Browns WI Tweedsmuir Community History, August 1972-December 1972, p. 4

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/ é In use for 5400 years .____â€"sssmss 3 ; 4 *A e e > 1 N "#4 ‘fiiw ; | stt & on TL â€" P [ ' N geall _ [ 4 A er | Nails"stil - world TtogeTrnel h Ned ; a&) N § U B & / : &Â¥ t * 2 € €7.3% 2 * , § _2 ‘ | » y â€" are ‘designed . with o e 4 F en hese are still They * « $ ~WK§T§’INGTON â€" Ever a power pounder that makes vage them from the ashes. Nails su‘rjul_ar ]t':yitng floors beâ€" screw threads, ridges, bszi | ' since the cearliest. carpenter _ its own nails fr tached Yyears ago in the face of atâ€" preferred in ints selâ€" â€" and square edges to make it ; «mashed his thumb for the first ,S.l > n.a'l sregtaltaci‘s tacking Scottish highlanders, _.cause their squaredpom_ harder for them to ',work: out. { time, man has had plenty to °* dyte and sold in part as souvenirs dom split ‘floorboarlds: ennyâ€" _ They may be blued like a Sunâ€", â€" ‘say to nails. That‘s a far ery from the for up to $7.50 each. Nails still are sol« l?alrjlce a â€"barrel, or galvanized to make â€" i "Goodbye!" is what he is PODZe nails used in EgyPt _ Until a Frenchman invented weight sizes. ,I;"rvg‘ss lnd‘ is | them rustproof! & _ ~Â¥ saying todayâ€"at least to someâ€" 3004E 3400 B.C. The Bible is _ a wire nailâ€"making machine in _ threeâ€"inch nail W3S 200 :0 " ppoy are even sterilized hE | | . nails, Affter 5,400 years of fU! of references to nails. 1838, all nails were mad® BV | Collto what it cost for 100 of _ cause biisy carpenters Babitit s holding. civilization â€" together, Nails used in the crucifixion hand, hundreds of thousands that‘s what 1 ally hold nails in theu-mou%hs ‘ ‘nails are being yanked from _ Were believed to be about six by American colonists around â€" them. s «e made ‘or eue troubles can ,sm];- come ,: «many of their traditional O eight inches long, squareâ€"_ winter firesides to stretch the Today nals iron, . and. up: A few years ago surgeons . 3 ; roles. sided,. and wrought by a family income. ; steel, aluml_léum,bo; rds, they â€" investigating a carpenter‘s & w 1. Spaceâ€"age glues and fastenâ€"_ Placksmith. They resembled These cut nails,. fashioned _ copper. Best ‘t’s_ concrete and _ stomach paing discovered he | * & â€" ‘ers made of plastics, exotic alâ€" â€"th¢ seven tons of nails dug up from strips of iron, were so are banged in onail- gun powâ€" _ had swallowed 160 nails of asâ€" _ _ loys, and even everyday met. 2 few years ago from a Roâ€" â€" valuable old barns and houses even steel byblal k cartridges. _ sorted sizes. ~igte. > : _ _ als are replacing nails in MAN fort abandoned. 1,900 _ were once burned down to salâ€" ered by -23 52 j , ax‘~ stt * some old jobs and taking on â€" PA ug 2.) 14 7A se it w n e vaee o id y e new ones beyond reach of the . 3 % : : most ingeniously d e sig n e d | nail, the National Geographic : Society says. : 2. ; But the old standby is far from being dead as a doornail § A (used in the M;gm%ge(gito ; stud and reinforce heaty front C i+ & doors). As many nails as ever . are being made in the United > Statesâ€"340,000 tons in 1971â€" 7 Pz * ;s f with nearly as many imported y "ad e y â€"!â€" E SA a â€"293,000 â€" tonsâ€"mostly _ from F4 + . " E Japan. . es \ _A Je Yet, as a sign of the times, ft _ _ _~Sweden a A P e 7 ' new ways have cast a shadow ~ > 3 +. A er & y of sorts on the ageâ€"old tradeâ€" > â€" * $t2e doz." & engek _ _ _U.S.S.R. ~~@ mark image of house buildâ€" _ # *A * 5 _ _ â€" 34¢ a doz. : | ing: a carpenter shoving his _ * es *4 mss : ad» â€"~ hand into a nail keg for more E_ < fi 22 o â€" P . ammunition for his hammer.., 4s ' ~â€"â€" M | | Today, nail kegs turn up a >.â€" o_ < Q s : $ 3 only in antique shops; nails e - # K now come in cardboard carâ€" | f ~ $s 3 e â€" °§ e tons and may be packed parâ€"~ - h se â€"s allel like toothpicks so their . . ~>% * # f points won‘t nick carpenters‘ â€" g â€" ies ies y Switzerland 1 fingers. & : & | s .~. is2 > . 89¢ a doz. [ / The traditional claw hamâ€" | : en e â€" : : is er k ~i > mer is sometimes replaced by . ] a ; 5 2 § . 4 : $ 3 ‘-';? & y S 2 °* 1>." rege ,::.:7" â€"_U.K. #f . ]ta"y :? § oo o ~40¢a doz. ( o e 2ez &¢ ( . 19¢ a doz. > *ses s ‘ 7 France f f %g 2 35â€" ~ & k ‘ 84¢ a doz. â€" s * SS _ ' » â€" a ""‘ & ..» a _.; .- id :': 4"_‘ & *3 4 es ‘:‘ & I. . > e â€" | x â€" e > M t h e a id = hiz â€" ¢ ~ B = £ y s I \ e e _ _ / NOl’Way § 6 i‘w.’.ri{;.- '~ F <E2: $1.01 a doz. in ~. * o4 Km Tiz n L . Canada, ,# : 49¢ a doz. > s _ , & R.. : 3 E â€"â€" _ M | § es :. § 3 â€"â€"â€" W k. i: Oe mt _ & s & .;‘,,!‘f;.'i;':.‘ E E. & . : > t > > 5s j K C ;:’ oo ons r_~ii’_ _ o o c & * > â€" ~* . ol _' ;‘; $ se s .A \‘\ 2 ~ ’, * ‘

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