Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 212, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 January 1926 — Page 7

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BROAD RIPPLE’S BUSINESS AIDED Extend Shipping District. Through extension of the northern boundary of the Indianapolis railroad shipping district by the public service commission, several manufacturing houses in Broad Ripple and north Indianapolis have been placed on a parity with establishments in the city proper. In a recent order, arising from a case brought by the McNamara Construction Company against the Monon Railroad, the commission ordered the northern boundary of the switching*district moved from Fifty-Second St. to Slxs.y-First St. Merchandise from points out of the city is. carried by railroads to all joints within the city shipping district at the same freight charge. Before the present order was promulgated, the McNamara company and many others in the vicinity were forced to pay higher rates. APPOINTMENT EXPLAINED Meloy Gets Job Due to Illness of George Woodward. A. O. Meloy, who was made street Isunperintendent by the board of works Monday, will serve because George Woodward, original appoinieß, is seriously ill, George V. CoAk Republican city chairman, Bait^Juay. Meloy formerly was a worker In the Jewett-Lemcke machine, but delivered his ward in goqd shape'for Coffin. Meloy’s appointment may be temporary. It was indicated.

T • m • Rheumatism |\| 1 ¥•! T 1 C Nerve Pain X ■ JL Aching Joints

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Nothing Counts i Blit ‘RESULTS’ V % v V The users of Want Ads are concerned with only one thing. That w is results. If a two-line ad accomplishes its purpose, then it is, from the standpoint of the advertiser, a good ad. If a hundred-line ad fails to get results, its has no value regardless of what paper it may have been published in. ' ; j •* i > Bear these two facts in mind when you are reading The Times classified columns. Day after day you will notice the same people and the same concerns using a constantly increasing amount of space in them. These folks have awakened to the fact that “nothing counts but results.” They are get- - ting results in Times Want Ads. You can do the same. % I : - ' TIMES k WANT ADS '! / Get Quick Results Phone MAin 3500 .

SCHOOL HELPS ° ’ Copyright, Compton’s Pictured canning the food is firststerilized by heating—that is, that bacteria which cause fermentation and decay are killed in this manner—And the cans are hermetically sealed to prevent fresh bacteria from entering. -The process of canning was introduced in the United States from England and France early In the nineteenth cen-’ tury, but it did not become a general household practice until after the middle- of the century. The first cans were very crude and it required an expert tinsmith to turn out as many as sixty a day. The sheet tin was measured, marked for each can, and cut with hand shears. Wherever the tin was joined it was thought necessary to pile on a thick ridge of solder, and enough solder to seal a dozen cans as it is done today was used on one can. The cans are now stamped out in quantities by machinery and soldered automatically; and the inside of the can is acidcleaned and coated with pure tin, so that it can be used for practically all kinds of cannings. There was little demand for the canned , foods until 1849 when the rush to the gold fields of California began. This was followed by the Civil War and the opening up of the West. These events caused a continuous and increasing demand for canned foods, because they could be transported easily, prepared without delay, and could be stored In quantities for future use without spoiling. Canned in Glass No sooner was a supply of cans available, moreover, than the thrifty housewife back home began to take advantage of the new method, and

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CANNING INDUSTRY —How Food Is Canned by Machinery. Encyclopedia Feature Service “ the coming of winter found rows of canned fruit and vegetables, in addition to preserves and pickles, upon the pantry shelves. Now glass jars sealed with rubber rings are almost universally used in place of the old tin cans which our grandmothers sealed with sealinng wax. Great Importance was placed upon the conservation of foods in this manner during the World War. Home canning was encouraged, and canning club? amongs the boys and girls as well as the grown-ups added no small amount to the food supply’ of the country. The first canning was done at low temperatures which required a long time for cooking and did not always sterilize the food. Incomplete sterilization caused a large amount of spoilage at first. But when sterilizing Is perfect, and sealing properly done, the canned foods will keep for a year or more, and there is ifc> need for the use of chemical preservatives. Shoriening the time of cooking by using super-heated water or steam In "closet kettles” or pressure cookers. increased the possible output of the factories and many labor-saving devices in other stages of the winning process have kept pace with the cooking. Peas e-re shelled and sorted according to size by machinery; corn Is taken frdm the cob and cleaned from the silk by machinery, and the cleaning, peeling and pitting of fruits is also done by mechanical devices. In the case of soups and other liquids, the cans are dipped and filled by madhinery. After the filled cans are heated, an exhaust apparatus take out the air and the can is sealed by machinery. A machine pastes on the attractive labels, and the cans are automatically packed Into boxes ready for shipping. Many Varieties There are over a hundred varieties of canned meats on the market, besides the great variety* of oysters, clams and fish foods. Fruits and vegetables are canned in great variety; also pickles, preserves, Jellies and sauces. Milk, with part of the water removed by evaporation, either with or without the addition of sugar, is canned and used for almost all purposes for which whole fresh milk can be used. The condensed milk factories have thus made the production of milk profitable on farms located far from the city markets. Canning factories for the various products are located in the production areas. In the United States they extend from the cardine factories of Maine to the salmon fisheries of Alaska and the Pacific coast, and out to the pineapple canneries of Hawaii. California witb her wealth of fruits and vegetables has one-fourth of the canning industry, while the nortlv central States do most of the milk canning, and canning of peas, corn and other vegetables.

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Professor to Speak at Conference

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Dr. George A. Coe

The principal speaker at a conference on character education at the Lincoln Jan. 13, will be Dr. George A. Coe, professor of education of Columbia University. Several other educational leaders of the country will be on the program, according to Dr. Henry Noble Sherwood, State superln-> tendent of public ihstructlon, who is sponsoring the conference. SETTLE NOT TO RUN Farm Federation Head Will Not Seek Senatorial Nomination. William H. Settle, Indiana Farm Bureau Federation president, today announced he will not be a candi. date in the Republican senatorial race next May. Settle said he had been urged to make the. race, but considered the Firm Federation work more important. DREAMS TO BE SUBJECT Insurance Research Head to Address Junior Chamber. Mansuriß. Oakes, president of the Insurance Research and Review Service here, will address the Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce luncheon at the Chamber of C ommerce Wednesday noon on the subject “Dreams.”

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GIFT BY PADEREWSKI Famed Pianist Help* American Legion Endowment Fund. Ignace Jan Paderewski, worldfamouk pianist and World Wan hero of' Poland, has made the largest individual gift yet received by the American Legion endowment fund for disabled veterans and orphans of the World War, according to National Legion Commander John Rj McQuigg. The gift totalod $28,487.67. Four benefit concerts for the fund were played by Paderewski. The amount realized for the fund were; at New York. $9,423.62; Philadelphia, $5,771.17; at Washington, $6,679.87, and'as Boston, $6,613. Paderewski defrayed all expenses of himself and staff.

and bums, apply Resinol As soon as this ’soothing ointment touches itching skin, the itching usually stops and healing begins. That is why doctors hive prescribed it so successfully for nearly thirty years in even the severest cases of eczema, ringworm, rashes and many other tormenting, disfiguring skin diseases. Buy a jar of Resinol from your druggist today and note the improvement after the firat treatment.

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NEW STUTZ SHOWN Mayor Duvall Among Thoe© Seeing Auto Models Shipped to New York. Mayor Duvall and other city officials, following their Inauguration Monday, visited the Stutz Motor Car Company of America, Inc., to view the new Stutz model. Officials said more than 3,500 persons visited the plan*. Models were shipped to New York by express to the auto show there. “Stutz is an Indianapolis institution and we wanted home people so see the new car first," F. E. Moskovlcs, president, said.

Compton’s Pictured Encyclopedia Knowledge of all the world, past and present, in pictures. L.S. AYRES & COMPANY State Agents Buy Your Fur* From the menofncmrer end •*• the retailer’s profit. Jacob WoElfeld For Cos. 457 OCCIDENTAL BLDG.

oecond Floor A—-y Occidental Building, Wash, and 111. Sts. A Final Clean-Up (56) DRESSES Odd lots accumulated from the season’s selling. There are Dresses in the lot worth as much as $25.00. Out they go at the Ridiculous price of DRESSES FOR GIRLS DRESSES FOR MISSES DRESSES FOR MATRONS 4 .. Adorable with unusual trimmings of embroidery, lace, beading, fancy collars and cuffs, buttons and pipings. Included are long, short sleeve modes, of satin, canton, brocades, jerseys, balbriggana and flannels. - . , THE JANUARY SALE PRICE FOR ONE DAY ONLY TEN DOLLARS TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS