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Show t s THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH J House of Commons Damaged by Bombs View of part of the damage wrought by German bombs In Britain's historic house of commons In recent raids. Public parts of the building were untouched, and nearby St. Stephen's chapel also escaped, but the cloisters in the crypt and the public bill office were hit. The private bill office was struck by high explosive and oil bombs. New Sub Grampus f m ariiiMf .. .. .i"V&"w-- m Uncle Sam's newest submarine, the 1,475-to- n Grampus, sliding Into the water at New London, Conn. The craft, one of eight similar type ordered under the Vinson act In 1939, Is named after a common type of killer whale. Everybody Lihes This SmartAm I -- Z Lf THIS design was so extr popular, when it first apj? that it is repeated now, fori who might have missed it fr time. 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Ktr I; SPEAKING OF SPORTS By ROBERT McSHANE Rlawd by Wtm Nwipopr Untoii WHAT promises to b one of the interesting winter golf campaigns ever known is well un-der way with most of last year's pro-fessional favorites still ensconscd in the golden seat, managing to hold their own against all comers. With approximately $80,000 In prize money to shout at, the pros have unlimbered their biggest guns. Tlie quest for gold and glory started Id Miami recently, and continues some 10,000 miles up and down the West coast, then to Arizona and Texas, then to New Orleans, and finally, back to Florida. First successful searcher was "Lord" Byron Nelson, he of the poetic golf swing, who headed west-ward with $2,500 Miami Open money in his pocket. Nelson, conceded by many fellow professionals to be the world's greatest golfer, won the af-fair with a 271, nine strokes under par for the 72 holes. He won by a single stroke from Clayton Heafner of Llnvllle, N. C. Money Winner Little Ben Hogan of White Plains, N. Y the year's leading money winner, finished with a 273 total and third place. Sam Snead of Hot Springs, and Willie Goggln of Mi-ami, tied for fourth with 277. No one was particularly surprised to aee Nelson walk off with top hon-ors In the Initial tournament of the winter circuit. Not even his closest competitor begrudged him the $2,500, for Lord Byron was on his game and that means golf near perfection. By the same token, how-ever, no one would have been sur-prised if the victory bad gone to Hogan, Snead, Demaret, Smith or any one of a dozen other 1939-4- 0 favorites. It Is only natural that a lot of questions remain unanswered as yet. The winter campaign is too young to be used as the basis for any prognostications. For Instance, can Slammln' Sam-my Snead finally hit his true stride and start winning tournaments with that beautiful swing? Remember that he finished the fall meets In good shape. And he opened the winter wars with a good showing. Dub golfers don't place fourth against competition like the Miami Open offered. For a while things were looking dark for the West Vir-ginian. He had blown the National Opens of Philadelphia and Cleve-land in 1939 and 1940. He lost his poise in the pinches and his men-tal attitude went haywire when the chips were down. Later on Sammy regained his courage. He won three of his last four big tournaments and gave Nelson a real battle for the professional golfers' crown. A Man to Watch Snead Is one of the country's best golfers. Almost any pro golfer will Insist that Sammy's Is the finest swing In the game that he can't be beat from drive to pitch. His big weakness has been his mental attitude, which has let bim down all too often. Once be gains full control of himself, he will win con-siderably more than his share of tournaments. Ralph Guldahl is another player to watch. He hasn't been playing the kind of golf that he's capable of playing. Guldahl plays as cool a game as any man in the pro ranks. His failure to win more tournaments baffles even the experts. He is the kind f a player one would expect to be consistent. He plays as though his veins were filled with ice water. This may be his year. He used to wreck the field, and may start in all over again. Vou may remember that Jimmy Demaret was a regular ball of fire along the winter circuit last year, lie grabbed all the headlines in Cal-ifornia, Texas and Florida. De didn't open with a bang this year win-ning exactly $31.25 In Miami but he may come back to surprise the galleryites. Ben Hogan is likely to pick up where he left off last year. The $1,000 he won in Florida ran his total earnings for the year to $10,655. This gave him possession of the Vardon trophy, awarded annually by the Professional Golfers association to its most consistent member. Nel-son, winner of last year's Vardon trophy, was second with a total of $9,653, and Snead was third with $9,206. Hogan, who weighs in the neigh-borhood of 132 pounds, continues to astound his contemporaries with his tremendous drives. Despite his small frame, he lays them ofT the tee with the longest drivers In the game. It wouldn't be at all sur-prising if he continued the pace he set in California a year ago. Sport Shorts The Missouri Athletic commission is fostering a series of elimination matches to determine the world's j wrestling champion . . . Ray Mur-phy, Army's football captain-elec- t from Anaconda, Mont., attended a Butte business college, Montana U.. and Montana State before being ad-mitted to West Point Baseball fans in the Canal Zone ( hope to raise $20,000 with which ( they will try to induce the Giants , and Indians to train there in 1942. , LOS ANGELES. The paths of Ouimet and Eddie Low-er- y crossed again at the Bel-A- ir course of Beverly Hills. Who is Eddi Lowery? He is now a suc-cessful San Francisco business mnn and a good golfer In his own right. But nearly 28 years ago Eddie Low-ery was the caddie who worked for Francis " ,Jm"mK Ouimet in the Vardon Ray f ' 3 play for the U. S. ,1 Open at Brookline in JV - v ? Ouimet's finishing i rush and his play in ' toe play-of- f Is now ; w, one of the main dra-'fL- k matie spots of all H eoW' no matter how 6mASiM many centuries you rnay look back. But Crantland Rice Edd)e Lowery. part in that championship also has an interesting side which in the main has never been known. Lowery's Story "1 was only 10 years old at the time," Eddie said, with Ouimet lis-tening, "when my older brother and I used to caddie for Francis. We both played hookey the first day of the tournament. My brother cad-die- d for Francis while I followed Vardon and Ray. That night our mother said we both bad to be at school next day. My brother went back to school, but I played hookey again and carried Ouimct'a bag. I bad to keep an eye on Ouimet's ball and also on the lookout for truant officers, who were pretty keen. "I'll never forget the last three holes of the last round," Eddie con-tinued. "Francis had to play these in 10 strokes, one under par, to get a tie with Vardon and Ray, who had already finished. On the short sixteenth Francis had a 20-fo- putt for a two. This seemed a good chance to go for that birdie. But he was too bold, and the first putt ran eight feet by the cup. But he holed that one for his three. On the seventeenth he holed another 19 or ' for the needed birdie and then through pouring rain got his par four on the last hole which resulted in the now famous triple tie." What Happened Later "You can imagine how tremen-dous was the excitement," Lowery said. "Few thought the kid with the caddie had even an outside chance against two famous British golfers who had played in so many British Opens. A good many of Ouimet's friends thought I was too young and too small to caddie in an event so im-portant They insisted on some old-er caddie, but Francis held out for me." "I'll pick the story here for a moment," Ouimet cut in. "Next morning, a short while before the match, Eddie came and got my bag. 'You won't want to hit any prac-tice shots, will you?' he asked, know-ing that I seldom did. I said, 'No.' Eddie then said, I'll see you in about half an hour.' 'Where are you going?' I asked. 'We start in a few min-utes.' 'I'll tell you later,' Eddie an-swered as he hustled away. As we were all three ready to drive off I looked around again and there was Eddie. " 'Where have you been?' I asked him. " 'I didn't want to bother you,' he whispered, 'but I've been hiding In that barn. There's a truant off-icer after me to take me back to school so I had to keep out of his sight. And listen,' be said, 'you're going to beat these two guys sure. You just keep your eye on the bail and I'll take, care of everything else.' " Lowery Speaking "As I recall it," Eddie said, "the three were all even as they passed the turn. I could see a worried look on the faces of both Vardon and Ray. They had expected the In-experienced kid to crack wide open. But here he was cooler than ever. He didn't watch their drives. He just kept playing his own game. Then on .the tenth hole both Vardon and Ray took three putts and Ouimet was out in front. "They all played fine golf the next few holes, and then big Ted Ray was the first to break up. This left the battle between Francis and the great Harry. And it was Var-don who finally couldn't stand the strain and the fast pace any longer as he, too, cracked and Francis with a birdie picked up two more strokes. The killing thrust. "Francis was still as cool and as unruffled as if he had been playing a dime Nassau with two old pals. It was still raining and the course was wet and soggy, but Ouimet's drives continued to find the middle. His iron play was perfect and his putter was smoking hot. The two veterans couldn't stand up against that finishing 34 under such condi-tions, especially when they had looked fbr a certain runaway." W "That must have been a big thrill." 1 said to Lowery. "It was a thrill I've never for- - Seized as Spy ' ' ' ; Y Oscar Stabler, German barber on the American export liner, Excam-bio- n, who was taken from the ship at Bermuda by the British and held under suspicion of espionage. Stab-ler became a V. S. citizen in 1933. New Nazi Army Moves Into Rumania f 1") r'Tfy i; German troops arriving in Bucharest, Rumania. A total force esti-mated at 20 divisions, or 300,000 men, with artillery, bridge-buildin- g equip-ment, tanks and motor transports formed the vanguard of a new German expedition into the Balkans. Hungary's grant of right-of-w- ay stirred up many conjectures as to what this move might mean. Washington, D. C. BIBLICAL DESTROTIRS There were two reasons for that grin on the face of North Dakota'! Gov. John Moses when ha left the White House the other day. One was an assurance that the President would personally investi-gate why North Dakota has not re-ceived any of the new lefense plants. Moses argued that hs state was so far inland that it was ideal for defense industries. Roosevelt promised to look into the mater im-mediately. .The other reason was an anecdote the President told Moses "about a famous namesake of yours." It hap-pened when Roosevelt was assistant secretary of the navy in the Vilson administration. He was asked to select from i list of American naval heroes, the name of a new destroyer. He picked "Is-- , rael," in honor of a U. S. captain1 who distinguished himself in the war against the Barbary Coast pirates in 1815. Some time later, Roosevelt was asked to approve the personnel of this destroyer. And while looking over the list of personnel, another' aide entered with another personnel list for a destroyer named "Moses." "This coincidence struck me as very funny," Roosevelt related, "and I leaned back and laughed. The young naval officer looked perturbed and Inquired, 'Aren't those the right crews for those ships Moses and Israel?' And then I laughed some more, because heading the lists of officers were the names of Murphy and O'Reilly." Note Moses, a Democrat from a rock-ribbe- d G. O. P. state, is the tallest governor in the country 6 feet 4 inches. ALBANIAN MOUNTAINEERS HELP GREEKS (Editor's Note The Washington Merry famous Brass Ring this week is awarded to the unsung allies of the Greek army, the peasants and mountaineers of Al-bania.) Much tribute has been paid to the gallant Greek army and royal air force for winning one of this war's most crucial battles, in that wildest and most remote corner of Europe Albania. But little has been written about the Albanian peasants and moun-taineers who have provided the Greeks with the most amazing In-telligence service of this war, so ac-curate that the Greeks have known down to the last detail just how many Italians were located behind each hill, where their guns were placed, and the exact nature of their fortifications. An army without eyes is helpless. And the Albanians, who have never forgotten the manner in which Mu-ssolini drove their queen and her day-ol- d son out of the country two years ago, have contributed materially to the surprising succession of Greek victories. STATE DEPARTMENT WIDOWS There was not much Christmas joy this year in the homes of 124 "blitzkrieg widows" of the Ameri-can diplomatic service. Their hus-band diplomats are still on the job, but the wives are prevented by offl cial regulations from joining them. From Warsaw, from Berlin from Copenhagen, from Oslo, from Brus-sels, from the Hague, following the spread of the war, these "blitzkrieg widows" came trekking home on government order with children by the hand. A few capitals, such as Moscow and Helsinki, have now permitted wives to rejoin their husbands, but meanwhile, a new warning has gone out affecting citizens in the Far East, and the ranks of the widows are swelling still further. This separation Is much more than a sentimental problem. It creates a strain on the budget of each fam-ily, for they are obliged to maintain two establishments, and the salaries of the foreign service are not gauged to meet living costs in this country. The state department has had so much grief from the "widows" that a move is being considered to lift the ban and allow them to return to their husbands' posts, CAPITAL CHAFF The state department is getting a heavy volume of mail from all parts of the country urging strong U. S. assistance to Greece. Josephus Daniels, ambassador to Mexico, is the only ambassador ap-pointed by Roosevelt in 1933 who still remains at the same post. Experts of the house migrant in-vestigating committee estimate that at least 4,O0Q,0O0 are con-stantly on the move in the country. Some American women have switched to cotton stockings as a protest against Japan, yet in the first nine months of this year, the United States imported $66,000,000 worth of silk from Japan. MERRY-GO-ROUN-Two former editors of the "Ame-ro- c News," daily paper of the 191J U. S. army of occupation at Coblenz, Ger-many- , are now on active duty at the war department They are Col. Fred J. Mueller and Lieut. --CoL B. B. McMahon, both assigned tc the public relations staff. Power for Defense aummi ' I i f 1 John C. Garand, inventor of the army's famed semi-automat- ic Gar-and rifle, is shown at work in his model shop at the Springfield, Mass., armory, where his grand gun is in mass production to arm our defense forces. Our Newest Bomber in Flight t :' x'viv. ':' .' ;, j ;.f Vi" v .r. .'i; H. ': I. The newest and best of the U. S. medium bombers is shown here taking off (above), and In the air (below), during a test flight at Baltimore, Rid. Product of the Glenn L. Martin factory at Baltimore, this high performance dealer of destruction will soon be rolling off the production lines at mass production rate. Sees Fascism's End K - f t , 4 Count Carlo Sforza, former Italian jremier, who is credited with the statement that the Italian people are lissatisficd with Fascism. He is now in exile in the IT. S. President Awards Collier Aviation Trophy . ,! i $ fc 1 I "1 ' ' r. A. mi Vv; AJ if ,... rw, . i 'V,' &b t y J President Roosevelt awarded the Collier trophy, principal aviation award of the year, to 15 representatives of commercial airlines for the safety record achieved last year. Three physicians were also honored for developing an oxygen mask. They are L. to R., standing (front). Or. W. Boothby and Or. W. Lovelace II, of the Mayo Foundation, and Capt. H. Armstrong of the army medical corps, Wright field, Dayton, Ohio. |