Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1946 — Page 7

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Republican sday, May 16

NO. 32

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“ings by a young Brazillian artist, Djanira.

Inside Indian:

"Jr. reared three children through their early, _

tive, years.

200 more. He acquired his new youngsters recently when he

Now he has to repeat the process with

was appointed superintendent of -the Marion county :

children’s guardians home.. JBoyish, humorous, understanding and six-foot tall with an athletic build, he's the ideal picture of the perfect papa. For years, Mr. Hennessy studied how to rear children scientifically. -But he didn’t exactly follow’ the book in rearing Bis own. He doesn’t believe in applying strict psychological rules in the business of developing human beings at a tender age. So, like Topsy, and practically all other youngsters, his own delightful William, 18; Grace Louise, 16; and Helen Frances, 12—“just grew.”

He doesn’t think spanking is an intelligent method * Nevertheless, he abashedly

of disciplining children. confesses, there were infrequent occasions when he spanked his own, “But it was never premeditated,” he hastens to add. : “As a matter of fact, I'm not so sure I'm sorry about it. . . . It wouldn't have been fair to deprive them of normal childhood experiences.”

Children Aided in Experiments

POSSIBLY the Hennessy children were subjected

. to worse ordeals than spanking, although they diplo-

matically won't admit it. They've patiently served as “guinea pigs” for daddy’s numerous new-fangled child intelligence and aptitude tests, They've undergone just about every question-and-answer, fit-thg-blocks together examination ever devised. (Helen Frances took a “paby test” when she was two) And like Clifton Fadiman on Information Please, they pretty well know all the answers by this time, “They seem to be none the worse for the tests,” their father observes somewhat ironically. In fact, the quizzes appear to have sharpened them up. This sharpening up process is now manifest in a quick-trigger barrage of high schoolish punning trained on their innocent parents. The Hennessys learned to pun in self-defense and do a bangup job of it themselves now. - Most of the time, their house at 6185 Rosslyn ave., is overrun with youngsters of all ages—{friends of the Hennessy offspring.. Thus, Mr. Hennessy is wellprimed for the overcrowded children's guardian home, where hundreds of tots trip over each other. . William (Three Star—from the brandy of the same name) Hennessy is a studious man, deeply immersed in his chosen profession. He earned the sobriquet as a tackle. on Hanover college's football team back in the 1920's. He managed to shake it off during his school teaching career, only to get stuck with it again in the army, from which he was recently discharged ag a major.

Aided in Army Teaching IN THE ARMY, he first was in charge of psychological examination staffs at induction stations in Louisville and Evansville. Then he headed a special training unit at Camp Atterbury, where he converted G. L illiterates into literates in 12-day classes.

Occupation Duties

HERSFELD, Germany, May 4.—What does an army of occupation do? Well, something’s always happening, somebody's always creating a disturbance, trying to go where he (or she) has beenr ordered not to go, trying to steal,

to carry illicit mail, to deal in the black market. This regiment, the 7th infantry, is spread over 10 kreis (an area comparable to an American county). In this district are cities, towns, villages, farms. Also the usual quota of lawless persons plus an unusually reckless and dangerous mass of displaced persons hell-bent on drinking, robbing, even murdering. Roads and railroads must be patrolled, as the search for Nazi party members goes -on. Persons warited in other sectors must be watched for. Reports of black market operations must be investigated. Murders, unfortunately far too common, must be probed—and it's not easy to catch ’em. Displaced persons live in big camps, where they are fed and housed. But allied control forbids any attempt to make them work or to set a curfew or confine them to quarters. So, restless and reckless after years of forced labor, they roam.into villages, to farmhouses, demanding what they want (usually liquor and women), and beating, even killing to get it.

Displaced Persons Sent Home

STEADILY these D. P.’s have been sent home as nations prepared to receive them and transportation became available. But there were several millions (more than 5,000,000 from Russia alone). Only recently has the number decreased and occupation skill increased so that killing and robbery are fairly well checked. At first there was no local government, no local police, no. local court. Gradually these have been established and in most places are handling their own affairs—and doing it well, too.

Calory Cutting

(Last of a Series)

WASHINGTON, May 4.—One slice of bread equals one potato equals three @ieces of candy. That sort of arithmetic will be heard again in restaurants, grocery stores and home kitchens as Americans reduce their daily rations to spare food for hungry Europeans. It sounds like pre-war days of slimming diets and the calorie-counting we did before we learned about vitamins. Those who are earnestly trying to cut their rations will find they can do so without sacrificing health if they go about it scientifically They may, however, need to brush up on the calorie counts ot various 1oods as well as on their vitamin and mineral content.

Simple Way to Count Calories

THE SIMPLEST way to count calories is to learn 100 calorie portions of various common foods. Here are a few, as a starter: : Bread, which we are going to eat less, furnishes 100 calories in every slice if the slices are thick enough so that 12°make a one-pound loaf. Every quarter-pound stick of butter, when you can get it, furnishes 800 calories. As you cut the butter you can determine how many calories each pat furnishes.

My Day

NEW YORK (Friday) —I forgot to tell you that, the other evening, at the New York School for Social Research, in the lounge where we had our refreshments, I noticed a very interesting exhibit of paintn She 1s only 32 years old. Her ancestry is Indian and Austrian. She comes’ from a small town, in the backlands of Brazil and has had to fight for a living all of her life.

She is largely self-taught and only began to use colors less than five years ago, but her pictures have sold in both France and England. She paints the world in which she has lived, the world of everyday people, and her work has vitality and strength. I am sure these paintings will interest those in our country who are looking for new talent.

Thanks People for Sentiments

1 WANT TO take this opportunity to thank literay thousands of people who wrote to me around pril 12, in commemoration of the anniversary of

" my husband’s death, They have sent me poems and

“thoughts” and stories and dreams: and letters,

1 should like to answer every individual personaclt;

but as that ls not possible, 1 want, to tel

“At -

- Army Makes Many Checks

. to us can rest assured his, spirit goes marching on

William D, Hennessy Jr... . A new “dad” for. the city’s homeless children.

least, they could read the label on the K-rations,” he recalled. It took Mr. Hennessy nine years to get through Hanover. But it was due to temporary lack of funds, not lack of knowledge. Working his way, he served apprenticeships in ditch-digging, truck driving, mechanics, farming and various types of salesmanship. In school during world war I, he first majored in algebra and French because he wanted to go overseas as an artilleryman, But the war ended before his ambition was realized and he switched to English and social studies. After graduation, he became a school teacher in the Columbus, Ind., high school. One of his classes there was next to a sheet metal shop. In an effort to conduct classes with some degree of efficiency; he instituted what he called periodic study conferences in which he interviewed students individually at his desk—so they could hear, . To his surprise, he found he obtained better results than he did with the old mass classroom technique. This innovation was partially responsible for his interest in child psychology. He learned that professional understanding of the childhood and adolescent mind is an indispensable aid to teachers. Later, following graduate study at Indiana .university, he became school psychologist for the Columbus public schools. He thinks school systems generally have grossly underestimated the importance of the grade school instructor, whose teachings mold the first opinions of each new generation. In 1939, he came here as clinical psychologist in the Marion county mental hygiene clinic, the job he now. Holds. He takes over the Guardians home superney ont May 16. . (By Sherley Uhl)

By Jack Bell

But comes an informer. who has watched his neighbor's black market activities. A man once member of the Nazi partyis séen and reported. Persons crossing from the Russian to the American zone without permits are caught. American civilian censorship division wants to check a train-load of passengers, so the army sends a company of infantry to help search for mail being carried secretly rather than being put in the postoffice where it's subject to censorship,

SUCH TASKS come up daily. The army does the job, turns the suspects over to American military government—and has more jobs next day. Occasienally every road into a town is blocked suddenly and soldiers move in and search every house from attic to cellar. They find G. I. equipment, illegally sold and bought. They find Germans. without proper papers, showing they've slipped in from the Russian’ zone. Occasionally they find a D. P, suspected of some crime; occasionally a Nazi party man who didn't check in; sometimes G. L deserters. Sadly enough, not a little of the work of our occupation forces is caused by our own men. Acts are committed which arouse horror at home, and too often they're done so cléverly that both army and local police are without clues. And, of course, one such act can undo the good morale building of the entire regiment. Usually it isn’t the work of veteran soldiers who fought the Germans, saw buddies die and might be expected to go berserk. The rookie does this dirty work that keeps his outfit in trouble—and there are many outfits other than the combat units which alone do the security work.

Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

By Jane Stafford

One medium-sized - potato. weighing five . ounces furnishes 100 calories. Other 100 calorie portions are: One large apple; one and ‘a quarter cups (one ounce) of puffed or flaked cereals; two-thirds of a cup (about five ounces) of milk; three large prunes; one ounce of sugar, or about one and three-fourths level teaspoons; two ounces of cream; one and onethird medium sized eggs, two small slices of cooked bacon.

3 Pieces of Cundly y—100 Calories

GETTING over to the lunch and dinner types of | food, there are 100 calories from each of the following: - Eight ounces of carrots; one and one-half cubic inches of cheese; one-half cup of peas figured on the basis of two such portions making one pound of unshelled peas; one small slice of medium fat roast beef weighing one and one-half ounces; two and one-half ounces of canned salmon; one pound of tomatoes. Three small pieces of candy furnish 100 calories. A piece of plain cake cut one and three-fourth inches square gives slightly more than 100 caloroies, while a plece of plain frosted cake measuiring two and a half ‘by two by ‘two inches runs up to 160 calories.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

through this column how deeply I appreciate their thoughts of my husband. If they remember Maeterlinck’s “Blue Bird,” they will recall that in that story people live again as those on earth think of them. If that is so, the many people who have expressed hope the things my husband cared for and lived for will not be lost

with the help of their thoughts.

Value in Help to Needy

AS A RESULT of an interview written by Gretta Palmer in which I told of some of the European conditions, letters have been pouring in from people in this country who would like to get in touch with some family in Europe and to feel they are contributing individually to that family’s better living and greater happiness. 1 know American Relief for France will provide the names of needy. French families or children, and I am quite sure the organizations representing other nations in this country will be glad todo the same. This kind of -individual contact has value now because of the material help it will “bring, and it will also have value for us in the future because.of the

. By HENRY BUTLER ONE REAL test of a conductor is what he can do with

“iri amateur orchestra. ‘ Fabien Sevitzky and the Scottish Rite Symphony or-y

chestra last night worked together to make surprisingly good

& | music.

‘I say “surprisingly” because of the usual hazards and difficulties ama=teur orchestras struggle with, You go to an amateur orchestral concert prepared for almost anything, and

certainly willing to forgive a lot.

” BUT LAST nothing to forgive. True, the Scot-

on the brass side, but in the compositions Dr. Sevitzky wisely chose, the brassiness was all to the good. What really moved me last night was what I've observed in Dr, Sevitzky’s work with the Indianapolis Symphony, especially in. the season's first rehearsals, The man knows how to train an orchestra. He knows what he wants: He knows how to tell the musicians what effects he wants them to produce.

» » » THAT, in part, explains why Indianapolis Symphony personnel, particularly some of the younger ones who are learning symphonic repertoire, are apt to be enthusiastic about Dr. Sevitzky, Last night's program was entirely what scoffers might call old chestnuts—Meyerbeer, Thomas, Strauss, Herbert, Sousa. It takes good conducting to make them hot chestnuts. That “Coronation March” from Meyerbeer’s “Prophet” (almost as familiar as the strains to “Twice as much for a nickel, too”) last night

sounded new, ” » »

TRUE, the Scottish Rite orchestra has the advantage -over many other amateur orchestras of having ex-

night there was

tish Rite orchestra is a little heavy °

Indianapolis’ own . . . the only symphony orchestra in the entire Masonic organization bowed to an appreciative audience in the Scottish Rite cathedral last night under the directorship of Fabien

DR. SEVITZKY LEADS ORCHESTRA'S DEBUT—

~ Scottish Rite Concert

Sevitzky, Indianapolis Symphony conductor.

perienced musicians in its ranks. Among them is Thomas E. Wilson, conductor of the Hoosier Symphony out at Danvilles Central Normal college,.who last night modestly and industriously played viola. (This is a big week for Mr, Wilson, gho will conduct Mendelssohn's “Elijah” in Danville tomorrow afternoon). Such was the demand for tickets that two performances of the pro-

‘gram were given last night. We

went to the later one, in which a

musical Masons with tumultuous applause.

» » n MAYBE Indianapolis isn’t so glib as Los Angeles is with the fustest-and-mostest lingo. But this Scote tish Rite orchestra is something

unique, as F. Elmer Raschig pointed out in his introductory remarks. There isn't another such orchestra in the whole Masonic Jurisdiction, said Mr. Raschig. And, again to quote Mr. Raschig,

has done a fine job,

practically full ‘house greeted the .

Classics from the saxophones .

«camera's critical eye.

: - 5 = , - . 4 A | a : . i ii Li yolis Hoosier Profile E e In di: li ery | L in hosiee Boh n ianapo is Imes ' SECOND SECTION SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1946 PAGE 1

+ + & close-up of some of the memspeaking as a Mason, Bro. Sevitzky bers in the brass section reveals their intense concentration to the

EDITORS’ GROUP PLANS MEETING

Indiana Democratic Press Men to Convene Here.

The Indiana Democratic Editorial association today planned its annual spring meeting May 25 in In-

dianapolis, with John A. Watkins, publisher of the Greene County Evening World at Bloomfield, as chief speaker. The meeting will feature a luncheon in the Claypool hotel. There will be no evening banquet. Hugh A. Barnhart, Rochester publisher, will retire as president. His successor will be Robert P. O'Bannon, Corydon, who will be elevated from the vice presidency. Other officers to be advanced were Marion Ayers, Shelbyville, to vice president, and Curtis Hostetter, Lafayette, to secretary. A new treasurer will be elected. Mr, Barnhart said that President Truman had informed the association that he would be unable to accept an invitation to attend the meeting. -- Mr. Watkins, the principal speaker, is a past state commander of the American Legion. He is a vet eran of World war I and World war II.

clude members of the state democratic committee; U. 8. Circuit Court of Appeals. Judge Sherman Minton; Assistant Postmaster General Walter Myers; former Governors Henry F. Schricker and M. Clifford Townsend; former Secretary of Agriculture Claude Wickard, and Representatives Louis Ludlow and Ray J. Madden,

SPONSOR ‘JUNGLE LUNCHEON’ Mrs. Virgil Sly will speak at a “Jungle Luncheon” sponsored by the missionary society of Seventh Christian church at noon Thursday in the church dining room.

> HANNAH ¢

amount we will learn about families similar to our" 9 in. gther Dakiona SHOGHOW this WOE,

ae

Guests invited to the meeting in-f

long.

bobbed-haired teachers caused? Some school boards wouldn't hire them! But the criticism you complain of is dying. Generally, ‘the public likes to see us looking chic. A frowzy get-up’s been our uniform too long. And under our smart coiffures today, there's far more knowledge and teaching skill than in the days when people bragged that they could spot a teacher every time. So, I'd ignore the criticism, or what's left of it. You owe it to your daily audience of admiring youngsters to look as spotless and smartly dressed as you would if you'd invited 40 guests into your home. Kids, what do you think about your teacher's clothes?

HAVE YOU EVER—

Helped with a school paper sale? Many parents have, and found it a full-time job. On the day of the sale they arrive as teachers check in 7:15 in the morning. You'd never recognize this crew of’ mothers arrayed for the fray in slacks and sweaters. You've seen the empty crates waiting to be filled. Maybe you've watched the kids on their way to school that day. By 7:30 the trek is on, Scurrying from all directions, appearing as if by signal, hundreds

MISS TILLIE'S NOTEBOOK . . .

Should a School Teacher DressUp?

DEAR MISS TILLIE-We'd like to know what you think about| teachers dressing smartly, wearing earrings and high heels, using rouge collecting, tying, stacking! They and lipstick. We get criticized for this. After all, teachers are people. work sometimes into the night, so

WELL-GROOMED TEADHESS: s =

(Parents, teachers and ‘children, toe, are urged to send their school worries to Miss Tillie in care of The Times.)

of children, each loaded to the chi?)

with bundles of papers and magazines. Cars, fairly oozing papers, stop at the school, dads on their way to work, tossing out bundles to the work crew and to a handful of small boys eager to be useful and so dodge studies for awhile. But this is just the curtain-raiser that you've seen, The real act's yet to come. 5 For two weeks the children have been gathering and stacking and tying papers at some 10 or 12 centers in the neighborhood—“paper stations,” the kids call them, each with a manager and his assistants; storage space which kindly disposed parents have offered for accumulating papers, a front porch or the family garage, : We've seen porches so stacked with bundles of magazines that the back doors were the only means of entrance to the house; garages so full of paper that the car's front bumper couldn't get inside. Rivalry among the stations runs high, for an award is giveh to the one with the biggest pile of papers.

By Hilda Wesson

| vestigation of all military estabe

Army Orders Probe of Bible : . Burning Charge &. ou Bo By ROGER STUART WASHINGTON, May 4. — The war department has ordered an investigation of charges that the army is burning Bibles at military camps in the United States, it was learned today. ; The Christian Advocate, a pube a! lication of the Methodist church, * which brought the ‘charges, has been requested by the war departe ment to “name names and tell what it knows,” according to a spokese man. The publication asserted that the army, in dismantling camp chapels “in a certain Pennsylvania military reservation,” had ordered that all tracts, Bibles and Testaments found there be burned along with other materials.

. » s “THOUSANDS of os, still in the original packages, just as they had been received from the Amere ican Bible Society and the Gideons, were among the stock marked for destruction,” the paper said. Declaring that this information had come from a “thoroughly ree liable source,” the publication state ed: “If it were not altogether aue thentic, (it) would sound incredie ble.” The same procedure, the paper sald, is assumed to he followed at other camps, with the result that “vast stores of scriptures designed for soldiers’ reading will be burned.” . » ” ” THE WAR DEPARTMENT, in ree vealing that it had ordered an ine

sd

lishments in Pennsylvania, dee clared: “It is not our policy to destroy Bibles.” Generally, the spokesman sald# Bibles, Testaments and other re= ligious books were sent to army chaplains by private publishing companies and church organizae tions for use in the camps. “When the camps are closed and the Bibles are no longer needed,” he said, “they are supposed to be turned over to the quartermaster’ corps for use elsewhere or for dise posal.” “ war assets administration, disposal agency for most surplus property in the United States, said no complaints of Bible-burning had been received at headquarters here,

We, the Wom

The hours the youngsters put in

that parents call to ask us to put a curfew limit on them, and to say

Dear Well- Sian Teachers—You've said lacie are people.| they can’t get their boys to work like The public's waking to the fact, and we're to blame it's taken them so |that at home!

A truck, donated by a patron, col-

Early in the game. the taxpayers got the idea that because they lects from the stations farthest paid us, they controlled our actions, and we let them. No other group of public servants was_told what to wear and how to! loads to the crates, But the “loot” comb their hair. Are you old enough to remember the furor that

| from the school and delivers the

from the closer stations is brought in by the “wagon brigade”"—and what a gang they are, Under the leadership of trafic boys, they rumble by, stringing bumper to bumper over an entire block, pulling wagons of all sizes and kinds, some with high, built up sides, some with two boys hitched to the center tongue like horses. The brigade serves in shifts and when it’s time to change, loud are the wails that go up that their time has been cut short,

Meanwhile, the mothers’ group is directing the - whole show, filling crates, keeping count of those sent in to the paper stock company, ordering more empties, calming Mrs. Jones, who calls to argue. that her son's station should have had first prize, assuring Mrs, Smith that her front porch will soon be empty. At last it's over, The final crate is loaded on the van. A welcome silence settles if, The kids can't even talk. The mothers’ crew limps painfully toward home and food and bed. n » . TODAY STEVE SAID--When we made out our senior high study slips this morning, we had to put down what kind of work we wanted to prepare for, I put “Warrior” on mine and my teacher said I'd not need to train for that.

PURDUE GALA WEEK OPENS WITH DINNER

Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind, May 4-—The first annual Gala Week at Purdue university since 1941 got under way last night with a dinner for the class of 1896. Members of the class who were present are Harry B. Marsh, Hagerstown, Ind.; Natalia Lahr Dwight, Butte, Mont.; H. P. Stinespring, Ghicago; Samuel R. Fox, Oakland, Cal; Prace A: Orb; Lafayette; David ©. Jordan, Albany, N. Y., Fred Ebershof!, Lafayette; BEd D. Jackson, Detroit, Mich, and Earl T. White, Waterloo, Iowa. A parad€ this afternoon will follow ‘the noon alumni luncheon. The parade will end at the grave of John Purdue, on which members of the class of 1021 will place a wreath. Today's program will be climaxed

by the annual Founders’ Day ban-

quet. Fritz B. Ernst, class of 1900, Alnumni Association president, will preside at the banquet. Dr. Frederic L. Hovde, Purdue president, will speak,

——————————— FREED ON $5000 BOND

One of four men arrested a week ago in connection with a $200,000

clothing black market ring was free

today under $5000 bond. He was

william Ames; 49,. Louisville, Ky.

Ames will be arraigned in the Louisville district federal court on

» BE .. e

7

8 charge of thel’ from interstate ‘shipments.

Sh —

4 Networks Share Awards

For Top Radi

COLUMBUS, 0, May 4 (U. P). —Awards made at the Institute for Education by Radio in the 10th American exhibition of educational radio programs were distributed today among the four major American networks and the Canadian Broadcasting corpqration, The awards for: national network shows were made in 11 classifications in addition toa special presentation to Columbia Broadcasting system for Norman Corwin's V-J day production, “On A Note of Triumph.” First place in the cultural division was shared by the American broadcasting . company’s program, “Theater Guild on the Air,” and

the CBS series, “Invitation to Music.” Raymond Gram Swing, ABC

commentator, was a double winner. The committee at Columbus, O., cited his program as the best in news interpretation and in furthering international -understanding. The ABC also won. & first place for its “American Town Meeting of the Air” judged by the committee the best in the presentation of public issues. Mutua} Broadcasting System took top honors in dealin with personal and family presentatic with its series entitled “Don't Be a Sucker”

and “bad the best program for)

o Presentations

| childrens’ out-of-school with “House of Mystery.” Awards by classifications: Religious—First, “The Eternal Light” NBC; honorable mention, “The Catholic Hour” NBC. Agricultural—-First, “Columbia's Country Journal” CBS; honorable mention, “National Farm Radio Forum” Canadian Broadcasting corp., and “The National Farm and Home Hour” NBC, Women’s— First, NBC. Cultural —First,

listening

“Consumer Time"

“Theater Guild of the Air” ABC, and “Invitation to Music” CBS. Honorable mention, “The White Empire” CBS, Dealing with social problems—|C First, “Here's Youf Health” CBS; honorable mention, “I Was a Conviet” MBS. Dealing with personal and family problems—First, “Don’t Be a Sucker’ MBS, and “The Baxters” NBC; honorable mention, “Home Is What You Make It" NBC, Presenting public issue--First, “America’s Town Meeting of the Air" ABC; honorable mention, “American Forum of the Air” MBS. News Interpretation — Raymond Swing, ABC. Children’s (out-of-school I tenEt, “House : of MBS; able, seniba, & of America” C38,

SALES REPORTED BY

Let Hubby Select Your New Clothes

BY RUTH MILLETT IN SPITE of the fact she walked with a “seeing-eye” dog in° the Easter fashion parade at Asbury Park, N.'J, Mrs, Joseph Vaughn Weeks of nearby Red Bank received an orchid as one of the best~ dressed women out for a morning stroll. Her husband, she said in explain. ing the ‘chicness of her outfit, had selected her clothes for her. ’ Many women would dress more becomingly if they let their huse bands have the say on what they should or shouldn't buy. The reason is that a man looks at a hat or suit or coat with no pree conceived ideas of what is cure rently “smart.” . ” n HE HASN'T been studying fashe fon magazines, so his head isn't crammed full of information about the new kind of sleeves, the favored colors, and the stylishness of padded shoulders. Nor does he know or care what the other women in his wife's bridge club have bought. And he isn't ine timidated by a clerk's dismayed, “But NOBODY is wearing that this season.” Being a man, he has an open: mind when it comes to women's fashions. ‘All he sees is whether or not a dress or hat makes his wife look pretty—and to heck with smartness that isn’t flattering. ” - n BUT FEW women have any ree spect for their husbands’ ability te help them select clothes. They buy what they. like, or what they think will impress “the girls,” and then come home to ask, “Do you like it,~Dear?”, without really believing it important whether a mere man approves or disapproves. Maybe men don't know anything about fashions. Perhaps that is just the reason why it is easy for a man to see whether or not a hat or dress is becoming to his wife.

NORTH SIDE REALTORS

Menibers of the Associated North Side Realtors have reported the recent following sales of property: _ 4734 Hinesley ave, by Fred T, Hill; 608 E. 46th st. by Fred T, Hill and Pieber & Reilly; 1626 Tabor st, 2041 Olive st. and 1164-68 W. 31st st. by Edgar E. Broderick; 4119 College ave and lot 604 ab warfleigh by R., E. Walker; southe west corner at Meridian and 82d oe. by Harry I. Robbins Realty lots 15 and 16 at Forest Ridge ne Thomas" PF. Carson; 233 E, 634 st, Douglas and Walnut sts, and one and one-half acres at Michigan rd. and 52d st. by Fieber & Reilly} 4387 and 4440 Sutherland ave. by Robert L. Mason; lots 57 and 16%

tenden ave. 160 E. Tist st. 2134-36 N.~New Jersey st, 5845 and 5849 Indianola ave, 3145 N. New st. a a os Story by Bruce Savage and American