OCR Text |
Show wet. If the roadway la full or holes or badly rutted, the drag should be ured once when the ground I soft Mid slu.hy. This la particularly applicable before a cold spell In winter, when It la possible to ao prepare the turf ace that it will freeze smooth. Not infrequently conditions are met which may be overcome by a slight change In the manner of hitching. Shortening the chain tend to lift the front slab and make the cutting flight, while a longer hitch causes the front slab to sink more deeply into the earth and act on the princi- Road Building. (Continued Krona Laut Week) nf the alab pr-mlt- chain at thi the earth to drift past the of the drag. The other end of the chain should he paaaed through a hole m the opixwite end of the front ib and held by a pin paused t (trough a (be 'Roosevelt Hot n-- l a rv link. For ordinary purpoaea, t!:e hitch ahould he ao made that the unloaded drag alii follow the team at an angle (f about 45 degree. The teamahoula be driven with one horae on either tide of the wheel track or rut the full length of the portion to be dragged, and made to return In the ame manner over the other half ol the roadway. Such treatment will move the earth toward the center of (he roadway and raiae It gradually above the aurruunding level. The beat rcault have been oh-- . talned by dragging roada once each way after each heavy rain. In somel caaea, however, one dragging every three or four week ha been found aufflclent to keep a road In good con- ples of a plow. If a furrow of earth la to be moved, i be doubletree should be attached close to the ditch end of the drag, Mid the driver ahould stand with one foot on the extreme forward end of the front slab. Conditions are so varied In different localities, however, that It la quite impossible to lay down specific rules. Certain sections of a roadway will require more attention than others, because of steep grades, wet weather spring, soil conditions, exposure to sun and wind, washes, etc. There la oii condition, however, in which special attention should be given. Clay rcadi under persistent draggings frequently become too high In the center. This may be corrected by dragging the earth towards the center of right-han- 1 dition. When the aoll la inolat, but not tllcky, the drag doe Its beat work. Aa the soil In n Held will bake if ploughed wet. ao the road will bake If the drag la used on It when It I uf M il MILFORD, UTAH. V -R O -- P. P A K - T la The above named springs, while not extensively known to the world, ure very well known to tho jieople of Reaver county for the virtue of their curativo powers. These springs are to the xH)ple of Milford as the spring Silosse was to the people of Jerusalem in the year one. For the Iast 30 years there has not been one case of any description of a disease treated by the waters from this spring that has not been benefited and cured. Rheumatism, inflammatory, yields to treatment by this water like ice to the August sun. While this water lias been analysed and shows the predominating ingredients to be salt, there is still some hidden virtue that the chemist can not pronounce by the common form of a test in analyzing water. This water, while mineralized, is much different to any other rainerul or hot water springs, being a bright blue color and as soft as rain water. No matter how intense the pain, caused by rheumatics, it must yield to the first bath the patient takes takes after reaching the springs. The springs are located eleven miles northeast of Milford, in Reaver county, and are nicely fitted up to accommodate ten or twelve people. The prices are moderate, being from $2 to $3 jer day; special arrangements can be made by the month. The springs are reached by the Salt Lake Route to Milford and by taking a team from there to the springs. Why these springs have not been advertised ana brought to the notice of suffering humanity is something unusual. For years people from the state have been visiting springs east, west, north and south, with inconveniences ana heavy expense, when right at homo there is a spring without equal for curativo powers in this or any other country. Ten years ago a Mr. Jacobs wrote a letter to Air. Wm. Armstrong, then at Smyths ranch, that he would send a friend who was suffering with rheuinnticH for him to take to the springs for treatment. Mr. Armstrong met the patient at the train on a Sunday morning and lmd to carry him to his house. After breakfast he hitched up his team, arranged a cot in the rear end of his buggy nnd he and his wife drove him to the springs and left him to be cared for by a colored lady, and drove back to the ranch. The following Sunday Mr. Armstrong and his wife, anxious to learn how the sufferers condition was, drove to the spring to see how their friend's patient was getting along, and on reaching the spring found him out chopping wood and the following week the taticnt walked eight miles to the train and went home cured. K j the latest and most accurate science f of removing of all Acut- - without d of .r . ) 95 Me iter cent diseases, . I warn muttac to man F .ffcnt g from I'.'pijepju .b tlstr (.nmbago, Slatfea, V curas so'.- ia, Constipation, Sioigh... - vo- - j. in- - . rou-b- - rr any othe organic din.- ,, Ftaiale Cuiit-V- , j, that rt is permanent reilbl - .nln your Ner-uMioa- e, lly Five years ago John Taylor of Frisco, from exposure, was taken down with inflammatory rheumatism and in a few days his entiro ierson had swollen to twice its original size, suffering with pain and helpless. Mr. Henry Osborn of Frisco arranged a spring wagon with a bed, louded him in and drove twenty miles to the springs, lie was carried nnd placed in the hath tub, and after remaining in the water 30 minutes was taken out, stood up and with the aid of one lerson, walked to his room and in ten days was cured nnd attending to his daily labor. Four years ago J. L. Moore, then assistant freight and passenger agent for the S. 1., I A. & S. L. route, after being treated by the best physicians in Salt Lake City for two weeks without relief, was taken to these springs and cured in one day, being able to be at his desk three days from the time ho started to the springs, nnd it 1ms been said that the springs did not only euro him of rheumatism, hut made a preacher out of him, at least he is now a minister of the gosiel in California. There is scarcely a month in the year that just such cases as the above are not cured by these springs, ns well as a great- many other ailments too numerous to mention. It has been the custom of the people of Reaver county to visit these springs with a camping outfit for nil ailments, when they 'could not find relief from medicnl treatment. It is known to have cured rheumatics, eczema, catarrh, dropsy, hay fever, urinary troubles, asthma, gout, female diseases, blood oison, kidney diseases, scurvy, delirium tremens, piles, dandruff, lost vigor, and all kinds of blood and skin diseases. It has only been quito recently that the springs have been fitted up to take care of nnd accommodate the public and are now prepared to make an old man young. These springs can be vouched for by any person that has ever visited them for treatment, nnd there have been very many who have offered to testify to the good these springs have done for people, and any person requiring treatment to be derived from hot springs can in no place find water more curativo than the waters from these snrings. There is nothing artificial about them and no need heating of water or steam. I h without drags o' jtlon. CHIROPRACTIC (pronounced Kl-prak-tik- ) la a ad- - jee baaed upon tue naneat of pru triples bee ause P. E. Erickson, O. C. it ati kes direct1 at the original cause of the disease, realising that if the tauae . removed the dls- -' ease must vanish. Let me tell you how am. wr . Consultation Free. DR. P. E. ERICKSON, Chiropractor, the road twice, and away from once. There question as to the this in first either Is no of omy plement, or In operation. road-makin- g In six counties it econim- cot Dr. Le Roys French Tansy lu Kansas in 19o6 the cost of maintaining ordinary earth road, without the 34Vk 231 Constitution Building, Main St.. Salt Lake City, Utah. okfVMlAli Tablets. THATS ALL aid of the split-lo- g drag, averaged 912.50 a mile. These figures were furnished by Professor W. C. Hoad, of the University of Kansas, who secured them from official records of the counties. Some figures furnished by F. P. Sanborn and R. H.AIshton. general manager of the Chicago A Northwestern railroad, have revealed the wonders of this simple device. Mr. Sanborn said the least expense per mile per annum for split-lodragging was (1.50 the greatest a little over 98, and the average expense per mile for five and a half miles a little over 93. 1 have lived along this road all my life, and never In forty yeara have I seen It freer from mud and duht, despite the fact that during the season we have experienced the extremes of weather conditions. The testimony of Mr. Alshton is equally strong. Learning that a township In Iowa had been making an Investigation of the split-lodrag and had been experimenting .with It for a year on twenty-eigh- t mllea nf highway, he sent an agent to secure information. It was reported that although the town board had paid the cost of making the drags and of hiring men to operate them, the total expense for one year averaged but 92.40 a mile, and the roads were reported to have been like a race track" the greater portion of the year g S2.00l Mall Orders promptly filled. DRUG AB DOULL CO. The Owl Corner. Market and Main Sts. and tha Post- - office next door South. The Syracuse Easy Washing Machine THE WOMAN, OMVrfiri the CLOTHES, iJMVJUkJ THE MONEY. lllrS g A Straw Clock. . An extraordinary addition has been made to the exhibition of Inventions now being held In Berlin. A shoemaker named Wegner, living in Straa-burg- , sent In a clock of the grandfather shape, nearly six feet high, made entirely of straw. The wheels, pointers, case and every detail arc exclusively of straw. Wegner baa taken 15 yeara to construct this atrange piece of mechanlam. It keeps perfect time, a Berlin report says. r, ' Read Oar Advertisements. Hiva aa Hotel Sign. Over the doorway of a house called the Beehive Inn. Grantham, England, la a hive in which-bee- s store their honey. This is believed to be the only living" public house algn In England. Read Our Ads. It is Profiabel Automobile Tlrts Vulcanised. Bicycle Repairing and SundrlM. Baby Carriage Tire Put on. All Work Guaranteed. Osbornes M E. 4TH SOUTH ST. Boll, IMS. Ind., 1470, SALT LAKE CITY. Largest Consignment of National Cash Registers Ever Received in thi West Prices on Registers Reduced from 10 per cent to 60 per cent - The above cut shows the advance shipment of' 150 National Cash Registers ordered las February by the local agent, Mr. Oscar Croshell, 221 Main Street. The balance of the rerfistPra will arrive from now on daily until the entire order is filled. Nearly all the resistor Wn in the cut are already sold and distribution will be made as as rapidly possible. About one-ha- lf of the registers are for the summer resorts, Wandamere the Salt Palar Saltair, Lagoon and Ogden Canyon Resort have purchased registers to be delivered this weeH Registers always in stock. GROSHELL, 221 Main Street, for Salt Lake Second-Han- d 5 VwP OSCAR Send Catalog. City. I |