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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1940)
PAGE TEN MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 81. 1940. MedfordTbibunbI KaJ lb Hull Tritons. ' Osllp Klp tmtnrtmy. Publish by HEDfuKU fKINTINO Cf U-9T- NorU rtr L Prion fl. KOUERT W HUHU C4ltor. RNKT R OILSTRAP. Manae. An tndspondsot Newspaper. ('rod as imm4-iImi tnsttsr at ad ford. Orf on. under Act of Marob S, JiTS UBORIiTION HATH r Hall la A 4 a nest Duly and Btindajr oea raar ,.,.M-60 Daily and Sunday mix mootha... lit Dally and lunditr ihra tnoniha. IS Daily and Htinday na month,, . la y Carrtar la Advance Msdrord. Aah land, CaoirAJ Point, Jacksonville. 0"I4 H:U &. r iwau, - iaiaob and motor routes: Hany and Sunday on yaw tl.ot &4iy ano bandar ona month.., .f$ All Isrms cash in ad vane. Official Pa par of lb City of MMfortJ Offltlal Paper of 4-kata) Count. H KUHKH OV THE AHMH'IATFII PHtM Rc..ln Full Lauaod ttlrs Karvlra. Tfco Aaavtciatad Praaa la eluaiay atltlad to iha uaa for publication of ali eawa dispatch croditad to it or othar wiaa craduad to this pa par, and ala to tba local niwi published h oral a. All rihta for publication of apaelal Mspatehss haratn aro alao reserved. MEMBER OP UNITED PKEBS MCMHER OP AUDIT HUREAU OP CIRCULATION Advertising Rtprssontstlts WEST-HOLLI DA V COMPANY. INC. Offlooa la Naw Torn, Chicago. Dalrolt Baa Francisco. Loa Ansa last, Bsattl. Portland. L Lou la. Atlanta, Vaooouvor, B ff. Jlaaatat; Put Ye Smudge Pot Bj ARTHUR PERRY REMEMBER GIRLSf (What you wen doing 30 yean CO in June, gleaned from the fuas of the Mall Tribune.) ' There was a rush of the (air ex to Pauls' Electric store to see the latest electrical power ed washing machine wash a shirt . . . Miss Joe Clark was home from a short trip north .' . . Mrs. Ed Janney was a pat roness of the senior class recep tion . . . Miss Ina Cottrell, a teacher In the high school, left for a summer vacation in Los Angeles ... Miss Evelyn Dew accepted a position with the Palmer Music House . . . Deuels offered 600 yards of crepe de chene and georgette at $1.98 per yard . . . Two little ladies started running things at the Bill Young and the Harvey Fields home . . . Miss Hazel Hamilton of the Applegate be came a bride. Miss Laura Gates has a part In a uofO opera to be given next week ... A friend of Miss Delilah Stevens of C. Pt. from C. Pass visits here . . , Mrs. Mary Grieve of Prospect shop ped In the city . . . Mrs. Jerry Jerome left for San Jose, Calif., for a visit with her folks . , . Rain forces D.A.R. to call ' off visit to historic spots at J'vllle . . . Mrs. H. R. Satchwcll was among the Medford people who had dinner at the Sunnyside in E. Pt. . . . Republican women of the county to work for Hard ing .. . P.-T.A. meets for the last time until fall , . , Mrs. Tom G. Bradley visits In the city for a few days from Copco . . . Mrs. J. B. Andrews and Mrs. C. I. Hutchinson leave to attend the Rose show. Jackson county woman gives advertising testimonial on the merits of Tanlac . . . Mrs. Charles Strang and daughter Helen, and Charlie back from auto trip to San Diego . . . Miss Bernlce Cameron leaves for the Rose show at Portland. Housewives irked by health board order to boil city water before drinking . . . Phoenix ladies given chicken dinner . . . The Colony club reports on the number of thing it knitted for the Belgians , . . Mrs. Rose Schlefflin busy battling for Democrats . . . Miss Ina Coch ran is back from school , . . Miss Dorothy Myers performs In the Society Cabaret at the Page t . . Mrs. Charles T. Sweeney leaves for visit with her daughter-in-law In Portland . . . Mrs. Nell von der Hellen of Wellen Is writing some radio plays . Miss Katherine Nealon ruturns to Table Rock, after finishing a term of school in Fern valley . . . Special prices on hair-dos at the Marinrllo shop all next week. A noted radio commentator on war news today, reported America was whole-heartedly swallowing German "descrip tive propaganda," and another expert on European situation announces, "the nails have started boasting too soon." Both point out, the Berlin claims of the first of the week, Allied troops in Flanders, estimated at S00.000 would "surrender or be destroyed," is not borne out by their evacuation, "in one of the most astounding military feats of modern times," as reported today. One only has to loiter In front of the postoffice or stroll down the Main Stem, to find evidence of the gullibility of citizens, when it comes to war news. In 1918. the type thought when not in the front line trenches, Yankee soldiers did nothing but drink lemon ade, and buy candy for French kids. There are to many bank corner generals Jumping at con' elusions, and musing them. , ' f(fj "NE of the great lessons to be learned from the present tragic situation in Europe is the danger of national self-deception. And nothing so stimulates 6elf-deception as a disposition to avoid unpleasant facts, and fall back upon the soft upholstery of national pride, as an "escape." fVJE is probably justified in declaring, in fact, that if it had not been for the national complacency of the conservative governments in England, during the past decade, this disasterous defeat In , Flanders, would never have been suffered. One might even go farther and maintain the present war would never have occurred, at least when it did. For it was essentially this complacency, and its by-product, political gullibility, which impelled Hit ler to first start on his rule or ruin policy, with the crushing of England and France, and the control of Europe as his ultimate goal. e e e llf E grant it easy to see the grievous errors now hindsight is always so much easier than fore sight. And it all comes under the general heading of crying over spilt milk, anyway, the harm has been done; it does no good to moum. But while it is too late for England and France to nrofit. as far as the loss of the channel corts are con cerned, it is certainly not do so, and as we see it, it this should be done. VET what is true here in throughout the country, a disposition not to face the by this defeat in f landers, and to fall back upon na tional, or in this particular case ALLIED, pride as a kind of compensatory "escape." We are in receipt of one communication, for ex ample, which tries to make out this flight back to England, and these courageous rear-guard stands, by both British and French, represent in reality a great moral victory, with the losses on the German side exceeding those of the allies over three to one! The relative losses may be correct; the moral victory can't be denied. DUT, in precisely the same fashion, only a few years ago, Prime Minister Chamberlain returned from Munich with what he termed a great "moral victory," and the British Empire was to have peace "in OUR time." There is no doubt Mr. Chamberlain sincerely be lieved it, at the time, as did a vast majority of his countrymen. But those who faced the realities of the situation, and made no effort to dodge the facts because they weren't PLEASANT, believed no such thing. In fact, what the Prime Minister termed a great moral victory, they knew to be a great moral DEFEAT, and from the standpoint of power politics, a crushing disaster. Had they, instead of Mr. Chamberlain, then taken over, what a different story would now be told ! e e e e BUT there was that national complacency again, an1 wotinnol ruMi-ia tintr if cinv. iiat-iuiiai Ji n mil it Hadn't Hitler promised he wanted nothing more in Europe, and if the worst should befall, what could Germany really do against a great empire in control of the seas, that would promptly bottle her up, and, as usual, successfully "muddle through"? Well, Nazi Germany is now answering that ques tion, and rather emphatically, we fear! e e e e e CO what earthly good can come from following that Chamberlain example in this country, refusing to face the facts because we don't like them ; why fall back upon our national pride, and our passionate sym pathy for the allies, with the confidence that if the worst comes to the worst we, too, .will successfully muddle through. Only disillusion and disaster lies at the end of such an unrealistic, ostrich policy. e e e e XE grant this defeat in Flanders is neither fatal nor final. Nor can the courage and valor of the hard-pressed allied troops, facing tremendously su perior forces, be regarded as anything short of SUBLIME. But granting all this is one thing. Trying to make out the loss of the channel ports and the outflanking of the Maginot line is, in reality, a victory and NOT a serious allied defeat is quite an other. In fact, pursuing such a policy of self-deception and wishful thinking invites the very catastrophe every right-thinking person wishes to avoid. A catastrophe which, even if the allies win, Eng land can't escape, the catastrophe of underestimat ing the strength of a foe, and failing to prepare IN TIME to meet it. It is all right to talk of MORAL victories, and gain what solace they may supply. But what the allies, and the entire democratic world, need are not moral victories, but military victories. military victories of a far-reaching and decisive kind. The poorest way in creation to secure them is to let our sympathies cloud our reason, try to raise our selves by the hoot-straps of self-deception and pride, and thus fail to recognize the dangers, as they exist, until it is too late to successfully cope with them. Checker Champ Snnkane. Wash . Mnv 31 I (U R David Thompson 'of Wil i bur. Wash , todav va reclaimed checker champion of raMcm i Washington. The liU was b- Ourselves? too late for this country to is extremely important that Medford is probably true namely: there is already facts as they are disclosed stowed following a tournament held at the Spokane Y. M. C. A Cl.vtng I'm, for too Uat, to Claa illy Ada is i SO p m I'm Mali Tribune aant ada. Personal Health Service Cy William Slrned letters pertaining to personal nealtb and nyglene, not to dlaeaee diagnosis or treatment. will be answered by Dr. Brady If a eta raped eel adrtreeetd envelope ta enclosed. Letters abould be brief and written In Ink Owing to the large numbers of letters received only a few can be answered. No reply can bo made to querlea Dot conforming to Instructions, address Or. niulani Brady. gSS CI Cam loo, Beverly Hills. Calif. 80 YOU CAN'T RELAX? The popularity of neuras thenia was tremendous back in the gay nineties, although only those who had gaslight, hard wood, ru and a ref g erator could afford It. The common peo ple still had nervous pros tration. We d o n't hear so much about neuras thenia today. Instead the hokum artists in and on the fringes of the medical profes sion give us modern playthings to keep our minds off from the fact that they don't understand what ails us such as Inferior ity complex, obsession, neurosis, high tension, fatigue toxins and the like. But no matter how thin they slice it, it is the same old baloney. No one since the novelist Weir Mitchell created "neuras thenia" and popularized the rest cure has ever understood what neurasthenia is, except Mitchell himself, and he never told. Oh perhaps he explained it well enough for those days, in his monograph (109 pages) "Fat and Blood: and How to Make Them." Today In medical literature one seldom comes across the word "neurasthenia" or the con cept implied by the word that is, nerve weakness, lack of "nervous energy" or exhaustion of "nervous energy." Unless a doctor himself is ignorant of physiology or believes his audi ence is, he does not venture to dispense that line of malarkey. The Omniscient Pooh-Bah of the American Medical association, of course, is an exception: when he warns the dumb rank and file that a patient "might be on the verge of neurasthenia" they dare not laugh even if they doubt it. Since there is but one kind of energy, strength or power In the body recognized or measur able, namely, physical or mus cular energy, work, heat, meas ured in calories, it is purely fanciful to imagine nervous ex haustion can occur independent of physical exhaustion or ex haustion from hard manual work, exercise, effort. Quite different, and consis tent with our knowledge of physiology, Is the concept of irritability, hypersensitivity or THE CAPITAL PARADE By JOSEPH ALSOP and ROBERT K1NTNEP Released by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc. Washington, May 31. Atten tion has been too anxiously con centrated on the tragedy In Eu rope to leave much place for domestic politics in most peo ple's minds. Nevertheless, it Is already becoming clear that the crisis in world affairs will have its repercussions in domc-stic politics as in everything else. On the Republican side, the cause of Thomaa t. Dewey haa obviously suffered. He unquestionably enjoya a large and probably inalienable fol lowing Having completed one full sommeraault oo the subject of for eign policy, he haa now boldly bounwd up In a new role, discussing national defense In a tone somewhat remlnlscrnt of the hero of a radio soap opera getting after the cattle rustlers. This Is smart stuff, for the Dewey dramatlration of Dewey as a shining champion In the unending conflict between good and evil baa elwes gone over remarkably well. But the tact remains thst In a period of grave national danger, even Iha met victory-hungry politician is Hkely to hesitate before nomi nating for the presidency a man so inexperienced aa Dewey. The Dewey bandwsgon waa Just beginning to roll down the road when the war crisis started. Now report, from the country iniKate that It haa lost muoh of Its momentum, simulta neously. Wendell Wlllkle has come up In the betting from a dark horse position to th, plat-, of thld favor ite white eenator Robert A Tuft of Ohio has slso benefited from Drwey s ditllcultlea. On the CVmocniUr side. th fact tht the president will prcr-shly seek third term is now almost url r tailv accepted, whether lth dismal rem j nation or JuMlsnt deltghl. In his reiterated dentals of anv inten tion to run again, the president alav inserted sn eev-ene clause. He might run. he invariably eaid. if the nations! security should be directly threatened Virtually every informed official and orener in V whtngtoa la convinced Uut the Brady. M. D. excessive tone or tension In the nerve-muscle mechanism of the body, which occurs charac teristically in the state known as tetany, in rickets in child hood and in a less msrked de gree in the years of adolescence, due to deficiency in calcium In take or in calcium utilization. In justice to Dr. Mitchell and others who adopted his concept and treatment of "neurasthenia" it is fair to mention that pat ients were required to take a milk and egg diet milk and egg yolk are the richest natural food sources of both calcium and phosphorus, and Incidental ly the richest food sources of sunshine vitamin D which is es ential for the assimilation and utilization of calcium and phos phorus. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Heat Stroke Would an Ice bag on ttae head of an elderly person, applied often, sa treatment for heat stroke, do any harm? (W.H.) Ana It might reterd recovery. Heat prostration or heat exhaustion or heat stroke la generally a form of shock the victim la pale, surface cool or cold and clammy, pulse thin ando weak, breathing shallow or sighing, consciousness clouded or lost so thst response to questions Is feeble If any. This Is precisely the condition we call shock when It occurs In consequence of any Injury, operation or fright. (Paint.) Heat externally Is alwaya beneficial. An loa bag on the forehead might be good treatment for sunstroke, not for heat exhaustion. In sunstroke the victim la flushed, surface warm or hot, pulse strong and bounding, consciousness lost, breathing deep end stertorous or snoring or noisy sa In stroke of paralysis. Cold or Ice bag to the head In these circum stances la good treatment. Alkali Would a email amount of bicar bonate of soda for gas in stomach have any effect other than to relieve acidity and aid belthlng? (A. V. 8.1 Ana No 111 effect. If an alkali to neutralise excessive acidity is needed frequently. I recommend 10 grains of calcium carbonate aa preferable to soda. Purgo What effect would two tablespoon fuls of castor oil and 1 tablespoon!' .1 of orange (uloe have If given mlxrd to an elderly person who la very weak from eating very little? (D. R.) Ana. It seema, harsb treatment. I should think s 'Ch a large dose would Increase the weaknesa and vital depression. (Protected by John T. Dllle Co.) Ed. Note: rersons wishing to communicate mtb Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M D.. ZfiS El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. prospect of rapid German victory seriously endangera th, welfare of this country and thia hemisphere. If the president wishes to Invoke his escape clause, he can do so with consistency. The question still remains what th, president's wishes will be. The new deal managers of the third-term draft are now convinced that thetr draft movement la too strong for the president to resist even If he wanta to. They are hoping to make It even stronger, In the near future, by adding the voices of leading cltl nena of Independent, non-polltlcal atature to the calls of th. Democratic party polltlclana. Judgtng by their anxiety on ttile point, the president Is slightly sensi tive about the fact that to date the loudest demands for his renomlnation have come from his own subordlnatea and from the Ed Kellya and Prank Hsgues. There la no doubt at all that If ha chooeee. the president can be triumphantly renominated. His Sun dsy fireside chat waa sufficiently political to suggest that hla mind la not entirely free of third-term thoughta. He Is tn a tactical posi tion Infinitely stronger than ever before, sine, msny lmportsnt anU thlrd . termera. Postmaster Oeneral James A. Parley among them, gave lip eerMre at least to ths presidential escape clause. But In these laat w-eeks. for the first time In hts administration, th, president has been notlcesbly tired and overburdened by the heavy dutlea of bis office Although most of the men around blm will tell him thst seeking a third term Is his plsln duty to the country, h, may still decide to pusn aside th, prof fered crown. If the president does run, tt Is alfo taken for granted that he will he In a posit ion to nominate the j vice -presidential candidate. At pres ent me most n.uiy n-orea oy in third-term drafter la Justice Wil liam O. Douglas. Justice Douglas and Attorney Oeneral Fc-bert H Ja:kscn. who as a New Yorker cannot go on s ticket with tlie president, are the 1 two b'.git political figures produced ' ot the new ca. If anything. ! Douila is even better liked by the president then Jackson, and strange I a it seems that a Juetlc should leave the supreme bench to have s try at the Mce-presidency, the poe iihilstv mum be comideiei. Next most fored afer Denwlss is tVrator Jms P Byrnes of South Carolina, who hu done yeoman serv ice as congressional leader. House Majority Leader Bm Re-burn of Teias. who would coo .'I Hate th remaining; Oamerites, and Senator Burton K Wheeler of Montana, o would be pop ilar In the west, are I also talked of But trite, like the i main problem, is up to the president slone. ; I In The ! I t-w a - uays . News' -" By FRANK JENKINS MEMORIAL DAY (when these " words are written) com memorates the dead of a great war. On this Memorial Day of 1040 another great war is being fought. Its dead will be count less. Visualizing the "little green tents where the soldiers lie" that will be pitched as a result of this conflict staggers the imagination. JN the American Civil war, the sympathies of artistocratic England were with the aristo cratic South. In addition, the American South was the source of England's most essential raw material cotton. Inspired both by sympathy and economic interest, England employed "measures short of war" to AID the South. I"VD the victorious North turn " upon England after the Civil war to wreak vengeance? Not at all. Instead, the British-American friendship and understanding that are now so generally under stood really BEGAN not long after that time. IN the background of the Civil war was a great principle) putting an end to human slav ery. Did the British fight shoul der to shoulder with the Ameri can North in defense of that principle? They did not. PRANCE is regarded as our traditional protector the tradition arising out of the help given by the French to the American colonies in the hope of WEAKENING ENGLAND then France's enemy. RJIAXIMILIAN'S ill-starred at " tempt at empire in Mexico, in direct violation of the spirit cf the American Monroe doc trine, was aided by France. THIS is the point: 1 AMONG NATIONS there is no such thing as sincere, unself ish and disinterested FRIEND SHIP. The underlying principle in international relationships is dog eat dog: every man for him self. International alliances are held together (when they hold) by the knowledge that unless the parties to the alliance hang together they'U hang separately. In the present international crisis, it will be well for Ameri cans to remember this funda mental truth which is so amply proved by history. C O M M A N D-C o in . manding officer of the "Sall flsh,'' which is the former Squa lus, reconditioned, is Morton C. Mumma, Jr. (above). 35. The officer Is a former lovran. f f . t I, ill a tk ffi'ASfll Wlt lf WW Iftlt Export McCONALD CANDY AT THS National Capitol WITH John W. Kelly CONTINUED PROM tAO ONX move toward this end will re ceive the active support of Dr. Raver. e- e e A DMINISTRATOR Raver does " nnt rtnrm-e of miblie Utility1 districts paying a commission to have revenue bonds sold. He re fused to lend himself to the plan of Guy C. Myers, who has con tracts for selling such obligations on a commission basis, although Myers' proposal . had the ap proval of the late J. D. Ross, first administrator. Jim Met calf, who was brought to Bonne ville as an expert by Raver, has associated himself with Myers, which gave the color of the ad ministrator approving the Myers program hence. Raver's recent blast against PUDs having their securities disposed of on com mission. RFC will be called on to pro vide federal taxpayer money to finance the PUDs. All these matters were dis cussed by the administrator dur ing a win ftwnre nf several days duration with the federal power policy committee. SHASTA DAM. in nortlwo Ctli forn!: feoimevtUe, Grand Coule, Boulder lam are to b hoolted-up and connection mada with every private and municipal power ayatem In the northwest. If arrangement can be made, aa a national defenae measure. Dr. Barer appeared before the bureau of the budget, submitted a p rogram of wha t he conald ered Fhould be done or could be done from a power standpoint in a a tlonal emergency, but asked for no appropriation. Part of the program was development of strategic min erals with pilot plant to work out processes by which the mineral can b used commercially. BERT E. HANEY. Judge of the United State court of appeal, ninth circuit, doesn't like San Fran cisco, where he must llv u a member of the court ,ai3.6X a year), and want to return to Port land, hi old home. Judge Haney 1 promoting the Idea of creating a new circuit by splitting the ninth, the new circuit would conalat of Oregon. Washington. Idaho. Alaska and possibly Montana, leaving the ninth with California, Arizona and Hawaii. This would place In the new cir cuit Haney. Judge William Healy, of Boise. Idaho, and a Washington member of the court, would permit appointment of two or three new Judge (who would be Democrat, of course ). Judge Haney waa doing aome mis sionary work on hi Idea when In the national capital a few days ago. Hla argument: A new circuit would be more convenient to people having business before the court: would av them the expense of a longer trip to San Francisco. Judge Haney doesn't like two of hi colleagues now on the bench with him. ONE with the president's veto VJ of the rivers and harbors bill was authority for the secretary of war to acquire lands replacing the Indian fishing grounds which were submerged or destroyed by the build ing of the dam at the Cascade. No amount was specified In th bill for purchasing lands. WAR talk A story circulating that If Hitler wins he will place the Duke of Windsor on th British throne. That if the king of Eng land ts wiped out the D tonnes will have lost their guardian and Mr. Eleanor Roosevelt should be selected to fill the vacancy. A "war party" la growing In the United State. "Inside tuff" tn"t always so. Key Plttmsn. chairman of the committee on foreign relations was confiden tially predicting that Italy would Join Hitler May 31: had several senators believing blm. Judge by any standard you choose Nature hu chm ts the Bohemian Brew, eries the WATER brewers dream of SUBTERRANEAN Waw endewed with rare taste properties. It b this water used in brewing Bohemian Club Lifhr Export Lagerwater from a freat under, ground rivvr. purified and slighitv miner, alued bv Narure that gives an added efTeneacenc and iparUe.a "diSerentneas and character in ia flavor. Lag e r Bee CO, DuL Phone 10 Flight 0' Time Medford and Jackson County Blstory from the rue of the Mall Tribune 10 and to I ears ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY Mar 1930 Gt wan Saturday) Graf Zeppelin lands at Lake hurst after flight from Rio da Janeiro. Growers warned to guard against cherry fruit fly pest- re" ported raising havoc in Willam ette vi. ey. Fifty cent piece 100 years old is found in Medford hotel cigar stand till. Strawberry crop In state less . than last year due to wet spring, A, and cloudy weather. John Wilkinson. John Orth, and Verne Brophy journey to Fish lake for week-end fishing trip. Petitions for closing of Rogua river to commercial fishing are widely signed. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY Mar 31. 1320 (It was Monday) Elks picnic on Rogue River yesterday attended by 130 peo. pie. Fishing in- Rogue River said poorest in years. Letter by Pope urges "Lord's prayer for peace among the nations." Federal control of wheat prices ends tomorrow. U. S. supreme court holds the president and court members do not have to pay income tax. Frank Clark named member; of Oregon board of architects. Hometown Heroin Dragoon, Ariz., May 31 (IP) Dragoon's entire population of 75 crowded into the Texas Can yon school to attend commence ment exercises for Lola Mae Grahm. She was the only gradu ate. 0B SHIFT?-Preslder.t Roosevelt said recently that he probably would name Robert Hinckley above) aa assistant secretary of commerce, to sue ceed Monroe Johnson. Hinckley now is chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Authority. Closing time lor loo Lata ta Clas sify Ada Is 1:30 p. m. Canning Needs OS .!. National Pressure COOKERS 10 qt. six 23 qt. sis 312.30 1S.50 Sl-qt. Canner 16.95 12-qt. Aluminum Kettle with Fruit Jar Funnel S1.49 14 qt. Kettle S1.69 16-qt. Kettle 81.S9 24 qt. Wear-Ever g m saea Aluminum KettU't. I U Jl-qt. Kettle S4.25 17-qr. Kettle S3.25 14 qt. Kettle 2ftS 12 qt. Keitl S2.40 Enamel Canner, wiih rack, holds 7 quart f 4 rs rm 51.35 Enamel Canner, holds 7 SFZ SI. 60 HANSEN HARDWARE !h and Bartlett. Phone 35