Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1950 — Page 23

must be mentioned, My polblur when they stepped up to

*

THE LOCATION made the two teachers a hit nervous. It didn't occur to me that the Cl ¥pool Liquor Store would make teachers fidgety. After all, the apples weren't spiked. The reason for choosing the spot was that Alfred Cahn said it would be perfectly all right for me ta/stick the sign ‘on the front of his window. Besides, the Claypool Hotel is sort of headquarters. Mrs. Joan Stairs, substitute teacher from New Castle, was undecided whether she was eligible to receive an apple. She was certainly eligible in my book, “A substitute teacher doesn’t apples,” Mrs. Stairs remarked. Her two companions, Mrs. Marilyn Hoover, Muncie, and Mrs, Martha Jackson, Muncie, showed no reluctance. Especially happy was Mrs. Jackson who teaches high school classes. “High school students don’t give apples to teachers,” laughed Mrs. Jackson, “unless they're wormy. Are your apples free of worms?” I was

* ~

Apple of his eye . . "Mr. Inside” polishes

apples for Teachers Mary Jane Jeffery (left) . 2b Mrs. Kathleen Richardson.

8

get many ofy Vogue.

LJ > -

Robert Long,

l, easy to crushed. 2 2% much as an apple that, for example, Miss Mary fortable. Jane Jeffery received. I reminded him that even ortable, MRS. HOOVER, a third and fourth grade as a small boy, lady teachers were my favorites. | is made teacher, said she gets as many as six apples in I'm funny that way. one day. Her popularity made me whistle. It is unfortunate the weather couldn't have at drapes 3 “Oh, don’t get the wrong idea. Most of the held out for the convention. Indianapolis has had ad Wests 3 time the students give me the apples they don't beautiful weather for weeks and there's no rhyme n = Want or can’t eat,” explained Mrs. Hoover, or reason why it had to rain yesterday. vy is truly a A vivacious lady who reminded me of a The teachers I liked the best were the ones : : teacher of mine stepped up with hand out- who would pass me by, not believing the apples ce fabric, . © stretched and cautioned me not to shine her were free. Then they would stop 10 or 15 feet 2 apple on my trousers or spit on it. That's what away and take another look. i + she said, spit. “Catch, teacher,” I would yell, and let fly 3 I assured her my polishing cloth was brand = a luscious red: apple. new and elbow grease was the only polishing Fifteen’ or 20 apples were tossed through the : 8gent used. Wonder what prompted her to be air. Not one pass was incomplete. One teacher ©. #0 cautious? had a handbag that opens by pulling on the : Many of my customers left me in ‘doubt handles. No lock on it. As the apple sailed Whether they were teachers, It was out of the through the air she held up her handbag and in | Question to ask for credentials. Anyway, when plopped the fruit, She smiled and disappeared . an attractive gal steps up to receive an apple, into the Claypool. who is going to be a stickler for rules? It was fun welcoming you to our city, May It occurred to me that our school system your stay be pleasant, educational and comfort- : must be loaded with pulchritude, Makes a man - able. | wish to be -back in grade . high school. And, you're the apple of my eye. Ci - v - It Happened Last Night Al Jolsen’s Heart By Earl Wilson Big as His Fame NEW YORK, Oct. 27—Well, anyway, that One day- fhe took him to a place she wanted failing ticker of Al Joison's was a large and “to buy. : S— generous one. yh It was the home Jolson had owned before. : Not only did “The King”"—as the other stars ; “Well, yo' see it was dis way,” Jolson said. knew him—leave close to $1 million to three Ameche had fixed up that house some and I colleges to help educate boys wound up buying it back from him for more who are poor, but toward the than I'd got for it!” end he finally 'fessed up that he a He handouts were enormous. He once showed had been kidding some of us e a letter saying: i press boys for years about his “Dear Al: I saw your show last night and } age . . and that he was you didn’t look healthy. What you need is ° | § really 67. some whole wheat bread. Why don’t you lend | Not 62. . . as it appeared from me $1000 to wpen a restaurant? Then you the current Who's Who . . . not could. drop in once in a while for some whole 64 . .. as it appeared if you'd wheat bread?” used the birthdate he gave in Al had a certain pensioner of whom he was former editions before he very fond. He paid his rent, bought his food and to get younger . . . but 3 years clothes, and gave him spending money. short of three and ten. Came a day when Al found the fellow was “Wall, suh,” he used-to say, around knocking him for being stingy, going into his Mammy talk, “it “Don’t I pay your rent. buy your food and was dis way . .." clothes and give you spending money?” said Al , he always act- Co : 2 3 ayes Jokes, i Aw hn “ “YEAH,” answered the fellow, “but don’t * . Erle Jolson you think a man wants to lay up a little someIng his age, until a month ago. thing for a rainy day?” : ; “ARd then one night he So Bo Mminisens. Al was particularly proud of his comeback * one o very. Aid because for some years he had been unable to he said he was 67. impress the modern film magnates, “It was the first time he'd ever mentigned “It was dis way,” he said, “I got me a job Bs ge yo 38d alse The Brat Sime I ever notice a 3 producer but they never gave me anything ! at he begun to look old. 0 do. ; ; oa . : : “For months and months nobody called me. STILL, at 67, Al was able to get a $500,000 One day the phone rang. I answered it all excited, ’ life insurance policy. EL Me voice said: ‘Is this Shapiro the plumber?’ » ne t ding about his age and t was little Sidney Skolsky who persuaded ho liked A a that as he was Ee Holiywood producers to do “The Jolson Story” the preview of “The Jolson Story,” he heard a and thus brought him back . . . bigger and more ! man say to his wife: ‘amous that he had ever been before. taffeta “It's too bad.” And thus “Jolie” won a whole new genera- = # i ad. = : met tion of fans, gven bobbysoxers, : What's too bad?” the woman sail y wh o e bow “Too bad that he didn't live to see it.” Richard Hayes is excited ick with Al enjoyed talking about his young wife, about a clever, rich girl he je sash. ‘Erle, who was so Southern she wouldn't let just met. She's a combination green. her father visit Grant's Tomb here. of brains and booty. . . . At id trim. A telegram came to Jolson one day, un- LeVouvray, Taffy Tuttle

signed, but obviously from “a dame.” “Dear Mr. Jolson,” it said—" How about stepping out with me some night?” Jolson, telling about the wire, said, “When I saw that much of it, it scared hell out of me. I tore it up. Later my wife said, ‘Who was your wire from?” ; “I said I didn’t know. “She said, ‘It was from me, you rat. I'm 8ick of you going out with the boys every night and letting me go out with my father,” : * $+ WHEN JOLSON and Ruby Keeler were divorced, Jolson sold his home in the San Fernando Valley to Don Ameche. Then when he married Erle, they lived in a hotel, and his new "wife didn't like that, She wanted to be ir the country. s 5

Double Talk By Robert C. Ruark,

CHICAGO, Oct. 27—At the time Sen. Estes Kefauver’s Crime Committee was stirring large. headlines here and high-blown cops were candidly admitting receipt of large cash gifts, I took “#& little stroll through the middle of Capt. Tommy Harrison's balliwick. ~ . : eS P 2 CAPT. HARRISON is the cop who confessed to a $32,000 gift ‘from the late John J. Lynch; for serving as his bodyguard - 0 while Lynch was a large gun in a racing wire service, Capt. Harrison is the police boss of an area generally called Strip Row, a honkytonk section that is somewhat less savory than a ! sewer. : 4 : In some places. the girls take "it all off. In nearly all they * hustle you for drinks. You can generally place a horse bet, buy a deck of cocaine or a stick of ~marijuana as casually as a housewife buys a loaf of bread. You can get fed a Mickey or beaten up with a ball bat or mugged or rolled or shot. You can find any kind of prostitution or perversion merely by loitering. It comes to you. The little charmer who braced me said that $20 would buy her off for the rest of the evening—that sum representing her intake on p-ony drinks of colored water or diluted vermouth. The barkeep touted me off 3 . of her. He was promoting another lass in whom Setmmish Sen. Kefauver was referri he evidently had a commercial interest, as gats and cannon. : . 2 A wave of righteousness swept the city, but Business procecded as usual during the Ke- pop St. and its strip row components went Hght fauver blood bath, with Capt. Harrison, the on joing business, and the rich hoods went right district's boss, sizzling on the griller,

: " ; on doing business. a, = The attitude is that even minor violators of And all the alarums and excursions were law and order are contemptuously cavalier about

suddenly washed away by the death of the old the importance of the big scare-head revelations boss who, perforce must have been intimately ay. “Newspaper talk. Cam.

sighed, “The trouble with rain is that it always comes in such awful weather.”

on - . WHO'S NEWS: Ex-King Peter of Yugoslavia went right to Washington after his arrival here from Europe ... CBS offered Connie Matk a 15-minute commentary show during the baseball season . . Today's Daily Double: Radie Harris’ kid sister, Pat, and announcer Kenneth Banghart . . , Robert Merrill, just signed to a screen contract, is delaying his Héllywood trip until after the Met. opening. Leo Fuld argues that a speech is like a bicycle wheel—the longer the spoke, the greater the tire... That's Earl, brother.

[98

Richard > Hayes

Chicago Crime Probe

paign confusion. After the elections everything settles down again. Hooey. Reformers.” ‘Capt. Daniel A. Gilbert, Democratic candidate for sheriff, blandly tells the Crime Committee how ‘he amassed a fortune of $370,000 on cop's

later—after elections—and fetch his records of financial transactions over the years. . Both Capt. Gilbert and Capt. Harrison de- « clared in a statement that they dearly love Chicago, which is certainly natural.

political boss, Ed Kelly, died, inadvertenly remov- » £1ng much of the heat from the investigation. As perennial mayor—1933 to 1947; as absolute boss, as ‘Democratic committeeman; as king maker in national presidential elections—the old politico’s ox knocked the starch out of a splendiferous vote stealing plot headline, and the rest of the week-end was devoted: to eulogizing the grand old man. * * > THIS IS EVER, or nearly always, the way with the sudden swoops of morality or political expediency that sporadically demand an airing of evil. The air is thick with accusations and admissions. Threats are hurled and promises made. Sensation piles on sensation) until the ordinary citizen is giddy to the point of humbness, and he finslly shrugs his shoulders and forgets the whole business. | , Sa . So much underworld doubletalk flourished in Chicago last week’ that even. the rather ng to guns

acquainted with every facet of evil in Chicago's

Sor

A FEW MALE teachers reached for an apple. I hesitated to waste my good apples on them. teacher at Jackson Township School, Frankfort, was one of the few who received and noticed his apple wasn’t shined as

Several young ladies’ with convention booklets looked as if they had just stepped out of the pages Too bad my sign didn’t stress “an apple for the teacher from Bachelor Mr. Inside.”

Raises ‘Wind Devils’: |

pay. And the committee tells him to come back |!

At the end of the week, Chicago's longtime

liquid loot was estimated at$1500, |

‘Mrs. Margaret Babcock

{two years ago.

(Cheer Up— Flowers (

You Can Still Make $1 Million

But It Takes More Talent, Says Barney Baruch

Millionaires are still being made, but it takes more talent than it used to, according to Bernard Baruch, who amassed his first million at the age of 29. The 80-year-old elder statesman told a press conference at Brown | University yes «| terday that until ‘the state turns from its activities and lessens control of the individual,” it will be increasingly difficult to. lay up a fortune.

Ww

Mr. Baruch

Chicle Challenge

Paul E. Peters, Gainesville,| Fla., high school principal, has {announced that gum -chewing {teachers will not be rehired. i

Margaret, Maybe? |

Lauritz Mel-| chior, opera ten-|

V. A. Vernon, Mrs. Vernon, New Albany, and Mrs. C. F. Cha

It's not pin a rose but a chrysanthemum on me at the Teachers

HR Som i E. | Tn 1

Mr. Melchior

United States farts.”

Leonard Cox Dies; or, proposes that | y | » i | Arts and ~ Sci-| } ences be added] U ne VY I to the presiden-| good music aie] Veteran Worker In this country] Suffers Heart Attack gested that mu-/ing ambulances for General Hos-| sic be subsidized Pital “back in the days of the § to bring the Maxwells and Pathfinders” died > heart attack. . i The 54 - year - #8 Medical Mulcter ] ofd driver died in| A plump, gray-haired practical while -recuperatD. C., today on her admission .ing from a pre-j that she represented her 15-year- vious attack. Dr,| old foster daughter as a leukemia

a Secretary of] { tial cabinet “lest singer also sug-| Leonard Cox, who started driv-|§ “to the fore In yesterday of a | General Hospitil| nurse was held in Washington, | Kenneth Kohl-|

victim to obtain money from staedt, a close] sympathizers. friend of Mr. Mrs. Doris Marte Neeley, 50, Cox, said that he |

told Judge George D. Neilson she had shown im-|

did it to get money “to start al Mr. Cox provement re-|*% i small business.” * : cently and was | y . |about ready for release. | 3 Poultry P oultice | Mr. Cox was credited with|§

Georgia Farmer Charles A. bpeaking in two. generations of| London, taken into Atlanta for|doctors who worked with him on|f treatment of a rattlesnake bite, his ambulance runs. ; said his wife applied first aid by Praised by Doctors { smearing the wound with alcohol, “I'd rather have Leonard Cox snuff and turpentine, and used atake care of me if I suffered an fresh egg for bandage. {injury in an automobile ¢rash IA . « ‘than I would have half the doc-! ; Nuptial Addict /tors in the state of Indiana,” said 5... A “marryin’ blonde,” who pr, Rogers Smith, with whom Mr:

{sought the protection of a jail cell Cox worked during ‘the running [to overcome her yen for hus-

{bands, was free again today to jensnare what she said would be

a

Dr. Joseph Bean, assistant su-|

| be of value in teaching. perintendent of General Hospital, | ;

|

Miss Betty Mitchell and Mrs. Laurel Hafen, Lafayette (loft to {of Indianapolis Speedway races.| right) . . . They gather information from dis

{ ianapolis Times

Not Apple) for Teac

her

2

pman, Clarksville (left to right) . . .

' Convention in progress here.

spouse No, 4. | Barbara Privan Malone Hu-| “He served as a steadying inbart, 28, told skeptical police who fiyence on the many young doc-| released her when they could find |tors who worked with him. If

[no trape of three former hus-they made a wrong decision, he! ands,

sig; Lonely Life—

Marian's Chance fo See

“You'd bett k { { ° 4 nere or T'm liable to get married ane tn te me ren one 1 SOIAier-Dad Soon Fades

again.. Husbands are awful easy ina benefit of his {to find.”

Knuckle Massage

many years on| the ambulance run.” { Friends Saddened | News of his death saddened

Chaperone Offer by

Brazil Family

Rejected, Girl Must Go by Army Plane

Ten Pe

play booths which will |

Ten Persons Are Killed in State Traffic

Three in Family Die in Crash; | Seven Injured

| Traffic accidents in Indianap« lolis and on Indiana highways {reached a grisly climax yesterday and today .as police reported {10 dead and seven injured in 10 accidents, Two of the dead were from Ine dianapolis. Three members of one

{ | i

family were killed in a three-vee hicle smash. A head-on crash be« tween two cars accounted for two more, Dead were: Sanford I. Pedigo, 58, 4021 Cose« sel Rd. John A. Fouty, 78, 331 Hanson Ave, Herman Wright, 56, French Lick, Russell Wayne Middleton, 44, Elkhart, Mrs. Emma Middleton, 38 Elke

hart, James Middleton, 14, Elkhart, © Mrs. Dorothy Mae Parker, Glase

gow, Ky. Albert L. Senn, 26, New Albany, Bobby Dean Holt, 14, Bedford, Byron Daggett, 39 Richmond Mr. Pedigo died in Methodist

Hospital yesterday shortly after the produce truck he was driving was hit by a New York Central passenger train at the Michigan St. and Holmes Ave, crossing. Trapped In Wreck

Police worked 15 minutes to free Mr. Pedigo from the truck cab where he was pinned with his foot caught between clutch and brake pedals. Back end of the cab was touching the steering wheel, which was bent in half

by the impact, The train, operated by Engineer Charles Baird, Indianapolis, knocked the truck 60 feet along the track. . . . Mr. Fouty was identified today as the pedestrian killed by a car yesterday at Six Points Road and U. 8. 40 west of here. Mr. Wright, a surveyer, was killed today when a truck hit him las he walked out onto U. 8. 150 {west of Paoll., | Five members of the Middleton family were killed or injured last night when their car sideswiped {a semi-trailer and hit another {truck on U., 8. 33, north of Ft. {Wayne. | Mr. Middleton, his wife and a son died instantly. Another son, Richard, 20, and the son's wife, Teresa, 20, were injured. State police said all were thrown from the automobile, Crash. Head-On

Mr. Senn and Mrs. Parker died when the car Mr. Senn was

driving met head-on with one

driven by Mrs, Parker's husband, | Eugene, on U. 8. 31 near Jeffer|sonville yesterday. » ’ Mr. Parker and Lester Weldds, Louisville, a passenger in Mr, Senn’s car, were injured, neither seriously, hs Bobby Hope died when his bicycle was struck by a truck on a county road near Bedford,

Mrs. Eileen Barrett, 20, was... men, police, hospital em- Marian, the unhappy little girl ‘at Juvenile Center who wants Mr. Paggelt, Sted in ele Me |granted a divorce in Chicago in the Speedway to join her soldier Dad in England, is going to have to wait a bit Moria spa 0 n after she complained that her ployees; the men in pe y yesterday of injuries suffered ja 5 P circle and his many friends. longer. Wednesday when: ‘his. bevels hishand hit pe Jn the Stomach “Many people can thank theilr Yesterday the word she had been waiting for—chaperone- was Lah ay dls ht ye every time she tr o eat. e heard. = (lucky stars that Leonard Cox was * } wi said it was his method of getting ie I a bulda chat cat!" It came from Lloyd Alien of Knightsville near Brazil. But struck his head against an iron ho Ne uct from Ber present's; tneir aid, He was a goodiit Is going to go unheard. uy : Fang ndiada olis, Joseph G pormgs. |doctor himself.” Dr. Smith said. 3¢éms that Marian can’t travel on For months he saved. every polis, P .

: ! commercial lines. She must wait Kin Shun Con | ‘Mr. Cox, who was one ‘of the The Georgia Pardon and Parole 0ldest members of the coroners i fur on an Army Jahagort. Board yesterday sent back to Staff had served as an assistant] MT. A en bio} ous ®\ir. y x . prison, at his own request, a man|COTOner for many years starting YEE S urhulen e, ner Caan i my amy so, ar be gan working Lo PORE Lr cmp cn , : . i + : ri ov “I'm going back to die,” said] He 18 survived by his wife, a ary ih being wife the 67-year-old man, me with-| Bessie M. and a daughter, Nancy, Sy ’ ’ : held, yea a TAR, a io "i948 Jane. Today he is making sure that his

in {English war bride overcomes that after serving 21 years on a mur- Mr. Cox lived at 718 Lexington: ROrIeRiTRaaES. der charge. Ave.

She and the Allen's children, Janet, 6; Patricia, 2,

_ Funeral arrangements are be- : ing arranged by. the Harry W, Services Planned for yoore pore Chapel, (M-Sgt. Robert O. Mathis William H. Singleton I Times State Service ‘ | BEDFORD, Oct. 27 — Services William H. Singleton, _super|will be held here this afternoon! Yi®or of janitors at Link-Beit Co, {for Master Sgt. Robert O. Mathis, | Will be buried in Crown Hill Cem{who weathered 15 years of mili- tery after services at 1 p. m. to{tary service, including World War morrow in the New Bethel Baptist |II, only. to die last week + by Church. {drowning. He was 36. | Mr, Singleton, who was 50, died | Sgt. Mathis, a native Hoosier, |Wednesday in General Hospital. lost his life in Sandy Hook Bay, |He was born in Kentucky and had {Oct. 18. His wife, Marian Ann, been a resident of Indianapolis (was with him in New Jersev at for 48 years. He was a member {the time. He was stationed at of the New Bethel Baptist Church. {Camp Kilmer Replacement Cen-! Mr. Singleton lived at 744 W. er. ’ : . [26th St. Surviving are his wife, Services at 2 p. in. in the Sher- Janie, and two daughters, the wood and ° Ferguson - Funeral Misses Dora Lee and Gloria Ann Home will be followed by a mili- Singleton, all of Indianapolis. tary funeral in Beech Grove Ceme- oda haimmeinmmiiios tery. Bedford. Howard Brennan - Survivors incléide his parents,| Services ‘for Howard Brennan, Now All Thieves Need Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Mathis; four former Marion County deputy brothers..Jack and Jim of Bed-|gheriff, will be at 2:30 p. m. to- Is a Case of Beer | ford; William, -Oolitic; and John |morrow at the Royster & Askin/ Police. shou loo out ro Columbus; and iwo sisters, Mrs. Meridian Street Mortuary. Burial Cheese and beer thieves tonight. Allen Fox, Bedford; and Mrs. will be in Crown Hill. Burglars broke Jite a Saeko Donald Owens, Sacramento, Cal. | Mr. Brennan, who was 55, was distributing firm here last nig t a lifelong resident of Indianapolis and drove away wih the follow- : and was a member of the Seventh ing aly foot: bo ; os Services for Mrs. Margaret Bell Christian Church. ay hundred boxes of Srackeys. Babcock, former resident off He was employed as maintenane re eo re Ixes of fig wi Indianapolis, will be at 1:30 p. a. {man at the county highway ga ay oxes of cream sandt . jomorrow Jn Shirley Brotners rage ind formerly was a y Total value was estimated at $450. They were stolen from the

Irving Hill Chapel. Burial willitruck driver. uty Sheri 8 ben Memon} io Ra a 74 dedian served 38.46puty shes Hausmann Distributing Co., 1530! rae . {Carrollton Ave, Sunday in Tucson, Ariz, friends! Surviving are his wife, Ger- Cw here learned yesterday. She left/trude A.;a sister, Mrs. Ella Smith, - Also stoiéa FAs Signed Hans. Indianapolis to live in Arizona Indianapolis, and a brother, Fred, to the Carr Consolidated Bisc ot | Lebanon. 1€0.. Chicago J mere Mae A -ouclid AVE. |GUSTAF IN TLL HEALTH = | Police said thieves must have oe a. 3 dene a *|. STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Oct. 27 liked the crackers well enough She is purvived by her hus.|(UP)—King Gustaf's physiciansto be grateful to the company. bane it 1. and % sister {issued a communique today dis-'They returned the truck in which ’ " . "closing a marked deterioration in they hauled away the loot. Mrs. Ella Lee, Terre Haute. ‘the health of the 92-year-old Ebi emg ron Bra TE ERT monarch. r v RESUME GRAY LADY AID i THIEVES HAVE NICE TASTE a SEs Gray Lady service at the Cathp Thieves with a taste for Glas- GRAND LADY IS 64 |Atterbury “Army Hospital has| gow dew last night stole 12 cases) NEW YORK. Oct. 27 (UP)-- been resumed under direction of! of whisky, mostly Scotch, from |

and Barbara,

a sailing tomorrow aboard the Mauretania. There are four berths in the cabin, . “Marian could have one,” Mr. ‘Allen offered. “The baby is so small she wouldn't need a regular

act as chaperone. “I know what Marian and my wife have been going. through. i was just a kid in the Air.Corps during the war. It's rough.” Mr. Allen, veteran of 76 combat missions out bearer of two Purple Hearts, to-

week pay.

. »

of American freedom and liberty acting chairman of the Johnson. in New York's harbor, will be 64 tomorrow, : 7%

the stockroom at Pat's Tavern, 530 Indiana Ave. Value of the! Corps.

mi - -

i . i b sn

9 months, left for New York and. *

of “England and |

day is.employad in the shipping | department of a clay factory in| {Brazil. He averages $50 to $55 a

for,

The Statue of Iiberty, symbal Mrs. Carrie G, Banta, who is.

penny to make the trip possible for his wife and children- so they can visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Reginald Canham of London. The family will be parted for six months-—maybe longer, Would Like to Help “I'm _staying home. I'll start scraping everything I can, but it'll take at least that long to get enough money together to bring them home, “Imagine I'll be pretty lonesome for a while, But we sure would have been happy to have helped Marian,” Mr. Allen said.

Traffic Scores Aga

bed. and my wife would be glad to

z 3

pi = ole 2 Roy Evans (left)

“%

Howry E. losing Jr, Tinds’ Stat ; and Dr. Cul Ak... Hi County group of Gray Ladies) the wheel of a car, Mr: Evans is being freatec a - HEL | pit } . ian. > a

Greenan, 53, of 1635 N. Emer gon Ave. was taken to St. Vine cent’'s Hospital in serious condi« ition after his car hit a street light pole at 38th and LaSalle Sts. ? Two pedestrians are in fair cone dition in General Hospital today following accidents last night, Mrs. Edna Durand, 56, of 1044 N. Delaware 8t., suffered two fractured legs when hit at 1ith and Delaware Sts. i Roy Evans, 56, of 3421 Brouse St, walked into the glide of a moving car in front of 28 8, Capitol Ave.

in

ge 6