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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1934)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD. OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1934 Medford Mail Tribune "Ewryorw In Southirn Orifloa Read, thi Mail rrikuiu'' Oillf Bxetpt SMurdif Published bf HEUKi.SD PRINTINU CO. SB-ST-SS N. Ptr 8L BOBKHT W. gUUU CdlUT An indljxndwt Nmpap Entsrsd u wcoDd cUm autUr at Mtdford. Oregoa, BDder Act of Mvdt t, 1SI9. SUBSCRIPTION BATES It Mil U In AnrinM Dally, mm rv 9& 0O Dillr. tli norrtta .... .TO Dallr. sm Dootb 6U Rt Cirrttr In Adrian Medford. Alblind, JieUoDftlU, Central Point, Phoenix, TaJeot, Gold BUI and on Ulr.hw.qn. lull), dim tear .0O Diilr, li mootha..... Daily, ooa BODtb G All term, eatb Id sdfinc. Ofne.il pap of U City of Medford. Official paper of Jackaoo County. - MEMBER Of TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS Reeetrl'if Pull Leaaed Wire Berrtre Tba Auoelated Prew la oielittltdy tntlllad to the ut for publication of all one dUpete&ea credited to It or oUierwlH credited la tola paper icd aiao to th loeal ww published amis. All 'IgtiU for pablicatloo of pedal dlipelebaa borelo are alb reserved. MCMHr.B Of UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU 09 CIRCULATIONS AdfertUIng HcprtMOtetlTea St. C UOCEN8EN A COMPANY Onicee la Ne Tori, Chlrtfo, Detroit, Sao trranctaoo Ue Ancelea Saattlo Portland. MEMBER haociA Ye Smudge Pot Bj axthui fenr-- No construction work U underway In the valley at present, except the making of mt. out ot m-hlll. The number of mean dogs 1 on the gain. The ownera assure the per son growled at, that the dog will not site. It la hard to forget that the dog II equipped to bite, If he wanta to. i The announcement waa made last week that H. D. (Johnny) Reed of a. HIU In Mi race for co. Jdge. la "standing aquarely on hi own feet." Tine work Johnny I We knew you could do It!" was the general com ment. ... Proat U badly needed for "proper decoration of pumpkins, and hog' killing. . - The bow and bend at the Armory Thurs. eve was well attended, and the best all-around brawl In severs! moons. A. Moore Hamilton, scribe and Young Democrat leader, has named his new boy after himself, Instead of a Democratic statesman, of either the Old Deal, or the New Deal. Republi can chieftains see signs that 'the Democracy of A. Moore Hamilton, Sr., has started to frarale. O. Arnsplger waa among the Old Oregon grads, who joined the week end heglra to the metropolis to see the grid battle. He played tackle for Ore, years ago, In a pair of high topped ahoes. He was accompanied by Dock Thayer, ex-playmate. Bowlers got off to a flying start last Mon. and several better-a have announced they will fly again. If the lawn la not mowed regularly. J. Kort Hall Is over to Lakevlew, where he Is fighting a cold, etc., etc, Politics have started to boll, bake, atew, fry, almmer, ataxia, and alop over. Partisans shriek "a vote for Zimmerman la a vote for Dunne Under Oregon law a vote for Zimmer man la a vote for Zimmerman, if the counting la correct. Many would like to see a plan worked out, whereby a vote for any Oregon candidate would count for Upton Sinclair In Califor nia. The I. Coleman boy and girl towned Thurs. pm. They are a caution, par ticularly the former. Dentlata report cltlrcns are getting their molars filed more so, than when there was nothing to eat. ... A number or klda are taking lessons In "creative clogging.' There are rumore that neat yr. there will be an auto on the mrkt. that will coat one month'a Old Age pension, f o b. Detroit. Unless uncouth comment ceases about the sad happenlnga that 'lave befell the OSC. football team, some Informsl obsequies are scheduled for these parts. Beer drinking la getting down to an orderly basis. Many were quite avid about It, but have come to the con chislon there will always be plenty, and the breweries can make It faster than they can awlg It. ... The hatlessness of Th. Brsdley. who claims he has been bsreheaded since 1B0I, has been called to the attention of the Hatmakera Union. Many sus pect this has been going on for 33 yrs. due to the Inefficiency of pneu monia. tee Ouy Conner will leave neat week b. water for NY and will scoot thru the Panama Canal with a load of pears. Support the Gleemen THPiE Medford Gleemen are starting out for another geason and to make it a success, public support must be extended. We have no doubt this support will be given, this year, even more generously than in the past. For like some other good things and unlike others, musical organizations like the Gleemen improve with age. The longer the men sing together, the more proficient they become; the more extended their training, the better the results. Not only docs this organization improve as time goes on, but its field of activity broadens. Not only are frequent local con certs given, but the Gleemen tour the rural sections, sing at Grange gatherings, are an influence in bringing rural sections closer to Medford and Medford closer to the rural sections, in short increasing all around good will and a better understand ing. Finally the organization asks for no contributions. It is not seeking charity. It merely asks people of this community to buy season tickets, in return for which full value will be re ceived. These tickets should meet with a ready sale, The organiza tion is a worthy one and its services to the community during the winter, are from every standpoint entertaining, constructive and worth while. Vote "No" On All Three THE voters won't have to sit up late the night before election This is some relief. There are only three proposals this year, the Grange Power bill; tho 20-milI tax limitation amend ment and another amendment called the "Healing Arts Consti tutional Amendment." All of them should be voted down. We have previously expressed ourselves regarding the first two. If anything the final measure is more objectionable. We don't agree entirely with either the proponents or the opponents of this measure. The proponents claim such an amendment is needed to gain liberty of treatment and break the materia medica monopoly. The opponents claim the measure if passed will destroy hospitalization standards in the state and fatally impair the present workmen 'a compensation act. Both contentions this paper regards as extreme. There is amplo liberty in tho healing arts now, without nullifying the Basic Science Law, which would undoubtedly turn liberty into license. We fail to see anything in the measure that would impair the sanctity of contracts where private hospitals are con cerned, and render it impossible to rule out quacks and nostrum fakirs from practicing in such institutions. Nor do we think tho bill would necessarily jeopardize the Workmen's compensa tion act. But we are against the amendment and believe all right thinking peoplo should vote it down, First and foremost it isn't needed. And while it appears innocent enough on the surface, it would undoubtedly be USED to feather the nests of the medi cal fakirs and gct-wcll-qtiiek mountebanks. Tliero is enough faking and swindling in this direction now, without giving it legal and constitutional encouragement. Personal Health Service By William Brady, M.D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene not to dis ease dlugnusls or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady if a etampeil self-addressed emelope Is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number or letters received only a few can be an swered. No reply can be made to queries not conrormlng to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, 285 El Camlno, Beverly HIUs, Cal. DO VOm GOOD DEED DAILY BUT DO IT BETTER. (leese Kly South PORTLAND. Ore., Oct. IS.-(AP) With their funny honking sounding like squeaky rollers on a pisno, bn of geese have been flying southward over Portland. Farm Refinancing Helps OREGON fanners received 79 Federal Land bank loans for :!fl finn rliirinn tli it-onlr nF n.lW 'I n in ixrnin knlrlinn top place in the twelfth Farm Credit administration which in cludes Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana. This brings Oregon's total volume of Land bank loans above the $16,000,000 mark since this cooperative credit institution began its emergency mortgage refinancing program 17 months ago to save farmers from threatened foreclosure. The Land bank reports that these loans have gone almost entirely to refinance and substantially reduce the debt load which farmers were staggering under. Borrowers now have new hope of working their way out through the benefit of long term, amortized payments at a low rato of interest. At the same time local business conditions undoubtedly have been strengthened by this program of farm refinancing. Comment on the Day's News Bj IK ASK JKNKIM AN INSURANCE man, addressing a Southern Orceon service club yesterday on the. subject of fire pre vention week, sulci: "The annus, loss from fires In this country Is around 600 million dollars. That Is an annual loss for each man, women and child of approximately four dollars." YOU may say: "That doesn't mean anything to me. X didn't have, any ft res, and so 1 didn't have sny loss. "Let the other fellow wory.' YOU would be wrong. Fire losses are covered by Insur ance. Practically every responsible concern In this country carries in aura nee. It HAS to. The riak of loss by fire is too great to be taken by wise busi ness concerns 4V . OW liitrn: The cost of Insurance is a psrt of the overhead coat of doing bual ness. It has to be added to th price of the product. So, whenever you buy an article, the cost of Insurance Is Included in the price you pay. The cost of Insurance varies with the I na i. If losses are high, the cost of Inaursnre has to be nlch. f NMUri AN('K. y.ui rV. Is Just a meth od of &rKEADlN(3 the losses. N making them fall on a large num ber of people, In a reasonably light way, Instead of falling all on ONE person In an unbearably heavy way. Because this la true, each of us bears his share of the cost of losses by fire. HB CONTINUED: "Approximately every four min utes. In this country, somebody's home is destroyed by fire. "About every seventeen minutes, somebody Is either killed or very ser iously burned in a fire somewhere." (fT1! leading cause of fires,' ne 1 added, "is smoking, and be cause cigarette butta smolder until they burn out cigarette cause more fires than any other form of smoking. "Another lesdlng cause of fires is faulty construction of chimneys. Im proper placing of stoves and other heating equipment la another Im portant cause of fires.' . CARELESSNESS that la the whole story in the rather staggering fire situation In this country. If ws were more careful, the an nual loss of half a billion dollars would be materially smaller. If we wete mors careful, there wouldn't be a home burned every four minutes, or a fstal or exceedingly serious lire accident evey seventeen minutes. In U.ls country, remember, the annual per capita fire loss La around four doltArs. In Europe, where they ARE more careful. It Is approximately 43 cents. A LITTLE more care with fire m this free and easy country ot our would ps mighty big dividends to everybody, I Every little white one of my scouts sends In a new picture of handsome lifeguards, gallant firemen or earn est Boy Scouts demons tratlug artificial respira tion by the wron method. Here is one from Pitts burgh showing blind Boy ftcouts committing the error to which I have called at tention so manv times. The error may not seem Im portant to one who has never actually resuscitated a drowned person, and perhaps that Is why the American Red Cross contin ues to "approve" It The error is in the position of the victim's head and arms. When Schaefer discovered and gave to the world the prone -pressure meth od of artificial repairs t Ion or reauz. citation he published the specific da scrip tlon of the correct technic In Medlco-chlrurglcal Transactions, Lon don, 1804, and also tn Journal of the American Medical Association, Chi cago, 1908. He Included with his de scrlptlon a picture which makes It perfectly clear what the position of the victim's head and arms should be. Any one who cares to ascertain the facts about th Is may consu It Howell's Textbook of Physiology" (W. B. Saunders Co..) which quotes Schaefer's description and reprints the picture. This la one of the lead ing authoritative works on physiology and may be found m any public li brary. 1 ! Prof. Tandell Henderson, recognized authority on resuscitation, assures m; that the position of the subject as preacrlbed by Schaefer, viz., with both arms extended well above the head and palms down, the head turned toward one side, places the thorax In the most favorable position for Inspir ation. That la obvious to any one with an elementary knowledge or anatomy and physiology. No doubt Sir Edward Schaefer had the fact in mind when he prescribed this specific posi tion for the subject. I am not a physiologist, nor a physicist, just a plodding doctor. Bat I have resuscitated a drowned child and so I am qualified to have an opinion about the method. In my opinion the victim of submersion hu a better chance to recover when Schaefer's prone-pressure method of artificial respiration Is applied than such a victim has when the first aid operator employs the Incorrect meth od approved by the American Red Cross and a dozen other organizations interested In resuscitation. I believe that when the subject's head Is lifted an inch or two off the ground or floor to rest on one of the subject's arms. In the wsy of the American Red Cross approves, a trap Is formed In the victim's breathing passages, so that any water or thick frothy mucie that may be In the breathing passages will not drain from the nose cr mouth as It does when the proper position Is used. At any rate, what sound objection can a Red Cross or other Instructor or authority bring against my pro posal that Schaefer's method of prone -pressure resuscitation be adopt ed In place of the questionable meth od "approved" by the Red Cross? In the name of humanity, science and plain common sense I make this pies to the powers that be In the American Red Cross. Why not quietly drop from your "Rules for Resuscita tion" this fatal error that has crept In, probably because It makes prettier pictures for publicity purposes, just as you dropped the deadly Jack-knife stunt, which you advised snd pic tured in your msnual on First Aid snd Resuscitation In 1028? NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre 13 convex I S 7 m isr : s QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Winter Footwear. What should a 4 year old child wear on her feet in winter, shoes or oxfords or what? Some mothers make their small daughters wear shoes the year around because they aay it will make their ankles smaller. Would shoes give more protection than oxfords If child has a touch of bronchitis no snd then? (Mrs. B. L.) Answer High shoes are more prac tical footwear for lively youngsters In winter. So far as exposure Is concern ed, In the case of the child with bronchitis, that has nothing to do with the question. Low shoes (oxfords, slippers) are quite all right for winter wear for any one who does not have to wade thru snow. Cans Bulfte. Is fruit In tin cans fit to eat If the ends of the cans bulge? The food tastes all right, but I wonder . . (Mrs. P. E.) Answer Better discard It. Food might taste all right even If contam inated with the deadly botulism. Dictionary No Authority, Is the druggist critic quite sure we must say phenol and not carbolic acid? The dictionary says phenol oc curs In crystalline needles forming with a small quantity of water a per fect solution known as carbolic acid . . . (E. W. R.) Answer Yes, the druggist Is right. The dictionary Is not a scientific au thority. Phenol is phenol, no matter whether In crystalline needles or In solution In water. (Copyright 1934, John F. Dllle Co., Ed. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Or. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. Ullllfim Brady, M. D.. 203 El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Cal. Communications Dr. Hedges Defends Act To the Editor: The "Peril to Public Health Seen 1 In Healing 'Arts Amendment," pub lished In the Medford Mall Tribune of October 11, Is very misleading, and contains statements and gives Impressions which are not In accord with the facts. The healing arts constitutional amendment Is sponsored by citizens who wish to preserve Inviolate those sacred rights to which every citizen is entitled. We have religious freedom; this proposed amendment guarantees medical freedom. And a measure granting such belongs In our bill ot rights. If the "high standards of public health" are not endangered by the present laws, then, they most as suredly cannot be endangered by the proposed healing arts constitutional amendment; for this amendment in corporates those very same laws which have been fundamental In produc- ; lng those boasted-of ''high standards ; of public health" enjoyed today. It i Is to protect these standards that i the citizen, not a political group. is awakening to the need of the i healing arts constitutional amend ment. The high state of public health. , of which our state can boast. Is due. In no small mensure, to the pro gressive medical legislation enacted and maintained through the efforts of the drugless physicians In their fight Mr the Individual right of the i cltiren In his relation to the state. Under this proposed amendment ! the legal requirements for the 11- ! censing of all phystclans of trie dit- J ferent schools of practice will abso lutely be higher thsn they hsve ever j been In the history of Oregon. i Instead of monopoly, this measure provides for competition between the different schnnls of practice, and thus insures better and cheaper medical J service to the people. Under this measure, each and ev- ery school of practice could develop and progrrM as rapidly as It possibly ; can without the hindrance of Its economic rivals. ! We are told that this amendment If pi.wd, will "lower the high hos pital standards. " There Is not a sec tion In this amendment that will substantiate such a statement. Un d It. if passed, each and every , hospital in the state will be able to . render tht same high and efficient service which It does now and ot which it would be capable under the present law. The proposed amendment dees not give the naturopath snd chircprac- i tor the right to practice major sur- j gery. A statement to the effect that j It does Is absurd. The performing oi auoh la now prohibited by law and ; this prohibition is carried into the ; proposed amendment. There la no section or clause in this propped healing arts conatltu- tionsl amendment that furnishes any , roundel'-:', f r UKh a statement as "that It would completely wreck C&egou a woikoiia i compensation act." Such a statement Is false and made evidently for the purpose ot frightening the workmsn so as to se cure his vote against this measure. The workman's compensation act will remain exactly the same and the commission will function as now. except that the Injured workman will have the right to choose his own physician. And that Is what the workman wants. A. R. HEDGES, N. D., D. O. Medford, October 13. NEW YORK, Oct. 13. The old-fasb-loned brownstone boarding bouse ap pears definitely erased from the Man aiwi "'"Vl3 hattan scene. Mr More modern 4mS Quarters s h o u 1- dered them out with scant aym pathy. Yet to those of us who found sanctuary there as new comers to New York there Is i nip of nostalgia. Their third or fourth floor up I rooms were the wt t5 settings for many roseate Orison Sweit Maxden dreanxv Irvln Cobb once wrote that every ou lander eventually became a "paying guest" In an old. brownstone on We3t 57th. I was one of the caravan. The front of my old stand la still there but Its interior la cublcled Into a hatr-wave parlor, a tap dancing stu dio, valet shop and on the windows from which I gazed nightly at Broad- way's pink flush are gilt letters of Mile. Somebody, who gives astrolo gical readings "by appointment only." The stoop where boarders sat In the dusk la also gone. And I wonder what fate haa done to the dull-eyed, submoronlc slavey. Sophie, who seem ed in constant cringe from the Imper ious landlady's bark. 3ophle who fin essed with life, reading Love Confes sions surreptitiously between scour ings of rickety hall stairs. Doraldlno, hula dancer from Ft. Wayne, was notching temperatures at Relsenweber's a stone's toss from our house. Windows up you could hear the orchestra's barbaric blare. The typewriter repairer at our table, who read Jane Austin and smoked cubebs, hesrd sandwiches were 60 cents and after 1 o'clock you had to "crack wine." I visited Relsenweber's yesrs later with a show-off who snapped fingers at waiters, called the hat gtrl "Little Lady" and rowed over the check, so I was never much of a fan for the place. Flight o Time (Medford and Jackson Count History from (he files of The Mall Tribune of 30 and 10 rears Apo). There was a pathetic pretentious ness about the old-time boarding house. A doleful collection of Grade A aecond raters many begaU from the fabled goal. I remember sending a telegram to myself to give Impressive nesa to the little pile of mall at my dinner table plate. Opening It In cas ual offhandedness and returning t- the soup provided a fleeting spark In the spot. A gentleman of Importance1! Julia Sanderson was trilling "Tlwy Didn't Believe Me" at the Knicker bocker and I had splurged for two seats, third row balcony. Several nights later, stopping to watch after theatre crowds drift under a Rector canopy. Miss Sanderson stepped from a hansom. Her roaming glance acci dentally fell on me and I gave a sul den start which she mistook for a nod and generously smiled. A fellow of the boarding house happened also among the loiterers. At my window an evening or so later I heard a voire from the front step say: "That new j boarder In No. 12 Is a friend of Julia Sanderson's." Next night I carried Variety to the dinner table. Board and front room for two with ! bath down the hall was $18. Now and then on pay day you left Alex, the colored waiter, 25 cents, a gesture that not only sent him to the kitchen grin ning but was rewarded with a larger cut of pie or a heavier blob of Ice cream. Alex came from Orange coun ty, Virginia, and If you stood In call ed you "Cunnel." I never got beyond a Captaincy. We came down to breakfast one morning and found Alex stranga.y quiet. Out a window I noticed several camera tripods on the curb. "It was the foreign lady." Alex sottoed. Noon editions went into fuller details. The English actress, who said "Chaw- mlng, really I" went to the roof In the night and an aimless sickness of heart leaped Into the dark. Her show hid closed that evening. West 67th street achieved thick head-lines. My preference was for the red glox of Faust's on Columbus Circle, where musicians wore Mephistophelean cos tumes and flames seemed dancing from the walnscoatlng. One night I saw Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson, authors of eminent so briety, lo!, these many years, at a table. But this large evening they were tilting the gin mills, as It were. They tarried but a moment, and I followed to the door, where I saw them, as was their Invariable custom, on the loose, motion the driver Into the cab; gravely. If mayhap a shade teeterlngly, mount the box and clop-clop-clop for new adventures. I went back to my boarding house more re solved than ever to try to become a writing man. (Copyright, 1934. McNaught Syndi cate, Inc.) SUFFERS LEAST DURING inM io ounw 10 TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 14, 1924 (It Was Tuesday) A large meteor falls in the Dead Indian district and Is seen by many people in this city and Ashland. Hunt's Craterlan theater will for mally open next Monday with Elliot Dexter in "The Havoc." William A. Gates haT recently pur chased another radio set and had It Installed In h!a home on Crater Lake avenue. Apparently he Is quite a radio fan as he now has three radio sets. Dirigible ZR-3 nears New Jersey coast and Is expected to make flight across Atlantic ocean in about ao hours. Portland adopts ordinance to put ban on Fatty Arbuckle, the movie actor. Jackson county Democrats Incensed by speech of Secretary Hughes, flay ing "Bourbon stand on the money question." Chinese pheasant season to open tomorrow, and hunters warned "not to shoot from highway or loads." TWENTY YEARS AfiO TODAY October 14, 1914 (It Waa Wednesday) Democratic candidate for governor In speech here, declares "for economy that Is economy." In the October number of Western Advertising, Jackson county gets some favorable publicity In the di rection of retail trade statistics. In 1933, for example, retail sales In Oregon declined 50.8 per cent from the 1929 level. But the decline In Jackson county during the same pe riod was only 47.7. This places Jack son county at the head of he entire state, for there was a decline of 48.7 per cent in Multnomah, 60.8 per cent In Marion; 61.6 per cent In Klamath, nfght The percentage In added retail stores was even more significant. In Jackson county the gain In this di rection was 9.9 per cent practically 10 per cent; in Klamath It was 9.6: In Marlon there was a loss of over 22 per cent; and In Multnomah a loss of 9 per cent. The average loss In the state was over 5 per cent. The statistical table and the article attached give striking evidence thnt during the depression Jackson county remained one of the brightest spots In the entire state. OREGON CITY, Ore., Oct. 13. (AP) A grand Jury indictment charging manslaughter was faced to day by R. I. Swank of Portland, who allegedly was passing a truck on the right side hen his automobile struck and fatally Injured Ralph Van Hove, 11, riding a bicycle. FILLER The Grange poverty social was In deed a pleasure from early till trie late hours. The old time games such Farmer In the Dell," "London Bridge Is Falling Down," and "Musi cal Numbers" brought back our child hood days and the old songs lent merriment to the occasion. We even had tho grind organist among our poverty struck group but the only thing that was not poor was the pumpkin pies and the good old liquid (Willow Springs Twlglets.) Allies report progress all along the western battlefront. Editor continues war on "the vici ous timber trusts of Jackson county". Slides In the Panama Canal block commerce. Police threaten arrest of cltlzena who Insist on "storing gasoline In their garages," contrary to city ordinances. Ore and Bullion Purchased Mcented by Stato el CtlllonvU F.stablithttl 1907 WILD B ERG BROS. SMELTING ec REFINING CO. Offices: 742 Market St., Sin Ftancuco Plmt: Sjuih San Francisco Adults 20c K Anytime IK Kiddies 10c Anytime SS Starts TODAY! .KIDCHIJJ fOfJ Continuous Sunday 1:30 11.00 How They Dish It Out! Gags and Girl Songs and Sappy Saying: IIP v . kSl w'A ALSO Sportlight "Jumping Giants" Goldilocks News BROTHERS The mad Marxes gallop through a grand musical show Starting Today for 3 Big Days Continuous Shows Today 1:45 p. m. to 11:00 p. m. SWEEPING MAGNIFICENT ROMANCE WITH MUSIC! A BRUNETTE BY DAY! A BLONDE BY NIGHT! Even her own husbind didn't know these'two' women he made love to were one and the same... HIS WIFE! JOSEPH M. SCHENCK prtuntt 4 . JV " , CONSTANCE ENNETT TON E&-y 4 t ft r. If: r 7 Music I Beautiful Girls! H nr. -Ctfn I. T , saa Tlm Urn, Of Jmr" Plus, I" CHARLES I Oddity. DARRYL F. ZANUCK S "fymatice fagnifictnl . TULLIO CARMINATI RUSS COtUMBO BOSWELL SISTERS CHARLES JUDELS in "PUGS AND KISSES" Oddity. "TRICK GOLF" with Pete Smith PATHE NEWS REEL