Monday, Feb. 04, 1957

N) ONE KNOWS exactly when the first space ship will touch down on the surface of the moon-- but what was only a fantastic dream a few decades ago is now recognized by scientists as being almost "just around the corner."

Already many of the initial problems have been solved and many others are in the process of solution, as scientists--working with today's guided missiles --learn more and more about this new method of flight.

Typical of the kind of new product development that helps make this progress possible is Mallory 1000 metal, a unique development of Mallory powder metallurgy. Already providing required balance in the nose of guided missiles, Mallory 1000 is twice as dense as steel or brass and far stronger than lead . . . actually outdoes nature in packing concentrated weight into the smallest possible space. As the pendulum in self-winding wrist watches, the rotor in gyroscopic control mechanisms, counterweights in airplane ailerons, and in dozens of other applications . . . this unique, man-made metal is another example of the way Mallory prepares for tomorrow's progress--today.

At home in tomorrow . . . Mallory serves the nation's growth industries with precision products and broad experience in the fields of electronics, electrochemistry and specialized metallurgy.

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