1 r 1 ' Cost of Living: Above : '.Reach of , 4? French Workmen I Thousand Can No Longer Afford Regular Meals 'j- Many. Take to Water -Aa Beverage. By I'nlTortal Harriet. Paris, Oct 29. As result of the . lit .,otrinB cost of living hundreds f ".. thousands of Frenchmen are no --longer, able to afford a .daily meal , of meat or eggs, v" 7- , HI .M'lk a bread have also risen .mi nt ,ul they are six times pre-war prices, J! ;epite ill efforts by thex govern: . .Sent ar "price cotitrol." . ', IS More; evolutionary yet, ' a large 11! i2fIrtt,?n of '"crimen have taken , ,flrinkirig water because ordinary ;j; ff'iiff formerly far more plentiful I!' '!" .wter, ii priced ' beyond !J! 3M- means. ... j. j" If the latest reports 08 experts are l Correct and they are being daily !!! MPPPorted by" fresh proof this win ;j, Mr wilt be the darkest for the French I!! Iflfcopto. .since 19J4. , . ' , ,T, tl Coal Prices High. J. iJ.SNot only have the necessaries of u, become scarce and high-priced, U but wool and coal are practically un IU !Btainabte by the ordinary man w without bribery. ,! i I Coal is weighed by the pound $ "where formerly it was weighed by j; the ton. Wood, whjch before the .,war Was ordered by the cord and ; hundredweights is now jealously counted out by the log. Sufficient ninncv tn hnu o m.J in jmrnniu a poor restaurant 10 francs wHl huy about 10 small logs, insufficient v to heat a stnall apartment for one !T. day. , , . , . . , g; Coal is striitly rationed at the rate of 100 pounds per-nerson per month. This tiny amount, insuffi ' cient for two days in a kitchen fire, , f, is often unobtainable. ,1 " Electmc heat is imoossihle in most Frer' homes for the reason that M - Li 11 - . 1 i rren '! the Cr tench electric, company refuse . to supply the larger' meters necest Rary. ' v i JJ Spurred by the general outcry the . government has instituted a com g mittee to deal with the ' bounding ' cost of living.' A careful survey by J'jj Universal Service of all the most recent statistics regarding the cost ti of living reveals the startling fact that many" necessities have doubled ii in price within the past three months. NT . 1 . 1 1 r til . HJr4.vui single instance na& uccn iounui 2it any article reduced n price. -'The following table is illustrative Sjof the aiiiaiing; rise in necessities ol w, life In Pai;iSv since the armistice: ' t ?ttt.' Bria. Mnt. Milk. Kggs. Butter. 1 .10 I .0 .to $..05 t .5 . St""" .0 . .5 .. 1.99 yiii .5 s.oit .5 r.so - .5 . (My). 1.00 7.60 x 1.00 , ; .R6 i i.50 (Oct.). l.S 10.0(1 1.10 xl.05 1J.25 5J These prices arc for bread per loaf, "meat and. butter .per pound, eggs 5:picce, milk per quart , Mit Out of Sight. . v j The 'table shows tlearly that the J pi ice of bread is six times more than m 1914 and 45 centimes more than J It the armistice. v Meat isiearly 18 times more than 5 In'. 1914, more than three times its 5JH!ce at the armistice and has dou- j liled during thif last year. !T,i.T9' Milk has risen nearly ix times its i J?914 value and 20 centimes more I than at the armistice, "having in creased 10 centimes, or 2 cents, in ihe last six mentis s. ' t-- f . I. ' aI J--S85 nave risen more, man inirc JJjnes since the armistice and 25 v limes above the cost before the war. 5' Butter "costs 14 times its-prewar 5 price and nearly" four times its cost f 1918. ', : -Man Finds Long Lost- Daughter Is Working In Factory With Him t; a r I 1 a her day by day, working in 1 ' iictory, gave Ijjm a package 1 - Flint, Mich., Oct. 29. What would man think if a young woman he Considered attractive as he had seen the same e to man Jsnd the address showed the young woman was his daughter? 5! Jack Benjamin knows. The J woman, Mrs. S. C. Diamond, was li;8 fellow worker. few days ago 5 he (landed him a package to be mailed, and this is his story: 5; "I glanced at, the address,, and there was the name of the"woman Z '(torn whom I had been divorced 30 Ji-ears before. Then I recalled the Tiother with our 3-year-old daughter "in her arms. - T " "For a month L nothing. J 'Then, one day when ' the girl was 1 passing the gate with a smile for me, 2!l called her back. " Remember the. package 4 you (-Rave me to maim 1 asKea. wen, )5'.it was to my former wife.'": J '0, "I have been trying - to induce . - 1 1 i . 1 : 1 . t. ahuam lEOOy to 0vc nis yuviiuKiuyii J Jivith mine so I can send it to moth ei," said Mrs. Diamond today. "I ihink it would be just lovely. "When father and mother were 'divorced he was railroad conductor J and away from home a great deal." The daughter, hopes, to affect a , 'reconciliation as a sort of Christmas ? affair. ' ( 1, Mullen Denies That He Slated Nebraska . Tor Republican Vote 1 . 1 Arthur ' F; Mullenl , former demo cratic national committeeman tor Nebraska, contradicts the statement Jtha he told Mark Sullivan, politi- cal writer, or anyone else, that he " i Would concede Nebraska to Harding Jnd the republican ticket. "I was at dinner several weeks I ago with Mr. Sullivan and we dis- cussed the Nebraska situation," said Mr. Mullen. "I don't doubt that the I German vote will go largely to the republican side of the contest, but ' 1 am also convinced that those votes ;witl be more than offset by the en h'stment of the church people to the ! democratic ticket As a matter of fact, I regard Nebraska as a doubt 'k fut state in the national contest." ,0 5 ' Mr. Mullen admits that the demo crats are making M strong' bid, for Iflie church vote on the league , of 'nations issue . , , , . 5! For cleaning automobiles-in ga rages a machine has been invented ItJiat generates steam, which is said , ;to be more effective than gasoline, Jess' hazardous-and less expensive. ti t 1 'Pussyfoot' Johnson Is Given Newv Name By Mayor of Newark Newark, N. J.. Oct. ', 29.l-"The standard encyclopedia Vn alcholic problems" is the new cognomen for 11114111 rusayiuvi; jviiiiauii, passed on him by Mayor "Gillen of Newark. . ; Writing to Johnson in response to request from ' the ."dry", agitator for information of the effect' of pro hibition in Newark, the. mayor ad- dressed him 'as the above. The mayor Jeclared that "five times as much whisky and other high alcoi ( t ,! a I. .IJ !.i t none (leverages are Dcing $oia in Jlewark since the days of prohibi tion; druj; addicts are more numer ous, drunkenness is more common p.nd prohibition has disturbed the" moral, industrial and commercial in terests here and has created a condi tion of unrest." kl , ; Mr. Johnson, who received the let ter in Scotland, forwarded the letter to the head of the law-enforcement division of the New Jersey Anti Saloon league, saying: .- "Dear Wilson: What is this roos-tei-driving at, anyhow?" -v '- High Cost of Wives : ' Causes Much Unrest Among Men of Burma New York, Oct." 29. The high cost yf wives is creating a great amount of unrest in the Cbin Hill regions of Burma. Widespread agi tation is going on there for a sweeping- reduction in Jhe lpricc of "bet ter halves." ' ' ' This is the information given by the Rev. J. Herbert Cope, repre- Modern Noah's Ark', Filled With Animals, ! Arrives at New York New York', wn.' 29. A modern scnting the Baptist Foreign Mission society in Burma, in a letter written to the society in New York and re ceived nere tc.iay. ji y It is the iiistom here tor 1he' groom to pay a certain sum to hie j future father-in-law, which is sup- j posed to compensate the latter for loss of his daughter's labor,", Rev.! Noah's ark docked here today when Copes writes Men have bettt de-1 the . Australian and United States manding morcxand more, iwtil now j lino freighter,- Bellebuckle, arrived a young man who ttiiifies acquires 'with 4,001) ' specimens of 'animals, a debt whiehhe isS'ears in liquidnt-j birds and reptiles, recruited for the ing. And if J while slow hi paying f rt Bron?. Ziio during the last two years his wife, ythev. husband incurs theMy"Dr. Ellis' Stanley Josephs in the anger of .her father, she is promptly j centra! and northern parts ofAus called home and, ii some cases, j tra!;a: - ' - ', . sold to another man." ! A F.nala, a roly-polv armful 'of gray tur, that looks like a tiddy bear, the first to be brought to this fOnntry, was one of the prize speci mens, fir. Josephs said it eats only the leaves of the Eucalyptus tree, and nearly a ton of these leaves were brought along from Australia. The real belle -of the party, how ever, was a spotted (finale dassarus. another Antipodean' novelty. She carried nine young in her pouch. Soon after the ship left Sydney several members of the crew and officers were stricken with tropical fever, which Dr. Josephs said was brought aboard by the animals. Wil liam Powers of Chelsea, Mass., ship's cook, died. - - Louisiana Chief Scored1 f : ,j, vFor His Cotton Actio Fort Worth,. Tex., Oct. 29. In statement issued here today I'rcsi dent D. E. Lyday 'of the Texai Farmers' union Renounced the re ceut request of Governor' Parker O' Louisiana that all cotton gins clos for a month hi order to raise tin,, price "of the staple. ; . !. "Such a policy woula mean finan cial ruin for T exas farmers," said Mr. Lyday. "We still have 1.500.000 bales of cotton to gather, while in Louisiana most of ,lhe crop has been picked, I understand." j SIOUX-OITY Extra Salespeople to Serve You Promptly " OMAHA -LINCOLN 318-320 SOUTH SIXTEENTH STREET ValUe-Giving Event Positively Unsurpassed Heretofore. A Great Money-Saving Opportunity 1 Starting Saturday Promptly at 9 A. M. Co ill An Enormous PiircKase Augmented By Man Splendid Coats From Our Regular StockOf f ering : Marvelous Values, Just As the Season Starts, at a Price W hith You Will Admit )Is Amazingly Iow $75, $85, $95 FUR FABRIC MODELS OF Baffin Seal Yukon Seal Peco Plush Nishni Seal . Behring Seal Sealette UngavaSeal Jf p w ) . . (( . " Mil Mr " At f ! CLOTH MODELS OF Bolivias - Chameleons, Suede Velours Veldynes 7 DuverDe Laines Marvellas Frostglos EVERY WANTED COLOR AND SIZE-MANY SUMPTUOUSLY FUR TRIMMED - STARTLINGLY LO W PRICED FOR THIS EARLY IN THE m SEASON COAT SECTION SECOND FLOOR" ';i-'; ; - .n:,x--'-' , '- , I ' .i j '.-. iii -'4a; c '' 1 . ana'$100;u , .-- ; A.y.f.-....i,.- . EVERY C0AT. SKETCHED .WILL BE ON SALE SATURDAY -