:RT SINGER LEFT HIM FOR TRIP TO PARIS, PORTER AVERS‘‘Struggling Artist and on Relief,” Wife Declares,DIVORCE HELD UPAppeared in Recitals in Europe and Cincinnati.His wife* career came before herhome, was the complaint in Do* meatlc Relations Court, Thursday, of Prank Waters, 42. Nefro, 3111 Van Buren avenue, as he soufht a divorce from Nadine Water*.' 40, Nefro soprano concert sinter, Brooklyn. N. V.Mrs. Waters, widely known In musical circles, has given recitals and concerts in many cities in United States, including Cinclnnat. and in Europe.Water* charged that hi* wife left him in 1821 to go to Paris, Prance, to continue her musical studies on a scholarship awarded her He told Judge Charles W. Hoffman that after she returned to the United States he saw her several times, but that she refused to return to live with him.WIPE WRITES LETTERMrs. Waters wrote a letter to Judge Hoffman. January 3, in which she stated that she did not care if her husband were given a divorce on grounds of abandonment or de* sertion, although she said that he had not supported her for a number of years. She stated also that it was he who urged her to stay In Paris and continue her studies. The letter also said in part:”1 was born and brought up In Wyoming. O., and because my hus-bind is divorcing me I write to you as I am yet a struggling artist and can not afford an attorney. My husband has not supported me since 1832. I have a future. , . . Please do not let him have the divorce by saying unkind things about me.Mr*. Waters's parent*. Mr and Mrs. Martin Van Robert*, live at *27 vine street. Wyoming. Her marriage to her first husband, Ralph Wataon, ended In a divorce at Louisville Ky. Waters, who is employed as a porter at the Hebrew Union College, also was married previously. his flrat wife, Ethel, having died in 1814. He and Mrs Waters were married April If. 1813, in Cincinnati.Judge Hoffman continued the case pending receipt of Mrs. Water*' first divorce decree.(Continued from Page 1)The fourth point Is that If slums are to be cleared, accommodation for the population displaced should be provided on another site before the slums are demolished. Otherwise, the displaced families crowd into other already over-crowded Accommodation;' We have also definitely proved, he said, 'that where people previously in slums have been properly housed, their health improves, their standard of life is raised, there is less juvenile delinquency. Money spent upon housing is therefore well spent.And finally,M he added, “the pro-vision of low-rent housing with public funds has not interfered in any way with the provision by private enterprise of dwellings for those income groups who can afford such accommodation In England, as in America, private enterprise can not provide good new accommodation for the lowest income groups without doing ao at a loss.THERAPY BOONITAt Tuberculosis Sanatorium, Report States.Dr R, G. DeVoist, superintendent of the Anti-Tuberculosis League, stated. Thursday, that occupational therapy was proving a boon at the Tuberculosis Sanatorium The work being done was revealed in a report to the Board of Trustee*.A total of 193 patients and It former patients enrolled for course* offered through the Social Service and Economic Service departments of the hospital. Dr DeVoist said.Of the many course# offered—from carpentry to music appreciation— by far the most popular turned out to be music appreciation, he said. There were 175 persons who enrolled in this course.Bedside courses. for those who are bed-ridden are one of the most important phases of this unique hospital schools. These courses include English, in which 129 are enrolled; vocabulary building, taken bv 150; ‘How to get a Job 25; art, 35, and office and filing, 28.Other patients are registered as follows: Office work. 53; shorthand. 20 up-patients, and 14 bed patients; typing, 30; filing. 6; dictating machine, 11: mimeograph, 6; business English. 14; business spell-* Urges Co-operation by Symphony PatronsSymphony patrons are being asked by the management of the Cincinnati 8ymphony Orchestra to refrain from interfering with attendance and activities at the Sportsmen's Show in Music Hall during the Friday matinee and Saturday night concerts —the second pair of the Brahma Cycle, when Jascha Heifeta will be the soloist. Theo F. Gannon, manager. issued the following notice ■We are indebted to the management of Music Hall for the use of the auditorium this week. Without this co-operation we should not have been able to present our distinguished vuom. Jascha Heifeta, since he had no other open dates on his schedule,In appreciation we are asking our patron* to refrain from entering the north or south Wings during these two concerts. Patrons who can remain in their seats during the intermission or occupy only the side halls, leaving the foyer free, will materially assist the staff in the directing of visitors to the hall's exhibit*.“Entrance to the auditorium will be through the usual Parkway doors and through the entrance nsrth of the foyer, which will be properly marked.IlHIIHMIMHIIIIInilllllllKIHIIinHIHfllllHilMDHIIMIIIinlTRUNK THIEF SENTENCED_Walter Carter, 32. Negro, 427 Elisabeth street, who was found in possession of a stolen trunk Sunday night, was sentenced to thirty day* in the w orkhouse Thursday by Judge A. L. Luebbera. The trunk was identified by Frank Gardner, a member of the cast of You Can’t Take It With You. appearing at the Cox Theater, Carter said the trunk wm given him.League. Time did not permit an Inspection of the Greenhiila project.Capt. Retsa said that additional housing facilities in the United State*, as contrasted with England, seemed to be provided for the income groups needing them less. He told of a survey covering home construction in the two countries during i834 and 1835.In the United State* three-fourths of all the houses and apartments built to those year* were for the income groups above 12.000 a year, which represents only one-fourth of the population, so that three-fourths of the population, whoWPfP iinrlar 10 AAA m troae