Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1946 — Page 5
- i,
RIL 18, 1946 *
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BALL FAMILY PLANS REUNION
Future of Heiress.
(Continued From Page One)
[to her daughter
| from Mt. Holyoke last Sunday. The |=
girl withdrew her full bank ac- s
| count of $305 and went to New York |= | without signing out at the college | |or notifying her family, She said, however, that it was {her understanding the heiress had | { “decided all of a sudden to go to | New York and get a job.” She | said the daughter didn't know her | disappearance, publicized through- | {out the nation, had ‘received any | publicity.” { “She had no idea of not notify{ing us,” said Mrs. Ball. “She | simply wanted to get her plans |= | worked out and to make a decision |Z jon what she wanted to do before | = she told us of 'the change.”
Future Undecided The girl, - whom her father sald | was “very independent” had write [ten her family a letter which they | received the day before her! disap- | parance.
| The girl's mother indicated that | they would discuss the girl's future {plans with her during the reunion {and that she did not know whether she 'would return to college or go ‘to work. {~“All IT can say now is that we {want Dorothy Anne to do what {she wants to do” her mother said. | The family felt that the girl's col{lege work might have become too heavy, prompting her to make the sudden change, She had completed all of her school work without use of manual deaf language, overcoming her handicap by using lip reading at which she has become very (adept. | Found by Clerk The heiress to the Mason jar for{tune was located when a clerk in the Salvation Army hotel tele-
phoned the missing persons bureau |
that a girl answering her desecrip{tion had registered at the hotel. Her Ifather was in the bureau when the ‘phone call came in and rushed to ithe shelter with detectives. | “Miss Ball explained that she had gone to the Salvation army shelter, patronized chiefly by bowery dere{licts, after the Y. W. C. A. was unable to accommodate her.
ASKS CONTINUANCE OF SAFETY RECORD
| Parents
must insist upon con{tinued safety programs in city schools to prevent a rise in the
{trafic death rate, declared Capt. {Albert Magenheimer, candidate for the G. O. P. nomination for sheriff, {in a speech at School No. 34 last night. | He gave credit- to school-boy {patrols for the low accident rate {among children going to and from | school. “There has been only one serious traffic accident involving children {on their way to and from school in the last seven years and that is a {record that must be maintained and (improved, “Capt. Magenheimer told members of the Parént-Teachers association. He urged the P.-T. Att osupport public officials in their budgets set up to continue safety programs.
police blockades to catch erring motorists as an effective method of making drivers more safety conscious.
POSTPONE HEARING ON TROLLEY RATES Hearing on the Indianapolis Railways, Inc, plea for an emergency rate increase was postponed by the
Indiana public service commission this morning until Monday.
company today will continue with the examination Monday. A commission spokesman said the hearing was put off under pressure of other business confronting the hearing body. In cross-examination Monday, intervenors hope to show that the company -is-in error in-its conten-
tion. revenues will be insufficient this year to maintain adequate service.
LISTS SU RPLUS MATERIAL WASHINGTON, April 18 (U, P.). The War Department today de-
clothing and $8,500,000 worth of clothing materials in a move that was expected to help ease the
clothing shortage.
Better
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES oy Rose Accepts Harvard Challenge
‘No Decision Made as to
long enough to|-- | learn the full details of her a AAA
He urged the P.-T. A. to support |
Interyenors in the case, who were | to cross-examine withesses for the |
clared surplus $11,500,000 worth of|
AMBR IDGE, Mass, April 18 | i) P.).—~A beauty contest has been set. for May 18 as result of . the acceptance by Billy Rose of | challenge by the Harvard Lam- | poon to prove—or eat—his words that beautiful girls don't go to college. The New York showman will pit six of his showgirls against six “knowgirls” selected by the Lam-
|
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poon editors from eastern college campuses. An impartial board of seven newspapermen-==five from Boston and two from New York ~—will decide the issue at the contest which is scheduled for Boston, A spokesman for the Lampoon said the editors were counting on girls from Smith, Wellesley and Radcliffe to rally to their cause,
Indiana's program to keep veterans in school despite long delays in receipt of their government checks, hit a new peak today with loans totaling $2546 for the 24-hour period. Checks ranging from $50 to $100 were sent to 36 former G, 1.'s in six colleges and universities over the
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LOANS G. I, STUDENTS $2506 IN 24 HOURS
money had been loaned two weeks the in effect but said a would be announced soon. state is advancing money G, I students a be paid back upon the arrival
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the tardy veterans’ administration
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