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Show Lead Scbu t Driver City Commissioner J. Earl ; Lewis, -center, newly-named . Boy Scout fund' campaign' chairman for Provo, lays the t groundwork ' with , his three --, 'assistants for a speedy wind . up of the drive here.. Left is , . Spencer - Grow, with George I Young right and' Peter Jensen standing. ' "H - ife Bobby-Soxers Get Rough Yith Stars t NEW YORK, Nov. 19 U. Movie start were a dime a dozen at the opening of Ingrid Bergman lrr"Joan of Lorraine" last night and a screeching mob of bobby-soxers bobby-soxers staged a near Viot in a mad rush for autographs. Police were almost powerless to quell the enthusiastic youngsters young-sters and before it was over here is what happened : Myrna Loy had her mink coat stripped from her shoulders. Charles Boyer was pulled out of his limousine and had his black topcoat yanked off. - Jimmy Stewart was escorted Into the theater by a protective . ' , 1 M Curuon ox policemen wnu xuriiieu a Hying wedge and dashed for an entrance. . . : i Paulette Goddard wasn't only mobbed. The kids committed the unpardonable sin of mistaking her for Evelyn Keyes. At the height of the melee one big patrolman pushed a kid in the face and pleaded: "C'mon kid, it ain't worth it" The kid ducked under the cop's arm. Scout Fund Campaign Renewed Here Provo's Boy Scout fund campaign cam-paign was being revitalized today as City Commissioner J. Earl Lewis, newly -appointed generalissimo general-issimo of the grive, marshalled a force of more than 200 men for a determined bid to raise the city's $10,000 quota.' Mr. Lewis, following a meeting- with his top ides-George ides-George L. Young, Peter Jen-sen Jen-sen and D. Spencer Grow Announced two klckoff luncheons lun-cheons one Thursday at 7:30 P. m. at the Chicken Roost and the other a Tuesday, Nov. 26 breakfast Thursday's luncheon is for 20 captains of the city-wide drive which will go into high gear next week plus five captains and 25 workers : who will complete the advance-contact phase of the campaign in the business district. The Nov. 26 breakfast will be kickoff for the city-wide campaign cam-paign in which more than 200 workers will solicit funds from VETERAN KILLED IN OIL DERRICK PLUNGE WORLAND, Wyo., Nov. 19 (IM!) prospect lists. No one worker will Funeral arrangements were be- have to contact more, than six Harden, 25-year-old Billings Mont., war veteran who was kill ed in an 80 'foot plunge from an oil derrick near Worland Friday night. N Harden, son of Chester M. Harden, Har-den, division superintendent for Pure Oil CO., fell 80 feet to the floor of a Pure Oil well, where he was employed by Loffland Bros, drillers. He was discharged from the army last March. $$$$$$$$$$$$ $ - $ $ We Make Ei( sum0 for any purpose I $25 to $300 f! $. KEN HOUSTON I Manager ' $ . t Charles D. Sessions, Utah county chairman, who with Clayton Jenkins, chamber of commerce manager, met with Mr. Lewis' committee, called attention to the many Boy Scout activities which the fond drive helps finance. The local council. Mr. Session pointed out, has doubled its Boy scout membership in the past three years and has made great strides in advancing the boys through the various ratings to the eagle rank. He said the per-scout expend iture in the Utah National Parks 'council is $6 compared with the national average of $12. $ Farmer-Pilot Hijrt In Crash JEROME, Ida., Nov. 19 (U.R) Roland Slatter, 38, was recuperating, recuper-ating, in a Twin Falls hospital today to-day after crashing his plane on a Jerome farm while his father witnessed the accident. Slatter, who has a year's flying fly-ing experience, was flying over his "father's farm at an altitude of about 250 feet when the plane suddenly started dropping. He crashed within sight of his father, D. B. Slatter, who rushed his son to the hospital. X-rays i showed no fractures but Slatter Is suffering from severe bruises and a neck injury. Prize Bull Brings $50 Per Pound SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 10 (U.R) WHR Royal Helmsman, 1,250 pounds of Hereford breeding bull worth approximately $50 a pound over a meat market counter, ruled today as the grand champion cham-pion Hereford bull at the Grand National Livestock Exposition. The champion-was sold recently recent-ly to W. E. Boeing, Seattle aircraft air-craft manufacturer, by the Wyoming Wyo-ming Hereford ranch at Chey enne. The sale price was $33,000, a little too much for Royal Helmsman Helms-man ever to worry about going to the slaughter house. Prizemere 547, owned by Rose-mere Rose-mere Farms of Maqueketa, la.. took top honors yesterday in the aged bull class in the Aberdeen Angus division. Prairie King, of the Prairie Farms, Dalton, 111., was adjudged senior champion milking Short horn bull of the show. Jimmy Walker Ex- at 65 By leo turner ;: . . ' ' United PrCss Stiff 'Correspondent 1NEW YORK," Nov.. X9 The people he loved stood tn line for hours -today, for last look at v Jimmy, iWalker , the . gay and lovable ex-mayor who went to meet the man upstairs." ': ' James J. Walker, 05, died in Doctor's nospital from a cerebral blood clot at 6:25 p. m yesterday, yester-day, admired by millions because he never held a grudge. i "The man' upstairs takes care of things like that," he once said. i The humble and the great waited patiently in front of the Frank .. Campbell funeral parlor, par-lor, Madison Ave. at 59th,-to pay their respects beginning at noon to the- politician of another era who looked at his world and found it' amusing. I The public never forgot his good humor. They remembere d Jimmy Walker,' who freqeuntly squelched squelch-ed the gloom spreaders with a wise crack. i It was the ' Jimmy Walker who laughed -: bookV censorship - bill out of the state . assembly with: "I have yet to hear of a woman whose virtue was destroyed- ty a book.! - . v.- v". -- It as- Mayor Jimmy who wel comed Wiley Post and t Harold Gatty after their round-the-world flight In the Winnie Mae Few TakersFor Women's Jobs SALTS LAKE CITY, ttfov. 18 (U.R) Paul R. ." Davis, manager, Salt - Lake branch, Utah division of employment, today ' said ap proximately one-third of the 1900 jobs In the Salt Lake area are for women but. that there .are few takers. ' ' Most of the demand is for stenographers, and despite that the pay is good, young women are failing to apply. Only about one-tenth one-tenth of the applicants registered with the service in Salt Lake City are women,,, the manager said. Iwith: fWirinie Mae, Winnie Must, Winnie? ua. si lt was Jimmv Wallri urhn niv. before found a crowd waiting for a look at him and said: What the matter? .Did they close the. aquarium?"1 ? Solemn High Requiem mass was planned tentatively for 10:30 a. m. Tnursaay at St. Patrick's cathedral. Burial will be in the Gate of Heaven cemetery at PleasantvlUe, N. Y. Walker had been in a coma since early Sunday when he was taken to Doctors hospital, and died while his physician. Dr. Sym Newman, administered oxygen. MUNICH GIRL TO WED GI AT BOISE MUNICH, Nov. 19 (U.R Berta DondL 21, first Munich girl to get a visa for entry into the United States, was on her way to1 Bremen today with her fiance, John Louis Hastie, former sergeant ser-geant from Coupeville, Wash. , They expected to leave for the United States as soon as possible and to be married in Boise, Ida., PAGE 12 WtOVO. OTAH COUNTY. OTAH TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 19, 1946 DAILY HERALD tJortlnvest Gets Blanket of Snow SEATTLE,' Nov. 19 ' (U.R) Washington and the Pacific north west huddled under a blanket of snow today ranging from one inch in Seattle itself to 27 inches In Stampede Pass just east of the Seattle-Tacoma area. Railroad, motor and air transportation trans-portation was stopped or thrown off schedule' from Wenatchee, Wash., to the coast and city traf- Lfic was slowed by snow and slush in Seattle, Tacoma, Olympia and other coast cities. It was Seattle's first major pre-Thanksgivlng pre-Thanksgivlng snowfall since 1938. The only death attributed to the storm was that Of Laura Dav-ennort. Dav-ennort. 16. who drowned in flooded Goble Creek, near Kelso, Wash., while trying to repair a damaged water pipe. Film Lecture Set; :l For Kiwanis Club i : Clarence Tyndall, , director of the audio-visual : instruction ' activities ac-tivities at the BYU will present a moving picture and, lectur Thursday at the luncheon-meet: ing of the Provo Kiwanis club. His subject will be, "The Present-day Present-day Use of Visual Aids," - ? , at the home of a mutua friend, WAC Capt. Rosemary Reed Powell. LOOK OUT F03 - Reeent nedieal wport thmt Mucin numbnr of children anl grows M too) may b victim f Tia-Worna often without astwetiBf what to wroact And tbeao note, Hvinc inakta tbo auaa body, can eau real iliilia . , Ko watch out for tha warninc abriii Utmt, way - mean Pin-Worm especially - thn anrraratinr raetal Itch. Cat JATNI'S 9-W, and follow the directions. ' r-yt i the Pin-Worm treatment iWet oped in the laboratoriee of Dr. D. Jarne Son. after year of natienl reaoarch. Too mall. .easy-to.Uk fi Ubleta act is a special way to remova Pin-WorrmT v t x Mk 7oat iruuitttf-Mt tot nforwut Letter Carriers Hold Confab SPANISH FORK An open forum discussion on how the Let ter Carters and Rural Mail Car riers, which organizations have been united, can function most efficiently was held at a district dis-trict convention of the groups at Spanish Fork. Sixty carriers together with members Of the auxiliary were present. Franklin Davenport of Provo, state vice president, cor ducted the meeting. ' Lut her Crockett of Salt Lake City ex plained some of the organiza tions objectives. Everett H. Burns of Los Angeles, member of the Mutual Benefit association board of trustees, addressed the meeting briefly. . Mrs. Franklin Davenport of Provo conducted a meeting for the auxiliary. Refreshments followed the bus iness session. CHICAGO YOUTHS BREAK JAIL LOVELL. Wyo.. Nov. 19 (UK- Two 16-year-old boys were back in the toils of the law today after a Sunday night getaway from the Hot Springs county jail in Ther mopolis. ' Dale Burss and Howard May- nard. both of Chicago, fled from the Thermopolis'jail when Jailer W. H. Short brought magazines to their cell. They ran around the jailer and escaped. The boys, being held in Ther mopolis on charges of robbing a store, were caught early yesterday morning by Lovell authorities. London contains more than 5454 licensed houses, including hotels and restaurants. WE STILL NEED 2 OR 3 WOMEN WORKERS TROY LAUNDRY' 375 W. Center Phone 164 8 -?Wv . . THE TOURING TROUBADOUR. . . always in good voice when the motor's running, secretly sure he'd be a hit in radio. Keeps engine humming harmoniously with RPM Motor Oil which is fortified to prevent start-up wear. A special compound helps to keep "RPM" on idle engine parts, reduces metal-to-metal wear next rime the engine starts. Try RPM Motor Oil today! 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Long warm sleeves, crew 1 V ' tij . -v Tv5f V" necklines. Bright colors. 34 to 40. 6.50 I MANICURE SETS. From the Cutie Set in colorful rayon bag to the Srairtie Set in leatherette case, they're swell, gifts for. every her i 75c 3.00 PEARL (Simulated) NECKLACES NECK-LACES in one, two or three strands, lovely with black. A gift enjoy for ye trs to come. 1.95 4.95 WOMEN'S SLIPPERS of soft, warm electrified shearling, with comfy wedge heels, leather soles. Royal blue, red or white, women's sizes 4 to 9. .98 - tii. |