ch mo A A gg MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1929 America in Lead as User of Labor-Saving Devices Stewed Chicken in 35 Minutes Most Economical Way Is to Cook Bird in Steam Pressure Cooker. READY IN~ 10 HOURS 4HOURS 2% HOURS J) = Az 5) ) quent intervals. it is usually larger, which is ‘upon the way it is cooked. six o’clock meal. Hand-Tasks Still Popular in 4 Europe; Continent Has Yet to See Its First Suec- tion Cleaner for Heating Plants and Chimneys. escape. Americans traveling in Europe, and residents of this country whose early lives were spent abroad, think of the Old World as more than the site of light dessert, A stewed chicken has many reasons for appearing on the table at fre- Not only fe it less expensive than a roasting chicken, but an advantage for the big family, Alse, cooking a chicken this way provides an abundance of rich, delicious chicken broth which can be made the foundation of another meal. But stewing a chicken takes so long, women often say. That depends If a fireless cooker is used, ten hours will he required. This means putting the chicken on at eight in the morning for a Then there is the old-fashioned stewing kettle. This method takes only four hours, but care must be taken that it daes not boil dry. Moreover, the escaping steam allows a great deal of valuable mineral salts and flavor to Stewing a chicken in a waterless cooker is an improvement in time over the other two ways, since it réquires only two and a half hours, but the most rapid and economical way of all is to cook the bird in a steam pressure cooker, which takes only thirty-five minutes. . the chicken is thoroughly cooked and tender and ready to serve by six-thirty. None of the flavor will be lost. The saving in fuel cost will be from a fifth to an eighth that of cooking by the other methods. At the same time, peas and potatoes can be cooked in separate dishes above the chicken. Serve am aspic or tomato salad with this dinner and a Put on at five minutes of six, (©, National School of Pressure Cooking.) superb museums and art galleries, his- ‘torfcal and religious shrines and mag- nificent pleasure places.. They also dwell upon its quaint and picturesque ways of doing things, and the prev- alence in everyday affairs of survivals (1) The typical English chimney-sweep, and (2) here’s one not so typi- MAGNETIC MILKER PLEASES COW; SAVES WORK, MONEY ical—Mrs. Hannah Poole of Hollywood, Worcestershire, (not California!) the of medieval manners. Ancient cottages and manors—such as Haddon Hall where Dorothy Man- ners lived her high romance, and the delightful farmhouses of France, from the crevices of whose thatched roofs, moss and wild flowers grow—present a delightful contrast with the mechan- only woman who ever took up this ancient craft; she does it to support her- | | self and her aged father. (3) Swiss sweeps wear silk hats—just because isa they always have. (4) This is the giant vacuum cleaner, modern America’s improvement upon the old-world sweep. (5) And this is how a crew of Ger. man chimney-cleaners appear as they set out for a day’s gambol over the housetops. Re ! he working through 2 “snake” formed. of States. Suction cleaning removes ob- |. ical-looking, “slick brand-new” dwell- ing house in this country, ; Wood: and stone still.are carved by +hand, and the smith still beats gut graceful shapes in iron, for the embel- lishment of the home; and, despite the encroachment of the machine age, many things which modern America accomplishes mechanically still are arts of handicraft in Europe. Old “Sweeps” Picturesque. But, while all this has the great ad- vantage of age-old picturesqueness, it has disadvantages, too. there is the matter of chimney clean- ing. In America the giant vacuum- cleaning mackine has all but supplant- ed the old-time chimney sweep, where- a8 in Europe this dirty but extremely necessary job still is done entirely by manual labor. : Any morning the American traveler in Europe, be he in England, Germany, Switzerland or anywhere else, may ‘see one or more of these strange fig- ures In black hood, silk hat or tall- peaked cap, with brooms and brushes, ropes and rods over their shoulders, ladder and soot bag under arm, saun- tering down the street, calling their trade to the housewives. Elsewhere on this page are shown pictures of chimney sweeps of several European countries. By way of con- trast, also, is printed a photograph of one of the thousands of mechanically- operated giant “chimney-cleaning blimps” used throughout America, which does everything that any chim- ney sweep can do and a great deal more quickly and efficiently. The Holland Institute of Thermol- ogy describes the suction cleaner for heating plants as an enlarged edition of the household vacuum cleaner adapted to the heating field. Usually it consists of a 40-horse power motor, mounted on a truck, a huge, canvas bag, and what appears to be many sec- tions of flexible stovepipe. The motor operates a fan which, For instance, | Keveral sections of pipe attached to first one and then another of the heat- ing plant epenings, draws the accumu- ‘lated dirt and soot out of the heater ‘into the huge bag, which is then taken "to the city dump ard emptied. The suc- tion method is the best yet devised for cleaning both chimneys and heating plants, because it reaches the many nooks and. crannies in the modern heating system that are beyond the reach of human hands. But one of the larger types of cleaners should be used for best results, since a small, improvised affair may lack both motor power and suction to do a spick-and- span job. © Motor-created suction not only cleans the entire heating plant more completely and thoroughly than is paos- sible by hand, and does it in a frac- tion of the time required by the man- ual method, but also does it without fuss, muss, dust or dirt—even while the decorator or laundress is working. if that Is desired. Soot Proves Costly. Dirty and sooty heating plants are fuel wasters. With hot water and steam boilers, soot covering the boiler heating surfaces means loss of fuel. Soot-covered surfaces keep the heat away from the heat pipes so that it is wasted out of the chimney. Tests by the United States Bureau of Stand- ards have shown that one-eighth of an inch of soot on the heating surfaces of a central heating plant will reduce the plant's efficiency 28 per cent, while one-quarter of an inch will cut it down fully 48 per cent. So a thor- ough cleaning of the heater can easily save one or two tons of coal in the course of a winter. Soot and obstructions in the heater and chimney interfere with efficient heating and are a source of fire haz ard. Defective flues and heating plants comprise one of the chief causes of fire ioss in the United A Little Secret . learns about cooking under pressure instead of the old-fashioned open- kettle method. With the pressure cooker, the entire meal is cooked at one and the same time and everything the heating plant increases until it (structions, brings to light defects in ‘the furnace, smoke pipe or chimney .and discloses any fire danger there. 4A thorough cleaning of the furnace | puis the finishing touch on the spring "housecleaning. A dirty and sooty ‘heating plant makes a house difficult to keep clean and raises the cost of cleaning it. In the ordinary house three-fourths of the dirt comes in from the outside atmosphere through cracks around windows and doors, and one- quarter from the heating system. Lightens Housekeeping Load. When the heating system is defec- tive, however, the amount of dirt from equals the amount that comes in through the windows. Cleaning of the heating plant saves labor in dusting, lowers laundry costs, preserves hang- ings and furnishings and reduces the necessary frequency of changing wall and ceiling decorations. Spring rains seeping down the chim- ney onto the soot-laden smoke pipes will corrode and ruin them. Remov- ing the soot by the suction method minimizes this damage. Gen An erroneous, though popular, im- pression is that a heating plant in which some other fuel than coal is used does not get dirty and dusty. Oil leaves a greasy and grimy deposit on the inner parts of the heating plant, and so does gas. The vacuum proc- ess is effective . In removing these drawbacks to heating-plant efficiency. ' Thus, on the score of economy in fuel and labor, and as a lightener of the housewife’s labor, the modern me- chanical heating-system cleaner repre- sents the march of progress away from the hand methods of the old country chimney sweep. That is why countless American women have the suction cleaner spend an hour or so on their premises and then dismiss all | | worry about the heater until the next fall. making up the menu—what fun it Is! First she decides what is to be the main course of the meal and finds out in the cookbook how long this will take in the pressure cooker. Then New York—The milking machine, which has saved labor, reduced expense and increased production on countless farms, is about to make the milking Job still easier and more profitable. This is indicated from an announce- ment made here of an invention to milk the American cow by magnetic force. After exhaustive research and tests, a device hag been perfected, according to Ralph Stoddard of the De Laval Engineering Laboratories, which will triple the speed of milking the dairy herd, provide pulsations that will al- ways be the same, and actually milk cows better than they can be milked in any other way. . “Through the use of the electro mag- net, railroads operate complicated signal systems that assure safety and swift operation of trains,” said Mr. Stoddard. “In the great pipe organs, eleetro magnets control the hundreds of valves. In the telegraph, telephone, steel and ore cranes—wherever posi- tive control, lightning speed and de- pendablity are needed—the electro Homes Can Have Healthy Air Without Big Expense While 50 years ago it was believed that the only demand for correct ventilation was that the air be free ® for the Bride she selects her vegetables and dessert, t j is automatically ready together. And Sebel _. esas se an ehold ! e meal is planned. All Items of Meal Finished 4 to balance the food values properly, a Together If Cooked ; salad is required, that can be prepared while the pressure cooker is doing its Under Pressure. job and the worker has nothing to stir or to worry about, and it is then put back on the ice for chilling. When the time is up, everything is perfectly cooked and ready for the table. The dessert can be left in the cooker, if it is meant to be served hot, or placed outside to cool. This, of course, is only a short chap- ter in the story—one almost says the romance—of pressure cooking. There are the economy of time and fuel, the ability to use cheaper cuts of meats, the retention of the fuli flavor of veg- etables and of all those precious vi- tamines we have been warned to save, fewer pots to. wash. With all these wonderful features, isn’t it surprising that the bride doesn’t have as many pressure cookers displayed on her gift table as she has cut-glass vases and silver candlesticks} : from carbon dioxide, the Holland In- stitute of Thermology of Holland, !Mich., points out that present stand- ‘ards place emphasis upon air-supply, temperature, relative humidity and air-motion. Adequate air-supply means that ev- ery room receives 30 cubic feet of air per minute for each person in it. Proper temperature is generally ‘held to be from 68 to 70 degrees. With this, a relative humidity of about 40 per cent should be main- tained. Finally, the air should be kept in constant circulation. The modern type of “super-circu- lating” heating system completely changes the air in each room from four to six times an hour, giving _more than the required 30 cubic feet of air per minute per occupant, and keeping it in moderate motion con- stantly. It also embodies an automat- ic humidifier, which makes the hu- midity standard easy to maintain, The bride’s complaint—who has not .heard it dozens of times?—is always: “I can cook separate things all right but how does one ever learn when to put the different parts of a dinner on 80 that they all get finished together or ready at the right time!” Genuine despair rings in her voice, and no wonder, because such knowledge or- dinarily takes years of experience and is the mark of tge expert. In fact many women keep house for years and never really get the knack of having everything ready at just the right time. As a result, the food is cold or some of the dishes are under- done und others overcooked, and the family keeps right on suffering, with- out ptrhaps even knowing why. : Happy the bride, then, who (©, National School of Pressure Cooking). A Complete Meal Cooked at Once. early heat. and, of course, it supplies adequate | The Milking Job Made Easy and Pleasant by the Magnetic Milker. magnet is used. We have now applied this same principle to the mechanical milking of cows in a way that will in- crease efficiency on the farm, save money and make cows happier so they will yield more. “It is a well-known fact that a cow is more contented, will give more milk and quicker, if it is milked by the same man every day. It is necessary to please the cow to get the most milk, and it has been found that certain stimuli or methods of milking are most pleasing. The new magnetic device will milk the cow with the same touch the year round and will speed up milk- ing operations, for one man with a magnetic milker will do the work of three hand milkers. Among the benefits to the farm, Mr. Stoddard pointed out that generally speaking, the magnetic milker saves half the time of milking, which in the aggregate will mean the saving of millions of dollars, or millions of ex- tra hours for doing other farm work and for rest and recreation. Babson Commends Home Cooling Idea Roger Babson, internationally fa- mous economist, predicts that in the near future automatic cooling of homes will be recognized as a stand- ard thing in this country.- “Experience with automatic heating and mechanical refrigeration,” states a recent issue of Babson’s Reports, “has developed to the point where new homes are now being built in which the temperature can be auto- matically controlled all the year ‘round. This will also include keep- ing the rooms at the proper humidity. “Automatic cooling has for some time been successfully operated in theaters and department stores. In extending it to smaller buildings, both industrial and domestie, it is simply applying and extending the principles of electric and gas refrigeration which are proving increasingly popu- lar.” In line with this forecast, says the Holland Institute of Thermology, Hol- land, Mich., the latest development in the warm air heating industry is the “super-circulating” system which pro- pels cocl air through the house in summer as well as warm air in winter. aGHO0LS ADOPTING PRESSURE GODKER Proves Solution of Rural School Children’s Warm Lunch Problem. Getting a hot dish for the children’s lunch in rural school, is a problem that has been worked on by parents, teachers and school boards alike, be- cause they all realize how much good this can do the children, especially in severe weather. Its simple solution is found when a pressure cooker is added to the school equipment, because in this way the food can be prepared quickly, inex- pensively and without adding a lot of extra work and responsibility to the teacher. Soup is one of the best hot dishes to serve because it takes the place of a beverage and at the same time af- fords a great deal of nourishment. The bowl of soup should, of course, be supplemented by the child’s, own lunch box from home, with its sandwich, fruit and nuts. Bake beans are also good cooked this way. Before the close of school the teach- er will ask some three or four chil- dren io bring some one item each te contribute to the soup-pot—a soup bone, a vegetable chopped up, some beans soaked overnight, or whatever tomorrow’s soup may call for. The parents’ co-operation must first be won before this program can be start- ed, and then care must be taken to ‘see that the children are called on for supplies in rotation. Staples such as salt and other seasoning can be kept | on hand. In the morning the ingredients are placed immediately in the cooker and thirty minutes before the soup is to be served the pressure cooker is put on the fire—over the stove if there is no other heat available. By using the pressure cooker soup which would otherwise require several hours sim- mering can be prepared in half an hour and all the mineral salts and vitamines will be preserved instead of boiled away. - The resourceful teacher will have no difficulty in getting the children in- terested in helping and will make this an opportunity to teach them lessons in co-operation and personal respon- "sibility as well as the more concrete lessons of simple cooking, the ele- ments of food chemistry and the necessity for right eating. The in- creased alertness and attentiveness of her well-nourished pupils will more ‘than repay the costs and effort in- valved. (©, National School of Pressure Cooking.) NO ODOR TO FISH COOKED WITH A PRESSURE COOKER The sensible woman gives her fam- ily fish at least once a week, both in the interests of variety and because it is rich in mineral salts, phosphorus and calcium, which are builders of bone and teeth. From the house- wife’s point of view the chief objec- tion to cooking fish is the odor which she is accustomed to associating with it. These difficulties, according to the National School of Pressure Cooking, are overcome by cooking the fish in a pressure cooker. There will be no odor, either escaping into the room or affecting other food in the cooker atthe same time. Furthermore, all the deli- cate flavor is retained as well as the life-giving mineral salts, and the flakes will be solid yet tender. Much of this is due to the brief space of time re- quired for cooking under pressure, which also means a considerable fuel economy. Again, many of the tiny bones which are apt to make fish eat- ing a wary occupation are so gela- tinized by being cooked in this way that they can be safely eaten without noticing them. Any fish which you could normal- ly bake is better done in your pressure cooker. First see that it is thoroughly clean. Then season and wrap in a strip of clean cheesecloth and place in the in- set dish of the cooker. Peeled pota- toes may be put in the same dish. Fill the cooker with warm water up to the rack, put in the inset dishes and fasten the cover properly in po- sition. For three pounds of fish cook 12 to 15 minutes at 15-1bs. pressure, and your fish is perfectly done and ready to serve. A complete and well-balanced meal of fish, potatoes, buttered beets and steamed apple pudding can be pre- pared in a pressure cooker at one tire. Page Three STATE CONVENTION —OF THE— CHURCHES OF GOD WHICH WILL CONVENE AT Edgewood Park, Somerset, Pa. —BEGINNING— June 28th, at 7:45 P. M. and continuing through the entire days of JUNE 29th and 30th Beds provided free for visitors. Meals and lunches served at reason- able prices in the park kitchen. Delegates from Pa., Del. and Md., will be present with inspiring ser- mons, testimonies and songs. Two spirit-filled quintets and a widely known soloist will sing at intervals. Divine Healing Services at the church, located on highway between Somerset and the park, each morning at 5:30. Automobile protection. PROGRAM Pianist—Mrs. Leslie Heskett 7:45—Song Service Address—E. P. 8:15 — Welcome Kimbal, Pastor 8:456—Sermon, Unity—R. H. Walk- er 9:15—Sermon, The New Birth— W. B. Owens 9:40—Altar Service June 29 8:30—Song and Prayer Service 9:00—Call of Churches and Re- sponse . 1. Boynton, Pa. .H. W. Poteat, Pastor 2. Boswell, Pa., L. T. Langston, Pastor 3. N. Philadelphia, Pa., J. W. Rowley, Pastor 4. Reading, Pa., Robert Seyda, Pastor 5. S. Philadelphia, Pa., J. R. Gallo- way, Pastor 6. Belvedere, Del., W. S. Smith, Pastor 7. Wilmington, Del., W. B. Owens, Pastor 8. Somerset, Pa., E. P. Kimball, Pastor 9. Man’s Choice, Pa., J. A. Wilson 10. Seaford, Del., Vesta Swanson, Norristown Church, A. Shelton, Pas- tor 11. Special Song from Maryland Delegates i 11:00 A. M.—Sermon, Advice Ministry—H. O. Harris 11:40—Sermon, “We Would see Je- sus”—L. T, Langston : 12:00—Noon 1:15 P. M.—Song and Prayer ! 1:30 P. M.—Sermon, Preparation for Ministry—A. L. Smith 1:50 P. M.—Sermon, Divine Gov- ernment—D. M. Donovan t 2:20 P. M.—Sunday School Lecture —IE. C. Branner 2:45 P. M.—Sermon, Prayer—J. R. Galloway 3:16—Sermon, Promptness in God’s Service—Harold Long Lo 3:45—Sermon, Philemon 8:14— J. W. Rowley 4:15—Adjournment No 7:00 P. M.—Songs and Prayer 7:30 P. M.—Sermon, The Contrast Between the Works of the Flesh and fhe Fruits of the Spirit—E. P. Kim- a 8:10. >. M.—Sermon, The Remedy for Sin—W. S. Smith 8:40 P. M.—Exhortation,, H. W. Poteat, followed by Altar Service June 30th 8:30—Songs and Prayer 9: ermon, Fishers of Men— A. Thompson of God— 9:30—Sermon, E. R. Williams 10:00—Sermon, What Wilt Thou Have Me Do—Vesta Swanson 10:30—Sermon, Bible Dress Pat- terns—Mrs. A. L. Smith 11:00—Sermon, The Christian’s Cost of Duty—H. W. Poteat 11:30—Sermon, Humility—dJ. A. Power Wilson 12:00—Noon 1:15 P. M.—Sermon, “Jesus Came Not to Be Ministered Uuto, But to Minister”——J. M. Caruthers 1:45 P. M.—Sermon, Prov. 4:26— Leslie Heskett 2:15 P. M.—Sermon, Obedience Bei- ter than Sacrifice—A. R. Martin :45 P. M.—Sermon, Church of God —A. Shelton 3:15—O0ld Fashioned Testimony Service 4:15—Adjournment 7:00 P. M.—Song Service 7:30 P. M.—Sermon, The Need of the Hour—Robert Seyda 8:15 P. M.—Evangelistic Sermon—- H. O. Harris 9:00 P. M.—Altar Service H. W. Poteat, State Overseer in Charge TWELVE-PASSENGER FORD PLANE TO ARRIVE FRIDAY AT AIRPORT IN SOMERSET C. W. Duppstadt, president of the Duppstadt Airport Co., announced that the visit of a big 12-passenger Ford airplane to the Somerset field has been postponed from Wednesday to Friday and Saturday. Pilot Liten- berger of the Pennsylvania Airways, Pittsburgh, will bring the big plane to Somerset for a demonstration. The pilot visited the Somerset air- port last week to examine the field. He pronounced the field in excellent shape for the use of the big 12-pas- senger plane. HOLD SERVICES ON BRIDGE Soldier dead of Rockwood and vi- cinity were honored Memorial day. Preceding the decoration of the graves of the soldiers in the Union and I. O. O. F. cemeteries at Rock- wood, a short service was held on the bridge which spans Cox Creek for ail former men of the sea service. "The Rockwood post of the American Le- gion was in charge of the day’s ac- tivities. Subscribe for The Commercial