OCR Text |
Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER. RANDOLPH, UTAH Released by Western Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE Released by Western Newspaper Union. REN HOGAN, the little man whose perseverance finally paid dividends, made his followers hap- py when he annexed his first major championship the Hale America war fund tournament in Chicago. It was homecoming for the sharpshooting Texan, who registers from Hershey, Pa. Last summer he took the Chicago Open title, and because that title was included in the Hale .America tournament, he defended it successfully. But more important, he won his first victory in a tournament officially designated as national. The Hale America was the No. 1 event of golf in 1942. The tournament will be remembered for a number of things. To begin with, there was Bens astound62 on the second day, one of the ing all-tifeats in golf history. Then, too, there was his total score of 271 just 17 under par. The Hale America will be remembered as the contest which Jimmy Demaret had in the bag until the last five holes. Jimmy led Hogan i FALKENBURG re-- j an urgent request JINX from a group of soldiers at a U. S. military outpost recently j signing themselves as the boys in Hut 33, Iceland, they beggedher to send them a large, picture of herself in a bathingj suit, as soon as possible. Wei Nazi Star Witness A King Takes a Ride in a Jeep ; want to put it on the wall for two important reasons, they wrote. "1 It will give us something interesting to look at. 2 It will help to keep the captains eyes busy when he comes around to inspect our She sent a picture five quarters. feet high! Once Upon a Honeymoon unites three of the screens top figures in the studio where each has previously scored triumphs RKO Radio. Theyre Ginger Rogers and Cary Grant, whove both made plenty of hit pictures, and Leo McCarey, producer-directof such delightful films as Love Affair and My Once Upon a Favorite Wife. Honeymoon is the kind of thing they all do best. or W s Wearing full uniform of the Nazi Luftwaffe, Lieut. Hans Peter Krug is shown (right) leaving federal court in Detroit after testifying Shown in this picture are Edsel Ford, Detroit manufacturer, and against Max Stephan, the Detroit accused of aiding King Peter of Jugoslavia, as they take a ride in a jeep at the Ford restaurant keeper River Rouge plant, in Detroit. This shot was taken when the boy king the German flier when he escaped visited the great defense plants in the former automobile manufacturing from a Canadian prison camp last April. Accompanying Lieutenant center. Before stopping at Detroit, Peter visited in Washington. Krug is a Canadian officer of equal rank. Leader of Latest Raid on Wake Island BEN HOGAN by three strokes with only five holes go. Then Jimmy blew apart balloon. like an a tempocavein wasnt Jimmys rary thing. He had taken an eagle deuce on the 67th hole, steering straight for victory. He then picked up a birdie which left him 17 under par for 68 holes. Then followed three holes, the like of which cant he remembered in any other major tournament. One seemingly immovable spectator deflected Demarets 15th tee shot with his shoulder. The hall ,was behind a tree, two inches from the trunk, on the opposite side from which Jimmy drove. He knocked it out southpaw style, using a putter. A six was the result. On the 16th hole he hooked his drive into some luxuriant alfalfa rough. His second shot caught another interested spectator in the chest, dropping into some stubborn Lieut. Col. R. M. Ramey, left, who led the latest air raid on vegetation fronting the green. His Wake island, is pictured with Brig. Gen. Willis H. Hale, in south traveled by east, recovery of the Hawaiian air force bomber command, who made the with the cup approximately 15 feet away. Two putts gave him a ster- nouncement of the raid. Colonel Ramey is chief of operations for General Hale. ling five the second of three consecutive bogies. Jimmy hooked on the 17th, overshot the second, chipped to within a Cairo New U. S. yard of the cup, and missed the putt, taking one over par for a last round nnw W w ' w f ww V vr lys, ed Troops Survey score of Post in BILL STERN life of the late Lou Gehrig. Theresa Wright, Walter Brennan and Babe Ruth head the supporting cast Stern flew from the Coast to participate in the scene showing Lou Gehrig Memorial day, which marked Gehrigs retirement. Gen. M. Scanlan, center, greets Gen. Ralph Royce, head of Pacific air forces, left, and Lieut. Comdr. Lyndon Johnson, congressman from an- air Texas, at an American-Allie- d base, somewhere in New Guinea. These are the first pictures of the new base. Nazi Saboteurs tourna- $1,000 semi-darkne- seen as an no less, in Buried Alive. Its this companys first effort in the horror line, and just the title promises well. John Shepperd and Lynne Roberts will have the romantic leads. 20th ape-ma- Century-Fox- s X ment for Demaret to lose. But Jimmy kept on smiling, taking the break in stride. It wasnt a pose by any means. An hour after Hogan had been presented with the winners purse, Jimmy and a couple of newspaper pals went out and played a couple of holes in the to settle a smal wager. . In review, it appears that Hogan settled the eventual outcome on the 14th and 15th. On the former he putt for an just missed a eagle three. He chipped up and sank a difficult putt for another birdie on 15. That made him even with Demaret. He fashioned a pair of pars on the next two holes anc thundered through to finish with a putt for a two on the 18tb green. Hogan deserved to win the Hale America. He has been burning up the fairways for the past two years, yet, until now, he hadnt succeeded in winning a major championship. Hogan is the hardest working of all golfers, getting in four and five hours of practice every day. Weighing a scant 135 pounds, he packs exceptional power in his big hands. Completely confident, he seemed not to even consider the chance for defeat when Demaret led him by three strokes. That temperament, plus the ability to play consistently great golf, is ample evidence that hell go right on winping his share of the big ones. X J. Carroll Naish is going to be Rosalind Russell is booked for another of those pictures in which shes such a clever and handsome young business woman tbat she makes business women in the audience green with envy. This one will be Portrait of a Lady, and the plot (which somehow has a familiar ring) deals with the efforts of a husband to win his wife away from a business career. 69. It was a heartbreaking G Bill Stern, NBC director of sports and famous sportscaster, plays himThe self in Samuel Goldwyns Pride of the Yankees, which stars Gary. Cooper and is based on the At New Air Post left to over-inflat- Thousands of moviegoers, on reading of Elmer Davis appointment as director of the Office of War Information, recalled seeing him on the screen. To Information Please fans he was one of the highlights of the series issued by RKO Pathe. Guerrilla Brigade, the Soviet picture which was shown in New York recently, has been booked by the RKO circuit and is scheduled for national release. This is the first time in some years that a Russian picture has been booked by a major theater chain here. ss 15-fo- ot 30-fo- ot Edward Kerling (top), alias Edward Kelly, ringleader of Nasi saboteurs who landed with explosives from a submarine near JackU. S. soldiers look over the Cairo rooftops from their new billet sonville, Fla., to be nsed in bombing in the Middle East. Since this picture was taken the battle of Egypt has key rail centers and bridges near been raging furiously, with' Field Marshal Erwin Rommel directing the New York , city. Below: Herbert Axis thrust toward Alexandria and Sues, while huge V. S. Liberator bomb- Hans Haupt, 22, of Chicago, a saboteur caught with another group. ers struck heavily at the enemy in and behind the battle area. , Those bitter little quarrels between actors and motion picture companies no longer mean what they once did, not since radios here to stay. When Madeleine Carroll and Paramount disagreed not long ago, the beautiful Miss Carroll merely departed for New York and picked up some engagements to broadcast, at $2,500 each. Paul Muni and his studio parted, so he did a stage play, got $5,000 apiece for several radio performances, then signed with another studio. John Garfield and Warner Bros, disagreed, and radio grabbed him. William L. Shirer talks to his friend, Edward R. Murrow (This Is London) every Sunday before their respective broadcasts. The conversation is over a private wire, and fixe first thing Murrow asks is about tht baseball teams. . |