Newspaper Page Text
THE CLEVELAND COURIER
Vol. No.
Princess Theatre Gives
Sneak Premiere ol
“I'd Climb the Highest
Mountain”
Palllc To See Picture Here Feb. 12
ihe Princess Tluatre permitted 1 lie
Mayor and Councilmen of Cleveland and
most oi tlie ministers of the county, toge¬
ther with a number of visiting mininsters
to witness a sneak preview of the techni¬
color picture, “I’d Climb the Highest
Mountain,” which was screened here this
summer at their theatre Wednesday after¬
noon.
The picture will run for 87 minutes.
All who were privileged to witness the
sneak premiere expressed in written state
ments to Jack White, manager, a strong
endorsement and a splendid onation fol¬
lowing the close of the screen.
When the picture is shown to the pub
lie here Feb. Id it will draw record-break¬
ing attendance because of so many
White County people being in the picture
as well as it being fiimed here. The scenry
is marvelous and will cause our people to
appreciate our majestic mountains more
The picture is bouud to attract tourists
here by the thousands.
You will certainly have to see the pic¬
ture to enjoy "its 'great fundamental les¬
sons.
The picture will not be classed as
“Gone With the Wil d”, but it will be
classed as a “Little Gone With the Wind”
First lndu.tees
Complete Training
Two Cleveland boys, William Robert
Ri.ssell and Allen Dewey Tnrner have
be n promoted to private from recruit
upon completion of a 14-weeks training
cycle with Company “R”, 28th Infantry
Regiment, of the Sill Infantry Division;
at Ft, Jackson, 8 C.
During their six.week basic and eight
week infantry branch training, the Cluve
land men tirtd all of the infantry weapons,
took part in squad and platoon problems
and underwent intensive physical train¬
ing for future assignment and service or
combat type unit replacements.
They arc the first inductees to leave
from W l ite County.
Mrs. Katie Alley Cannon
Buried At Nacooch:e
Funeral services for Mrs. Katie Alley
Cannon, 73. who died .at Eastman, Ga ,
Jan. 13, were he'd at Nacoochee Metho
diBt Church Jan. 14
She is tlie widow of the late Dr Alley,
of Naccoclree. She was postmastress at
Nacoochee for 20 years.
Survivors are: Mrs. Roy Peacock,East
man; Mrs. J. J. Skinner, Waynesboro.
Mrs. Jerry Norton, St. Augustine, Fla ;
Mrs. A. II. Sims, Atlrnta;one son, John
Alley, Burlington, N. C.; one bi other,
Hugh Knight, Atlanta- Rev. Lewis offi¬
ciated.
Workability Yet Unknown
FIRST U. S. TEST OF H-BOMB
POSSIBLE IN SPRING
OR SUMMER
WASHINGTON— (U.P.)— It is just
possible the United States may test
its first H-bomb this spring or sum¬
mer.
Whether the so-called super-bomb
will work is anybody’s guess. An of¬
ficial close to atomic developments
told the United Press recently the
prospects aren’t good.
But as Chairman Gordon E. Dean
of the Atomic Energy Commission
said a while back, “we don’t know
, . .” And even if the H-bomb “goes,”
as the scientists say, it may never be
manufactured in quantity. agenda,
Item No. 1 on the H-bomb
however, is to find out whether the
weapon can be made. The AEC has
been making its key ingredient, a
triple-weight hydrogen called tritium,
for some time now. It is believed to
have enough for test purposes.
A new- series of A-bomb tests at
the Eniwetok atomic proving ground
in the Pacific has been scheduled for
this spring or summer, according to
congressional will sources. be secret. They
The tests were
projected in November, 1949, to check
on the power of A-bomb designs
perfected since the last Eniwetok ex¬
periments in the spring of 1948. Last
Jan. 31 President Truman told the
AEC to “continue” its work on the
super-bomb. year’s tests, dubbed “Op¬
So this
eration Greenhouse,” could be a dou¬
ble-header, informed sources said.
Grass Silage
Grass silage is an ideal winter
feed for dairy cattle. A much high¬
er percentage of feeding value is
saved in silage compared with hay.
“COVERS THE MOUNTAINS LIKE MOONSHINE”
Devoted to the Agricultural, Commercial and Industrial Interests of White County
The Chinese Nationalist defense minis¬
try stated last week that Russia lias mov¬
ed an additional 300,000 troops lo Siberia
in readiness for an attack on Alaska,
They state that there were already Hi
Red Seasoned divisions in I hat area.
Washington sources state that our
troops will stay ,in Korea unless forced
out. We are unable to see the reason for
the continued slaughter of our troops
The military may know what they are
doing , but the people just can’t see the
wisdom of keeping our men there against
over whelming odds • We also winder
when they are pushed out if the Russians
wont use their air and submarine power.
The Communists in the United States
have ceased holding mass meetings;
avowing public meetings of any it ture,
and otherwise stopped attracting public
attention. That means they have gone
“underground” until they get orders
Irorn Moscow to act. It wi'l pay to keep
a close watch on them.
Bill Lundigan, slar of “I’d Climb the
Highest Mountain,” and wile will attend
the picture’s Atlanta piepiere Feb. 0, ac¬
cording to Hollywood.
Paris Match, a French magazine,states
Joseph Stalin, whose second wife died in
1932, has remarried. The magazine says
it gets its information from Ivan Mil kin
identified as a former captain of Stalin’s
personal guard, lie relates that his new
wife is “Comrade Baskova”, a tall, broad
shouldered, grey-eyed chesnut-haired ex
aviatrix. Well, the old boys days are
numbered.
Our troops in Korea are fighting for
their very existence in 30 degree below
zero weather.
Atpe Piux XII has ordered the Catholic
clergy, and indirectly suggested to lay¬
men of that faith, that they withdraw
from Rotary. Kivvanis, Lions and other
eimilar civic organizations. It is repi ited
in a news story fr om Rome that clinic
organizations may be influenced by
Masonry. Catholic are baffled by the de¬
cree, yet they must do wlint the Holy
Father orders them. It certainly will not
add any prestage to the Catholic Irier.
archy in the United Slates. The Cat hoi.c
priest in Gainesville is a Ro ariau
“When the righteous are in auth-iity
tire people rejoice ”
Pies. Tiuman Monday asked Congress
to raise taxes "vety much more” than
$8,000,0000,000 a year and outlined a
lend-spending defense program totaling
$140,000,000,000
He also asked that at least 1,000,00b
more men and women be added lo tbe
armed forces within a few months, and
4,000,000 more in defense production by
the end ol this year.
The president made it clear that the
stiff new taxes will hit every pocketbook
from top iO bottom of the income ladder,
the middle-to-lower income taxpayer wilj
catch the brum.
It is certain to sharply curtail all non
essential business activity and will “pull
away from normal peacetime production.' -
All non-defense goods will get scare r
and scarcer.
The government Monday banned tlie
construction of new stores, restaurants,
office and other commercial buildings un¬
til Feb. 15 You will now make applica
tion for new constructio to the regional
office of the commerce department in
Atlanta if the building will cost more
than $5,000
President Truman Monday made it
possible for men from 18 through 25 to
volunteer for a 21-month hitch in the
Army.
The President's order now- permits
men to go to their draft board ami be
placed at tue head of the list instead ol
waiting for his number to be reached.
Four former German generals stated
Sunday that Western Europe has yet a
year or more to prepare while Russia is
occupied in the Far East.
“I predict there will be no Russian at¬
tack on Western Europe in 1951 or 1952,’
said Blumentritt. •Western Europe in
1951, at least, is mote or less a sideline
for the Kremlin. The Russians want to
pick this apple later ”
Hansen expects “the Russians will try
to continue their colei war with tilth
column work and political maneuvering
if they are uot provoked by W st Ger¬
man rearmament without adequate Allied
backing ’’
The 3f ,000 acres trret of Roscoe Tucker
of Dawson County has been examined by
the Army and the Atomic Energy Com¬
mission for possible use. White County
could get something if we would go after
it.
American Newspapers
About 80 per cent of the news¬
papers in the United States are
evening papers.
The government will put on wage and
price controls in five or six days.
John Quiliian was elected dv the gene
ral Assembly Wednesday for a six year
term to the state highway board.
CLEVELAND, GA.. .FAN. 19 1951
Local News
Watch White county move
forward I
M. B Harwell. manager of Ihe JCIcve
laml DeLuxe Cottagi s, was in Atlanta
last week on business
t ar) Freeman, of Leaf, was operated
on fur cancer of the mouth at Gei rgia
Baptist Cancer Clinic Nov. 12. lie ie now
at home.
Miss lean Black, of llnpeville, and Miss
Emily Fendley, of Athens, spent the
weekend with their aunt, Mrs. Evan
Taylor, at her farm on Shoal Creek.
Tahna lge Blalock was in Atlanta Jan.
9 attending a men’s clothing show at the
Biltmore Hotel.
Read the Peoples Bank statement on
page 2.
Jackson and Snelling, S. 0.. orginally
scheduled for evacuation for the II-homb
plant, got a new lease on life Jan. 12 P.e
alignment of ottndry lines places both
towns now outside of the project area and
will not be acquired by the government.
Attend the March of Dimes Dance at
the Cleveland School Gym Jan. 20 at
7:30 p. in.
C D Young, manager of the district
office of the Georgia Power Company,
Gainesville, was in town one day last
week.
Miss Bennie Jane Allison will attend
the Slate Executive Council of the Future
Homemakers at the Georgia Stale Col¬
lege for Women Jan 19 and 20. She is
district secietary. Plans will be made
for the district meeting in the spring.
Miss Ruth Holeman spent 1 as week¬
end visiting places of interest in Jack
sonville, St. Augustine, Daytona Beach
and Silver - Springs, Fla.
Mr. ami Mrs. Barney McAllister. R 5
announce tlie birth of a son, David, Jan.
4 at the Neal Clinic.
Mr. anil Mrs. William J. Pruitt, of
Suches. announce rlie birth (fa duugh
ter. Joan Alaine, Jan 9 at the NesMtlinie
Born to Mr. and Mis. Edward Blalock,
R 3. a daughter Jan. 14 at the Tolhuret
cli nic
Two Fannin County coon hunters, Ver¬
non Grizzle, 32, and Gerald Gooch, 15,
tied in their car Monday night of asphy¬
xiation in northern Union County
Kille ■ Bill Cook was captured 300 miles
south of the border in Mexico Monday.
The infant Jof Mr. and Mrs. q. C Bla¬
lock is in Downey hospital suffering
from a serious intestinal trouble.
The big mountains were white Tues¬
day morning from sleet and snow Mon¬
day night.
Jack Allen, of Route^, left Jan. 8 for
the Air Force. He is now stationed at
Laokland A.F. B„ San Antiono, Texas.
Three M. D’s and one vetinerian of
White County resistererl for ihe draft
here Monday.
GusYork had a letter from his son,
Marion, Wednesday, who was recently
wounded in Korea. He stated that he
would soon return to his outfit. He wrote
Gus that the day he was wounded his
rifle failed to lire twice, otherwise lie
would have got the “China boy” that got
him.
Mis. Claude Hefner is recovering from
bruises sustained from a heifer gourding
her when she was feeding cattle at'her
barn ;wo weeks ago.
Jnhn Ledford, of Colo., is spending
several weeks here.
Fred Moon, Atlanta Journal movie
editor. Frank Tuggle, Journal photogra¬
pher, and Jimmy Gillespie, Southeastern
public relation manager, Twentieth-Cen¬
tury Fox. Dallas, were in town Wednes¬
day to get a story for the Sunday paper
on the tffi cts of making the picture. “I’d
Climb the Highest Mountain” has made
on the people. Watch for Mr. Moon’s
story Sunil ry.
The dr ive to raise money to fight Infan
tile paralysis is under way in White
County This dread childhood disease is
uo respecter of persons. It may strike in
our county. Lei’s all contribute to this
worthy cause. Mail your contribution to
Mrs. Frank Edwards or place your con
tribution in the containers on display in
all local places of business.
There will be a square dance Fri. Jan.
26 in the high school gym the pioceeds
of which will go to the fund.
Edward Nix is on the Dean’s List of
North Georgia College.
Infant Buried Here
The infant born to Mr. and Mrs: J. W.
Blalock Jan. 11 was buried in Cleveland
cemetery
Besides parents, survivors are grand¬
parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Turner and
grandfather, J. VV. Blalcck-
Collins Still lias Hope
For Korea
Washington, Jan 9—(UP)— Gen. J
Lawton Collins. Army chief of staff, told
a secret session of tire .Senate armed ser
victes committee Tuesday Hint militaiy
leadeiH have not completely abandoned
hope of being able to eta) in Korea, an
informed son 1 ce eaid.
Ellendei To Ask
Immediate Curb
On Food Gougers
Washington, Jan. ti—(AP) — Chairman
Ellender (Deni., La.) said Saturday In
will ask the Senate agricultural commit¬
tee for an immediate “price gouging’
investigation to protect the housewife
from unfair mar knps on her groceries
and oilier purchases.
Pureells, Home, Credit
IHvinity in Eye Case
By Celestine Sibley
Rejoicing that the “sure hand of God'
h id stayed the hand of the surgeon and
spared her child's eyes, Mrs. Frank Pur¬
cell tame homo Thursday with little Caro,
lvn beside her.
Hugging an almost life-sized doll giv¬
en her by Rochester, Minn,, Shriners, the
little Georgia girl whose name has been
in tire prayer s of Americans everywhere
stepped onto the runway at the Atlanta
Airport with her mother at ti p. 111. to end
a whirlwind trip that held the attention
of tire entire nation.
Mother and daughter were greeted on
their arrival by Atlanta Shiiners who
staged a jubilee reception to match the
joy of tire occasion
Carolyn's father, Frank Purcell, Shriner
Fred Cannon and a large delegation of
Shriners were on hand to welcome the
travelers and present the joyful child
wilh a bouquet of roses '1 he (Purcells
were then whisked away behind a police
escort to an undisclosed destination.
Unburdened of tire indecision and
worry that has plagued her tor weeks.
Irs. Purcell was a laughing jubilant
person The weariness and care were gone
in an unbelievable transformation that
puzzled rarolyn.
••I’m thankful, so thankful,” she said’
“The good Lord has been with us and
I’m asking Him to be with those goori
men, tire Shriners. forever.”
Mrs. I’ii 1 cell also gave warm piaise to
Mayo specialists who diagnosed Carolyn’s
failing as an “inflammatory condition”
instead of t edread cancer.
“They were Irrrlv marvelous,” she said
Meanwhile, a medical controversy de
velopr d over various diagnosis of 1 lie
disease affecting 1 lie four-year-old girl’s
dark brown eyes.
Mayo ipe ialists said tiny found no
evidence of cancer, only an inflammatory
condition that could be treated witr.otii
surgical removal of the eyebal’s.
But the Atlanta specialist who made
the original diagnosis that Carolyn was
suffering from “retino biastoma,” a
rapidly-growing cancer.
Frank Wilson, superintendent of Grady
Memorial Hospital, said live 'noted eye
specialists examined the girl there. Four
thought she had either an inflammatory
condition or cancer, Wilson said.
The specialist who male the lirst diag¬
nosis was quoted as saying he was not
altering his opinion, despite the Mayo
finding. He had recommended the child’s
eyes lie removed to prevent spread of
the cancer lo brain tissue.
Wilson denied that any pressure was
put on the Purcells to permit an opera¬
tion. He said at no time was there a
unanimous decision of the board of spe¬
cialists to operate, and that actually they
had recommended a waiting period
while the case was studied.
(A consensus of opinion by the board
did confirm tlie possibility of Glioma and
recommended immediate removal of the
light eye, and if cancer was confirmed,
either radiation or removal of the left eye
would be advised, tire Grady public rela¬
tions office said Thursday) —Atlanta
Constitution
Thomas Jefferson
Jefferson, third President of the
United States and author of the
"Declaration of Independence,”
died on Independence Day, July
4 , 1826.
Cleveland To Get
New Planing Mill
Clyde Turner anil Carlton Thurmond
have purchased equipment for installing
a new planing mill adjacent to the new
furniture factory of O. W. Turner anri
Harry McAfee.
They plan to get into operation around
the middle of February. At a later date
they plan to erect a kiln.
Established 1899 S>LOO Per Year in Advance
A RAY OF HOPE
IN THE HELL BOMB
By Gladstone Williams
WASHINGTON—For those who
seek some solace from troubled world
conditions growing out of threats of
;i new war started by Communist ag¬
gressor nations, more than a glimmer
of hope is held out by William L.
Laurence in his book, “The Hell
Bomb,” just off the press.
The book deals with the devastating
war potential of the mighty hydro¬
gen bomb, upon the production of
which we are already launched. This
is the new and far more powerful
missile which, according to scien¬
tific estimates, would have 1,000 times
the power of the conventional atom
bomb that mushroomed over Hiro¬
shima to bring the war with Japan
to a hasty end.
Both Russia and the United States
are racing in deadly earnest to be the
first to produce the new super weap¬
on, as everyone knows. If the Kremlin
crowd should beat us to it and ac¬
cumulate a small stockpile before we
get into production, we would be in
deadly peril. For it would neutralize
the advantage we hold in having a
far greater number of A-bombs.
Advantage
The thing that provides a strong
ray of hope and assurance in Mr.
Laurence’s book is the statement he
makes that, “Practically speaking,
. . . we have a heavy over-all .advan¬
tage in any H-bomb armament race,
and Russia may be squeezed between
the alternative of dropping sharply^cuvtail- behind in
the H-bomb effort, or
ing her stockpile of ordinary atom
bombs.”
This is the essence of what he says
as perhaps the leading lay authority
oon atomic weapons and the hydrogen
bomb. Mr. Laurence, of course, is the
science reporter of The New York
Times and has a reputation par ex¬
cellence, having twice been a Pulitzer
Prize winner. He was the only news¬
paperman on hand when the A bomb
was being developed at Los Alamos,
and he saw "it blossom into the new
deadly type of chrysanthemum over
Japan.
Once we are able to master the
secret of the H-bomb and get it into
production, here is what it would
mean in military potency, as outlined
by Mr. Laurence: If it can be built,
and our scientists are confident that
it can, it could blast to death every¬
thing in an area of 300 square miles,
burning everything in an area of 1,200
square miles. Rigged with a cobalt
casing, the author estimates that 400
of the bombs would be sufficient to
destroy all life on the earth by radio¬
active poisoning. A few of them, he
says, would suffice to kill off the
United States or Russia.
The bombs would also eliminate the
necessity of strategic bombing of
cities and industrial production cen¬
ters as it is now done under the mod¬
ern concept of war, it is claimed.
That would be because a whole army
could be eliminated with a few of the
weapons, making it unimportant
whether sources of supply were con¬
tinued behind the front lines.
It is estimated that one of the hy¬
drogen bombs would have been enough
to wipe out the entire German force
in the Battle of the Bulge, and that
if Hitler had owned one he could have
destroyed our whole invasion army
that was laid down in France in the
last war.
Horror
There is plenty of horror packed
in the 200 pages of the terrifying
Laurence book, but looking ahead in
the not too distant future there is
some consolation in the thought that
superior American industrial initiative
and resources will enable us to outdo
the Russians in the race to develop
the weapon. This is a major conclu¬
sion of the author. It overshadows all
else in significance.
For when that time comes we will
b? the masters of the situation. We
will be able to dictate to the totali¬
tarian aggressor dictators of the Com¬
munist world that peace is our aim
and the thing we demand. It is incon¬
ceivable that we would ever have to
use one of the bombs, except for dem¬
onstration purposes, to enforce our
peaceful aims.
The boat on which our international
policy is launched is a bit rocky at
the present time, but if vve can keep
it on something- of an even keel—
keep it afloat—until our H-bomb ef¬
fort bears fruit, then we will be in
a position to breathe easily. It will
make us the masters and the execu¬
tioners of the long held hope of man¬
kind for establishing a permanent
program of world peace. That is the
brighter side of the terrifying picture
presented by the hydrogen bomb.—
Atlanta Constitution.
Cradle of Wheat
The cradle of wheat is alleged
to lay in Abyssinia.
Loy Ash Dies
Loy W Aslr, 48 of Clarkesville, for¬
merly of Cleveland. passed away at his
home Jan. 15, after a short illness.
He was a member of the Cnattahooehee
Methodist Church, and was a carpenter
by trade. He is survived by bis wife Mrs.
Mabelle Thurmond; bis mother, Mrs. W.
L. Paidne, one sister. Mrs. Lamb Atlanta.
Funeral servicis were held from the
Amy’s Creek Baptist thnren at 11a. m_
Wednesday with Rev. Claude Hood, Rev.
G. C. Campbell, Rev. Ernest Barden ofii
ciatirg. Burial in the Cleveland Ceme¬
tery.
TITO CALLS UPON WEST TO
PULL OUT OF KOREA
Opposes Arms
For Germany
By EDWARD M. KORRY
World Copyright, 1951, by
United Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Jan. 7.—•
(U.P.)—Premier Marshal Tito of Yu¬
goslavia called upon the West Sun¬
day to pull its troops out of “stra¬
tegically futile” Korea, to think
again before rearming Western Ger¬
many and to agree to another Four
Power Conference with Russia to try
to avert World War III.
Tito offered his advice in an ex¬
clusive interview with this corre¬
spondent in the Premier’s Belgrade
home during which the man who said
“no” to Josef Stalin surveyed the
world crisis.
The Premier also said he was con¬
fident Yugoslavia’s army—if attacked
—could stand against the more than
600,000 troops mustered by Bulgaria,
Hungary, Romania.
Tito described the state of inter¬
national affairs as “very critical” and
urged that everything possible, short
of outright appeasement, be done to
maintain world peace.
WHITE MAN LOSING OUT IN FAR
EAST, SAYS CHIP ROBERT,
AFTER 6-WEEK VISIT
(Chip) Globe-girdling Atlantan L. W.
Robert says that India, China,
Indonesia and all of the Philippines
except Manila are “anti-American.”
Back from a six-weeks’ trip around
the the world—during which he crossed
equator 10^ times—Robert said
American prestige had “sky-rocketed
in Europe, but had gone down rapid¬
ly since he was in the Orient just a
year ago.”
“I am afraid the white man is
through in the Far East,” he declared.
Robert added big investments made
by American, British and Dutch com¬
panies in Asia are “casualties of
World War II.”
The Atlantan will fly to Washing¬
ton, D. C., this week to report to
government officials on special mis¬
sions he undertook in Siam and In¬
donesia.—Atlanta Constitution.
HAL RUSSELL SEES DOOM OF
U. S. IN RETURN TO
ISOLATIONISM
Harold WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—(U.P.)—
AMVETS, Russell, national commander
of said Saturday that a
“rebirth of isolationism” threatens
this country with destruction.
In a speech transmitted throughout
the nation by the National Broadcast¬
ing Co., Russell denounced the de¬
fense proposals of former President
Herbert Hoover and Joseph P. Ken¬
nedy, former U. S. ambassador to
Great Britain.
“We have been counseled lately,
by men like Herbert Hoover and Jos¬
eph Kennedy, as well as by some
members of Congress, to draw our
boundaries on this side of China,”
Russell said. “This,” he added, “is a
political siren’s song, leading to de¬
struction.”
ASBESTOS
by Asbestos Ike
Mr. anil Mrs. Donald Larkin, of Chat¬
tanooga, Tenn . returned home Sunday
after spending sever al days with the
Larkins |
Health has been defined as harmonious
functioning of all the physical powers,
whereas disease is a disordered state in
which a man is only partly alive anil ail¬
ing. Correct eating is fundamental to con¬
struction of a healthy body, and for a
nation list'd at work, the physical well¬
being of every individual is of para¬
mount importance.
A regular use of whole foodstuff causes
the flame of life to burn high, whereas
devitalized foodstuffs favor old age and
premature decay.
L AND FOR RENT
1 would like to rent my land east of
where J. W Lancaster lives. See Jas.
P Davidson.
H. II. Davidson
POET SANDBURG “WORRIES
SOME” IN 74TH YEAR
HENDERSONVILLE, N. C.—Jan.
6—(A.P.)—Carl Sandburg, poet and
Lincoln biographer, observed his
73rd birthday quietly Saturday at his
home in nearby Flat Rock.
He gave a reporter this message:
“Along with the rest of the coun¬
try, I’m worrying some. The man
with no anxiety on his mind these
days is dead from the neck up. It’s a
good time to quote Roger Williams
(Colonial preacher): “My study is to
be swift to hear and slow to speak.’ ’’
Tip for Homemaker *■*’* j*
To keep the knobs on cupboards
and dresser drawers from working
loose, use washers of fine sand¬
paper. Cut the washer to fit th«
knob. Make a hole in the middlq
of the washer, and slip it over tht
bolt or screw between the knob
and the drawer. Put the abraeiv*
aide next tp the drawer. When
nut is tightened, the kpob will B«J|
work loose, „ --.iw