TIIK BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY, AITJL 1C. 192 jfrVcnch Boliemc, Latin Quarter. v Has Disappeared High Coot of Lit lug Form Art Studenl In l'tirue Thnr Sludir LUf. hrrf. .s BY FRANK E. MASON. fru nril fC R..lirllla lit Unii ol-'Miml. Trilby a4 vfnli, poor pjiiitrn and tutior, ihrradtuta ttii'lnit and porU i no moir. JfviJif J by wr, it tale J pUie wild K'hriiiit and Cli hirrry among ilie mini of a l.tml (It i a. Kuhrute Iwt become Iriililiuii. 1 he joyou ttuilcnt of tin Latin Omrtfr. lth a bottle ( ine hi one hand and hit tacctlirarl held by the ifhrr, ha Itemmc a iiiylh. The Muilmt a Mill there, hi tmallrr tniiiilirr. to be me, but they ate no longer joyous Ihrjr no ltjitr kinit; Oiry tMuiti laiian, Xhry ate rriott, tmc, strained, (ouniinc tli)1 lutiniul Kremh com which ha ili'C4icl time the war, trie rcnnine. iL L'Otuvre uigrt tlut the govern K.ent kuhkidie the univertititt to ihr llir t mli nt rnonijli iiioncy on uhirlt to live. The mi tub it of tiu- lent it cliiiiiiiiltin(t duly. The Kou-' tnanians, l'rerh, Serb. I'olUh and South Americans vho formerly time to I'aria for their education!, are rapidly disappearing. Many are &otng to the ticrnuii tmivmitift, here the rot of living i taid to be from one-half to onc-tcnih the price tit Pari. ;.' LUt of Expenies. ;, American art student uho with to complete their Mudie in I'arit, would do well to invcotiRalc the cost of living, today rather titan ask the advice of the graduate! 0( lVii of Other ycart. The figure published in the Review of the University of I'arii indicate that the life of a acci dent at this achool costs at least $1,01)0 a year. The day when the rtudents lived on $JU to $50 a month, are gone, it leemi forever. Transposed into dollarj at the cur rent rate of exchange, the bare neces sities for the student are about as follows, according to the Review. Room. 10 months, at $1.1... .$1.10.00 Laundry, 10 month, at $.'. . . . 20.00 Breakfast (cup of coffee), :-$1.50 a month 15.00 Lunch and dinner at univcr r sity subsidized restaurant, drinking water, but no wine, :''j0 cents daily 180.00 "fUreet car fare. $1.50 a month 15.00 Three suits each two years... 50.00 Overcoat .10.00 pair shoes and repairing .... 15.00 jihirts and underwear 20.00 jriat 4.00 University fees 25.00 !Pooki . 25.00 Newspapers, postage, sta- Ltionenr ....... 10.00 iDiies University association.'. 2.50 'Forget Me, Back to School, 9 College Boy Tells His Bride So Central High Girl Alleges Carl Dimond ' Wrote - in Letters From University. Alleging that Iter oung hnthamL Cail Utmgtid, student at the L'ui verity of Nebratka, wrote her be could get all the liquor he wauled, and would hae nothing more to do with her, Lnlua Llinbnh Youngman Liitnntid, IH, pretty Initial gli ichool pupil, fifed suit for marriage annulment in dmlrict court yelci day. fie iJimondi were married secretly in f'apillioii. July 21, IV.'I. by Key. II. T. N-huiidt, according to her ti l n. 'Ihree mouthi later young I Ji ittnnd wrote her from Lincoln, hu miliating her by addressing the letter Mt Belli Youngman," she tayt. N :i w inpcramrut, and wai going to I I 'I f J iversity to get away from Iter. r r lr iarge he wrote her she could . I j 1 , "keen a man of aood caliber 1 - 1 unless she comet out of that com placency.'' ' "Beat He Could Do." In this same letter goung Dimond said be didn't want to be seen with bis gill-wile in Lincoln, and that he U undergoing ridicule berause she "is the best he could do," that he bad fp-nt more time on her than she was worth end that be didn't want Iter either to write or telephone to him iu Lincoln, she asserts- In another letter of January 3 he said he was going to Canada; that he couldn't spend any money coming to Omaha to see her and that it she wanted to attend a certain party she bad better take some other "lad," the young wife avers. ' I met a school madam and she s some baby," Mrs. Diamond quotes her husband as saying in this letter. "I have plenty of new friends." He made reference to a certain "crowd" which had taken him .in and de clared "anyone or anything he wants is his for the asking. Threatens Divorce. Mrs. Dimond, in her petition, cites third letter, dated January 24. and. like the first and second letters, ad dressed to "Miss Beth Youngman." In this letter her youthful husband says he is through with her; that he will remain a bachelor all his life rather than take her back, and ad vised her to "forget me and go back Carl Dimond. (0 school, she avers, lie threatened to get a divorce if she didn't, she de clares. "Carl gave his age as 21. and my name as I'.iuanetii L. Youngman when he got the marriage license," says Mrs. Dimond, "instead of Lolita L. He has failed to support me and wrote the letters to humiliate mo." Carl Dimond consumed newpape'r space last June, when he was editor of the Central High .Vhoo Kegistcr. He struck J. Ci, Masters, principal of the school, tin younger brother, D, i-. uimonii. nonor ioy M-our. is prominent in high school activities and is now major of a Ceutrul high cadet battalion. High School Romance. Young Dimond's altercation with Principal Maters arose over a print ing contract for the High School Register, and occurred after the fac ulty had accepted his resignation as editor. He began destroying copy for the Register, when instructors in terfered, it was said. Mrs. Dimond's lawyer says the marriage was the outcome of a high school romance. Young Dimond is the son of Mrs. Zaidie Dimond, formerly of the wel fare board. His bride is the daughter of Joseph Yoiiiigtnan, Omaha real estate dealer. An(i-Trust Act May Be Brought Up to Date t':i Total... .'$541.50 Work. Ia One Remedy. 111!- In'To this estimate of he cheapest Igirjidc of the bare necessities must ;be added railroad fare and other ex Ibienscs. The student mustn't smoke, nijiy never take a glass of wine or beer, never go to a theater or movie, nftt be sick or pay doctor's fees in (i!!'word, he must live a hermit's life Paris, which is, to say the least, Improbable if not impossible. i!!;To combat the H. C. L. students ,nave been forced to abandon the tWrefree camaraderie of Bohemian fjjfc and imitate their American lltiOusins in an elfort to work their W'y through the university. !i.'5tudcnt self-help has been assisted fey the eight-hour law, which in many jpthcr respects' has done so much to ijdlimage French reconstruction and ifflelay return to normal. In olden Isiays a student would not have been iWile to have secured work, because i'iisc employer would have insisted i.tipon a 10 to 12-hour day. Today Ilw employer who even permits his jitmployes to work longer than eight Mlftrjur in danger of being punished (iby the courts. Wt Musicians, waiters, stenographers, ' jjjtriists are spending their spare time '(Completing their university courses. The Paris university, however,, has "ijjot vet developed the sympathy for dthe self-supporting students which is ''found in America and the faculty is jiraid to frown upon the 'people who Won't devote their entire time to the !;itcliool. As a result many students (litre able to take only part-time work. f'Tliis is especially disheartening to '(those who already have been set back iijfive years by the war in getting into Work in their life ' profession. The i'achools are filled with embryo doc ftors and lawyers 28 to 30 year of 'age. Ilii i L'Oeuvre demands that the gov 'irnnwnt giv some attention to the ttibumbcr of candidates in tne meaicai. 'Jtnd law schools. Unless some assist ance is given the future may see a lidangerous lack' of representatives of ji'these two professions in French life. For the law course takes five and i;ihe medical college seven years. And ' there are comparatively few French families today who can face the out ihty of from $4,000 to $7,000 to give ;ihcir sons a professional education. i&ew Twin Save Father ! r" From Police Court Fine ftV When twins were born April 1 to ::5Mr. and Mrs. Oren Proper, 524 iNorth Twenty-fourth street, Proper j wasn't certain it was good luck. In Central police court yester "day, however, Bernard and Bernice, tithe twins, won his freedom from a ;:eharge of reckless driving. ' ... "Seven dollars and a halt" was the : first judgment of Judge Charles E. liFoster. ".When he learned that Mrs. Proper .'and the twins had been taken from ' hospital to their home last night and that yesterday was the first day Proper had worked since Christmas, ilte reopened the case and dismissed utile young father with a warning. ill! ' U. S. Senate Adopts Ban. j?"Washington, April 15. The sen ;.jUc today adopted the house joint Resolution extending to June 1, 1924, jMihe provisions of the present 3 per jjfynt immigration restriction law. ijveral amendments were added to jhe house measure, which originally iiyould have extended the present Urw for only, one year, or to June 1, (Contlnurd From race One.) wrote Senator Jones, Washington, chairman of the senate committe on commerce: "I have given a great deal of time during the"past year to the study of trade associations and conferences with their officials, and I believe that this department is in a position to assist iu the consideration and de velopment of legislation that will make for the advancement of public interest through these trade asso ciations and at the tame time elimi nate from their organization those destructive practices that have crept into a minority of them,-If the sug gestion of a joint inquiry and hear ings by committees should be un dertaken we would be abje. to pre sent a great deal of information re garding the situation much more fully than can be done by cor respondence." Asserts Industry Confuted. Senator Edge, in explaining his measure, said that the decisions re cently handed down by the supreme court in the Hardwood and other cases, divided as they have been, has naturally the tendency to confuse industry, and at the present moment trade associations and co-operative business organizations naturally hesitate to proceed m any direction. "The policy of the present con gress has been well demonstrated through the legislation already en acted authorizing co-operative mar keting by agricultural associations," said Senator dge. "This legisla tion received practically the unani mous support of congress and if a method can be devised which will give industry a vmilar. opportunity and still prevent monopoly and re straint of tirade as already prohibited under existing statutes, congress will certainly be contributing towards the solution of existing economical illl.' .- . . Present Situation Intolerable. "These are days of necessary busi ness organization in order to cut overhead and assist in minimizing costs of production and distribution. To accomplish this, co-operation, of course, is essential and necessary. The distinction between monopoly and illegal restraint . of trade, and co-operation . which should lower costs to the consuming public, and thus encourage activity in markets, should be clearly defined and in my judgment can be. "'Certainly the present situation is intolerable and must be remedied. "If the committee is authorized, I believe concentrated study of the subject will result in legislation which will not only have the force of public opinion back of it, but members ot eacn house win, tnrougn their service on the committee, be that much more familiar with and interested in the subject, which is important in order to secure final affirmative action." ; t Representative McArthur, who in troduced the resolution in the house, said he believed tuch an investiga tion as proposed would be helpful to business. "The business man of today is in a quandary," said Mr. McArthur. "He is groping about in an effort to find the most economical meth ods of business to replace former indefinite and inaccurate informa tion and to submit substitute, re search and science for conjecture and speculation. This resolution is introduced in the hope that an im partial investigation . of business methods will evolve a plan which will permit American business to operate under conditions sufficiently advantageous to compete with for eign production and thus stimulate industry and find a means of mini mizing our. recurrent periods of dis- I tressing unemployment," Well, Naturally Amherst, Mass., April 15. The Vassar college debating team, which twice this year hat out talked the teams from men's col leges, will try again tonight in a debate with' Amherst. The ques tion will be: "Resolved, That it be in accord with public interest to abridge the right to strike and the right to lock out through the . settlement of industrial disputes by compulsory tribunals." Vassar hat defeated Colgate and Lafayette. Bread and Water Threat Stops Belligerent Witness It took a threat of 10 days in the county jail on bread and water to subdue Arthur Tinker in juvenile court yesterday when Detectives Williams and Wade told Judge Sears Tinker was a bootlegger. Tinker de fied Williams to call him that out side. . Tinker had becu summoned to juvenile Court to answer to a charge that the two children, Ernest, 14, and Margaret, 5, were not being brought up in proper surroundings. The officers testified that Tinker and his wife had been arrested in a raid on their home, 2224 North Nine teenth street. Tinker told the judge that he and his wife were going to Iowa and that they planned to leave the children with his mother and sister in Omaha. Bee Want Ads Are Business- 13,900 Nebraska Fanners Obtain War Finance Aid W) Api'lifuliotu .VIimI LTpon FiivomMy Grain and Live Sloik Market! liaised Through Loam. Applications ot IJ.900 Nebrk (aimers and raiuhers fur loam from the Omaha agency ( the War Fin ante corporation have been .acted upon favorably, according to a state ment made yenterday by I". W Tlmiiu. regional chairman of the corporation iu this territory. I he applications liave totaled frA with an average of 16 farmers' poles in each. Mr. Thomas stated. The majority of thrte notes ate secured bv chattel mortgage on crowing rattle and hugs, which bids well to nurd maintaining a steady market on liv stock, expert! say. The etfo t of bringing War Finance funds to Nrhtaska hat refilled . in raimuE the gram ana live stock mar krt from 50 to 10 per cent during the lat wittier. Mr. Thomas said. The total amount of loan since No vember 1 has reached $14,49769.09. The War 1-mame corporation, ac cording to Mr. 1 nomas, has given especially henehcial service m ex porting: agriculture products in an endeavor to dispose of surplus prod ucu which had a ilctcreut elfect uu markets. Omaha Woman Celebrates Her I(M)tbBirlb(lay Rrltir I rom Cuba to Call furuia Annul lriy Here for Mr. William KoIIimIi'iM. Her liHh birthday. Mi. William Ruiluvliitd. 719 South Tliiriy-cighili street, oprned Coal Strike Notes Springfield, 111., April IS. The miner is not responsible lor the ins of the coal industry and it is poor in dustrial leadership that can conceive industrial development only through debased manhood ana a pauper level of existence, said John L Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, today in an address delivered before the Spring field Midday Luncheon club. The present strike iu the anthra cite and bituminous coal industry," he said, "is the natural sequence of the orcanizcd effort ot the coal op erators to beat the miners backward to the level of subsistence obtaining in nonunion hclds. 1 he miners will not retreat." Pittsburgh. 1'a.. April 15. Augmentation of the union ranks is reported today to headquarters of the United Mine Workers here, ac cording to Vice President F. T. ragen of the 1-iltli district lrom the Indian Creek region of Fayette coun ty, where six independent mines em ploying about 1,200 men were closed yesterday. lTom Westmoreland 'county, he said, reports indicated that 15 mines had been closed iu the past two days, bringing the total of suspended oper ations to 35, involving 15,000 men. Uniontown reports that-1 J4 sink ers, at the Ncnacolin plant ot the Youngstown Sheet and Tube com pany, in Oreeue county, had returned to work yesterday. "Vice President Facet! stated that. according to reports, eviction notices , . . j1 W ctribM.r. ml.,. el 1,4,1 ;. 4n OiKt SHQ i: 1 Mrs. William Rothschild. for striking miners had been given to the sheriff of Westmoreland county for service at the company houses at the ureensburg shaft. Strikers Enjoined. Charleston, W. Va., April 15.- her eves yesterday to enjoy a thrill that truly comes once in a lifetime and in few lifetimes. What a beautiful, sunshiny dav for my birthday 1 I'm so happy 1 she exclaimed to her daughters, waiting to wish her "many happy re turns of the day. With the care of a debutante, the dressed to receive the children,! grandchildren, great grandchildren, nieces, nephews, grand nieces and grand nephews, who gathered from Cuba to California to celebrate the occasion. I he birthday party was staged yes terday alternoon at the home ot a granddaughter. Mrs. Dollie FJguttcr. 3709 Jones street. At Peace With World. The stirring century through which the has lived Mrs. Roths child was born in Germany when James Monroe was United Stages I president nas icit ner remarkably ai peace with life and the world. Orcat wars, marvelous inventions, outstanding epochs in the world's history arc milestones in her quiet career that of a faithful wife and mother, now mentor to younger gen erations. The centenarian has not much use for "flappers." Girls should be taught to cook, sew and should be fitted for home-making. They have too much freedom nowadays, the says. bhe herself is femininity pcrsom- ned. Uses Powder Puff. A powder pun is an important Strikinsr miners in West Virginia item on her dressing table. Her til fields todav were under three temoo- very hair is always carefully mar rary injunctions restraining officials celed and she is most particular about and members of the United Mine Workers of America ill the New River fields and in sections of Raleigh and Fayette counties from attempts to organize non-union coal diggers. . One, issued yesterday on petition of operators of the New River field, attccts liy operations, another was granted on application of six coal companies and one individual. Both name among others, President John L. Lewis of the International union. the fashion and cut of her gownt. Among those who arrived foV the celebration are Mrs. Rothschild's "baby sister" of 80, Mrs. Charlotte Levy of Sioux City: Mr. and Mrt, Mark Pollack and family of Havana, Luba, who telephoned their birth day greetings last year in the first long distance message to Omaha across Key West after ocean service was established; Mr. and Mrs. Eman uel Kmstler and family of Wilmette, III.; Mr. and Mrs. Henry sachs of They prohibit mass meetings andl Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. jay B. Kat any action by union organizers which' might cause miners to leave the em ploy of the companies. Ambitious io Make Laws yrayr Lincoln, April 15. (Special.) It the republican voters of Nuckolls county to see things the way Oswiu Keifer of Superior wants them to, that young man Will be a member of the legislature next winter and he will snake the third generation of Keifers sitting in law-making, bod ies. His grandfather was the late Con gressman J. Warren Keifer of Springfield, 0.,'who served in the 45th. 46th, 47th, 48th, 59th, 60th and 61st sessions of congress. He was speaker of the 47th national con gress. During the Civil war, Con gressman Keifer was a major gen -era! and also served in the Spanish American war with the same rank. His fatherJ. Warren Keifer, jr.. came to Nebraska in the 80s and purchased a ranch near Superior which he still operates. He served as representative from .Nuckolls county in the famous session of 1907 and was chairman of the republican state central committee in 1908. Young Keifer. aspiring candidate for the legislature, served in the late i emerging as a first lieutenant in the war, enlisting as a private and wSth division, of Marion, III.; Mr. and Mrs.' L. J. Hcrzog and daughter of Lincoln,' Mrs. Emma Hattenback of Sioux City and three sons from California. The out-of-town guests will remain a week. Most of them are at the Blackstonc. Many family parties will be given during their stay, Nine Children. Mr. Rothschild died more than-20 years ago, after he and his wife had celebrated their 50th wedding anni versary. They had nine children Mrs. Alexander Pollack,. Mrs. Sam uel Katz, Mi's. M. Jacobs, Miss An nabel and Late Rothschild. Omaha Mrs. Herzog of Lincoln, and the three sons in the west. There are 10 grandchildren and nine great-grand children besides. . ; Trucks Haul Off 1,000 Tons of Refuse in Cleanup Drive One thousand tons of refuse were hauled away in automobile trucks last week,- in connection with the cleanup campaign, according to an estimate by Dr. A, S. Pinto, health commissioner. "We were unable to complete the work this week, as we had planned," said the health commissioner, but we will resume next Monday morn' ling. We are asking for volunteer trucks to assist in finishing up the work. We had the use of four gov ernment trucks from Fort Crook this week. Perhaps 10 private trucks m addition to the city trucks will suffice." Clifford Thorne to Run for Iowa Senatorship Chicago, April 15.-(Bv A. P.)- Clifford Thorne, general counsel for the American farm Bureau federa tion, today formally announced hia candidacy for the republican nomi nation for United States senator from Iowa. He simultaneously ten dered his resignation to the farm bu reau federation. Mr. Thome's entry into the re publican senatorial race brings the list of candidates to five. Others are Charles E. Pickett of Waterloo; Smith Brookhart of Washington, la.; Burton E. Sweet of Waverly, and L. E. Francis of Des Moines. Lecture on Archeology. Dr. Frank N. Ridgely of the Pres byterian Theological seminary will deliver an address. "Sidelights on Archeology," in the Omaha Bible institute, Twentieth and Lravenworth streets, tomorrow at 7:JU DcValcra Plans Coup v in Ireland Today (t Ml)) fmm I'M Om I nifittit lo IN Duty Mail No tnt wt injured. British troops have Ittn conlinrJ la their btruckl under orders fcith will not empire unid Tuesday, Win dot at h Cftirtl station of the Dublin mrtropolittn police ht httn shuttered wiib loop ho led Steel. Not withstanding the day's fulling rtenlt, it it ddrd. a conflirl on s (arcs rl it not expected in Dublin, A late Dublin dispatch to the Lou don Timet tayt an armed party yes terday seized the Britiih-lrih steam packet abed at the iuttb wall. It ia not known how tin will fftt fadings. tuning nmd-iiu rx tuned in rit ptru ! ih nr U night. It It if potted hf republican fwfd ad d'liorul buildings. The ftrtulrr ( ulfjbon rubatigt wit shot n wouitdfd. iVmuundrr Roderick 0'Conne.f of the stall vi h mdrpe ndent Irish if puhluan army i imoiee a titling ldjy that there doubt whether r anion De Vtleu would approve y agreement which h knew could not ba made effective. "Hut in any event." added the commander. "I want to nukt it perlfrtly clear, we art perfectly mi dependfnt of De Valfri." Waging ton, April 15 lormaiion Of 4 lrw iHtl council uf the Aiimu icii A.mhuIioii (or recognition of the trull Kfpubtif wtt annnunrrd to day at the ri4ui4twn't rtttionl hrjd'jiMri-u (fi All oihrr council in the Doirwt ( Columbia rfcmtly writ expelled (mm th aooiiin lor (ailuir, it wtt ttid, longff support ih- purpokft ol the pun.l iHgtmsutmn, Lvrr Efrt trio Ralr. David Cur. N'rb. Apt. I 15 I Special ) Tri city council lowered bght tttrs 0 per cent (ruin the old price and lb electric power and stove rtiet were given IS prr rrnt discount if paid before the 1 0th of the month. & iMia ViA. i m () ami tto M e J 5 i SUITS THAT GREET THE SPRING OU will find in this store only those suit modes which have met with the approval of the best-dressed women at no' greater cost than you would pay for the common-place suit elsewhere. White Silks - Sport Silks Thompson-Belden Qualities REDUCED IN PRICE Seldom Such a Sale Every yard from regular stock. Fashionably new and desirable. Beautiful silks for bridal gowns, graduation; dresses and all sports wear. There is every advantage in purchasing for new wardrobes when prices are interestingly low. , These White Silks 40-inch heavy crepe' de chine, $1.95 " 40-inch lustrous charmeuse, 1.95 36-inch silk jersey, 1.50 40-inch radium silk, 1.95 40-inch extra heavy radium, 225 36-inch Belding's chiffon taffeta, 2.95 36-inch pure dye taffeta, 1.95 36-inch satin raye, 2.50 36-inch wash satin, 1.50 36-inch Georgette crefpe, 1.95 36-inch washable pongee skirting, 1.85 40-inch satin Sonata, a crepe back with satin finish, 2.95 Habutai, 35c, 95c, $1, $1.25 and 1.50 54-inch Glendora crepe, ' 3.95 38-inch silk ratine in colors and . black, 2.50 36-inch pure dye taffetas, colors and black, 1.59 Extra heavy Jap pongee, 95c Black and White Sports Silks $3.45 1 Monday Only kigel's washable F&n-ta-si sports silks in effective black and white plaids and stripes. (40-inch.) All White Sports Silks Plain and Novelty 1 $3.45 Monday Only An advantageously complete selection of finest white silks is included at this saving in Price. - Main Floor