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149 Sentences With "tinning"

How to use tinning in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "tinning" and check conjugation/comparative form for "tinning". Mastering all the usages of "tinning" from sentence examples published by news publications.

While local doctors and pathologists at the hospitals where the Tinning children had been taken had grown suspicious by then, charges weren&apost brought against Marybeth Tinning until Tami Lynne&aposs death.
Schenectady County District Attorney Robert Carney, who didn't prosecute Tinning but has opposed her release, doesn't think Tinning has shown true remorse, pointing to her inconsistent accounts in appearances before the parole board.
While a DOC spokesperson would only say that Tinning now lives in Schenectady County, she is believed to have returned to the home she shared with her husband, Joseph Tinning, in Delanson before her incarceration.
After she's released from prison, Tinning plans to live with Joe.
Marybeth Tinning was convicted of murder in 1987 for smothering Tami Lynne.
Tinning was granted parole last week after her seventh hearing before the board.
Paul Callahan, Tinning&aposs trial attorney, said he was glad for her impending release.
Tinning, who lived in Schenectady, has been eligible for parole since May 30, 2007.
Marybeth Tinning, 75, was granted parole last week at her seventh hearing since becoming eligible in 2007.
In 1986, Tinning admitted to smothering Tami Lynne as well as two of her sons, CBS News reports.
According to Mailey, Tinning "will remain under community supervision for the rest of her life" with a parole officer.
According to the Times-Union of Albany, Tinning was once suspected of trying to poison Joseph but was never charged.
She was one of Marybeth and Joseph Tinning&aposs eight young children to die between 24 and 24 under suspicious circumstances.
Tinning was sentenced to 20 years to life and entered the medium-security Taconic Correctional Facility in Bedford Hills that October.
According to Carney, Tinning initially said she didn't remember how Tami Lynne died but then later owned up to the crime.
Tinning was "very emotional" when she told her husband in July that she was finally coming home, he told The DailyGazette.
While Tinning will remain under parole supervision for the rest of her life, authorities believe she is not expected to reoffend.
State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision officials said Marybeth Tinning, 21980, could be released from prison as early as next month.
Tinning initially told the board that she didn't remember how Tami Lynne died but then later admitted to the crime, says Carney.
Tinning denied killing any of her children, including Tami Lynne, but that began to change during her second parole hearing in January 2011.
"After the deaths of my other children ... I just lost it," Tinning told the parole board, according to the Times Union of Albany.
While Tinning was convicted on only one count of murder, authorities suspect she killed all nine of her children between 22011 and 21974.
The 4-month-old was one of nine children to die at a young age under the care of Tinning and her husband, Joseph.
Tinning, who was sentenced to 43 years to life, could be released from the Taconic Correctional Facility in Bedford Hills as early as Aug.
"After the deaths of my other children ... I just lost it," Tinning said in a parole hearing in January 2011, according to the Times Union .
In the early 21's Marybeth Tinning and her husband Joseph lived in Schenectady, NY where she worked as a school bus driver and waitress.
Tinning, from Schenectady, was sentenced in 1987 to 20 years to life in prison after being convicted two years prior of smothering her daughter, Tami Lynne.
Some investigators believe Tinning killed her children because she enjoyed the attention she received when a child died (an extreme type of Munchausen syndrome by proxy).
News of Tinning's impending release has outraged many familiar with her case — especially considering Tinning confessed to killing two of her other children before recanting that confession.
It was not immediately clear if Carney plans to prosecute Tinning for the other killings to which she admitted, and PEOPLE's call to him was not immediately returned.
Marybeth Tinning, convicted of the 21985 smothering death of her 24-month-old daughter Tami Lynne, was released from prison on parole this week after serving 220 years.
Marybeth Tinning, 75, who is being held in a Westchester County prison, could be released as early as next month, state department of Corrections and Community Supervision announced Monday.
She was indicted in three deaths but prosecutors only pursued a conviction in one: The 1985 death of Tami Lynne, which occurred when Tinning smothered her with a pillow.
While Tinning was indicted on charges related to the deaths of three of her children, she was only convicted of Tami Lynne's and was sentenced to 20 years to life.
Authorities tell PEOPLE that Tinning will be required to abide by a curfew and participate in domestic violence counseling, and will remain under community supervision for the rest of her life.
But before it became a fascination in pop culture, even before Munchausen syndrome by proxy was described in medical literature in 13, there was the devastating case of the Tinning family.
Marybeth Tinning, the New York mom convicted of murdering her 4-month-old daughter in 1985 who is suspected in the deaths of seven of her other children, has been granted parole, PEOPLE confirms.
Tinning, whose case drew international attention, is believed to have exhibited Munchausen by proxy, a rare form of abuse in which a guardian exaggerates or induces illness in a child for attention and sympathy.
Yoenis Cespedes homered in the top of the sixth to put the Mets in position to overcome an abbreviated start by Jacob deGrom, who was lifted after throwing 45 pitches in a scoreless first tinning.
Though Tinning, now 75, later recanted her confessions, investigators believe she killed all nine of her children because she enjoyed the attention she received when a child died (an extreme type of Munchausen syndrome by proxy).
" In 2013, Tinning told the parole board that if she were released she would, "(work) in the church and the community where my help is needed, such as volunteering at a food bank and homeless shelters.
Doctors initially attributed the death of some of the infants to SIDS and speculated about a possible hereditary disorder, and the 75-year-old Tinning was convicted only of murdering 4-month-old daughter Tami Lynne in 1985.
But after the 1985 death of 4-month-old Tami Lynne, the shocking truth about the Schenectady, New York, woman emerged: Tinning admitted to New York State investigators that she smothered the infant to death when she wouldn't stop crying.
Tinning, who worked odd jobs as a waitress and school bus driver, also allegedly confessed to trying to kill her husband Joe in 1974 by poisoning his grape juice with phenobarbital using pills she reportedly got from a friend with epilepsy.
Incarcerated since 1987, Tinning, now 75, went before the New York State Parole Board six times before she was finally granted parole on July 10, New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision spokesperson Thomas Mailey said in a statement.
But in the months since the 23-year-old has left prison, Tinning — who was convicted of killing her baby daughter and is suspected of killing many of her other children — has appeared to be living a quiet life back in her home area of upstate New York.
Tinning at World Rowing An orthopaedic surgeon, Tinning travelled as the official team doctor accompanying the Australian rowing squad who competed at the 1980 Moscow Olympics.
In February 1981, Michael fell down the stairs and suffered a concussion. On March 2, Tinning took him to the doctor because he wouldn't wake up. Michael was already dead when Tinning brought him into the doctor’s office. Since he was adopted, the long-suspected theory that the deaths in the Tinning family had a genetic origin were discarded.
Bud Tinning 1934 Goudey card. Lyle Forrest "Bud" Tinning (March 12, 1906 – January 17, 1961) was a major league pitcher for the Chicago Cubs and the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1930s. In 99 games over four seasons (1932-'35), Tinning posted a 22-15 won-loss record with a 3.19 earned run average in 405.2 innings pitched and recording 135 strikeouts.
Tinning was born and raised in Pilger, Nebraska, where he was a sports star for the high school and local sandlot baseball teams. Tinning was born into the Arthur Tinning family. His father was a farmer by trade and the family lived northwest of Pilger on their farm. Bud's siblings included two sisters Mabel and Marie and two brothers, Oger and Dewey.
The next day, Barbara died after being in a comatose state for several hours; her death was attributed to Reye syndrome. Marybeth Tinning was 29 at this time. On Thanksgiving Day 1973, Tinning gave birth to son Timothy; on December 10, Timothy was brought back to the same hospital, dead. Tinning told doctors she found him lifeless in his crib.
Early hot rolling strip mills did not produce strip suitable for tinning, but in 1929 cold rolling began to be used to reduce the gauge further, which made tinning achievable. The plate was then tinned using the process outlined above.
As part of her release, Tinning will remain under parole supervision for the rest of her life. A Department of Corrections spokesperson stated Tinning lives in Schenectady County, in upstate New York. She has a curfew and must attend domestic violence counseling.
His notable students include Carl Schmalz, George Campbell Tinning, Elsie Lower Pomeroy, and Standish Backus.
There are two processes for the tinning of the black plates: hot-dipping and electroplating.
Tinning, R. (2008) Pedagogy, Sport Pedagogy, and the Field of Kinesiology, Quest, 60 (3), 405-424.
In November 1934, Tinning and Dick Ward were traded to the St. Louis Cardinals for Tex Carleton. This should have been a benefit for Tinning, as the Cardinals were hitting their peak as their "Gashouse Gang" era was dominating baseball. However, Tinning injured his arm in 1935 and pitched in only four games, effectively ending his career. After a brief comeback attempt in the minor leagues, he served as a minor league manager for several years.
As of the end of the 2005 season she had won five tournaments on the LET. She was a member of the European Solheim Cup team in 2002, 2003 and 2005. In 2007 Tinning played in the Solheim Cup losing her singles match to Juli Inkster. Tinning also led the Dubai Ladies Masters after 70 holes, before Annika Sörenstam sunk a 17-foot birdie putt on 17 to tie Tinning who missed an 8-footer for birdie.
If a second tin pot is used, called the wash pot, it contains tin at a lower temperature. This is followed by the grease pot, which contains oil and a tinning machine. The tinning machine has two small rollers that are spring-loaded together so that when the tinned plate is inserted the rolls squeeze off any excess tin. The springs on the tinning machine can be set to different forces to give different thicknesses of tin.
In his book Nebraska High School Sports, Nebraska sports historian Jerry Mathers recognized Tinning as Pilger's all- time greatest athlete.
In 2007 she represented Denmark at the Women's World Cup of Golf with Iben Tinning. Juul retired from professional golf in December 2010.
They were then washed and stored in slightly acid water (where they would not rust) awaiting tinning. The tinning set consisted of two pots with molten tin (with flux on top) and a grease pot. The flux dries the plate and prepares it for the tin to adhere. The second tin pot (called the wash pot) had tin at a lower temperature.
On the par-5 18th, Tinning hit her approach onto the green, only to have it spin back into the water, allowing Sörenstam the tournament victory. In 2010 Tinning announced that she would be retiring at the end of the season due to a lingering hip injury. She played her last tournament at the season-ending Omega Dubai Ladies Masters on the Ladies Europe Tour and won the tournament.
In 1963, Marybeth met Joseph Tinning on a blind date with some friends. Joseph was quietly happy-go-lucky. They married in 1965 and their first child, Barbara, was born in May 1967, followed in January 1970 by Joseph Jr. In October 1971, Marybeth’s father died of a sudden heart attack. In 1974, the elder Joseph Tinning was admitted to the hospital with a near-fatal dosage of barbiturate poisoning.
Doctors attributed his death to sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). In March 1975, Tinning's fifth child Nathan was born; that autumn he died in the car while out with Tinning. In August 1978, the Tinnings adopted newborn Michael; on October 29, Marybeth gave birth to her sixth child, Mary Frances. In January 1979, Tinning rushed Mary Frances to the emergency room, directly across the street from her apartment, saying the baby was having a seizure.
Boye was born on 4 May 1856 at i Tinning in Foldby Parish, Jutland, the son of farmer Søren Christiansen (Smed) and Ellen Laursdatter. He assumed the name Boye in circa 1885.
The most grown products were the peach, the apricot, the onions, the peppers, the tomatoes, some cereals, the almonds and the grapes. The most used animals in ranching were the sheep. The food tinning industry was developed during the first half of the century and that fact lead to a economy transformation in which it became mainly industrial. This industry reached its apogee in the 1940s, then Molina became one of the major tinning industry spot nationwide and even worldwide.
Dr. Michael M. Baden, the lead forensic pathologist and member of the State Police's special forensic unit, determined Tami Lynne's death resulted from smothering. After charging Marybeth with Tami Lynne's death, officials said that they considered the deaths of the eight other Tinning children to be suspicious. Investigators later said that Jennifer's death was not suspect because it occurred before the baby left the hospital. Marybeth Tinning made her $100,000 bail payment and was released from custody until her trial date.
Golf has become a highly popular sport in recent years in Denmark with more than 180 courses across the country. Golf is mostly popular among the older demographic, with more members over the age of 24 than any other sport in Denmark. In pro golf, Thomas Bjørn has dominated the Danish scene for many years, along with Anders Hansen, Søren Hansen and Steen Tinning on the European Tour. On the Ladies European Tour, Iben Tinning is the most successful Danish player.
While a starter in the minors, Tinning soon proved to be a success as a long relief pitcher, who could be counted on for occasional starts. Bud was 10 years younger than the manager for the first part of the 1932 season, Rogers Hornsby. In the 1932 World Series, Tinning pitched three shutout innings against the New York Yankees in two relief appearances, and stuck out Babe Ruth. The Baseball Almanac described Bud as "a crafty pitcher who started about one third of his games".
The murder trial of Tinning began in Schenectady County Court on June 22, 1987. Dr. Bradley Ford, Tami Lynne's pediatrician, testified on behalf of the prosecution, saying Tinning had dismissed his suggestion that, due to her siblings’ deaths, she should install a specialized alarm device enabling the monitoring of the baby's breathing and heart rate. Two additional prosecution witnesses (Dr. Marie Valdes-Dapena of Miami, FL, president of the SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) Foundation, and Dr. Thomas Oram (the medical examiner who performed the baby's autopsy) said they diagnosed that Tami Lynne was smothered to death with a soft object.
After the six-week trial, the jury deliberated for 23 hours across three days leading to the conviction of Tinning, 44, on one count of second-degree murder. During their deliberation, jurors called for a read-back of the portions of Joseph Tinning's testimony recounting his wife's alleged confession to State Police. In his testimony, Joseph said that he had a five-minute conversation with Marybeth Tinning after the police questioning, and she told him, 'I killed Tami.' She was acquitted by the seven-man, five-woman jury for the count of 'deliberately' causing the infant's death, but was convicted of murder by 'depraved-indifference to human life' count.
The Home Box Office (HBO) network reported the Tinning case on the first episode of the crime documentary series Autopsy sub-titled Autopsy - Confessions of a Medical Examiner (1994). After the passing of the ninth child Dr. Michael Baden requests the files of all the children's autopsy reports. His findings finally bring Tinning to justice, soon after her arrest he clearly reflects his analysis of her history as being in-line with Munchausen syndrome by proxy (MSBP). The Investigation Discovery network covered Tinning's case in the forensic series Most Evil sub-titled Most Evil - Murderous Women, Season 1; Episode 3 TV-14 44 min aired: March 7, 2007.
Tinning's best year in the majors was in 1933, as he went 13–6 with a 3.18 ERA, and led the National League in winning percentage and was ninth in total shutouts, with three. Tinning wore jersey #21 in 1932, then wore #22 for the 1933-34 seasons.
The people living there were Senones. This place is less than (on a beeline) from the Loire river and from the Bituriges, to whom is attributed the discovery of tinning and who were held among the best regarding their metalwork in general and ironwork in particular.Pliny the Elder, XXXIV, 162.
The Abdal are a Turkish-speaking socio-cultural group found mainly in central and western Anatolia, who follow an itinerant lifestyle. This lifestyle is closely connected with the activity of music making at weddings. Other occupations associated with the Abdal include tinning, basket making and sieve manufacture. They are related with the Abdal (caste).
Great square-headed brooches measure 100-150mm long. They are generally large and heavy brooches. They are the most common brooch style found in high-status female graves in the fifth and sixth centuries. Great square-headed brooches are generally made of copper alloy, and surface treatments of gilding, silvering and tinning are common.
Marybeth and Joe Tinning were separately taken to the Schenectady Police Department for questioning about Tami Lynne's death. During the police interrogation, Marybeth signed a document confessing that she had murdered Tami Lynne, Timothy, and Nathan. She was arrested and charged with Tami Lynne's murder. Police officials initially suspected that Tami Lynne died of SIDS.
It is well equipped with Pentium IV computer systems with PCB design software, Litho Film Photographic Camera, Film Inspection Table, UV-exposure, Photo resist dip coating unit, PCB baking oven, Spray etching machine, Screen Printing complete unit, Plate shearing machine, Roller tinning machine, and high speed drilling machine. The Process Instrumentation Control Laboratory is also well equipped.
The practice of tinning ironware to protect it against rust is an ancient one. This may have been the work of the tinner. This was done after the article was fabricated, whereas tinplate was tinned before fabrication. The manufacture of tinplate was long a monopoly of Bohemia, but in about the year 1620 the industry spread to Saxony.
The parole board ordered her to return in 18 months, rather than the previous standard of 24 months. Tinning, 76, was released on parole August 21, 2018. She served more than 31 years of her 20-years-to-life sentence before being granted parole. Tinning's husband, Joseph, who supported her throughout her incarceration, was there for her release.
340 with 35 HR, 358 total bases and 140 RBI was an All-Star as well. He was 6th in average, first in homers, RBI and total bases, fifth in runs with 123 and he tied for third in the league with 18 triples. Pitcher Bud Tinning, who went 16–11 with a 4.39 ERA, was an All-Star as well.
The practice of tin mining likely began around 3000 B.C. in Western Asia, British Isles and Europe. Tin was an essential ingredient of bronze production there, during the Bronze Age.Tin sources and trade in ancient times#Ancient sources The practice of tinning ironware to protect it against rust is an ancient one. This may have been the work of the whitesmith.
In 1989, the notable German researcher Herbert Haag observed that the meaning of the term 'sport pedagogy' was not as yet fully established in the English speaking sport science literature. Nevertheless, Haag confirmed the ascendence and usefulness of the term 'sport pedagogy' to communicate about research in learning and teaching in physical education and sport to international academic audiences in this field. The relatively late adoption of the term 'sport pedagogy' in the English speaking academic literature is also observed by the distinguished Australian researcher Richard Tinning (2008, p. 405) who notes that ‘notwithstanding the fact that our European colleagues had been using the terms pedagogy and sport pedagogy for many years, the English-speaking world of kinesiology has only relatively recently embraced the terms.’ Nonetheless, Tinning observes that sport pedagogy is now ‘firmly established as a credible academic subdiscipline’.
Tinning was used to help removal of rubber insulation. Tight lays during stranding makes the cable extensible (CBA – as in telephone handset cords). Cables can be securely fastened and organized, such as by using trunking, cable trays, cable ties or cable lacing. Continuous-flex or flexible cables used in moving applications within cable carriers can be secured using strain relief devices or cable ties.
In the 1700 and 1800s, coppersmiths typically had a few apprentices in various stages of learning the trade working together. Apprentices would start learning the trade usually around 8 or 9 years old. Typical duties of a youth in the copper shop would include tasks such as breaking coke or sal ammoniac blocks, scouring copper pieces to prepare them for tinning, and polishing hammers and tools.Fuller, John.
Annika Sörenstam won the event the first two times it was played. Sörenstam beat out Karrie Webb in 2006, and in 2007 defeated Iben Tinning by two shots. The 2008 event, which was Sörenstam's final tournament before her retirement, was won by Germany's Anja Monke. The 2016 event was shortened to 54 holes after caddie Maximilian Zechmann collapsed and died during the first round.
Tinning placed her hands over her eyes and sobbed quietly as the verdict was announced. Later Joseph said, "I still think she's innocent." Judge Clifford Harrigan immediately vacated Tinning's $100,000 bail, and mandated she be held in the Schenectady County Jail, pending her sentencing trial. After her trial, she received a sentence of 20 years to life, five years shorter than the maximum penalty for this crime.
The episode probes into what motivates women who turn to killing. Tinning's case depicts one of the striking differences between men and women killers. In this episode, Dr. Michael Stone, forensic psychologist, Columbia University uses his own mental health scale from 1-22, with 22 being the most dangerous ranking. Dr. Stone's assessment of Tinning is diagnosed at Level-7: Highly Narcissistic & Attention-Seeking.
In June 1914 the business commenced a trial run of daily services to Kew.'Hawthorn, Kew, Camberwell Citizen', Melbourne VIC, Friday 5 June 1914, page 5. In October 1914 Sunday morning routes were established from Fitzroy and Northcote to Melbourne.Preston Leader, Melbourne VIC, Saturday 10 October 1914, page 2. In July 1914 the Melbourne Motor Omnibus Co moved the garaging of all its buses to Tinning Street, Melbourne.
Bunching small wires before concentric stranding adds the most flexibility. Copper wires in a cable may be bare, or they may be plated with a thin layer of another metal, most often tin but sometimes gold, silver or some other material. Tin, gold, and silver are much less prone to oxidation than copper, which may lengthen wire life, and makes soldering easier. Tinning is also used to provide lubrication between strands.
Then, it is transported to casting machines for slab production. After cooling, slab is rolled at the hot rolling mill, creating hot coils (thickness: 1.5–16 mm). Some are sold; others go to the hot finishing mill for complementary work and hot sheet transformation or the cold rolling mill to lower strip thickness to 0.18 mm. Cold rolled coils are also dedicated for the tinning, galvanizing, and prepainting lines.
Integrated pest control management is used, all pruning, leaf plucking, shoot tinning and green harvesting is done by hand, and flocks of local sheep are brought in to trim weeds. A similar light-touch approach is utilized in the vinification. Grapes are hand- harvested and pass through a sorting table in order to ensure that only the highest-quality grapes are processed. Each block is handled separately until blending.
In the second half of the 19th century, tinning economic activities of the grown products started in Molina, but they were performed in a crafted way during the first decades. During that era there was a prevalence of the windmill industry. In 1916, the municipality started to have Molina de Segura as its name. Before the second half of the 20th century, the economy was based on agriculture and ranching.
In 1948 RTB introduced the first continuous tinning line at its Ebbw Vale tinplate works.BBC - South West Wales Eisteddfod - The Old Steelworks In 1951 RTB was nationalised and placed under the Iron and Steel Corporation of Great Britain. Under Conservative rule in 1953 it passed to the Iron and Steel Holding and Realisation Agency in readiness for privatisation. However, its size – it was the UK's largest steel company – inhibited its sale.
They later built a saw mill so they could build a standard size home. Along with the saw mill, the Tilleys became involved with fox farming, gardening, coopering, blacksmithing, fishing and fish canning. John Tilley and Sons were the tinning operation to tin salmon in Newfoundland (the first salmon was tinned by Tilley and Sons). Shortly after Scholar John tinned his first salmon he learned of a fishery exhibition.
The staff was able to revive her, reporting "aborted SIDS." A month later, Tinning returned to the hospital with Mary Frances in full cardiac arrest; she was revived, but had irreversible brain damage. She died two days later after being taken off life support. The Tinnings' eighth child, Jonathan, was born that fall; he died in March 1980 after being kept on life support in Albany, New York for four weeks.
He was schooled at St Joseph's College, Hunters Hill where he took up rowing. His senior club rowing was done from the Sydney Rowing Club. Tinning's first state selection for New South Wales came in 1949 in the men's senior eight contesting the King's Cup at the annual Australian Interstate Regatta. Tinning rowed in the bow set of the 1949 New South Wales eight who won the King's Cup.
Bombardment with atomic particle beams can remove surface layers at a rate of tens of nanometers per minute. The addition of hydrogen to the plasma augments the removal efficiency by chemical mechanisms. Mechanical agitation is another possibility for disrupting the oxide layer. Ultrasound can be used for assisting tinning and soldering; an ultrasonic transducer can be mounted on the soldering iron, in a solder bath, or in the wave for wave soldering.
The oxide disruption and removal involves cavitation effects between the molten solder and the base metal surface. A common application of ultrasound fluxing is in tinning of passive parts (active parts do not cope well with the mechanical stresses involved); even aluminium can be tinned this way. The parts can then be soldered or brazed conventionally. Mechanical rubbing of a heated surface with molten solder can be used for coating the surface.
Old Castle Works is a 7.5 acre (30,000 m2) brownfield re-development site with commercial and leisure development planned. Carmarthenshire County Council has recently cleared this derelict site. The Grade 2 listed Tinning House has been retained, and will be incorporated into any future development BBC.CO.UK. "Theatre plan for demolition site", 21/01/2006, retrieved 05/04/2009 In May 2007, an application was made for funding from the Big Lottery Fund.
This included new constructions of: an effluent plant; single stack annealing line; two electrolytic tinning lines (ETL); a cleaning line; and a Hallden Shears plant. Having cost £57 million, the plant was officially opened in June 1978 by Derek Hornby, the President of the Food Manufacturing Federation. It was envisaged in the original plan that phase3 would then be constructed to double production yet again, but it was never authorised for planning by the government.
Donkin was involved with tinning of iron from 1808 and was keen to expand it to the food industry. Donkin and Hall set up a commercial canning factory and by 1813 were producing their first canned goods for the British army. In 1818, Durand introduced tin cans in the United States by re- patenting his British patent in the US. By 1820, canned food was a recognized article in Britain and France and by 1822 in the United States.
Iben Tinning (born 4 February 1974 in Copenhagen) is a Danish professional golfer. Her first two wins on the Ladies European Tour (LET) came in 2002. In 2003, she won the LPGA Tour's Qualifying Tournament, but her 2004 LPGA rookie season was disappointing and she lost her card. Back in Europe, in 2005 she finished top of the Order of Merit, becoming the first Danish golfer to top the money list on any major international tour.
Morgan was born in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, spent his boyhood in Bathurst, New South Wales, and commenced life as a digger by joining with his uncle, John Woodward, who made the discovery which led to the Ophir, New South Wales rush, in 1851. After working with success there and at Golden Point, Victoria and Golden Valley, he migrated to Warwick, Queensland, in 1866, and engaged in mining at Thanes' Creek, and tinning at Stanthorpe, and was successful.
View of Stemnitsa Stemnitsa Stemnitsa has a folklore museum. It includes various exhibitions regarding the traditional way of Stemnitsa life in the past including how candles were made, a jeweler's workshop, a shoe repair shop and a copper tinning representation. It also houses an extensive selection of Byzantine icons, old costumes, copper- ware, guns and jewelry. An organization which is responsible for the beautification of Stemnitsa is the Cultural and Beautification Organization "Politistikos kai Exoraistikos Syllogos Stemnitsioton Ypsountas".
The canned food industry ("tinning" in the UK) has been used to preserve food for around a century. Before this it was common to buy food either salted, dried or fresh. The industries that produced these cans, or tins, were small and usually family owned, with limited ability to compete with one another because the market was so large. One of these family can makers was Robert Barclay, who had also owned a printing business since 1855.
During 1885, assisted by Robert Davies, Richard Beaumont-Thomas invented a cleaning machine and a dusting machine.Men of Steel, The History of Richard Thomas and his Family, David Wainwright, Quiller Press, 1986 These machines made possible the continuous production of tinplate. Richard Beaumont-Thomas continued this inventive streak, in 1897 together with his brother Hubert Spence-Thomas, a continuous tinning machine was patented.Patents The patents for these inventions were issued and utilised by the tinplate industry globally.
On December 26, 1971, Jennifer, the Tinnings' third child, was born at St. Clare’s Hospital. Jennifer had hemorrhagic meningitis and multiple brain abscesses that had developed in utero. Jennifer lived for only a week and never left the hospital; she died on January 3, 1972. Two weeks after Jennifer's death, Tinning took two-year-old Joseph Jr. to the Ellis Hospital emergency room in Schenectady, claiming that he had experienced a seizure and choked on his own vomit.
Different grids were used for different depth ranges, but also tinning (which is a triangular irregular network) and random points visualization were performed when the maximum resolution was required. The data analysis is carried out continuously by an automatic system at the monitoring center of the Vesuvian Observatory, called Eolo. VLP signals require unconventional analysis techniques. The current configuration of the seismic network allows to perform the detection and localization of VLP events with a technique based on a "semblance" analysis.
The mills throughout the works were two rolls high, and each had two pairs of standard housings. The annealing, pickling, cold rolls, tinning and assorting rooms, as well as the carpenters' and fitting shops, and the smithy, were situated on the higher level of the works. There were three reverberatory annealing furnaces, and two pickling machines. The tin-house contained fourteen tin-sets of the type known as the "Melingriffith Patent"; fourteen Richard Thomas and Company's cleaners, and four dusting-machines.
The entire 1949 New South Wales King's Cup crew was selected to represent Australia in competition at the 1950 British Empire Games in Auckland. Tinning was in that crew who won gold medal in the eights competition. For the 1952 Helsinki Olympics an all New South Wales crew was selected twelve months in advance based on the 1951 King's Cup result. The Olympic selection crew raced the 1952 King's Cup for New South Wales during its preparation and was comprehensively beaten by Victoria.
A mixture of borax and ammonium chloride is used as a flux when welding iron and steel. It lowers the melting point of the unwanted iron oxide (scale), allowing it to run off. Borax is also used mixed with water as a flux when soldering jewelry metals such as gold or silver, where it allows the molten solder to wet the metal and flow evenly into the joint. Borax is also a good flux for "pre-tinning" tungsten with zinc — making the tungsten soft-solderable.
After the war, he worked as an apprentice to his brother in the tinning trade in Rogersville, Tennessee, and later worked as an engineer on the Rogersville and Jefferson Railroad."Walter P. Brownlow," Goodspeed's Biographical Sketches of Washington County, Tennessee, 1887. Transcribed for TNGenWeb by Louise Jackson. Retrieved: 19 August 2013. In 1876, Brownlow was hired as a reporter by the Knoxville Whig and Chronicle, a newspaper that had been founded by his uncle's protégé, William Rule (and at the time co-owned by his uncle).
Villeneuve was founded in 1254 by Alphonse, Count of Poitiers, brother of Louis IX, on the site of the town of Gajac, which had been deserted during the Albigensian Crusade. By the early 20th century, Villeneuve-sur-Lot was an important agricultural centre and had a large trade in plums (prunes d'ente); the preparation of preserved plums and the tinning of peas and beans were major industries. The important mill of Gajac stood on the bank of the Lot a little above the town.
Gresson in England, 1915 William Jardine Gresson (1869 – 10 January 1934) was a British merchant and politician in Hong Kong and China. He was the son of Mary Fleming Tinning, who was the daughter of Elizabeth "Betsy" Jardine, who was the daughter of David Jardine. David Jardine's brother Dr. William Jardine co-founded one of the largest trading houses in the Far East, Jardine Matheson & Co.. Gresson arrived in Hong Kong in 1892 and became a managing partner in the Jardine Matheson & Co. from 1901 to 1910. He was also a Shanghai Municipal Councillor.
The 2008 Ladies British Amateur champ, the 2007 U.S. Women's Amateur champ, the 2007 European Ladies Amateur champ (if all have not turned pro before championship). Caroline Hedwall (a), Anna Nordqvist (a), Maria José Uribe (a) 16\. Players successful in Final Qualifying (28 July) Elizabeth Bennett (a), Erica Blasberg, Krystle Caithness (a), Rebecca Coakley, Claire Coughlan-Ryan, Stefani Croce, Naomi Edwards (a), Tanya Elosegui Mayor, Lora Fairclough, Martina Gillen, Lydia Hall (a), Leah Hart, Samantha Head, Kiran Matharu, Anja Monke, Lee-Ann Pace, Margherita Rigon, Iben Tinning, Marjet van der Graff.
Northrup Frye, Preface to The Bush Garden: Essays on the Canadian Imagination (Toronto: House of Anansi Press, 1971), p. i-iv Other notable artists in the 1930s include Rhoda Dawson, who arrived in 1930 to be a design instructor with the Grenfell Mission until 1933, returning in 1934 from England to teach at Payne's Cove.Peter Neary, Explanatory material for Rhoda Dawson's "The Wharves of St. John's Newfoundland," Canadian Parliamentary Review, Summer, 1992, p.2 Additionally, George Campbell Tinning visited Newfoundland as a war artist during the Second World War, returning to paint in 1949.
He was inspired in 1880 seeing a Haselmayer show. He eventually began his professional career in 1896. In 1898 Gerard left the bank, and with several partners founded Burketown's Endeavour Meatworks (producing tinned beef) to solve the problem of getting Gulf Country cattle to market. The venture was a roaring success for several years, however drought, economic recession and some lack of expertise in the art of tinning ruined the meatworks venture, and Gerard returned to Toowoomba to a series of temporary jobs, including a stint as secretary of the Toowoomba General Hospital.
The Daimler bus was proving its superiority to other buses.Brunswick and Coburg Leader, Melbourne, 6 March 1914, page 5. The business at this time had made a net profit for the first half-year of working. In July 1914 the Melbourne Motor Omnibus Co moved the garaging of all its buses to Tinning Street, Brunswick. At this time the business had 20 buses in service, two due to be put into service within a week, and three more by the end of the month, making 25 the total bus fleet.
The media then claimed the Victorian crew should be nominated instead. However the selector Joe Gould stuck with the selected crew since a number of them including stroke Phil Cayzer, had severe adverse reactions to the vaccinations they'd taken for overseas travel. It was also mentioned that their fundraising responsibilities, some 7,000 pounds, impacted their preparation - the Australian Olympic Federation had only been able to fund four air tickets for the eight. Tinning was the bowman of that Australian Olympic men's eight who to their credit won the bronze medal in Helsinki.
The First Handcart Company departed from Iowa City, Iowa on June 9, 1856 arriving in Salt Lake City, Utah on September 26, 1856. The company had about 280 different people, 3 wagons, and 56 handcarts. The experience of the first company was useful in that due to the green timber, the wheels and axles broke more frequently than expected, and that by tinning the axles and adding iron to the rims, the carts made much better mileage and broke much less frequently. Coupled with axle greasing, these innovations were incorporated into carts travelling in the years 1857-1860.
Ebbw Vale steelworks in 1969, by this time under the control of British Steel Corporation In 1948 in post-war Britain, two of the country's largest steel companies: Richard Thomas, which had plants in Ebbw Vale, Gloucester and the Forest of Dean; and Baldwins, with plants in Stourport and South Wales; agreed to a merger. The new company, Richard Thomas and Baldwins was resultantly the UK's largest steel maker by volume. In 1948 RTB introduced the first continuous tinning line at its Ebbw Vale tinplate works. In 1951 RTB was nationalised and placed under the Iron and Steel Corporation of Great Britain.
The restrictions are on each homogeneous material in the product, which means that the limits do not apply to the weight of the finished product, or even to a component, but to any single material that could (theoretically) be separated mechanically — for example, the sheath on a cable or the tinning on a component lead. As an example, a radio is composed of a case, screws, washers, a circuit board, speakers, etc. The screws, washers, and case may each be made of homogenous materials, but the other components comprise multiple sub-components of many different types of material.
Fractal geometry, using a deterministic Cantor structure, is used to model the surface topography, where recent advancements in thermoviscoelastic creep contact of rough surfaces are introduced. Various viscoelastic idealizations are used to model the surface materials, including the Maxwell, Kelvin–Voigt, standard linear solid and Jeffrey models. Nimonic 75 has been certified by the European Union as a standard creep reference material. The practice of tinning stranded wires to facilitate the process of connecting the wire to a screw terminal, though having been prevalent and considered standard practice for quite a while, has been discouraged by professional electricians,IPC J-STD-001 Rev.
Arthur Lougee was the art director then of both the Ford company's New England Journeys, Ford Times and Lincoln Mercury Times. He featured in these publications dozens of America's contemporary watercolor artists such as John Whorf, Henry McDaniel, Forrest Orr, Glenn MacNutt, Loring Coleman, Stuart Eldridge, Paul Sample, King Coffin, Maxwell Mays, Robert Paul Thorpe, Estelle Coniff, Glen Krause, JWS Cox, C Robert Perrin, Edward Turner, Ward Cruickshank II, Alphonse J Shelton, RJ Holden, Dorothy Manuel, Frederick James, William Barss, Campbell Tinning, Eunice Utterback, Andrew Winter. Paintings by Charley Harper and Henry E McDaniel were often on the covers.
C.M. Russell One of Utica's most famous local residents was the western painter C.M. Russell, who at the time was a young cowhand hired by a local rancher and gold miner named Jake Hoover. Russell stated that he learned most of his frontier skills from Hoover, and the two men remained lifelong friends. He featured Utica in the 1907 painting A Quiet Day In Utica, which was originally known as Tinning a Dog. Hoover; local businesswoman Mollie Ringold, a former slave; store owner Charles Lehman and Russell himself are all depicted in the painting, seen standing between the hitching post and door of the general store.
Benjamin Thompson noted at the start of the 19th century that kitchen utensils were commonly made of copper, with various efforts made to prevent the copper from reacting with food (particularly its acidic contents) at the temperatures used for cooking, including tinning, enamelling, and varnishing. He observed that iron had been used as a substitute, and that some utensils were made of earthenware. By the turn of the 20th century, Maria Parloa noted that kitchen utensils were made of (tinned or enamelled) iron and steel, copper, nickel, silver, tin, clay, earthenware, and aluminium. The latter, aluminium, became a popular material for kitchen utensils in the 20th century.
This accomplished, Dangar's services were no longer needed and in June 1833 he retired to his property, Neotsfield, near Singleton. At Newcastle he had boiling down works and meat-processing and tinning works, and in New Zealand he established a steam flour mill near the wheat farms around Official Bay. As a magistrate and member of the District Council his experience and judgement were in frequent demand, and he gave time and energy to the agricultural and political advancement of the Hunter Valley. In common with most large landholders who were seriously short of labour, he supported the proposed reintroduction of transportation and advocated the use of coolie labour.
In Melbourne, a huge painting of New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern embracing a Muslim woman, an iconic image beamed around the world after the 2019 Christchurch mosque attacks, was painted on the Tinning Street silo in the suburb of Brunswick, after was raised in a day via crowdfunding. The town of Monto in the North Burnett Region of Queensland has been put on the tourism map as the most northerly silo art installation in Australia. Its "Three Moons" silos depict several stories of the past, including the era of gold mining, cattle mustering and The Dreamtime. It also has a mural on an old water tower.
Gettysburg was founded by natives of Adams County, Pennsylvania, in the late 1820s. When the settlement was platted by John Hershey in 1842, the community was named for Gettysburg, the county seat of Adams County. The community's first church was a congregation of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, established in 1847 or 1848, while the first school was built in 1850. By the 1860's the village had an active business sector including general stores, shoe shops, cabinet makers, wagon/carriage shops, harness shops, tanning yards, cooperages, blacksmiths, tinning shop, tailors, physicians, a hotel, grain elevator, flouring and saw mills.
From 1914 through 1986, the Continental Steel Corporation facility produced nails, wire and wire fence from scrap steel on a facility in Kokomo. Manufacturing operations in the steel plant and on other portions of the property included the use, handling, storage and disposal of hazardous materials. Steel-making operations had included reheating, casting rolling, drawing, pickling, galvanizing, tinning and tempering. After the company filed for bankruptcy in 1986, EPA and the Indiana Department of Environmental Management investigated the plant and property and found soil, sediments, surface water and ground water contaminated with volatile organic compounds (PCBs) and several metals, including lead, arsenic, cadmium, and chromium.
During the First World War the tinning industry saw increased business manufacturing ration tins for British troops. With the UK government placing wartime restrictions on tin, many companies that formed the federation worked closely together, and after the war four of them, Hudson Scott, F. Atkins & Co., Henry Grant & Co., and Barclay & Fry, banded together to form the company Allied Tin Box Makers Limited. Though they were essentially one company, using it to control the market and make acquisitions, each member company still essentially remained private and ran its own affairs. In 1922 they opted to change the company name to Metal Box & Printing Industries after establishing comfortable control of the UK market.
In 1967, the Steel Company of Wales was nationalised with others to form British Steel Corporation. Choosing to close the tinplate works at Port Talbot Steelworks, they invested in all three remaining tinplate works within the newly formed South Wales group: Trostre, Felindre and Ebbw Vale. With four electrolytic continuous tinning lines installed at each plant, they were capable of combining to produce 2 million tons of tinplate per annum. While Felindre had always out produced Trostre on quality and volume since the start of its production in 1956 (peak production, 450,000 tons per annum), after a review of its tinplate sites in South Wales, British Steel decided in December 1980 to close Felindre.
He was first noticed by professional baseball scouts while pitching for the Genoa, Nebraska town team, and began his professional career with the Omaha Packers, a franchise in the Western League. Early in Tinning's professional career, he had issues with his weight and conditioning, and his performance with the Packers suffered until he got himself in proper playing condition. Once he achieved this, Tinning finally developed into a major league prospect. His minor league career was highlighted by earning all- star status in the Western League for Des Moines in 1930, as well as for his 1931 season with the Minneapolis Millers, where he was noticed by the Cubs and was signed for the 1932 season at the age of twenty-six.
They must also resist corrosion caused by salt water or salt spray, which is accomplished through the use of thicker, specially constructed jackets, and by tinning the individual wire stands. US single-phase residential power distribution transformer, showing the two insulated "Line" conductors and the bare "Neutral" conductor (derived from the earthed center-tap of the transformer). The distribution supporting cantenaries are also shown. In North American practice, an overhead cable from a transformer on a power pole to a residential electrical service usually consists of three twisted (triplexed) conductors, with one being a bare neutral conductor, with the other two being the insulated conductors for both of the two 180-degree out of phase 120 V line voltages normally supplied.
Bodén turned professional in 2001 and won the Telia Tour Order of Merit, before joining the Ladies European Tour where she finished third at the 2002 Ladies Irish Open, one stroke away from a playoff with Iben Tinning and Suzann Pettersen. She was the Swedish Matchplay champion in 2004 and the following year won the South African Women's Open by a convincing seven shots at the Royal Johannesburg & Kensington Golf Club. Bodén's seventh LET season in 2008 was her most successful, she posted three top-10s and finished 32nd on the money list. Her best career finish was at the 2008 Ladies Scottish Open, where she shared the lead with Gwladys Nocera after the first round and finished runner-up.
Tin layer on the inside of a tin can Tinning is the process of thinly coating sheets of wrought iron or steel with tin, and the resulting product is known as tinplate. The term is also widely used for the different process of coating a metal with solder before soldering. It is most often used to prevent rust, but is also commonly applied to the ends of stranded wire used as electrical conductors to prevent oxidation (which increases electrical resistance), and to keep them from fraying or unraveling when used in various wire connectors like twist-ons, binding posts, or terminal blocks, where stray strands can cause a short circuit. While once more widely used, the primary use of tinplate now is the manufacture of tin cans.
Established in 1897, the Monbulk Co-operative Fruitgrowers’ Association was one of the most successful fruits and preserves company in the area, with the jams produced by the company becoming a common household item through much of the 20th century. Co-founded by Daniel Camm, the co-operative constructed their own pulping and tinning facilities, to overcome issues with transporting raw product over the ranges and into Melbourne. The jams produced by the company were used during World War Two, after the company secured a contract to supply the armed forces of both Australia and Britain. By the 1970s, the company was producing more than 5 million kilograms of jam per year, at which point the ownership of the company exchanged hands, eventually transferring to the Shepparton Fruit Preserving Company.
MOM: The Killer, written by detective Mark Gado, pages: 90 released: July 19, 2011. Author Marc Gado who has a Masters of Science of Criminal Justice from Iona College probes the mind of child killer Marybeth Tinning and provides a perspective, of an accomplished expert, reflecting her tales of denial, neglect and unsolved deaths of her children. Investigative author Joyce Egginton details the case in her book, From Cradle to Grave: The Short Lives and Strange Deaths of Marybeth Tinning's Nine Children, released: 1990. In Unnatural Death, Confessions of a Forensic Pathologist, authored by Michael M. Baden M.D. with Judith Adler Hennessee, released: 1989, Dr. Michael Baden provides a complete first-person account of his career in forensic pathology, he addresses his findings of Tinning's and other crimes.
Webster had Hand's design modified, by Hobart naval architect Alf Blore, to suit local sailing conditions and boat building practice and by 1911 had persuaded several yachtsman to build identical yachts. These yachts, built for the sum of about £200, became known simply as "One-Designers". A total of 7 One-Designers were built in Tasmania. They are listed below, by sail number: # Weene - Built 1910 by Charles Lucas for E H Webster # Pandora - Built 1910 by Charles Lucas for D Barclay Jr # Curlew - Built 1911 by Charles Lucas for Douglas, Tarleton and Knight # Vanity - Built 1911 by Charles Lucas for W Darling, Dr Ireland and Stanley Crisp # Pilgrim - Built by E A Jack of Launceston for Richmond Tinning # Canobie - Built 1912 by Charles Lucas # "Gannet" - Built 1911 by Charles Lucas Two One- Designers were built in New Zealand.
Automatic signalling advanced a little further along the line in August 1971, with Royal Park to Jewell being converted and, in April 1972, the Macaulay to Royal Park section was similarly converted. Tinning Street manual gates closed for the last time on 6 September 1998 By May 1988, serious consideration was being given to proposals to convert the line to light rail, following the conversion of the St Kilda and Port Melbourne railway lines in 1987. After discussions with local councils, unions and the Metropolitan Transit Authority, a number of options were floated: the conversion of the entire line to light rail, partial conversion, or closing parts of the line and running the light rail via Sydney Road. Those proposals were finally put to rest in April 1995, when it was announced that $23 million would be spent upgrading the line.
The Port Curtis Dairy Company Ltd (the PCD) was formed at Gladstone in 1904, with its first timber factory buildings erected at Gladstone in 1906. By the 1920s, the PCD was one of the largest co-operative dairy companies in Queensland. The activities of the PCD at Gladstone and in surrounding districts stimulated the expansion of commercial dairying in Central Queensland. Statewide, dairying was an important economic activity for the first half of the 20th century, and a mainstay for farming communities during the economic depression of the early 1930s. Surviving elements of the Gladstone factory site include the 1929-1930 factory building, an early factory office building, several cold stores, a single-storeyed office building with two- storeyed extensions erected 1948-1950, a 1938 re-tinning shed, an ice shed and store room erected during the Second World War, and sections of a 1914 railway siding and 1923 siding extension.
1931 Des Moines duked it out with the Wichita Aviators throughout the 1931 season. The Demons went 39–26 to finish second in the first half, three games behind Wichita, then won 55 of 80 second-half contests to finish six and a half games ahead of the Aviators. In the championship, the Demons won four of six games. All three 1930 All-Stars returned and again made the All-Star team – Oglesby hit .341 which was 5th in the league to go along with 119 runs, 106 RBI, 200 hits (second-most) and 278 total bases (fifth); Tinning went 24–2 with a league-leading 3.11 ERA and was second in wins and first in winning percentage; Keyes won the Triple crown with a .369 average, 38 homers and 160 RBI, which were 22 more than anyone else. He also led with 401 total bases (111 more than the next player) and 203 hits. Joining them as All-Stars were outfielder Mike Kreevich who hit .
A Methodist circuit had been established in Westbury in 1848 with meetings held in homes of the Oaks Estate. After Hingston purchased his land in 1854, Methodist meetings were held at his home. Hingston's home proved too cramped for religious meetings so in 1857 he donated land for a chapel, which was built in the same year by Joshua Higgs. It was an all timber building made from pit-sawn beams clad with split timber. It opened for services on 13 December 1857, after completion at a total cost of 250 pounds. The wooden church was also used as a Sunday school and state school from 1865 to 1928. A chapel house was built in 1859 next to the church by the Wesleyan trustees. This house was used initially by David Tinning, the town's first school teacher. The 1865 brick church, and 1857 wooden church-- now a community hall In the 1860s a new church was planned.
He examined and reported on the auriferous (gold-bearing) rivers, the turquoise mines, the forests and the fossil beds of France. He devised the method of tinning iron that is still employed, and investigated the differences between iron and steel, correctly showing that the amount of carbon is greatest in cast iron, less in steel, and least in wrought iron. His book on this subject (1722) was translated into English and German. He was noted for a thermometer he constructed on the principle of taking the freezing point of water as 0°, and graduating the tube into degrees each of which was one-thousandth of the volume contained by the bulb and tube up to the zero mark. It was an accident dependent on the particular alcohol employed which made the boiling-point of water 80°; mercurial thermometers graduated into 80 equal parts between the freezing- and boiling-points of water are named Réaumur thermometers but diverge from his design and intention.
The place retains a number of elements integral to the function of the place as a butter (and later milk pasteurising and bottling) factory, including the 1929–30 factory building, an early factory office building, several cold stores, a single-storeyed company administration building with two-storeyed extensions erected 1948–1950, a 1938 re-tinning shed, an ice shed and a store erected during the Second World War, and sections of the 1914/1923 railway siding. These elements are important in illustrating the principal characteristics of an early to mid 20th century dairy factory with company headquarters and important links to a principal railway network and to overseas port facilities. The place has a strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group for social, cultural or spiritual reasons. The former Port Curtis Co-operative Dairy Association Ltd Factory, Gladstone was a major employer for nearly 8 decades, through much of the 20th century, and retains strong social significance for the people of Gladstone and district.
Metal Box barely survived the early 1980s; recession and bad management had marred the company as had ever increasing competition in the canned foods market. Eventually, in the mid-1980s, the company hired Brian Smith (the man mostly known for helping to turn around ICI) as chairman, and Murray Stuart was appointed as chief executive. In 1988 in an effort to de-emphasise the company's roots in the tinning industry, and emphasise its considerable expansion into other fields, the team of Smith and Stuart changed the company's name to MB Group, and continued steadily to grow its operations and make the company Europe's biggest manufacturer of heating radiators via its Stelrad unit. Also at this time, the company began to develop a bathroom products section via its Stelrad Doulton subsidiary, and in the United States its Clarke Checks subsidiary had grown to become the fourth-largest cheque printer in the US. In October 1988, MB agreed to merge its packaging division with Carnaud forming CMB Packaging SA becoming the third largest packaging company in the world.
In November 1938 the PCD installed a plant at the Gladstone factory for the re-tinning of cream cans, which proved popular with farmers. PCD butter production peaked in 1938–1939 with . About 1938 a single-storeyed administrative building was erected south of the main factory building, and in May 1939 a contract was let to J Hutchinson for additional cold stores, capable of storing 40,000 boxes of butter, at the PCD's Gladstone factory. These were operational by October 1940, giving the factory a holding capacity of 65,000 boxes of butter. The outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939 had a substantial impact on the operations of the PCD. Cheese factories were established at Bracewell (in operation May 1942 - 31 December 1954) and Theodore (in operation July 1942 - 31 January 1951), to meet requests from the British Government for extra cheese supplies. The processing of pasteurised milk at PCD factories was initiated with the arrival of United States troops at Rockhampton in 1942 as the American military authorities did not approve the use of raw milk. At the Gladstone factory a number of new structures were erected, including an ice shed and store to the east of the PCD siding, both of which remain in situ.

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