EFFICIENT DIRT " ROAD IMPLEMENT Construction and Methods ot Using a Plank Drag, WORKS BEST OH MOIST SOIL Battar Results Actiisvsd by First Crowning Roadway With a Blads J Gradtr How to Opsrats tha Maehins ; 8uecossfully. 1 Doit to construct and dm one of the most useful and h.-inJj devices for Im proving earth roads Is described In tile Breeder's Gaxette bj Professor L. W. Chase of the Nebraska experiment sta tatlon. who says: The split log drag. or. as It Is com Bonl; called, the King drag, is with- i ! KUtO BOAD CEIO VADI OF PLASH. out doubt the best Implement for keep tag roads In shape and In manj In stances Is as efficient as any other Im plement In the construction of earth' roads. The King drag can be constructed f either a spilt log or a plank, but In Nebraska the plank Is much easier to obtain than the log; hence this brief description pertains to the construction from planks. Select a good yellow pine, ash or oak plank two Inches thick, twelve Inches wide and fourteen feet long. Cut this in two at an angle so that one edge of each piece is seven feet six inches long and the other edge Is six feet six inches long. Spike to the back and along the center of each of these planks a two inch by six inch piece, which re-enforces the plan. Bore the holes for the cross stakes about twenty-six inches apart and fonr inches from each end with a two and one-halt Inch anger, using care to keep the auger perpendicular to the plank. The two inch by four inch brace at the front end should start from the middle of the rear plank and drop to the bottom part of the front plank. The blade, which is generally made of stock cutter steel. Bbould be given the proper cut mg slope by placing a wedge shaped atrip between it and the plank. One end of the chain is fastened to a cross (take, and the other passes through a hole In the plank and Is held in posi tion by means of a pin. The use of the drag Is more satis factory if the road has first been crowned with a blade grader, but whenever this Is not convenient and the traffic is not too heavy the road may be gradually brought to a crown by means of the drag. ' The surface of the average country road should be covered In one round with the drag. One horse should be driven on the Inside of the wheel track and the other on the outside, the drag being set by means of the chain so that it Is running at an angle of forty-five degreps with the wheel track and working the earth toward the center of the road. In the spring, when the roads are more likely to be 1 DIET BO AD BEFORE DEAOOLNO. rutty and soft. It Is generally better to go over the road twice and In some places oftener. The drag should be floored with boards which are separated by open paces of sufficient width so that the dirt which falls over will rattle through, and yet they should be close enough so that the driver can move about upon the drag quite freely. ' To insure the successful operation of the drag It is necessary for the driver to use careful Judgment. Some times It Is essential that the blade be held down so that the drag will cut roots and weeds, while at other times the front edge should not bear too heavily upon the surface, as It will dig out a soft place which would be better If left undisturbed. This regu lation of the cutting edge can be ac complished by the driver moving back and forth or to the right and left on the drag. If t:-.e rord Is to be crrni?a with the drag it is often well to plow a light furrow along the sides and work this loosened dirt to the center. On roads with heavy tniffle the drag should le used much oftener and with more care than on roads with light ttrafllc. ! The distance from the drag at which the team is hitched affects the cutting. A long hitch permits the blade to cut deeper than a short hitch; likewise a heavy doubletree will cause the cut- tins edge to fettle deeper than ltfht one. Thore ar very few periods of the year when the use of the drag does not benefit tbe road, but It does the beat work when the aoll la moist and yet not loo sticky. This Is frequently within a balf day's time after a rain When the earth Is In this state It works the best, and the effects of work lug It are fully aa bem-uVlnl as at any other tltna. The Nebraska soils when mixed with water and thoroughly worked become remarkably tough and Impervious to ruin, and If compacted In this condltlou they ecoine extreme ly bard. This action of the soil Id be coming so hard and smooth not only helps to shed the water during a rain, but also greatly retards the formation of dust. So much has been writteo and said pertaining to the great benefits from the use of the road drag that many people beginning the use of It become discouraged Ivfore they are well start ed. They should not feel thus, aa It often takes a whole season for the road to become pnierly puddled and baked to withstand the rain and truf fle. After a road has been worked with a drag only a short time It Is not well to expect It to stntid up to heavy traf fic during a continued damp spell with out being affected. Uowever, it will take far heavier traffic than most eartb roads receive to more than scuff tip tbe surface. During the four years that the writer has observed the road shown in the Illustrations only once has It ever become so soft that teams were not hauling a ton and a half of coal In each load over It Even in tbe fall of 11X10 teams were delivering 5.500 pounds of coal at a load to the university farm boiler bouse before the roads became froien. It is not well to consider tbe benefits from a good road as solely coufined to heavy traffic, for there is no doubt that tbe time saved to light vehicles ; V y ' ! - r a. ti 1 THI SAMS HOAD AFTER THEM TF-ABg' DBAOGIMI. and tbe greater pleasure derived from their use over good roads far sur pass tbe economy in heavy hauling. While driving over a well crowned, smooth road the team does not have to follow the usual rut. no slacking has to be made for Irregularities in the surface, and It matters not whether one or two horses are being driven. Calcium Chloride For Preventing Dust. The Houston (Tex.) Post has tbe fol lowing discussion of dust preventive: Second in Importance only to the construction of good roads themselves Is tbe solution of tbe dust problem. Automobile truffle has had a revolu tionary effect upon road building and has taxed the utmost energies of road engineers throughout the world to cope with the new conditions which have arisen. The dust that is raised by a rapidly moving machine Is disa greeble and annoying not only to other users of tbe highway as well as tbe occupants of automobiles following in the wake of the car ahead, but also the residents along tbe road. Tbe only real and permanent solution of the problem is the construction of a binder that will not yield to the effects of au tomobile traffic. Oil and tar together with various other preparations have been tried out, and especially abroad, with only fair success. In most cases their application Is expensive and their effects disagreeable. Tbe greatest sat isfaction from all standpoints has been obtained both in tbe United States and abroad from the use of cal cium chloride. It is the cheapest of all layers, with the exception of water, and in some cases Is much more eco nomical than the latter when the cost of dust prevention for the whole sea son is taken Into consideration. One of its greatest advantages is that it Is clean and absolutely odorless. In fact. It seems to have been demonstrat ed that calcium chloride can be used with profit on frequently traveled highways. Good Road Helpers. Don't be Jealous of the automobile owner, for if he doesn't happen to own land in your township be is paying taxes In some other place and thus contributes his share toward the mak ing of better roads, and in many in stances he Is advancing money to aid In road construction. If a road is made better for an automobile It is also made better for a buggy with a load of eggs In the back end. A Gotod Move. It is a good Idea to have a clean ditch at each side of the road before winter. The other day a farmer plow ed a good furrow out of each ditch of the road alongside his farm, and he pulled the dirt over the grade with a road drag. It was a neat thing to do. The dirt put on tbe grade was not enough to make mud, but enough to Dpen a clear track for the water into sach ditch. .. i ; ,.,. ! Sale of Mattresses I J We are offering you in new and second-hand, about forty mattresses almost at your own price. Give us a call and we will convince you our prices are right. J City orders given prompt attention. We set up all stoves and guarantee satisfaction. STORDAHL NEW AND SECOND Masonic Building. r.-i r.i ca r.:i CJ c J r.t fj r.-i t J ri Sonera ffiiaccsmithing Horseshoeing, Wood Work, etc., NlATLT AND PitOMFTLT DoNB Whkm it ra Dome Bt : : : Robert 7ooro ri CJ r.-i c J r.i CJ ri CJ r.i CJ r.i c J ri CJ Satisfaction Will Prinevillx, C3 Ck JJCJLJkJk. JCJL.CJl.Jk. jfcjC Dressmaking Olive and Goldie Telfer Ladies, we cut, fit and make stylish garments We use the only practical method of cutting garments, everythingbeing done by the actual inch measurement, on the same principle as the tailor cuts for gentlemenand perfect . fitting gar ments may be cut for all kinds and sizes of forms. Dressmaking by the Day Opposite Presbyterian Church City Meat Market Horigan & Reihke, Props Beef, Pork, Mutton, Wholesale and I Retail All Kinds of Sausage Nice and Fresh Home Cured Bacon and Lard. Fish and Poultry in Season. Butter and Eggs. Finest Made, 5 lb. Statement of Resources and Liabilities of The First National Bank . Of Prineville, Oregon . At the cloa. of business Jun. 7, 1911 RESOURCES I.IA1IJMTIKI Loann and Discounts 2M,SM M capital Stock, paid In (0,000 00 United States Bonds W.WI0 00 Surplus fund, earnd 6010 00 Bank r.rerolaM,eU: 12,540 12 Undivided profits, earned 27,724 M Cah A Doe from banks 210fjl oi circulation 8,600 00 Deposits W."89 )1,424 19 .031,424 19 B. P. Allen. Pr.iid.nt T. M. Baldwin, Chl.r Will WunweU.r, Vic.-Pr.iid.nt H. Baldwin, Am"! Casbiar Get in the Journal Piano Contest & CONDART, HAND FURNITURE Pioneer Phone, r..i CJ r.i Yi CJ r.i CJ ra CJ r.i CJ ra CJ CJ r.i CJ r.i c J r.i CJ r.i CJ r..i c J Be Guaranteed Oregon. CJ JL.LJLJi.JLJL JUJCJ 1 f Home Cured Lard k 90c; 10 lb. $1.75. I T J Sfolrsfc'taf Card. Dr. Howard (ovc Dentist Rooms 14 and IS Adanuoa Building. T. i:. J. DUFFY Attorn-ut-LMw (Muvonaiir t W. A. toll) rmNHVU.UI Ohmiok a Ji N. W. Sanborn Attornoy-nt-lw Adamnon block rrluevtlle C. c- Sri W. 1 MY FKS O. C. YOUNG jCmmjftr rrartlc. In all pntirta. HiwHal attanllnn to walvr nsliu, litigation and vrlnituai dvl.ureft. Dr. John lluback, late Vetprlnary Nuritmtn I. Army, hrtriniffiit oi tli ritilitlntw. All HorMUftl Work i KonbU Hamilton Stab). PriMvUla, Or. W. A. HELL FRANK MFNLFFF lawyers The Dalits OrKun Ckmt. S. CJmm-l Jf. 9. SStiknmp Of'CUMHTH ffiolknap dc Gd wards (County Pliyniclan.) WaenrVe. Crfmm St. Cum. jftHrmtf-ml-mCmm Frr.l A. Rice. C. K. 1, B. Ncrllle, Jr., K. M. Cuuniir Surveyor. Di-iitty Co. Hurrpytir, Hicc & Neville , Civil Engineers. tieneral Kniilnctirlni. 1'siNtvn.i.t, (laruus. C, SSrink Xawytr Culm Ahiwuir PanvrrLT IXT oa Niuht OrriOl ONK l)OOft HlltrTH or AUAMaON't Ijautt HTuas. Hoilt tilth,, an rtia). dwnoe IvltipliouM. Prinflll: . - Ortfm Dr. J. Trcgelles Fox M. R. 0. 8. Kng; and I,. H. A. London; Llcencw Ort'iron Ktate Medical Hoard, HpecialiM in Hurireryj llynlt'iif; Ali mentary Canal; women and children's dlfifaacfl. Attendance at office. Main St.. I'rlne- vi le, dally il to 8. lei, I'ioneer Ui7. Consultation Free Houra S to S R. D. Ketchum, M. T. D D. C. Acute and chronic illBeuw-B trented BucccHHlully by purely driiKlcHH mt'thoils Rooms 16-17 Adaauos Bldf. Calls mada G. A. McFAKLANF Lawyer Practice In all courts and U, 8. Land Office. Redmond, Oregon Willard II. Wirtz Attorncy-at-Law. Ofllcu in M. It. IllKK"' ofllce. I'llI.NKVII.I.IC, OlIKQON, Huntington & Wilson Attorneys Of The Dallort, Ihiive oponcd ofllcca In Portland, Oregon, Rooms 805-807 Lewis Building. RiiHlnPRB aont to tti(?m from Crook County throuiih thflrofflco In Th tlallci or direct to their Furlland itddreHN will receive prompt atututlon, Forlluud Phone, Muln 7080. AbatrarU ot title to all l.ud sail ki.a kiU la Unmk oouuljr. I. F. Wilde, Seoaitry. MattUU, 0nM F. II. Fremont Anhllact and Dealg nwr. I At. MMhiMta in btillilinieflri.iriii'tliin.lnl.rlur arr.nsmviiu ami detHiratluu. llMiil,uarlen al Urtiftin Huiol, Prin.ville, . . . Oregon. HAVE YOU Filed your Deed? Of Course. HAVE YOU An Abstract? Certainly everyone lias an alwlract now. ovon Know where your corners nr.. Well, No, Not exactly, Brewster Engineering Company, I'rluvville, Oregon, will locate th.m lur you ami gtinranln. the work. Survey ing, riatilim. Irrliratlon K D. H. PEOPLES Gvil and Irrigation Engineer. Irrigation. Subdivision, Land Surveying, Mapping, Estimating. Office next door to Lyric Therter Road Warrant CaSK KftflriU'rmJ warranta up to nj inoUulliiif aNo. H NovftntM-r (., lttll. r ! a .... c - umuj nuio acrrica From 1'riiieville to Hinter li)r way of O'Nt-ll, Heiliuotiii ant) Cline i'alla. leaves l'rihoville at 13 o'clock. Tit-seta on sale at tn oUtc. next Htxir to xt- ollic. J. K. CHHirruN, prop. H-SMI Nutlet l.r PuhllcstiM. lHartmint it( tit. Interior, I'. H. Uud tun,, at Tur Italic, tr.nn SuvvmUvr GtU, 1911. Nullr. It ht-rrt,? gtvrn lltt itl PrtiifviH, tiri-smi, tit, ou April r.'nd, I'Jlu, mailt Homi't-t, Nil tHkV.l, tor Ntti.. ', N',. .ltd Stti, t,, .h ll.in .l,,mi,. lilt, fl fti'tilti ranat, lit r.l, W lllmiii.il. Mi, rl'lialt, tiu llirit itodc tit llitrititnii in niMk. Dual I'lilimiliuiliui riwt( til v.t.tjllalt t'Ului tti Hit, 1huI ttUiv. diHH-rltMit, Ulurn Warri'n ttmwit, t'lititujr i li-rk al til. urm'e, .t rrlnnvlllv, Orfsn't. till llta lulh ily uf liwi-Biiilwr, !ll i ihiiiii,i iiii), ma wiiurB.c jniin Hun, pit. tin Ullm, A. Curl MuUtir, III, tint, I I'liuilcr, all til I'riitrtilU'. ort,,n ll l, c. . Mih'HK. Kfal.l' r. Nutlet of App4liitmnt o( AdmloUira trU od to Cr4lloin. Nnilif I ticivhy plvcn that Hid umti-r-lmtril Iimsi l-rwii hf I im pftuiity rnurt irih htstto of Omtmi, r OmiIi mutily, dulv n iHitnh'd Ni1iitlnii(rtrtit of I ho mlalK if 'Imitati K WrUilil. tr(rAHMl, uud rII Hrtifj ttH VlltR ClllllIlN MfnlltNl MM Itl tWiM I HrV ItrTfliV rttiulrttt lo prrxariit tl.ft Htnp, duty Vfrlflpil. tu anlil linluUtrtlrlV tl Ih mw ortlrw of il. K. H rln It, In I'rlni'vllte, Oriim. wlihln tlx month fnnu IliUUf of ltt drl putillm Hon of thU nulltw. Itotnl kiiiI ubUhv4 fintt Hnw Orti.rr IJtb lull. Ki th Kiutir, Adnttnlilmtrtx nf Iho KUl uf Onu.lr K Wrlgtit,il.-.vui'd, lti7l If otic of Appintmnt tif AJmlolitrutor and to Crc4ittra. Ntittrv U horfhy nlvvti thnt the utitter Hitrittt Imi Imiii, ly tit rmmly miurtoriho Htui of t 'nftin. fur i'riBt ciuitty, duly (. EMntxJ mtmliilMlrnlnr of tht rutnl oT HIIm . Atlniii, dttv iwil niMt nil rf"tn Imvlnf cUtuiB ittfulni th ttt am lirn-liv r f,ultrl in iirt'rn thn tuititt. duly vtrifltt, to utht tttliiihilliiiior. Ht flit Inw sfH' of M, V.. Hrliik. In I'rinr-vlllia. nstuii, within x inuiiihi fntni thD Utttf of llio Mri puhlkuilloit of IIiIn linllo, I'sitril anil puttlUhrit flrat tlmi Oo1otr IJtli inn. w. au AdtnlnUlrnlor nf the etttnto of HiIhn K. Atlanta. UtHi'nwil, iu-ti-7i Notice of Appointment of AdmlnUtrator and t Creditor. Noltep ti hrn'hy glvr-n that the untti-r-larnrti Iiuk m4i. hy tlmrountv oourt of tho Hiaicnf Onwiut, fur nntk rHiunty, duly IMitnit'U HdmlnUlmUtr of tlit n"inte ofollvo tlftlng, titHt'UMKl, nod nil iwrMins Imvlttf clutnm nanlnot kuhl cwtuie an InTt-hv n qutrtMl lo iinotfitt Hit wiiu duly vorlflt'd, to mi lit ftdinlulHirittor. al th law i (tv of M. K. Hrtnk. In rrlni'vlilt, Ortun, wlllilit nix month) from the ditto ,of the ft rat ul)lloatlolt of I hi nolle, ln hi I and puhllahrd first ttmit 0itolMr lllU. I -'it UlM.IAM U hKI. AdinlnlNtrAtor of tlte eaUite ofotlvo Itlini, Notice of Appointment of AJminlatrttor and to Creditors. Notlra U hrrvliy tflvcn that the under nltnid htm lMi-n, hy I he muniywiurt of I ha htutetof Onvoiii fori'rook county, dulyat- K)lnU'd adiiilnlHtrHtor of the nttaic of lwla ('alllMlor, diHHHMd, and all pcniotm havlne nlHlma iMrnliixt tnhl ittUtt urn htr'tiy r f.ttlrfd lo pnMrit thn humi, duly vorifli'd.lo mild adtnlnlMtrrlor, nt thn Inw olllw of M. K. Itrlnk, tn 1'rtiiMvlllu, Urt'Kon, within Mix monthi from tliu date of the drat publication of Lh In notlt. Imtvdaiid puhllHhfd flmt time (VtuN-r l-'lh, 1011. (.KoKOK W. MtX'A IiltlHTKKi AlmlnlNtnitor of t ho rn tutor of Ivewl Me. CallUter. dwwaHcd. H12-71 Notlct of Admiauitratrii'i Salt of Laad. Notloa tn herchy given by the undoralifnfd, tho ndtulnlmrHirlx of the cmnie olJolinir Knatiiit, d(taHiMl, that punmant to an ordtir of the county court of thu Htate of t)r'Kon for Crook county, innduon tho 6th day of Novi'm bor, Mill, fthe will at thu front door of the county eourihotiHO tu I'rlncvlllc, OrcK'". on tho ui fi day of Uwccmhwr, lull, alio o'clock In the forimiron, mil ui puhltt! unlo to the liiHlicut hlddur, anbjuct to confirmation hy Maid county court, all thu rlKht, title and Intorenl thu John II. k'miui had al thu time, of hi dunth In thu following diwrihcd rtuil entitle, to-wlt: toti one, two ami throe In Mock eight lu the flrat addition to Prliicvlllu, orcKon. 'IVrinn uf HHlu,caHti upon coullrmatlnn. Dated thliUlh day of Novciuhur, ml Mahoakkt Kramn. AdmlnlHtratrlx of out a to of John H, Huama, do ccniud. Give us your order for CORDWOOD Juniper or Pine, v large or small quantities. ' DILLON'S YARD Opposite Post Office.