New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 20, 1919, Page 6

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- lew Britain HeraldT HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Proprietors. Issued daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m, at Herald Building, 67 Churst $3.00 a Year B 2 $2.00 Three Months. 75¢c a Month Entered at the Post Ofce at New Britain as Second Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Business O Bditorial Ro The only profitable the city. room advertising medtum fa | Circulation books and prees | always open to advertisers. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news | credited 15 it or not otherwise credited | In this paper and aiso local news | published heretn. i e —— THE Member of the Assoclated Tress. | a SENATE'S CONFERENCE, Yesterd: Wwhich for afternoon the cvent to | we have been looking forward several months, 1 Wilson the eign Relations Committee and o the conference of President and Senate For- | came ahout gave us considerable it ormation various subjects, coupled with a great deal of pointless dialogue in Qguestion the President other and answer form, between and one member or an- of the commitice. Ignoring | most of this, the proposition simmered of and down to a discussion the Shantung clause Article with The sa)y in the treaty which we are vitally concerne American public, we venture to | is not materially affected by manner of bringing about various It of stipulations ot in the contract care whether the plan League General What it is going to was that of Smuts, or John know is how Jones. wants to it be affected by the clauses. The President’s was one that is deal of that it was declaration preliminary speech | | of a great We deserving a commendation believe a manly, straight-forward of his beliefs and convic- tions concerning the is a search in the Senator the document and There Utopia, need of its early adoption for the ideal, That for treaty was explained Brandegee, from differentiate Connecticut, tried to gal however, between the | and moral obligations, without, | getting us anywhere. That | the element of “judgment enters into | a no such a We nnot moral obligation and that legal the the there is element in a one” was point well made by President. can grasp if We to that, Senator are bound, it is true, icle have our representative the League council consider means bring about a Settlement of troubles that may arise. The Senator from Article X our this state, considers that for brin makes it obligatory us to use | armed forces to about a | settlement, irrespective | Congress wishes it dent of whether The Presi- mistaken. or not | | | | thinks that he is So R we. Our conclusion after reading article is, that it to provides for the affai encroach upon each friction if sible. will to a tral body to act upon | Aations as they her, to eliminat That all. pos | | | | agreed | of course But be by we disagree upon the means of following up the council What if ders are not obeyed? Senator Brande- gee says will ¥ be bound do The Pre will edicts of the | shall we do its or- we ave to fight, will | to understanding. ident makes the point that be we bound That by a moral obliga- | if to tion only. it appeals to our sense of justice we shall so. If forced accomplish of fight do it does not Congress is not X | to declare war. Then Article X | A serap | | nothing beyond Not at past paper,” vou say ail will resort to the war to a parallel Supposing that of League before the war, as were the rest of us. "We doubt dared to tempt fortune as knowing that coupled Germany had been | e member stich a in mn“ that she would ever have | she did, the rest of the nations were in moral obligation to see that Belgium She 'would have evitable her hts. it got recognized all that it was in- that other nations of have 1t would see the injustice to one League | members thi We would would th and resented believe this country have thrown its weight there any We the scales at once were with Belgium, however slight do not believe that Germany was ready to ture encounter the world and we ven- 5 e Vel en e e O | entry o United States into at all the wai Consequen had there | that she been any agreement between us would have hesitated. Supposing there were that Would gue and went ahead yhow ve, under Article X, have No, s0 to enter the gvar ? we were not legally bound o do would we have tated W have it on But i hesi- to accept our moral oblizations? b there doubt it. Then icle would Wil it. The | tle differenc We have made lit in the future doubt weight it wi is the greater nting there nflujnce upon di. nation be/ween nations a hesitate kiplate one of them thus chancing bring the whole aggregation about is a tie to to its will ea it lief fait he dea has Sha Has J in hel ma T us to But dra not wo to Pre mu con tige con fact will \s rab' the will be there th “moral’ The power be only a power the alleged far as Shar is concerned. is that is not h Japan acting in with the proposed Le: refore we are not in favor o 1. The insignificance of the « been repeated Ic intuns, many times. ( and she has gained not apan gained, in the acquire Shantung, too much for her war? Ostensibly she has. icve that she is misreprese to by tters as she seems be clearing her skirts return to China her lost prov Japan threaten if > Why if why did to from the League she dic w have the province rk so hard for it she within few that it a mor J enter zive esident Wilson admits bought with Shantung. to our nothing, she had already ough ung be- =ood ague. f the lause *hina lost hing. ment part We nting pretty promising ince. with- could 1 she intended 1ths? apan League and that she, at practical- the same time, promised to gi There is something the be Japan's. wrong President’s fault, What not to have obtained light on ch discussed subjects from ference. Possibly further i tion by the Foreign Rela imittee will As further far give us tion it now is, as a; ve it here. but is the an- two the nves- tions satis- s we are concerned, the score is about cven Sco ina bugaboo and score one for the vat que (1 hay tha cov With ban holc avid fror cou the the hea | stat the The mor sion of and our eral every or 1 in the fenc deey bric re one for the lLeague in the tion of Amc R ionists in the developinent ¢ the “forsake er contradiction anent The up the nese problem. wily Jap e some cards his sieeve, t is no reason for forsaking enant. THE UNITED STATES AND MEXICO. an armed dits responsible of for the r ling two United States ators, with aviators retur m a scouting expedition into ntry of the near-enemy, and troubles between ourselves Mexicans rapidly approachir d, there comes a report e Department that our polic future is to be a “bare-fisted" re is to be no more re “after you, old thing,” ex mutual sentiment betwee the ones who ature re presuming to the extent the Mexica good n of underhanded slaps in week or so. The hose of them with whom we = contact—have put themsely class of the cats on the e who howl .themselves into )est consciousness when kbhats are unavailable, and ref force pursuing from t fooling, clim- rica’ eser- e Jap- must But the the ent Army ning the with and ng a he ey in one. no pres- n us upon sova dark ns— ome in alley our our treat in hurried disorder as soon as we give evic ™ not bats our that that that @ 8] the direction, mee ribl If i som murder sou dow who persons responsible. kinc be & thir has or a the He lence of United of has a supply he States now ¢ of them. opportt ice that it has a supply b intends that es will and to the use wish first ari we mean what we say. will We the slippery bandit giv hance soon ur expedition- into the countr hold-up man Let success is a step that make in us hope and the it it with et a of let accomplished. 1 e example law-brea t does not, stay there ething s is reported from the extr thern part of Mexico, let us m: whole if n the country with ble Army, That that is the i of language the peon ible to understand. g in the his favor, unfortunately opportunity of an small band of hiding himse brush and the hz mountain But pa will be hard to find. u we have to, to get ammunition. zivein rick- I ity is prove bevond dispute hope ry of his will hor- kkers. until o 2me arch our the only will He has every- ; he individual 1f sses. in nies: he had these advantages, and knew it, he We whether Pre mo let's would not attempt his hold have to they sidential get the guilty ¢ are in the hidi That chair or in st remote arroya. is our do it. {ups ones, Mexican the job; FACTS AND FANCIES. Uni him his poy will is a to A A heer al ) Bela Kun ted States, that desires to come to ? We n sure would the ples be nch r Union here does ular alarm strike goodly supply not that Even stock the seem he the movie if they did t of the canned g market.—Baltir to ac rican Ithough the high cost of living v in evidence for many mor inpression both the president ve is that it came to complete surpris nion ost as nefield U Talking about di th who won’t Dyr. nuec lot of New be hap until they Clemenceau riding up Fifth and renewing the days of e are a the sure e all much tors here oods more ha nths, and hem tors, York residents see ave- his l NO JORE- AEOUT THAT kBEL\E\"E ME; t vouth York when Herald. he was onc of us.—New What's the difference between labor and lightning? Give it up? Well, then, lightning never strikes twice in the same place.—Boston Transcript. Shoe dealers are perhaps justificd n fearin it mignt break the heart of the 1d if they charged as much for shoes as they the old foliks at home.—Philadelphia North American wo do “The of L. E publishers Profiteer’s March,” by H. C. not won th= popularity its expected.—Toronto Globe The mittec peace tu ahly that ecches bhefore senate relations com- expedite the means presum- be two one foreign agreed lo ty, which there will where there —Kan: Cit has now was only as Time Two Mas: turers say achusetts shoc that the public for the high cost shoes. is true, we are sure that intentional.—Portland manufac- to blame If this is not is of it Press. The brotherhoods should get fain treatment. But the tail should not be permitted to wag the dog.—Buffalo Evening News FHTY -FIFTY ifty-fifty Kicker Fifty-fifty the Half the And PINNEGAN, negan 's name, the way game. work fo half of it for me. Half the time a-cursin Roarin' like Old Timers Half the time as silent man be. was our was he army dirty you hlue do, s a silent can Here was dressin’ face a splash “Come up: behine And stick I'll teach you mind- Stand up! hlind! God. give me some I'll do a mprtal sin Sergeant up the line, pinkish purple like of madame's wine. Come un! You're away Finnegan, His that belly dam’ in! recruits You're deef as well O patience fty Finnegan his francs— hough of payment wanted any thanks. he had a twenty-spot, Then half of it was yours; The ten he'd split likke as With any Buck to get a shot Of Rhum—which has a pleasing taste and cheers a well as was liberal with Never back nor 1f as not cures! Fifty-fifty and Finnegan was hated, loved, feared, Coal Box humped him off, and then he w revered That's the way it always goes— IU's after yvou are dead, Friends vours who once foes, Buddies praise And chisel above your Until a are were vou to your foes out a monument broken head! Fifty-fifty Finnegan is absent out leave He's struttin’ ‘round in his chevrons on Tellin' off the first Of angels on the Policin’ up around the Busy in the afternoon Postin’ winged sentinels e throne divine with- Heaven his sleeve, platoon line, with moon, around LLIAM V. V. STEPHE Engineers, U. S. A, in York Times. 11th top | played | ¢ day (From the Herald of that Date) 25 YEARS AGO | August 20, 1891, Kenny won the German Bantist cvening. J. T 0’Connor Sunday his family in New Haven. Thomas Brydy and Daniel spent Stnday at Savin Rock N. M. Cohen spent Sunday family at Central Park, West E. N. Stanley of the First pank, hds returned from an Long 1sland D. A. Niven ning from his trip in (he Adirondacks, 1. H. Johnston, of Wood Co., is spending Massachusetts, Mr. and East Main strect, Walnut Beach, Milford William Weld, of dry goods store, left with his fanily for A camping pariy mornin the following: Bert Dyson, Ired Forrest, F | Jonn Will AT by the Saturday quilt raffled 1 socieiy or spent with Sdwards with his Haven. Natior at vned henting ret Satunday nd fishing the hi City Coal vacation & Drs. BN of to Humphrey, on a trip . Humphrey's this morning shore. town the ieft Andrews, L For Farmington. of and Porter National Happenings, attack torped: Japanese have entered W 1ei-Wei and forts—Inemy 2 hand- pane onzhold submarine -] to ~Despite the hine and mines the harbor reconnoitere:d but tie the up. in a n Sister leep waking Jumped express— Was of umford- the c a few ational snicide, front of New York respected citizen nealth thought to he rrived from urope after his death New Bedford has over | idle—22 mills closed i 2 Sunday Sen tuse— 13,000 hands Prohibitions. (New Haven Massachusetts is indulging in a pute which well illustrates reductio ad absurdum of the bluc-law of legislation. We take it that the one are the staid gua dians of the laws that be, while on the other are the golfiacs who don’t see any good on why thy 1ouldn't be permitted to take care of them- selves Sun according to reasonable self-imposed ions which serve throughout the rest of the week The delightfully ridiculous argument appears to over what constitutes indul- ging sports on the Sabbath. Here recently was an inoffensivc who with some difficulty “knock out flies” to the customary istance one fellow-sportsinan A county judge found the guilty of violating the and visited the penalty for that vio- lation upon him. Now the nice ques- | tion is raised of whethe: a man who is playing golf by himself on Sunday is violating the law. Not a great while | ago a Middlesex county judge ruled that driving a around cou on Sunday without competition not the equivalent of en game and was therefore not of the quaint of the state the knowledge that tak bat and ball in hand and knoc! ‘em ouf is all wrong. and natu ally the sportlovers of Massachuseits to whose our forefathers fled from oppression, on pins and heedles cannol help but won- der how progre would be Tadel this sort of thing to its logzical conclusion. From the preving eye of such laws as life constituted to nothing would be | afe, not ever, the subtle sport of | matching for the extra hunk of Sun- cake. Tfhese must be stirring times in histéric Massachusetts. Journal Courier.) dis- prefty order on side) rea on 1y the same strict re- he exactly in vouth managed himself of Worcester to without as at least yvoung Sunday man law a [ a Wi in viola- aging a tion laws But ing | ing there is shores One much carryinz is 1y s minutes the | | | outing at | : for Twin Lakes, consisting of =i and of | S operate in | OF BAY STATE FACES NEW CAR STRIKE Public Trustees to Stand miy by Wage Award of National War Labor Board. Boston ‘stand Labor the must pay in this year to announced yesterday tr the Isastern Railway company In a 15 local trustees AU s, firmly 20. the wage —Intention National award, by $1,000,000 our men,’ to War which by Board’ public more wages * owas by istees of letter to t unions called he presidents of of employes, the men '‘to protecting an outrage of the that on ith in m us public f wilful repudiation It was read at men such as award.” the letter at which the whether to a War Labor the men approxi- hour less than Boston by requested meetings tonight consider be are to the Board & mately emy | cept award. The arded to 10 loyes cents an = the the vilway obtained independent arbitration A sub-committee of board the ISastern employes answered the conference Street Railway trustees’ lecter there had been union to abide the War Labor the trustees to of the that the e by a stater 1ent agreement the by by decision Board f hind this Failure them fact, it James H. ar Men's graphed to Detroit that sted on the tem and that needec o elves was responsible was said Vaney, union, inter counsel for t vesterday tecle- tional officers itical situation e; Bastern company’s “action of some kind” It was reported (he indicate the men to vote strike at eys- was s cgram that likely w for a ACQUIT CHAPMAN OF SLAYING “DOT” Deliberate Ten Minutes—Jury Finds That He Couid Not Have Fired Fatal Shot. Norfolk va, jury minutes Chapman of the murder of Mrs. Doro- thy Schwabh in the corporate court here vesterday afternoon. Character witnesses introduced the defense included Frank A. Morey, former mayor of Lewiston, Me., Charles. Le Maire, the present mayor, and other citizens Chapman had been a resident this city five weeks when Mrs. They 20, It acquit Aug. toolk to Eller @ D, by of chwab were together on tha was killed evening of April 2 til near midnight committed about hedge in Blmwood cemetery. Chap- man declared that he and Mr Schwab were attacked by a highws man. That the man shot him (Chap- man) first and dragged Mrs. Schw ome distance and then shot her. Her hody was found with a bullet through the neck. Chapman had a hullet wound in his right hip. He was in Vincent's hospital for three The bullet has never been ex- from 9 o'clock un- The murder midnight was near a weck tructed. It w that Chapman himself in the entered. W pert qf New Yo Zould not the wound in contended could not spot wher by the defense have shot the bullet Jones, a firearms ex- testified that Chap- have possibly inflicted his man hin An oyster produces 400,000 eg nually, but of these only 400 or Jeach maturit, an- less y. a Elevated | [ Galloway for | he | About the No doubt there are American citi- ens in New Britain that had chance to study and .. the great men Ireland furni for the cause of independence in loved republic of the United States With limited scores informa tion I will endeavor ‘o give you names of these great men. The ary veriod first overt act gle for independence; massacre in which of the first to Killed: of the fort at New Castle and s of gun powder and 15 cannon many small arms used later at Hill was th2 work of Majoi and John Langdon, irishmen. Foir which act they hoth elected to the Continental con- gress and Stllivan was appointed Lrigadier-general of the northern divi- sion of the army: was attorney-gener- al and thrice governor of Hamp- shire, his brother was governor of Massachusets. The New Hampshire regiment was almost all Trish and led by an Irishman. John Stark was one of the most renowned mien in New England while General Knox, another | Irishman, v Washington's trusted adviser. Of eight under Washington at the first of war held in Cambridge in were lrishmen. Richard ery and John Sullivan and fully half of the active chiefs at the arm) vere of Irish birth or descent. When congres. ordered Pennsyivania, in 1775, to raise several regiments the colonols commissioned were Anthony Vayne, Stephan Moylan, William Irv- William Thompson, Walter John Shea and Richard But- Irish. The * regiments of Stwert, Irving and Butler formed part of (he Pennsylvania line also the Irish brigade. They were the picked men of the whole army and were sent by Washington to guard West Point on the discovery of Ar- nold’s treasen. Colonel Fitzgerald, an Irishman, was Washington's favorite. Aide-de-camp Richard McAllister, an Irishman, commanded the Battalion of Pennsylvania and among its of Kennedy, Major McClosky, all Irish man, Joseph Reed, private to Wasiington, to whom officers offered a bribe of £50,000 and the best office in the gift of the king if he would desert the almost hopeless cause of the coloni His reply “I'm not worth purchasing, but king of Greal Britain not enough to do it." This patriot was appointed adjutant-general by con He was clected chief justice of Pennsylvania, three times its governor general. Walton Stwert, a mere boy, fearless fighter and noted the handsomest man in the Revolutionary war, was horn in Ireland. Andrew Pickens, who saved the day at Butaw and whose and grandson filled the governor's seat of South Carolina Andrew Porter, the hero Trenton, Princeton and Gern.antown and | whose three sons were governors of Michigan, Pennsylvania and secretary | of war in Tyler’s cahinet. David Ram- , soldier and historian; Gen al Robinson of Deiawarc: General Spaight, who fought at Camden, aft- erwards governor North Carolina, was his son, General Morgan, the hero of Cowpens, who with 300 Irish- men defeated the famous General Carleton and one thousand regulars John Kelly, who covered Washing ton’s retrez from Princeton: Alexan- der Martime, colonel at Brandywine, afterwards governor of North Caro- lina; General Lewis, (General Rache | Fermey and General Butler, all fa- | mous fighters and Irishmen. In 1779 was asked the foliowing questions: What, in the service of congress, were they chiefly composed of, native Americans or was the great- part of them English, Scotch or lrish? Galloway answered the names and places of {heir nativity with precision. Scarcely one-quarter were natives of America, ahout one- half were Irish, the other English and Scotch. You see there were no Scotch-liish at that time. George Washington Parke Custis, Washing- ton's adopted son, has left the follow ing authentic statemeirt: Of the oper- atives of the war, I mean the soldiers, up to the coming of the Kremnch, Ire- land had furnished the ratio whatever then honored he said be the service of the Sons of Erin in the war of inde pendence. Let the shamrock be en- twiaed with the laurels of the revolu- tion and truth and justice guiding the pen of history inscribed on the tablets of American remembrances; eternal gratitude to Irishmen. And again on July 20, 1862, Mr. Curtis said: “T shall speal American it is not Irish- men alone that have congregated to | this interesting bidding, not Catholics alone, for therc are many here that worship at other than the Apostle Shrine. Tis a millenium of feeling wher: various tribes of men have as- sembled in the love of one another to express their hatred of oppression and their sympathy for the cppressed And with such revelations these can tell yvou will you Americans talk of interferance and withhold voices from a general acclaim which should thunder in this land till cchoes reach the Emerald Isle in a prayer for her deliverance. If there is an Amer- ican who does not fight for the wrongs of that country whicl robly con- tributed to the establishment of our rights | pronounce him recreant to the feelings of virtue. honor and ituds. In closing 1 desiregto few questions. Why is it that Irishmen and nearly all Irish- cans know absclutely nothing the hisiory of the land of th ers. lreland has the most history of any nation in the She held aloft the blazing torch art, sclence and literature when lurope was in darkness it schoolhousc of Europe nea sand years before America was dis- covered. It fought and won for Eng- | land on land and sea her every battle | for six hundred years. It swept Brit- | ish power from the American colonies | and it is dstined with God’s help to save and protect from the polluting hand of England the Green, White, Orange flag of the Irish republic Yours respectfully, F. 1. FREEDOM, Per M. J. Kelly. COMMUNICATED. | never the great work this be- my o revolution of the strug of the Boston Patrick Ca rr was one bhe apture zure and Bunk- John both were or New s most generals | council Montgom- two one- all vne, Second volunteers, | icers were. Clark and It was Colonel Captain an Irish- secretar the British was, the is rich sons of est as ar o its S0 grat ask some Ameri- about ir fath- glorious world of all the | a thou- a was v PARIS FEARS RETURN . OF “FLU” EPIDEMIC Prench Scientists Discover Symptoms of Return »f Dreaded Malady an Issue Warning to Public. Aug. 2 u's epi in Eur selentific ~ lescenée Spanish in- Paris The rect of s lemic of fluenza ope is feared here d aded I'rench have men discove return symptoms dre preparing, with the French Academy of Medi warning to the publi influenza and the malady aid cine, Although throughout to issue the the whole the spr or less persisted last wnd of winte' and through ing summer in nothin eviden and Switzerland number Scient fled by buted country a more like o except serious degree, real epidemic was in Europe the t million e in southern where btal of cases n was two men herc are ny attri- one in how the ion hav- ip under the for disease and causes in Lets its recrudescencc are disputed by the f another. Theories that cause the been shown and flou very J\![r:vr'v“ climatic that the of not less severe one part than in German universal grip few years. tending to atmospheric conditions are are not accepted by one of Medicire that the germ hes well conditions and the sec it of Academy ing breeds as ravages in another professor scourge predicts 2 in the next FREE STUDENT ACCUSED OF MURDER ~ Cazenovia Insufficient Court Finds Evidence of Crime in Habeas Corpus Proceedings. yracuse, b Aug 0 Donald Fether of Los Angeles, student ak Cornell unliversity, charged with mur- in with tho death of Miss Hazel Crance of Ithaca, in Cayu- #a Lake on July 18, was ordered re- leased on the ground of insufficlent evidence by Supreme Court Justice Michael H. Kile; Cazenovia last night, Justlce Kiley reviewed the evidahes yesterday afternoon in the proessd- ings on a writ of habeas corpus. Au- thorities of Tompkins county had er- dered the student held for the &8p= tember grand jury at Ithaca. Atker- neys for the accused claimed that thé proceedings under which Fether was being held were illegal and that as yét there was no evidence of crime. I"ether had known Miss Cranee but a few days when he invited her for a canoe ride on Cayuga Lake, from which she never returned. He claim- ed the boat was accidentally upset and that he was unable to rescue his companion, His trousers were found near the spot with two krots in them a foot or so apart. The prosecuting authorities cmphasized their ariu- ment on this feature of the evidence. There were marks on the canoe #id the au‘horities alleged these indicated a strugzle BLAZES WINS GRAB BAG Ral Parr’s Brown Colt Captur W. der connaction ture Event at Saratoga., Running in Sensational Style. Saratoga, brown Star, to Aug. 20. of Wrack Blazes, the and Blazing belonging to Ral Parr, was put real test yesterday and he came out of it with fiving colors. He won the Grab Bag Handicap in sensation- al style and left far behind him such good juveniles as Walter M. Jeffords’ Kinnoul and W. R. Coe's Cleopatrad and Cinderella. It was the third con- -utive victory for Blazes during the meeting and he accomplished his task vesterday in the same easy fashion in his two prewious races. At the end of the six furlong route he was cased up two lengths ahead of Cleoq patra, which beat Kinnoul four lengths for place honor So impressive was his race that Wil- liam Garth, the veteran trainer who developed him, declared that was now ready to take the scalp the great Man o' War. Blazes little rolt but sturdy. muscular youngster, posses- sing zreat speed and no end of cour- age and stamina. Early this springs he was stricken with the “flu” and a skin disease which would have caused the averaz thoroughbred to refuse to do anything but loll around his all. Not so with Blazes. De- spite his illness he always wanted to be on the and Mr. Garth let him have his to a certain extent He gave him few breezes and ade the veteran trainer said yesterday he showed great speed while he il a of o he is a g0 way a was R SPONSIBLE. Trouble JAPANE! Soldiers Provoked With Chi- nese at Manchur 17, (By Associatéd Press.)—The official report to the Chinese government regarding the clash between Japanese and Chinese soldiers July 19 at Chang Hung. Manchuria, it was announced in goy- ernment cireles today indicates that the Japanese provoked the troubleg The Chinese claim that the fact that Japenese soldiers with fixed havonets and loaded rifles forced an entry into the Chinese military encampment shows that they were the aggressors. The Chinese repart says 18 Japanese were killed and 17 nded and 12 Chinese were killed wounded and 100 are missing. Peking, Ausg. the on wou 14 Electric apparatus has becn invent, ed by a Swiss that employs magnetis to pack nails in boxes in regular lay ers and thus have about half the space required when they are placed loosely in Kegs.

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