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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Beloved, now are we the
sons of God, and it doth not
yet appear what we shall be,
\ but we know that, when he
shall appear, we shall be like
him, for we shall see him as he is.—Gospel of Ist
John 3:2,
~—Mr. John Crawford 215 Williams Street, City.
Have you a ravorite Bible verse? Mall te
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chupel
Everybody Wants To Get
Into The AclyWith Aluminum
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON.— (NEA)—There’s a big scram
ble going on now in the copper and brass industries
to get Into the aluminum buginess. Companies that
don’t make this switch face the prospect of their
processing plants having less and less metal to
chew on,
World supplies of copper are getting no greater
and the price is going up. Before World War II
copper was 12 cents a pound. Today it is 24% cents
for domestic, 27% cents for foreign metal.
On the other hand, aluminum was 16 cents before
the war. The two metals were equal in price at the
14-cent level. But today aluminunr is 19 cents a
pound—s 2 to 7% cents less than copper, And one
pound of aluminum will in most cases do the work
of twe to three pounds of copper. So competition is
a simple problem.
Anaconda Copper Company has jumped into the
aluminum business by backing Harvey Machine
Company of California in its successful bid for a
government power allocation fromr Hungry Horse'
dam. It will supply a 100-million dollar, 72,000-ton
aluminum plant to be built at Kalispell, Mont.
The two other major U. S. copper producers are
Phelps-Dodge and Kennecott, There have been op
portunities, particularly since the start of the Ko
rean war, when they might have gone into alumi
num production.
“ Department of Justice’s anti-trust division has
wanted to keep copper and aluminum industries
trnpetitive. But the defénse agencies invited the
copper people to get into the picture. They showed
insufficient interest. Now it nray be too late, unless
the government decides on a further aluminum ex
pansion prograim.
SMALL FIRMS WANT THEIR SHARE
On the sidelines, anxious to get into aluminum
production, are a number of smaller companies. So
far they haven’t been able to handle financing and
production problems. They all want government
loans and public powetr allocations. The power just
isn’t available and the most Defense Production
Administration seenrs willing to offer financially is
rapid tax amortization.
Olin Industries, a smail scale aluminum preducer
in a government plant during the war, would like
to get back in the game, but big. One of Olin's sub
sidiaries, Winchester Arms, is typical of the com
panies bothered by the problex'n of decreasing cop
per supply.
American Smelting and Refining, Apex Smelting
of Chicago, Spartan Aircraft of Oglahonra, and
Arnold Troy, a New York aluminum extruder, have
also made passes at getting into primary aluminum
production. So far none has been able to raise the
100 million dollars which C. E. Wilson says it takes
to start a business today.
The government’s present aluminum expansion
plan to be completed by 1954, will add 677,000 tons
a year to the pre-Korea production of 727,000 tons.
Of this 1,404,000 tons total, Aluminum Conrpany of
America will have about 41 npercent, Reynolds
Metals 29 percent, Kaiser Aluminum 25 percent,
and Harvey-Anaconda 5 percent,
While ALCOA’s monoply has thus been broken,
it is still claimed there isn’'t enough competition
yet, and not nearly enough production. There are
now some 17,000 aluminum processors.
SMALL PROCESSORS GET MOST
OF PRODUCTION
Jess Larson, Defense Materials Procurement ad
ministrator, who started the present expansion
prograny, wrote into all contracts that two-thirds of
the new production must be sold to these small
processors for five years, to keep them going.
Whether there is a further expansion program to
take in the copper producers and some of the other
hopefuls, is now in the hands of the new Office of
Aluminum, headed by Samuel W. Anderson, in the
Defense Production Administration. It was Ander
son—a former New York banker—who worked up
the deal to put the Anaconda-Harvey combination
into aluminum.
There is no danger and no possibility that the
transition fronr copper to aluminum, which has
been going on gradually for a number of years, will
be completed overnight. If the industry converts
six percent a year, metals experts think it will be
doing well,
There is plenty of bauxite, the ore from which
alumina is made. But in addition to lack of electric
power, the bottlenecks to greater aluminum pro
duction are shortages of natural cryolite, which
comes from Greenland, and is about exhausted.
Cryolite is used in reduction of the ore. A synthetic
eryolite can be made of sulphuric acid and fluro
spar, but both of thees materials are in short sup
ply.
. Some metals experts think America’s best bet is
to rely on Canadian aluminum production. Canada
now has 900,000 tons annual aluminum production
in Quebec Province. Another 750,000 tons produc
tion can be made available in British Columbia by
1956. But that may be too late.
Nature Heaves A Snowball
.
At That Stuffed Shirt - Man
Man is inclined to behave in a rather cocky man
ner as he sums up his superlative scientific con
quests of his material world. But just when he is
about to become insufferable, nature takes him
down several rungs on the ladder.
Weather seenmrs to be nature’s chief weapon for
administering these rebuffs., And right now one of
these little lessons is in progress. Snow, the lovely
white stuff that does so much for Christmas, isn't
doing nruch good for man in some of our key cities
these days.
TLook at Chicago, for instance, Chicagoans have
watched upwards of 30 inches of snow descend
upon them during the past month, and most of it is
still on the ground. Altogether they’ve had nearly
50 inches since the season began.
The transportation officials are fed up. They've
spent $600,000 already in trying to keep buses and
street cars rolling, but it's been largely a losing
battle. Marooned automobiles block plowing efforts
in many spots, Side streets are a bold adventure to
any motorist. Hardly a one does not echo continu
ally the whine of spinning tires trapped in churned
up drifts,
Snow removal authorities comrplain they can’t
find places to dump the snow they strip from the
streets, The usual dumping grounds are loaded, and
there’s little melting to make room for more.
The thick mantle has almost smothered the city’s
normal doings. Countless business and social en
gagements haven't comre off. Industry and com=-
merce have slowed. The filling station proprietors
are muttering about the 20 to 25 percent drop in
gasoline sales.
Things are no better in Detroit, another indus
trial whopper. Some 32 inches has been the city’s
total snowfall since November 1. Virtually all of
that fell in a two-week period. Weather officials
can’t remember a worse winter in the 52-year-old
history of Detroit’s Weather Bureau.
A motor manufacturer laid 6,000 men off their
jobs recently because trains and trucks hampered
by snow couldn’t keep the plant supplied with
parts. Elsewhere in the city, it was like the Chicago
story in main details,
Cities like Chicago and Detroit couldn’t keep
enough snow-removal equiprrent on hand to deal
forcefully with nature when she is in so abundant
a mood. So they stay half immobilized for days,
possibly weeks, waiting for a warm sun to do what
men in all their technical glory seem unable to do.
Anyone who has been in a giant metropolis when
the snow was piled high can grasp what a feeling
of helplessness grips the city which is weighted
with a burden. Human values are altered, too.
What seemed important in a time of clear streets
suddenly appears much less so in an hour of urban
paralysis. The simrplest acts of getting about become
major enterprises. Life is measured in terms of
only the most elemental necessities. All of which
would seem to dwarf, by comparison, our problems
here in the South,
.
Magic In The Home
Ever since Justice Jackson said such harsh
words about gadgets we've been keeping an eye on
what might be called the lighter side of industry.
It still turns out marvels,
Take for example entries in the Versatility-in-
Design contest run by Hess Brothers of Allentown,
Pa, to encourage development of objects having
more than one use. The list of contenders includes
pajamas good in bed or cutdoors, house slippers
that look like a fire-chief’s car and double as toys,
a mop that will wash dishes or wax furniture if
you take its head apart.
Those we understand, but a pair of items in the
children’s wear division has us pop-eyed. Listed as
“Magi-creeper” and “Magi-Panti-Dress,” they are
cited as leaders in their field because they “make it
unnecessary to remove the garment for easy dia
pering and no additional rubber pants needed.”
We do not underestimate the ingenuity of Amer
ican business, but, please will someone tell us how
they hook on the plumbing?
Hitler's real monuments are the ruined cities of
Germany, and no other monuments should be al
lowed to remain. — Waldemar von Knoeringen,
German Social Democratic leader.
The greatest sin of our age is impatience and its
child is the short cut—in politics, in econonrics—
and in Reno. — Rev. H. A. Feinhold, of Roman
Catholic Church.
Since arms cannot be obtained except from the
Western bloc . . . it is in our interest to side with
the bloe. . . . Neutrality is impossible . . . (and)
is considered by the Western bloc as animosity. . . .
If we are not strong, at least let us be wise.—Hasan
Hakim, Premier of Syria.
Tell the British government that if Dr. Mossadegh
deviates one iota from oil nationalization, the Iran
ian people will dispatch him to the next world.—
Mullah Kashani, of fanatical Fedayan Islam, to
Britain’s Sir Richard Stokes.
The closer you get to the problems in the Far
East, the less certain you become about the ans
wers.—Governor Thomas E. Dewey.
Any man who says we have no foreign policy, or
that he cannot see one, must be blind indeed, ancd
there are none so blind as those who refuse to see.
—Vice-Ppesident Alben Barkley.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATPENS, GEORGIA
MORE PRECIOUS THAN AUBIES
Byco:ria:: : 9?3,'::(5:::: mj
THE STORYt Alma Conroy, de
signer for the exclusive jewelry
firm of Trumbull & Company, has
been told by her hushand Tommy
that he has obtained a promotion
in the firm, for which he also
works. Tommy hasg a great deal of
money and buys Alma an expen
sive gift. But as she goes to work
the next day she meets Joe Den
tion a friend of both Tommy and
herself, who tells of an inside rob
bery at The House, the second in
2 series of thefts, Joe lives with
his step-mother, a selfish, cruel
woman, who also is employed by
the firm.
- - .
v
“Poor Joe!” thought Alma, but
it was actually more admira
tion than pity which she felt. Joe
took everything calmly.
But now he would be meeting
the Lock Sergeant at the counter
and counter-checking the contents
of the Sergeant’s steel lock-box
as the latter laid under glass the
flaming jeweled pins and clips.
Then Joe would use the little key
which hung so. unobtrusively on
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his watch-chain and the Lock Ser
geant would move on to another
show case, and Joe’s daily guard
janship would begin,
Joe was a good saleman. Wom
en liked to buy from him. Women!
And Jee had never looked at a
woman other than herself! Yoor
Joe, thought Alma once again.
The service elevator stopped to
let clerks out at Silverware, at
China-and-Glass, at Special Wed
ding Gifts. Minor executives left
at the fifth floor. At the sixth
Alma stepped out into the lobby
of the workshop. Most jewelers
had their jewelry manufacturing
done outside the premises, but
Trumbull’s had, even in the new
building, stuck by the tradition
of h"‘fifl: done under their own
roof. nodded to the uni
formed guard who was always
slumped in his chair by the door.
“Moring, Pete!”
He grunted, but with a smile in
his eyes. .
She left her things in the locker
room, slipped into her dark blue
working smock and went to the
check-away counter. Behind its
chromium grille bright-eyed little
Mr. Youmans looked like a moth
eaten gray squirrel in a cage. Alma
slipped her last night’s receipt un
der the grille and presently he
brought her flat steel work-tray
and unlockel it raising the grille
and slipping it out to her, smilling.
“Don’t drop and diamonds on
the floor today?” he admonished
playfully. It was his standard poke.
Alma smiled back.
“You bet I'll be careful!” she
said. “The floor’s about due to be
sold, isn’t it?”
. 9 9
The floor of the workroom at
Trumbull’s was the dread of
all its jewel-makers. It was
covered by a shallow super-struc
ture of finely knit slatwork, and
‘despite every precaution on the
journeymen’s part, a certain
‘amount of gold and platimum dust
and shavings from the trays seeped
‘through to the concrete floor be
‘neath.
~ Once a year this dust was auc
tioned off blind to salvage dealers,
the highest bidder undertaking to
‘remove the old wooden floor and
‘replace it with a new one. The
'smallest winning bid in the his
tory of The House had been S3OOO.
.~ Anything other than dust slip
ping through the slatwork was
considered the property of the sal
vage frim and for a journeyman to
lose even the smallest stone in
this manner was looked upon as
a disgrace.- When Mr. Youmans
made his little joke, his audience
stepped carefully.
Alma found herself holding her
tray grimly as she took it to her
place at the bench where her
grandfather already sat. Old
Victor watched her affectionately
as she laid out her work, his eyes
anxious.
‘All is well, cherie?”
“Yes, Papa Victor. Well enough.
What are you making?”
“A horrible modernstie eclip.”
He held it up, shuddering exag
geratedly. “However, one must
live!” He leaned toward her con
fidentially. “But I have a new de
sign—a five pointed star. Wait
uqtil I am through, eh? I who
originated the flexible diamond
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bracelet, the diamond sunburst!
Alors! They are wrong; Regarde
ftol, cherie!” b
' He shoved his meticulous' draw
ing toward her. Even before she
looked at it Alma felt sure that
it, like most of the old man’s
dated work, was doomed to re
jection. But she smiled and said.
“Very lovely, dear Papa Victort”
* » »*
Then she concentrated on her
own commission her pliers
busy with the soft gold wires of
the trial set-up. And presently
she had forgotten everything ex
cept the beauty which was flower
ing under her hands. The atmos
phere swept her up into the Alad
din’s lamp magic with which the
‘place never failed to inspire her,
for Trumbull’s was no mere fac
tory, no cold, detached series of
unrelated luxury shops, but a gi
gantic entity which extended far
beyond the stalid white marble of
its walls. \
The House owned pearl fisheries
off Guedhelpus Island in the Pacific;
‘had their own ruby and saphire
mines in Ceylon and Burma where,
before the war, white-robed mer
chants and yellow-robed priests
aided the American bagmen in the
selection of the best gems. There
was the interest held by Trum
bull’s in African diamond fields,
and in gold and silver mines as
well. The House of Trumbull had
roots reaching out all over the
world—strong roots of its own
through which flowed the precious
sap which supported The House as
the main trunk of a tree is sup
ported by the rich earth.
And the heart of this giant,
golden tree was this workroom in
which she labored with such en
‘ergetic pleasure.
At noon she showed Old Victor
the furs and when they had been
| dully admired, they went to lunch.
, (To Be Continued)
Convulsions Should |
IBe Probed As Caution|
|g . ‘
Against Epilepsy |
i
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. |
Written for NEA Service [
Mrs. O. K. asks for a discussion
of the difference beiween epi
lepsy and convulsions. Some chil
dren do have convulsions which
do not appear to be reiated to epi
lepsy, even though convulsions or
fits are the most important sign of
the latter disease.
Those youngsters who have con
vulsions of this sort are usually
somewhat “nervous” children, but
neither this nor any other feature
of their physical or mental make
up seems to explain why they
should develop “fits.”
But fortunately they seem to get |
over the convulsions as they grow
older without having suffered any
permanent ill effects.
But any kind of convulsion
should be investigated. This can
be done much better now than in
the past, thanks to the discovery
and development of an instrument |
which measures the electrical
waves in the brain. It is called an
electroencephalograph.
Not only are the waves which
! can be recorded by this machine
different in epilepsy from those of
a normal person, the information
which is obtained is of great help
in deciding the seriousness of the
epilepsy, what medicines to give,
and how the patient is responding |
to treatment. !
The least serious variety of epi- |
lepsy is called petit mal; in this |
[ there are usually no convulsionsf
- but only speels of brief loss of |
consciousness. |
The treatment of petit mal Isi
likely to be quite successful with x
the drugs which are available to- i
day. {
The more frightening form of |
epilepsy, known as grand mal, is |
accompanied by convulsions andl
loss of consciousness. A tvpical
attack does not come without
warning. :
On the contrary, most of those |
who suffer from attacks get pe—i
culiar sensations for days or hours |
before the fit takes place. |
These sensations are called thei
“aura” and they may take differ
en forms. Sometimes the aura is
noticed in the vision, sometimes it
is merely a strange feeling in the !
abdomen. |
| The attack itself is often more !
unpleasant to the onlooker than |
to the one who has it. A loud |
scream or cry may occur at’ the
beginning.
"he victim quickly becomes un
conscious but muscular move=
ments may occur such as a draw
ing back of the head, tightening |
the fists and straightening the |
legs. l
Horrible Feeling |
The face gets red and a person
who has never seen an epileptic
attack may feel that death is close.
But the victim recovers, and hav
ing been unconscious remembers
nothing about the attack. |
The purpose of treatment at |
present is to make the atacks less
severe and farher apart. While
treatment is not yet perfect, many
are helped by the drugs available
and the outlook is by no means !
as dark as it used to be. |
|
The Gulf of California is among |
the finest fishing grounds in the |
world. |
—_— I
Japanese military engineers be- !
fore World War II built ont of the |
Far East’s finest rail networks in f
Korea, |
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Open 2:00 P. M. Continious
Betty Grable - Dan Daley
Danny Thomas in
“CALL ME MISTER”
in technicolor
Color Cartoon and
Selected Shorts.
PSRt B RPN S 5 Moso, S R
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
James Cagney in
“WHITE HEAT”
Selected Shorts
AT THE MOVIES
PALACE—
Tues.-Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. —
“Distant Drums,” starring Gary
Cooper, Mari Aldon. Holiday
Land—color favorite, News.
RITZ—
Mon.-Tues.—"“A Place In the
Sun,” starring Montgomery Clift,
Elizabeth Taylor. Lucky Pigs—
color favorite.
Wed.-Thurs. — “Fighting Cara
vans,” starring Gary Cooper, Lily
Damita. Jerry's Cousins—Tom
and Jerry, Arnold the Benedict—
special.
Fri.-Sat.—“South of Caliente.”"
starring Roy Rogers, Dale Evans. '
Bee at the Beach—Disney Cartoon.
Quebee Sports Holiday—Sport.
Perils of Darkest Jungle—chapter
6.
DRIVE-IN— |
Mon.-Tues. — “Little Egypt,”
starring Mark Stevens, Rhonda
Fleming. Bluebirds Baby-—color
favorite. World of Kids—Novel
ty. News.
Wed.-Thurs. — “Fort Worth,”
starring Randolph Scott, David
Niven, Heavenly Puss—7om and
Jerry. Did You Know—Pete
Smith. News.
Fri. — “Big Carnival,” starring
Kirk Douglas, Jan Sterling. Mer
maids Babies—Disney Cartoon.
Sat.—“ Fury of Congo,” starring
Johnny Weissmuller, Sherry More
land. Hook, Line and Sinker —
Donald Duck. Hollywood Honey
moon—comedy.
LARGEST “RATTLER”
The state museum at Raleigh,
N. C., contains the largest rattle
snake, mounted, of all collections
in the world. It measures 6 feet
11 inches in length and 11 inches
in girth, It weighs seven pounds
11 ounces and has 12 “rattles” on
its tail.
The largest airfield in Africa is
the new British installation at
Entebbe, Uganda, with runways 2
miles long capable of handling jet
planes.
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5 ._,_,__‘v = e i, s HERBERT J:-YATES _}rrs(‘nls* ee :
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HODGKINSON'S
145 East Clayton
TUESDAY, JANUARY 1, 1952.
GEORGIA—
Tues.-Wed. — %“Adventures of
Captain Fabian,” starring Errol
Flynn, Micheline Prelle. U, 8. Ar
my Band.
Thurs-Fri.—“Love Nest,” star
ring Wm. Lundigan, June Haver,
America’s Singing Boys. Snow
Time. News.
Sat. — “Sea Hornet,” starring
Rod Cameron. Scout Fellow,
Fresh Water Champions.
STRAND—
Sun. = Mon, - Tues. - Wed. -
Thurs. = Fri. - Sat. — “My Favo
rite Spy,” starring Bob Hope, Hedy
Lamarr. Ridin’' The Rails. Droopy’s
Double Trouble. News.
New Year's Eve—ll:3o p. m.—
“Detective Story,” starring Kirk
Douglas, Eleanor Parker.
HARLEM THEATRE
New Years Eve Late Show Mon
day, starting at 10:13 p. m.—*“Na
bonga” (the gorilla) starring Bus
ter Crabbe,
Tues.—New Year’s Day Holiday
Fun, open 2 p. m., continuous —
“Call Me Mister,” starring Betty
Grable, Dan Daley, Danny
Thomas. (In Technicolor). Color
Cartoon and selected shorts.
Wed.-Thurs. — “White Heat,”
starring James Cagney. Selected
shorts.
Fri.-Sat. — “Pioneers of the
Frontier,” starring Wild Biil El
liott. Chapter 4—lnvisible Mons
ter. Three Stooge Comedy. Color
cartoon.
Late Show Saturday at 10:15
p. m.—*“Doomed To Die.”
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