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Show THE TREMONT TIMES. Published Every Thursday At PINEULES March 3rd, 1879. Thfre are many different usu-SB- Jr kii..i-plows- . Co 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE B. Designs sketch and CALL, Lawyer, County Attorney. Practices in all the Courts. Office : Couht House, Biigham, Utah. Doth Phone. p. o. Box 972 Trade Marks Anyone sanrMng C. my whether an on Patent! Miit free. Oldttt Rgucy for aecui tug patents. Patent! luitwn through Muiin ,fc ( u. receive J" MWHfflfc wtihuut ciiarge, lnthe Scientific American. 111 nat rated weekly. Ijirtrest of any scientific lournaX Terms, $8 a i nniiuin, fu duiu ujmi newsdealers. Suite (., IT St- - Wuhiucion, 5 and 6 Commercial Logan f?Cn.361Bro.dwa.NpW Ynrlf &6 NEBEKER Lawyers A handsomely Branch & Bl ck Utah. Phono 70. I), o- P.O. Box 51 &- -' S. F. CrlKLSTIiNSEN 3 the Man Who Put Harness on Steam. six-foo- h self-mad- e plain-feature- d g g c. t Scientific Optician El E8 TESTED WSXJt With L.C. Christcusen and Sous Brighum City, Utah. And cloth-shearin- HANDBOOK NEBEKEfi, HART COOPER A curious and fearsome object, the by little, to the device's effectiveness; sight of which made women swoon and, in 1822, an English miner, C and set children to screaming, plowed Stephenson, succeeded in making tho its way through the streets of London first locomotive along modern lines. on day in 1S03. It was called a In 1825 the first railroad, with one or "steam locomotive," and consisted of his locomotives drawing a train ovei i carriage bearing one its tracks, was opened. This was an epoch-makinenof the then new event in the History of t Progress. The public was forced, regines; a boiler, a single cylinder and a great stack from luctantly, to admit that the invention which gushed a torrent of black had come to stay. To England belongs smoke and fire. Guiding this weird the credit of this wonderful invention. Peter Cooper was a contrivance was a gigantic, New man Richard Trevithick. Yorker, born in New York city in 1791. When the practical use of steam He had little more education than did was still a new thing. Sir Isaac New- Trevithick. As a boy he worked for ton had prophesied that some day this his father at making hats. When 17 odd power would propel wagons, tak he learned the coach-makintrade. ing the place of herses. But no one This later acquirement was destined took much stock in the forecast. Near- later to be of use to him along a ly 100 years had passed before the broader line of endeavor. He, like idea was taken up. Then, in 1769, a Trevithick, was a natural inventor. A scientist, Cugnot by name, made a machine, a patent glue road wagon, driven by steam. Hut it and many other unique inventions was not practicable, and was regarded started him on the road to fortune. He merely as a plaything. It frightened had already won fame as a man of horses so badly that a man with a red original ideas when the question of Mag was always sent on ahead of it to the locomotive's importation came up. warn riders and drivers. Fifteen years Cooper, who had recently entered a later British inventor, Murdock, the iron business in Maryland, at once made a second of these steam road set to work on plans of his own along wagons. This, too, was a failure. Both this line. His knowledge of coach Cugnot's and Murdock's devices were as well as his trend for origmaking, more the ancestors of the automobile inality and natural deftness, came to than of the locomotive. his aid. In 1830 he built, from deIt was not until 1800 that the real of his own making, the first lo- "father of the locomotive" made his signs c o m o 1 v e ever Thmk'. first test along this line. He was Trein nmnuiactured vithick, and he had already made a gine That Saved this The country. Road. reputation by adding important imBaltimore & Ohin provements to Watt's steam engine. railroad was building, and the road's Trevithick. besides being a giant in promotors were in doubt as to stature, was the "strong man" of whether there wouldgrave be a reasonable Giant Who Made Cornwall. He was profit on their investment. Cooper the champion box- demonstrated the First possibility of builder, wrestler and ing railroads on small capital and weight-lifte- r of the saved the Baltimore & Ohio from district Although he was too bankruptcy. His first locomotive was to acquire education, he was stupid a me- called the "Tom Thumb," and it led chanical genius. He perfected a the way for America's supremacy in ensteam engine gine building. and made the first locomotive. This Nor was this the greatest service was a rickety, noisy, clumsy affair. Nevertheless, it was the forerunner of Peter Cooper rendered to his country. every locomotive since made. It could Remembering how hard he had been carry, in a sort of chaise, 15 passen- iorced to struggle in order to gain an gers. Trevithick described it in his education and instruction along Indusapplication for a patent as "a steam trial lines, he resolved that New Yorkers of the future should have an easengine in a propelling carriage." ier method of obtaining these than Rut after proving the practicability any he himself had known. With this of his discovery Trevithick was compelled to give up the idea of making it end in view, he built and endowed, in popular. The public at large sneered 1S57, the great building known as Cooper Union, for the providing of at it, called it a freak, and predicted that it would come to nothing. Never- free teaching in art and science and theless, during the next quarter cen- free reading room and library for the tury other men added at times, little people. , 6 BACKACHE our 0Mfihra fr Sickly Metrutflt is probably iialeinahle. PETER The point of the plow, as it comes but they may all be divided from the factory, turns into the land Subscription rates. into three types, according rho bout of an inch, in either a On year in advance 11,25 shape of the moldboard. One is the walking-ploor a riding-plow- ; that Six months in advance .75 sod plow, with the long sloping mold is, II the straightedge is placed upon 11 50 board, which turns the sod clear nvcr One year not in advance the landside. one end touching the Tll? second has a moldboard of niedi heel of the landside, there will be um slope, which turns the of an inch space between the ftjrrov. upon edge, but does not throw it straightedge and the landside at the H. L. TUCKER, tirely over. The third tvne is a hiuff connection with the share. The point moldboard. which turns the furrow needs to be thus turned to draw the Contractor and Builder, up and thoroughly pulverizes it. plow iijtQ the land and this sidewise Ground TREMONTON, UTAH. when it willcan be well plowed onlyIf urye of the point is. called the laud pulverize landing of the plow. ,jf The Plans Furnished and lEtlmates Made It turns up in chunks thoroughly. and cakes th wing of the share that is, the ou all kinds of wurk. Your patronage land is not properly underdraini ,i point farthest away from the landside solicited. Many farmers are finding that their (W. figure 4), should have a hearing tiled fields are not completely drainci surface in a walking plow to hold up ally relieves the most severe case before morning. PINEULE MEDICINE CO. CHICAGO, U. S. A. For Sale By Tremont-Mercantil- e Bv Albert Payson Terhune m. Trouble, rheumatism and lumbago A dose at bed time n Romances of Progress So Important Is the Exact Shape That the Manufacturers 1904. at the Post office at Tremontoa, mu 11 necessary i maKt wotauoara Utah, nnder tha act uf congress of In Three Layers. for all kidney bladder "" PLOW 1111 Wm. H. Citpwcll, Edit if and Manager. Entered as necond class matter April. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. divides a cere IMTA nirccDCMT V LWTJLIVCllI K,LtJJLO Tremonton, Utah. 30 DAYS' TREATMENT FOR $1.00 K MOLDBOARD Various Parts of a Plow. 1 and are putting in new strings of tile that side of the plow and enable it between the old ones. to run freely and keep level without 8ik1 mixlol. ubuto or kl,'l fr.r rr, r r the The . bottom is plow of the plowman pushing upon the part Inn Iut.I rnn I iu yean' praeOe. ISIR. General Real Estate Business. the implement that does the work. handles. This bearing surface (B, "Juiif, . . r. B MiSlMA r rrw m uuioe . r.. 'Z uu i 1 U figure 3) should extend back Turn the ronuuj. I'utemi wril to Choice Improved Farms in across theplow upon its back and look inches from the corner .of the share. bottom, put a straightedge When the wing wears off, leaving but Bear Rivor Valley a specialty , lengthwise upon the bottom or sole a small bearing surface upon the botof an old plow and of a new one and Easy terms. Call on tom of the furrow at that corner, as tind whether the shares V. dip down at in figure 4, it allows the plow to tip J. FERRY, the point. If the point dips down as toward the furrow. In a riding plow Corinno, Utah. the plow stands in the furrow, the the bearing surface at the wing is point would of course turn un when decreased, giving the share much the plow is inverted, and the Straight- greater angle at that point. This eage will touch the point of the share bearing surface is not needed to hold and the heel of the landside, but the riding-plolevel, because it is there will be a space of about l loaded on wheels and supported in a of an inch between the straightedge rigid position so it cannot tip. In and the landside, where the latter sharpening the share of a walking-plothe share (E, figure 1). This joins it is important to see .that suffidipping down of the point is to make cient bearing surface is given to the the plow go in the ground and it is wing. " NEW HORSES, NEW HARNESS, NEW CARRIAGES, called the suction of the plow. The The plow, as it comes from the facplow as it comes from the factory tory, has Everything First Class and Up to Date. exactly the right curve to should be and generally is the moldboard and share and il the constrjtReasonable Charges. eu so mat it floats freely in the angle at which the furrow strikes the (Copvrighted.) ground, cutting a uniform furrow of face of the plow is changed by the the depth for which the plow is ad- hitch or by unan holding plow at justed. If a walking-plorequires to usual angle, it will not do its best oe forcibly tilted or held in a certain work in the easiest So imporway. position there is something the mat- tant is the exact shape of the plow ter with the implement. In the that the manufacturers find it neces-plow the suction should be twice sary to make the moldboard and as great as in the walking-plow- . The share in three layers (a soft center, suction or dip 6f the point is almost with a hardened layer on each side) to prevent these surfaces from getalways right in the new plow. A big, bearded, farmer-likAfter the plow has been used for ting out of shape when the steel is youth of probanly failing to realize the 24 found himself one importsome time the point often gets worn tempered; and hence the day in 1871 the ance of such a step. Miss necessity Hubbard off or "snubbed un." so that a tor keeping the suction, land and hero of Rrant county, Canada. He was added her plea to her father's. When straightedge laid upon the bottom of wing of the plow in the orieinal Alexander Graham Bell, Scot, who all other means failed she asked the the plow as before would rock over sliape, so that it will not be neces had moved from Edinburgh to the inventor to come tnw tha aiuLiun iw see Dominion the previous year. He had her off the middle (figure 6). Such a plow sary to tilt the share and thus for Philadelphia. change As she was cannot be made to stay at the proper the angle at which it strikes the fur invented a contrivance by which hu- about to in any quantity and for any kind of building by calling on board the train she burst into man speech could be carried across a tears depth in the ground without material- row. and again begged her sweetly increasing It i When the plow is sharpened a single wire and transmitted with per- heart to come ' h " i,n. " the draft to the Quafer city with posed that this section will be cor- - piece of steel should be added (if the fect distinctness for a considerable ner. He yieSded: rected by the blacksmith when he point has worn off much) and tho distance. This "telephone," as young apparatus as well and the telephone sharpens the share, but all smiths do point brought out to its former length. Bell called his invention, was regarded shipped to him-b- y as his luggage was the next train. not give the share point the correct If the farmer will make a record of as a wonderful and highly PRICES QUOTED ON APPLICATION. amusing But only half the battle was won. dip. It is important to see that this the length of the share point when toy. Nothing more. The country folk is done. It will pay well in the sav- the plow is new and measure it turned out by hundreds to witness the Before the telephone could be exhib again ited a committee must A wire had been ing of horseflesh and the securing of after the blacksmith has sharpened first experiment. pass on its merits. It was late in the afternoon stretched from good work to apply the straightedge will the house of Bell's fa be able to know (and to it, he when the tired committeemen reached to an old plow every few weeks and tell the smith) whether the point has ther in the suburbs to the telesrranh the Hell invention. find out whether the suction is right. been brought out to the proper office in the city of Brantford. two and They were on the The accompanying nictures show length. Those blacksmiths who thor a half miles away. The test was suc- - point of deciding such a toy did not the difference in suction between a oughly understand sharpening a Hell was praised, though deserve a place in so dignified an explow cessiui. some of the graver Canadian Scots I'osmon when Doffl Pedro, emptor of plow as it comes from the factory "will at once recognize the importance and one with the point worn off. In of these adjustments. thought he might far better have Hrazil, chanced to wander bito the The hammerfigure 1 the point has the proper dip ing of the point should be done on spent the time on something reallv committee room. The emperor rushed over to Bell, shook han(Js and In figure 2 it has no dip at all, the under side and not upon the face useful. effu8lyei, but turns up instead. The curve of of the plow. He went next year to Boston to pn. with him and asked a number of ques The better class of tions the point Is exaggerated In each cut, smiths seldom hammer the face of cept a professorship In the concerning the telephone, which TREMONTON. UTAH. University that the idea may appear the plainer. the plow. mere, rrom Doyiiood he had devoted he had seen tested during a recent himself to a system, devised by his visit to Boston. He went on to insist father, for teaching deaf mutes to that Bell let him talk through it al several loads of manure saved. Sim- communicate with once. Accordingly, potenate and In each other and POTATO ply drive the load where wanted, lift with the outer world. This was his veiuor snouted ii,.s of Shakespeare back and forth to each other across a scraper up by the handles, leaving intended life work, AND YARD SCRAPER load, although as a boy l'nilted and repeat the operation. stretch o!' wire until the for iie to be a musical mngea S. and had with difficulty been mer was tired of the plaything. Wood Ashes for Orchards. The imperial approval had turned persuaded by his father to give up Sentrivance Mada of Lum-ba- r The ashes from apple, pear ami me ammtion. Hell when a mere lie tide of fortune for Alexander Bell MALAD VALLKV BRANCH Can Also IW Used for lad peach trees contain about 70 per cent, conceived the idea of ARRIVE Leveling Rough Ground. forming a sys- The committee promptly decided that of lime, and the crops of fruit borne tem of harmony telegraphy. He found a contrivance which could so delight every year also contain lime. When that sounds could be carried over N No. 31 Emperor Turns a real live emperNo. 33. Besides its use in the barnyard, this orchards fail It is always profitable to wires that were joined to a No 84. Worthy of galvanic Fortune's Scale. or was hi.7,t-iIt should be done .it battery, and that by is bandy for covering , nilttln tha potatoes, level- apply lime, and adjusting a set of least once in five years. Wood ashes reeds at one end of the line PL bile. The ing rough ground, filling ditches, etc. was telephone of vibraaccepted S S are preferable to lime for orchards, tion with another at the and It should be made of two inch lumopposite end Itora attiaeted multitudes of p;iir..r tri. 2 I but the lime is nMMfc rheai.cr Is on one set could be noises lm i throughout the course of. the ber, and'linrd wood If possible; the will ulso prove of benefit to grass ih.it by the other. Thus, each r,.r.i be Centennial. But before Hell could put could scraper Should be six to eight feet may be growing In an orchard, and both a transmitter and receiver of It to practical use a number of other long, and two feet high; its life will it is destructive to certain A. SL P. M, grubs and music notes From this it was but a men claimed credit for similar InvenA M p M be prolonged if shod with a :V5 of other orchard enemies. It. is best ap- step to applying the same Idea to tions, and for years the fight wag 0: t0 piece Brtgbssji l':40 4 5.1 10:10 tt i) the courts. At length Hell won plied by plowing the orchard Comine Love and the "Poken words. Itn was MO 4.3-1" n r, and broadcasting the lime over tlio said at one time thaf he gave js nml U.U7 WnukegHn ""' telephone, 413 Telephone. 1027 OJt Kvaus surface. hi crude form, was Miss Hubbard, as a wedding present t!01 4M lO'U fl:3S the result. when she married him, the royalty-rightBoslts 8:.W 10:37 fl Vnirnl Soon after Prof, rtell on the telephone. These H:W :BQ 1" "'J Handling rights, moved to BosSilage. Ui Tilt tf ON ros ton a wealthy of course, have accumulated to a fabu8:40 We have used an improved n ,i 11:90 I inbCambridge man. Oarlnmt silaga oard by name, 0:40 sum. lous H .. a sent hi. cutter with blower, a machine of gve.it UM 707 KiveMide B:M a .v, no,. ,or vocai instruction. IttM 710 with only one fault, Despite tho wealth his Inventions An capacity, PleldlBg n 53 namely, l 11:43 b, tween pupil and have brought him Prof Bell atlll de- 7.3.) that the knives are nth Pljrm hard to teacher 8.i3 set. bat i a u n 7.3S MRS Hubbard and her vqtes nimseir to the wel'are. educaWaibakfa with the great advantage that it cuts soon followed t:(Bi 2:35 11 p ra. 8:80 la her became deeply Interested In the tion nnd advancement of dear MaUd 7:15 inch pico-nA Y.ird l:a0 mutes u says wrller Scraper. ' ''''' "" ! Hell was Induced early whose former pitiable condition he In Baltimore American. These The mixed irln en thU Ih ! pi in to bas Improved as vastly as his more Iron or steel, ns shown; lew ever. It best In the silo, becauso lift patent It. igltcj dnily eieept fcadty. of their stnnll Mr Hubbard was will do good work without i'ue' Iron placed In charge famous device has enlarged the scope size, and because of dose packing of the Massachusetts exhibit at the of the human voice. The evener must be at I. nat fonr J they keep better ha!! il lar,;.. Centennial feet from scraper, to allow ror load, are also In Philadelphia. To the efforts of a deaf bttT to mix Willi cut hay He wanted exposition Everybody to advertise in Tho nnd to keep game from under the and grl who A Bell to place before the lin.l sublime In her since there Is very littbj P' grain, sweetheart's in horses' feet. Iim,'sople A the Massachusetts build tg genius the world owes Our service reaches very la . barnyard waste of uneven parts, such as coin-Stal- his mi the Hell teleiveloiin scientific toy. nay he cleaned in a obort time, ; phone joints, in the manger. parts of the Valley. Try Rt Hell did not care to do V ) I I ' ' Ueriii THAT PAY. '' uuiaj, tliom thmmUi ." -- - - . ,- e - Kent's New Livery. cAt rear of Hotel Kent, TREMONTON, - Samuel Kent, - UTAH. cTVlanager. You Can Get ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL The Man Who Made Voice Travel riding- Concrete Building Blocks 1,000 Miles e .,ti A. B. MANAUSA, Manufacturer, j j Garland, Utah. FAMILY LIQUOR STORE, - G. A. Woodward, Proprietor, Wholesale and Retail O. C0VERER w L. TIME TABLE. coin-Pose- s I f ! s J P-- ,ir r l WW OiHl frf r' ' fih it "''pvrluhtrd |