 1121. Tba averega paid ftunday circulation or Tin Omaha Be far June. 11122. . 17.014. tain of 20.120 over Jun. of 1921. This la a larger fain than that mad tr any other daily er Sunday paper. STRIKE SETTLEMENT DUE TODAY. Dispatches from Washington have a very optim istic note, expressing confidence that the conferences to be held in Chicago today will bring a settlement of the railroad strike on lines proposed by the presi dent. Just exactly what Mr. Harding has suggested is not yet given to the public, but it is hinted that each side is required to make some concession. Work will be resumed and the matters of difference again taken to the Railroad Labor Board for consideration and adjustment. The attitude of the disputants is also encourag ing. From B. M. Jewell comes an expression to the effect that he will recommend to the union heads' the acceptance of the president's proposal. If he does this, it will be done in good faith and without re serve, and will carry much weight with the men. On the other hand, while some of the executives of the railroads throughout the country maintain a "hard boiled" stand and T. Dewitt Cuyler, chairman of the executives' association, holds to the strict letter 1n his statement, declining to specifically commit him. self to the acceptance of the president's suggestion, plenty of reason exists for thinking these alert and energetic men will find a way to get around certain obstacles, and will do their part in lifting an em bargo that is now affecting all. The group that deliberately thrusts aside any rea sonable proposal for ah honorable settlement of a great industrial dispute, insisting on submission of ita opponent, is accepting a grave responsibility. When the dispute is one that affects a basic Indus try, then it becomes a concern of the public, for the welfare of the nation is at all times a paramount con sideration. Just now it is of secondary importance to the world whether men who did not go out on strike and those who since have re-entered the shops are te be protected in seniority (which is defined as. preference in choice of work) , or whether those who did go out are to be restored in the original posi tion. The president of the United States has reasoned with men of strength and pride. He has asked them to forego something of their personal feelings for the public good. Granting this request of the president will not weaken any principle that is involved, nor detract from the dignity or mitigate the authority of any one connected with the strike. Grant showed magnanimity at Appomattox, and gave use a word we may well repeat now. "Let us have peace!" , ESSENTIALS TO PROSPERITY. It is evident enough how necessary railroads and coal mines are. If ever there was any doubt, the events through which America is now emerging have demonstrated how necessary also is an industrious and contented body of workers to man them. The prosperity of the nation depends on securing this. Not by any invention of machinery is the mat ter to be solved, but solely by the discovery of ways to better human relationships. Suppose one man, or one set of men succeeded in devising and controlling machines that would per form all the necessary work, thus doing away with the need for human labor. Where would they sell their products? The men who had no work and were attached to no payroll would not have the money with which to buy them. The times when this country has been most pros perous have come twhen all men were employed at some useful task. Measured in actual terms, pros perity consists in nothing less than plenty of goods to be consumed, plus the ability of the people gen erally to purchase them. Stoppage of work, paucity of wages or a lowering of the standard of living sets the cogs of the economic machine in reverse. The ending of the present industrial disputes in a satisfactory manner will mean much to American prosperity. It is not only that the men affected have been without an income during their strike that has prevented their buying, but they also have not been contributing to the production or distribution of goods. They are poorer than before, and so is the whole public. Verily, there is no prosperity without an equitable balance of all factors. The task of ad justment is a complicated one, but certainly not be yond the power of man, once the desirability is clearly recognised. and it ought not to be further mixed up by the addi tion of a complicated code of signals to be wigwagged by the driver who should be giving hi attention to more important parts of his occupation. Stick to the simple way; it will be found the bettor in the end. Make the streets safer and not more complex. NEW AUTOMOBILE SIGNALS. The city police commissioner is reported to favor a new system of signalling for drivers of automobiles. According to the published accounts, the extended arm of the motorist is to describe certain varying motions, each of semaphorie nature, and each convey ing its separate and distinct notion of the driver's purpose as at warning to any who are following him. The idea of the plan is undoubtedly good. It is intended to give more accurate information to driv ers of what the fellow ahead of them intends to do. That is all raight, as far as it goes. The difficulty will cdme not to those who are versed in the code, but to those who are unacquainted with it And it is possible that not a few of the men, women and chil dren who pilot motor cars along the city's thorough fares will lack intimate knowledge of the code. The principal purpose of the signal is to notify the following driver that the one giving it intends to turn, to stop, or to do something else besides pro ceed at the rate of speed his car is maintaining. This is due notice to all to look out, to be on guard. When the one who gives the signal follows it by the first step in his intended maneuver, those who are coming behind him are appraised of what will follow, and govern themselves accordingly. This system puts a little of the responsibility on both, and that is at it should be. Our street traffic is sufficiently confused at best, THE DILEMMA OF GREECE. The breakdown of the Greek campaign in Asia Minor demonstrated to the world, if not to King Con stantine, that his is not a military people. Their special aptitude is for business and trading, a pursuit that has made them also a nation of tailors. If the stability of the throne depends on the appearance of military success, the king may as well give up now as later. Venlxelot received more from the peace confer ence than he bad asked more, it appears than his country could take and hold. Seaports necessary to the trade of Jugo-Slnvia, Bulgaria and Turkey were there awarded to Greece in spite of national unrest that would be stirred up in the Balkans. The Turk was to be driven from Europe, the pious announce ment came, and Greece was assigned the responsibili ty. Britain's plans would have allowed Greek con trol of Constantinople, but France would not consent. Now, however, the French and English, influenced by the need for friendly relations with their Moham medan subjects, have restored Constantinople to the Turk and even had arranged for the complete with drawal of the Greeks from Asia Minor. King Con stantino first counters with a move toward Con stantinople, and upon being warned away by the powers, declares Smyrna and its hinterland to be an independent Greek state. In ancient times Smyrna was a part of the glory that was Greece. Homer is said to have been born there, and Alexander reconquered it. There is a dramatic appeal in King Constantine's effort to hold it that should appeal strongly to his people. However, Greece can accomplish nothing without the backing of the great powers. For a time England was its backer, while France sided with the Turks; now they both appear to have deserted it. The Greeks have not the strength to accomplish their territorial plans much better would they be if they returned to the commercial penetration of the Eastern Mediterranean region where their location and train ing gives them large advantage. DID ROOSEVELT CUSS? In his reminiscences of our presidents H. H. Kohl- saat chanced to remark on having heard some strong language from Theodore Roosevelt. Mark Sullivan was prompt to rise to the defense and questioned whether anyone had ever heard the colonel use pro fanity. His command of the English language was too great, this opinion ran, to necessitate resort to the rather hackneyed expletives that serve as safety valves for lesser men. The controversy continues, drawing evidence for the defense from many noted men. Henry Cabot Lodge and Gifford PLnchot among them. Lawrence F." Abbott writes to the New York Evening Post to record his surprise that Colonel Roosevelt, with "his robustness and love of men of the frontier and pio neering type," never was known to use an expletive or tell a story that would offend the most sensitive ear. "He was one of the most clean minded and clean mouthed men I have ever come in contact with," says Mr. Abbott. "Profane and obscene men felt this quality so that their own language was guarded in his presence. This was not because he was austere or professionally pious, but simply because he radiated decency and good breeding." Many thing? were anathema to Roosevelt, and he was never reticent in expressing hisf eelings. Wood- row Wilson's favorite expression on the golf course is said to have been "tut tut;" those who knew Roosevelt will remember his occasional use of "By Godfrey" to express determination. These can hardly be called oaths, though possibly they were substi tutes. There have been men who could drive mules without cursing, and the evidence is pretty good that this country has been run with a similar absence of reprehensible language. Certainly here is an ex ample to put many leesser men to shame. FOR A CLEAN CAMPAIGN. Senator Hitchcock pleads for a clean campaign. This plea should be granted, for all hands are anxi&us to see politics of Nebraska kept on a high plane. We voters are intelligent, and the appeal must be made to their reason, their sound judgment, and not to their passion or prejudice. Therefore, the canvass for votes this year ought to be carried on in a digni fied manner. This, however, should not be interpreted to mean that a candidate's public record is not to be scrutinized; that one who has continually shifted his position, standing first in one and then in another po sition on thVsame question; who, for example, has been back and forth along the political runway, is to be allowed to escape examination. Nor should it be considered "mud slinging" to smile at the spectacle of Dr. Jennie Calf ass and "Jim" Dahlman, seated side by side on the same platform, and pleading for "harmony." The campaign should be a clean one, clear and definite, and devoid of personalities, but the candidates will have to be judged by what they have done, not by what they promise to do. Brazil touches off a revolution as a curtain raiser for its coming centennial. Here's pointed for Phila delphia, where the excitement so far has been be tween rival groups of social leaders. A force of marines is about to invade Wyoming, which will take a bunch of "leathernecks" about as far away from tidewater as they ever got on duty of the kind. Judge Wade has given the unruly a sample of what he considers a light sentence. It may be ques tioned if any will ask for a heavy one. Omaha shop hands are being mobilized to return to work. If they go back as promptly as they came out, the movement will be a success. The bride who shot her mate because he had violated an agreement not to quarrel at least took a sure method of rendering him peaceable. The young man who committed suicide because he could not find love in the world evidently had not looked in the right place. It's tough when water interferes with the move ment of as seasoned a dry campaigner as William Jennings Bryan. At present quotations, the Germans would make little sacrifice if they burned about 200,000,000,000 marks. July put up some weather record. On Second Thought Ford and Muscle Shoals " "" By H. M. STAXSIFEB. If every worker did more than he is paid to do and every employer paid more than he is compelled to pay, we would have no strikes, . By (.rOIU.r'. K. AlTlllin. Senator Norrls bus JimU muglily with the Ford myth and a tlrrnit rnurl for nuMta opinion nhmiM prompt Hinry Kurd to reply to thr ver Indictment re a-mtvreil Hgulnat hla Mm.'lo shuttle, offer In tlto re port made by tlto Ncliruxku aeiuttur. Xo I'oimidfiution would have beim Riven th! offur Imd it no; lien for the fact thnt Kurd oii'upU'a a uiilu place In th lielrsithy of multimillionaire. Tho ri'iei'lnrilo character of the offer wai predi cated upon the theory thnt Kurd U somethliiB of a philanthropic nd without going into the conditions of his of(Vr for the government plant In Alabama a iwitlon-w lite propufunda was set at work to force roiiR-rens to uccept It. rlrnnlor Nor rls stood out Ha-uhist the clamor and ha made n report which ef fectually estops any further consid eration of the Kord offer unlet it shall be ritai-mltted. As depleted by Senator Norrl, the Ford plan Is 'made to appear like a "(lei Klch quirk Walllna ford" scheme projected on a nit tlonsl iriilx rather tlmn confined to the dlnieimions of a hick town. Mr, Kord is to gut everything the gov ernment 1mh put Into the plant up to date. This amounts to -over a hundred million dollars, lie In to pay about five million dollars for the movable property not needed for t ho plant luit which, according to Senator Norrls, can he changed into $7,onn,000 of ruHh over night, leaving Mr. Ford a couple of mil lions to start working with. Hut this is not all. Tho government la to complete the plant and for the money that is to be uxed, and which the taxpayers will furnish. Mr. Ford In to pay, according to the same authority, a little less than 3 per cent. In addition to all this, the gov ernment undertakes to keep the dam In repair for 100 year, an un heard of obligation. Mr. Ford gets a leasa to the plant for a 100-year period, which is eulvalent to a gift and it is not surprising that Sena tor Norris describes the proposition as one proposing the greatest gift in the history of the world. And what does Mr. Ford agree to do for all o fthis? Just this: He proposes to devote a small amount of the power generated to the man ufacture of fertilizer and obligates himself not to make more than 8 per cent on this part of the plant, made possible by the taxpayer's money for which Mr. Ford pays less than 3 per cent. This would eeem to be tho height of satirical generosity. The rest of the power is Mr. Ford's to do with as he pleases and for a ' hundred years. He does not propose to furnish cheap power to anyone but him self. He proposes to build a man ufacturing plant which the real es tate speculators who have brazenly opened their headuarters In Wash ington, announce will result in a community rivaling Detroit or even New York. There is to be no regu lation of the power so generated, no adherence to the principle estab lished in the law controlling water power and limiting leases to 50 years, accompanied by strict gov ernment regulation. Mr. Ford is to have his own sweet will about it. all because he stands well in public opinion in his ca pacity of a multimillionaire. But there is not even the reliance upon Mr. FOrd's reputation for philanthropy to justify this offer. Mr. Ford is not negotiating directly for the plant. It is being done in his name and a corporation is to be formed which will outlast Mr. Ford In the natural expectancy of life from -80 to 80 years. It should be remembered that the 100-year lease does not commence to run until the project Is completed. Trusts have been described as sood trusts and bad trusts and we suppose it Is possible with a, proper exercise of th virtue of charity to segregate Mr. Ford from the ordi nary run of the mill multimlllion aire on the basis of past achieve ment. Even with this admission. it is well to remember that Mr. Ford has done fairly Well in amass ing millions. He has paid good wages it is true, and has turned out a cheap car. All this to his credit, but in doing all this he has not overlooked the main chance and it is safe to assume he will contin-. tie to do so in his present activity of grabbing up water power. As Edison, from his wizard's re sort at Orange. N. J., said of his friend, Ford, "Henry is no fool." Still it is something to stand in a. millionaire class all one's own. Whether deserved or not, the spe cial standing which Mr. Ford has is worth something and Mr. Ford should guard it jealously. In order to do so, he should re ply and promptly, to the criticisms suggested in the Norris report. If there is any plausible explanation that can be given of this preposter ous offer, it Rhould be forthcoming and the public which has placed confidence in the Ford offer be cause of its confidence in Ford, is entitled to it. Readers' Opinions Around the World With a Two-Cent Stamp. From the De Moinps Capital. It is a. well known fact that Uncle Sam will cany a letter from New York, to San Francisco for two cents; but that is only half the Tho TTnlted States nostoffice now carries letters to many foreign countries at the regular (lomestu: rate. This country leads the world in the realm of cheap postage. Announcement is made from Washington that Spain and Argen tina have recently been added to our i,n.nt ctnmn xnno. This iS iust one step in the extension of the low letter rate. For two eems unnc a-. wm ari.w a latter to Shanghai. China, or to New Zealand. All parts of the British empire can be reached for the same price, wttn me excep tion of Australia, India and Egypt, voorir all' ihn rnnntries of South America and Central America are now in the two-cent zone. to aiso are. the islands in our vicinity in the Atlantic and Pacific. No other country can even come close to the postal record attained by the United States. Most of us take the mail service for granted. We fail to appreciate how much of a blessing it Is and 1 , v,,,r.h aoruipf. Wp cpt flt Slight cost. Who else would be willing to carry a letter to England or cpain Insistinz on Literacy at the Polls. From the Des Moines Capital. In recent years several states have considered and some have adopted laws requiring voters to pass, liter facta Registration boards and election boards are given consider able authority In deciding wneiner the would-be voter has the proper Diirintnni The text used in the literacy test -usually comes from the state constitution or me ieuerai constitution. It is too soon Jo tell Just how these laws are going to work. In theory they are absolutely sound; but in practice they may bring new election abuses if election boards use their new authority in the inter est of partisanship. For example, unscrupulous election officials might in the literacy tests, accept the votes of their political friends and reject the votes of their political enemies. tThla aMml la 4alfa4 a a bruadraittiai laiiu litruuaa uih n4 r af Ilia Oman IU wuty ama aiuti'Htv aatnbwiMi all aauta I'M), ana bm wibjmia uf falilt Wttmal. Illr aliuuM ba -butt eu wura I baa lae anrU. Mi'H lailar waal ba a.-oiiiaalrt lha Ham of lb wrllrr, a,rn I hoot a M i4a iltat II am a iutili.tmi.i lUillniail lliiilillnic lit (lit Meat. (Jerlnif, Nrb.. July JS.-Tu th Kditur of The Omaha Hev: In ur lnu of July r you have nu eli torUI iitun-r ih rnpHon, "8uitl I.Ike Ulit Tltiiea." In which ynu re ft-r to tint Hinii FVa ISunO.ono cnnatructloii Job am "iita first real Job of railroad coital ruction let in I lie went aince l lie r," Waka up! Whut about the I'nion Pacific's cxtenalon of the North I'lutie Vallry lira tub from tierinit west ward Into Wyoming". lth IS mile aptir track? Here wua rill roml extenulon job that coat more than $3,ooj,oiio, bciiiin nfter the war ended unil now t-nniptetrd and In operation. Forty mllr of enn Htructlon Into what Is dcatined to be a wonderfully productive country bncniiHii the soil I ffrllle and prac tically cvrry Hi-re uf It aimer Irrl gated or to ho Irrigated within th next threo or four years. It t:ip Ihe tiodien Hole I'ouutry or Wyo ming, and In Nebraska opens up n urea thnt will soon become Ihe banner sugar beet section of Amer Icii. In ihe territory tributary to this exlonxlmi Is nn Irrigated and Irrigable urea of more than COO. 000 acres, und double that acreage uf land that srowa the best wheat on the market. ' Five growlnir towns are already In existence along this extension. Jf Omaha Is awnke to her opportuni ties she will begin at onci to culti vate trade relations with this won derful territory. Tho Santa Ke'a new work doea not open up new territory; It mere ly adds to the service already es tablished. Hut the recently com pleted extension of the Union Pa cific from tiering westward into Wyoming opens up new territory. affords transportation facilities to a vast area that has heretofore suffered from n. lack thereof, and makes possible the erection of farm homes for thousands of people. The Union Pacific's extension westward from Bering was not only tho first bit of railroad construction since the war. but was the first piece of railroad extension nnder takep in the United States for more than ten years. WILLi M. MAUP1N. What Other Editors Say SIS ADDS TO THE COLLECTION J Where tiallantry Draws the Line. Many a time we Tmve seen a sen ator offer a lady his eat in a street car, but in the senate it's another story. Washington Post. A Word of Cheer for the Drys. If It is true that jokes made the Ford a success, they may yet do something for prohibition. Atlanta Constitution. !r.raja Mr. Howell. Tram Hia (...' in Ti.twaa. I it mo proaumptuoua for a nm! loan fimp.iprr to vaiiime thu mt. Sratiun that rrput.lii alia may tie properly rl:iad riihar a omarrva live r a procraaaivra and mil be cndowt.l with lha fundamental ptlii. t lplea of iviblici4iiim? The Oiii.ih.t Worlrf-llerntii a dm wrath- n.-w,jp,.r 1 1, in rolled by Ul. bctt Al. Ilitchcit. k, taho will oppota It. 1). Hiiw.ll in the aenfttorial raoa tbia fall, decUrra: 'The Kramont Tribune ta that 'Howell la tin doitl.ihly prua-reaalva of tba flrl Mater . . , hut ha la alao a staunch republican ami an ardent supporter of ihe Dunlin realm at Washing ton.' Which la elemental In Ita sim plicity. It la Ilia Mime aa id aay that an object Is undeniably black but alao ataunrhly and ardently white. It I a platform, Ihe old lima politician used to nay, broad enmiith for averybody io at and on." la It Impoaalblo then that Mr. Howell, being progreaalva In hi be in fa, ran alao ba republican? Doe this mean that he, and lb rest of ns. must remain conservative and reactionary or ha Iamvip nniitami from Ihe reilllhllfan narfv? rinMi It completely remove tha possibility iimt me prugreaaiva element of re publicanism can ao dominate tha Cfinaarvaf Iva UihmI mm a Mitlllfu tha Influence of the latter within tn party? Howell is a piotreaaha. Samuel nnmnaia tiaa trliimnltantlii a-M The democratic presa, In mistakenly nernimng nia nomination as a re pudiation of the admlnlHtratlnn. has said ao. Howell himself makes no bonea over the fact that ha Is i progressiva witn many advanced idena of government. Howell Is a republican. He be tlrva In a nilajtlva tnwttft a mam.! Ilcan doctrine ever elnca the tariff became a political issue. He has re peatedly declared that, "the renub llcan party has alwaya been tha party of progress," that It haa "ever been arulded bv tha anlrlt of nur forefathers." that "It freed tha alaves." and that If elected to serve in tne Lnitea mates senate, it win ne ins aim to support its great tra dlllnna Howell must therefore be desig nated na a nroaraaafvA raniihllpan Prlmarw ala.tlnna in manv ilalAa have shown that the great majority or tne American voters are progres Iva romihltr'ana Whnn If la -a membered that men of progressive ideas, almost without exception, align tnemseives under the republi can hntinar la If fin miIKh t n aaoi.ma rnnf inn rannhllr.an n..lu u.a , im progressive now, as it always has ueen The renllhllcm itnrtv waa a oranf party 20 years ago. and It is a great ana poweriui party toaay. Uut It nas not retained its power by stand ins fn ItH trarka Tf haa nrnn..,., with the times, has evolved its gov ernmental doctrines with the ad vancing ideas of the nation, of th Pageant of Progress Exposition Chicago the Great Summer Retort July 29 August 14 "70 yean q( ivlc" Three and one-half miles of exhibits on the $5,000,000 Municipal Pier. Naval maneuvers, street parades, athletic sports, motor boat races, beautiful paries and boulevards. When making your plant tee that your ticket reads via Rock Island Lines Aik any Rock Itland Ticket Agent for particular! or addreit J. S. McNALLY, Div. Past. Agent Phone Jackton 0428 810 Woodmen World Building, Omaha, Neb. world and of civilization. It Is the great party now as It was 20 years ago because it la tha American party, the people's party. MvKlnley, Taft, Roosevelt, Pen rose, Knox, New and McCumber were great republican leaders In their day. This Is tha day of Hard ing. Hughes. Beverldge, Plnchot, Fruzler and Howell. The old leaders must atep aalda for the new becausu the republican party and the Ameri can nation are progressing unceas ingly and new problems and new conditions must be met and solved by new blood. A More Kflltlcnt Age. The old-fashioned man who could tako a drink of llkker every morning and live 100 years now has a son who can take one this morning and die before dinner, Dallas News. A Few Snap-crackers' Ieft. The safe and sane Fourth of July is now a national institution, threat ened only by the occasional mis guided attentions of some oratorical agitator. Washington Star. A Ilcnrh Cynic. A Galveston widow says that tha latest proposal she has had was from a life guard, who said the mora he saw of bathing beauties the more he admired housekeepers. Dallas News. Special FAPC 5 Any Style LUUU Each Buttarid Tout er Braa4, Sc El. ALL SIX RESTAURANTS Hotel Castle OMAHA MINNESOTA'S TEN THOUSAND LAKES .Are Calling You Get away from the sweltering heat, the grime and noise of the city. Come to Minnesota, where you can breathe invigorating, pine-scented air plunge into cool, crystal-clear waters loll upon sandy oeacnes; yes, and enjoy the finest bass and muskie fishing in the world. Come now while Minnesota is at its best. July and August are the ideal months. The average temperature is 67 degrees. The nights are cooL Hay fever is unknown. Low Fares lowest in years. Call, write or 'phone today for com plete travel information and our Minnesota booklet, "The Land of the Sky Blue Water." MARSHALL B. CRAIG General Agent Paaaengn- Dept. H. T. MINKLER ' District Pauengar Agent 1419 First National Bank Bldf. Telephone JAckion 0Z6O CHICAGO GREAT WESTERN mm? IF Vd be worth a fortune today iY You can't turn back the wheels of time But you can profit by the ex perience of others or your own mistakes of the past and begin now to save. Only those who cultivate the habit of saving reap the re wards of opportunity. The Omaha National Bank Farnam at 17th Street Capital and Surplus $2,000,000 CUNARD ANCHOR ANCHOR-DONALDSON N. V. to Cherbourg and Southampton KEREN ARIA ...Au-. Aug-. 29 Sept. 19 MAIIRETAMA . .Aug. 15 Sept. S Sept. SS AQl'ITAMA ...Aug. 58 Sept. it Oct. 3 N. f. to Plymouth, Cherbourg & Hamburg CAROM V ,Ang. St Ort. .Not. 7 NAXONIA Sept. Oct. 14 N. Y. to Cobh (Quefnstown) & Liverpool f ARMAMA Aug.1T SepU4 Oct. J SCVTHI V (new). Aug. 31 Sept. 28 Oct. SS LACONIA newr... ept. 7 ct. 5 N. Y. to Londonderry & Glasgow ASSYRIA Aug. 11 Oft. 21 . COI.I MBIA Aur. 19 Sfpt. 1 Oct, 14 ALGERIA Aug. 35 Sept. S3 CITY nf LONDON Sept. 2 . CAMEROXIA new Sept. 9 Oct. 1 Vox. 4 New Tork to Vigo, Gibraltar, Naplea, Patras, Dubrovnlk, Trieste ITALIA Ang.lS Boston to Londonderry & Liverpool ELYSIA Aug. II ASSYRIA Sept. 15 Stops at Glaegow, Boeton to Queenatown ft Liverpool SAMARI A new Aug. 2J Sept. S Oct. W CANADIAN SERVICE Via Pcturiue St. Lawrence Route Montreal to Glassow SATTRNIA Aag. 11 Stt. S Oct. CASSANDRA ... Aug. SI Sept. 29 Oct. tX Also calls at Movlile, Ireland Montreal to Liverpool ALBANIA ........ Aug. 19 Sept. 23 Oct. 21 TYRRHEVIA new Sept. 2 Sept. SO Oct. 2 AVSONIA Sept,l Oct. 14 Not. 11 Montreal to Plymouth, Cherbourg and London ANTOMA Aug. Sept. t Oct. li ANDANIA Aug. 2B Sept. 28 Nov. 4 Apply Compaay'a Local Acta. Everywhere pULBRANSEN PLAYER PIANO Wationalfy fyic&l Branded in the Back. WWfcHguaa CburjrvSea. SuujW 700 600 $4Q5 The Art and Music Store 1513-15 Douglas Street The Bee Want Ais are best busi ness boosters.