2G
OITR MINERAL RESERVES.
ing plants has not been strained to meet consumption and the plants
have not been operated to full capacity, so that as far as manufactur
ing facilities are concerned they are able to supply a large part of
any demand from South America, Africa, China, Australia, and
other countries. With lack of competition from Europe and low
prices for crude material the export trade should be profitable to
the manufacturers and result in the consumption of nearly all the
domestic production of copper.
ALUMINUM.
During the last 10 years there has been a rapid and healthy growth
in the consumption of metallic aluminum in the United States.
From less than 9,000,000 pounds in 1904 the consumption has grown
to more than 72,000,000 pounds in 1914. This increase was partly
met, in some years at least, by the increase in imports. Although
most of the aluminum consumed in the United States is of domestic
origin, a very considerable part of it is imported from France and
other European countries. With the possible cutting off of the
European supply of the metal—scrap, crude, and manufactured—it
will be increasingly difficult to fill the domestic need.
The use of metallic aluminum is widespread. Its employment in
the manufacture of articles of everyday use has become so com
mon that such articles no longer attract attention. Its use, however,
is now being extended to the construction of welded tanks, cooking
vats, and vessels which are employed by brewers, preserve manu
facturers, and fat recoverers, and in similar industries where a
metal that will conduct heat, will not corrode, and is nonpoisonous is
essential. Aluminum vessels of large size are used also in the manu
facture of essences, sirups, varnishes, fatty acids, table oils, and
nitric acid. A recently developed branch of the aluminum industry
is the manufacture of the powdered metal known to the trade as
aluminum-bronze powder, which is used extensively as a paint pig
ment, in explosives, in lithographing, and in printing. The use of
aluminum wire as a conductor in long-distance power-transmitting
schemes is of interest. Aluminum foil, though not exactly a new
product, is now being used on a larger scale than ever before, owing
to improved methods in its manufacture—the result of long and
expensive experiments which have reduced its cost appreciably.
Finally, the use of the metal in aeroplanes and automobiles may be
mentioned.
Plants manufacturing aluminum in the United States have been
rapidly expending and enlarging their output in recênt years to
meet the growing demands for the metal. One of the largest proj
ects is that of the Southern Aluminum Co., which is vigorously
pushing operations on the Yadkin River, N. C. This company, with