Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927, December 28, 1906, Image 3

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    ROGUE RIVES. COURIER. GRANTS PASS, OREGON, DECEMBER 28, 1906.
T
EXPERIMENT WITH TAR
ON ROADS A SUCCESS
Ulv A KOCK FOUNDATION
Weigh Carefully
To Our Friends and Patrons
Highway Thus Treated St&nd
Wear and Tear. Are Duatleaa
and Beneficial to Public
'7
1:
J)
'J
He buiWs on rock who owns his home and pays no rent to
; landlords. How is it with you. are you a rent payer or a house
owner? If the former, it will pay you to try to save a liltle and
purchase a home. . It does not take long when you once start, and
lean help you wonderfully to get a home of your own free and
clear. If interested come in and let "me put some mutually
; beneficial propositions before you.
JOSEPH MOSS,
. THE REAL ESTATE MAN Office 516 E St
Justice blanks at the Courier office
' E. A. WADE
Dry Goods, Underwear,
Notions, Etc.
Front Street
west Palace hotel
GRANTS PASS, OREGON,
J n. CHILES
The Pioneer Grocer
Is occupying his new brick and is
better prepared than ever to serve
bis patrons.
New refrigerator installed in
which to keep
BUTTER
CHEESE
, EGGS
, Not only will you find the sta
ple goods in stock but Fancy Gro
ceries and She.f Goods.
We always have the best Pota
toes on the market.
Molorlxla to Improve Roaala).
Road Improvement with the motor
ists themselves as the chief contribu
tors to the road building fund Is under
consideration In Great Britain. The
London chamber of commerce has
taken the Initiative In a movement to
establish a central governmental high
way department. This department
would have Jurisdiction over the trunk
highways. Automobile users In Eng
land already contribute nearly $500,000
yearly In taxes, and It Is desired by the
chamber of . commerce that this mm
ahpuld be directly applied to the nee
of the highway department .
KILL the COUCH
AND CURE THE LUNGS
WITH
Dr. King's
Now Discovery
FOR C
ONSUMPTION Pries
OUGHSand E0ca$t.00
OLDS Fret Trial.
Ararameut For Clood Ramata.
It Is estimated that the summer
travel of Maine annually brings Inta
the state between $15,000,000 and $16,
000,000, and It la argued that it could
be Increased by the addition of several
millions mora If Unproved reads war
universal
Surest ana Uuiciti-bC time for nil
THROAT and LUIIO TROUB
LES, or MCtfEY EACH.
was:'
I
I
New Cur for Epilepsy.
T. B. Waterman, of Watertowo, O.,
Rural free delivery, writes: "My
daughter, . afflioted for years with
epilepsy, was oared by Dr. King's
New Life Pills. She has not had an
attack for over fwo years. " Beat
body cleanser and life riving tonic
pills on eartth. 26 at all drug stores.
Cures OU tens .
Westmoreland, Kane., May fi, 1903.
"Ballard Snow Liniment Co. Tour
Snow Liniment oared an old sore on
the side of my chin that was supposed
to be a oanoer. The sore ws stab
born and would not yield to treatment
nntil I tried Snow Liniment, which
did the work in short order. My
sister, Mrs. Sophia J. Carson, Al lens
vine Mi Bin Co., Pa., hs a sore and
mistrusts that it is a canoer. Pleate
send her a 50c bottle, "t For sale by
National Drug Co. and Rotermund.
What's
orth doing is worth doing well. If
you wish to be cured of. Rheumatism
o Ballard's Snow Liniment and yon
wll be "well cured." A positive
cure for Sprains, Neuralgia, Bruises,
Contracted Mwcles and all the ills
that flesh is heir to. A. G.M. Will
lam. Navasota, Texis , writes: "I
have us-d Snow Liniment for sprained
ankle and it gave the best of fatisfact
ion. I always keep it ia the house"
For rale by National Prug Co., and
Rotermund.
Experiments In tar and oil for road
Improvement at Jackson, Tenn., are
described in a bulletin Issued by the
inited States department of agrlcul
ture.
During the spring and summer of
1006, says the bulletin, the office of
public roads co-operated with Sam C
Lancaster, city engineer of Jackson
and chief engineer of the Madison coun
ty good roads commission, in making a
aeries of careful experiments to de
termine the value of coal tar for the
Improvement of macadam streets and
roads. Teats were also made of the
utility of crude Texas oil and several
grades of Its residue when applied to
earth and macadam roads.
The macadam streets in the business
center of Jackson were built originally
of the bard siliceous rock known as
C7t
i
Msaw B I WZM mm'
mm
BIGGLE
BOOKS
li 5
A Farm Library
of acqualled vslse.
Practical, Upte
date. Concise sad
Cemprebeaslvt,
1909 and
Sample
BaaasMKlr Mitel ni
Baaatliallr MaairstaS.
BY JACOB BIQ0LE
No. 1-CiaOLE HORSE BOOK
ATI about Hnnrt . Contmon-atfise Treatise, with 1
than 74 illuatrationa ; a atandard work. Pric. 60 Cents.
No. 2-BKWLE BERRY BOOK
All ahnat growing Small FraHa read and team how.
Beautiful colored plates. Price. 50 Ccata.
No. 3-BIOGLE POULTRY BOOK
All about Poultry ; the beat Poultry Book la existence;
tells everything. Profusely illustrated. Price, SO Cents.
No. 4-BiaOLE COW BOOK
ATI about Cows and the Jairy Business: new edit loo.
Colored plates. Sound Common -arose. Price, 60 Cents.
No. 5-BKKiLE SWINE BOOK
AT. about Ho-Breeding. Feeding. Botrhery. Diseases,
etc Cover the whole ground. Price. 60 Cent.
No. 6 BIGGLE HEALTH BOOK
Gives remedies and up-to-date Information. A household
necessity. Extremely practical. Price, 60 Cents.
No. 7 BIGGLE PET BOOK
For the bovs and girts particularly. Pels of all kinds and
bow to care for them. Price. 60 Cents.
No. 8-BIGGLE SHEEP BOOK
Cover the whole ground. Every page fntl of good ad
vice. Sheep men praiac it. Price, 60 Cent.
Farm Journal
Is yoor paper, made for von and not a mkfit. it is 29 year
old; it is the errst hoilrd-down. bit-the-nail-on-the-heail,
uit-after-vou-have said-it Farm and Homehold paper in the
world the bisrgeit paper of its sire in the fnited States ot
America hsvinK more than Three Million regular resdr.
Any ONE of the BKKJLE BOOKS, and the FABM
Ini'UNill a VEADS (rmmd of ! "H all of 1907, 1WS,
1910), sent bv mail to any address for A DOLLAR BILL.
of FARM JOURNAL and circular describing BIOOLE BOOKS, ire.
WIUIBR ATKINSON CO.,
se fan Jxnrjui. RniiscLrKTi.
XAJIBjma A BOAD AT JACXSOX, TUTU.
novacullte. About May 1, 1905, after
fifteen years of wear, repair of these
streets became necessary. The old sur
face waa first swept clean with a horse
sweeper so as to expose the solid pave
ment beneath. This waa done because
tar will not penetrate a road surface
which la covered with dust and loose
material. Next, the surface was loos
ened by means of spikes placed in 'the
wheels of a ten ton steam roller, the
street reshaped and new material add
ed where needed. The road was then
sprinkled, rolled, bonded and finished
to form a hard, compact, even surface
and allowed to dry thoroughly before
either tar or oil was applied, for nei
ther substance can penetrate a moist
road surface. The best results are ob
tained' when the work Is dene in hot,
dry weather, and accordingly the tar
waa first applied in August It may be
well to add that the novacullte need In
the construction of the roads Is an al
most nonabaorbent rock.
The tar used was a byproduct from
the manufacture of coke and waa prac
tically free from motatore. . It waa
brought to a temperature which gener
ally reached 210 degrees F., bat when
placed on the road It was reduced to a
temperature from 160 degrees to 100
degrees F. The hotteat tar produced
the beat results. It was spread with
hose.
Laborers, with street cleaners'
brooms of bamboo fiber, followed the
tank and swept the surplus tar ahead.
They spread It as evenly and quickly
aa possible and in a layer only thick
euough to cover the surface. One side
of the street was finished at a time
and barricades placed to keep off the
traffic until the tar had hud time to
soak into the surface. The time al
lowed for this process was varied
from a few hours to several days.
From the results obtained It can be
stated that under a hot sun, with the
road surface thoroughly compact, clean
and dry and with the tar heated al
most to the boiling point and applied
as described above, the road will ab
sorb pructlcally all of It In eight or ten
hours. A light coat of clean sand,
screenings or the clean particles swept
from the surface of the road may then
be spread as evenly as possible and
rolled In with a steam roller.
After more than seven months, In
eluding the winter season of 1U05-OC
the tarred streets and roods are still
In excellent condition. They are bard,
smooth and resemble asphalt, except
that they show a more gritty surface.
The tar forms a part of the surface
proper and Is In perfect bond with the
macadam. Sections cut from the
streets show that the tnr has penetrat
ed from one to two Inches, and the flno
black lines seen In the Interstices be
tween the Individual stones show that
the mechanical bond has been re-enforced
by the penetration of the tar.
The tar Is a matrix Into which the
stones of the surface are set, forming
a conglomerate or concrete. A second
coating applied a year after the first
would require much less tar than the
first, as the Interstices of the rock
would then be filled with tar. ,
A tarred street is dustlcsa in the
same sense that au asphalt street Is
dustless, though a fine sandy powder
wears off, as In the case of asphalt
It can l swept or washed clean. These
streets have aince been swept regularly
and the city government Is In favor of
treating all of the streets with tar.
The cleaning that would soon ruin an
ordinary macadam road does not in
jure the tarred surface, as the stones J
are not torn up or disturbed. The tar
Itself has antiseptic properties; hence
Its use would be beneficial both as S
germicide find as a means of securing
elnanlinasa. .
Posters, placards, dodgers, al! sizes
nd kind, printed at the Coorier office.
; The latest in calling cards at the
I Courier office.
the question of where you will do
your banking! And we feel sure
your final judgment will be in favor
of placing your money in the
Grants Pau Banking & Trust Company's
Bank where you will always re
ceive courteous treatment; where
your affairs will be handled in the
most thoroughly business-like man
ner, and where you can have im
plicit confidence in the trustworthi
ness of the institution. '
We take this means of expressing
ou- gratitude for your, liberal patron-,
age, and of assuring you we will be
pleased to meet old friends and new
at the old stand ' during the coming
year.
Wishing you. every good thing
and prosperity during 1907, we are,
"very respectfully,
Smythe-Gamble Co.
PHONE 431 KESTKRSON BLOCK 412 FRONT ST
Fruitgrowers of Rogue River Valley
find the Courier of special interest
I want your bargains in
Timber and
Timber Inntls
Can use a few homestead and tim
ber relinquishments.
P. O. Bo 366, Roseburg, Oregon.
For the New Year
we offer the choicest in meats, pool
try, sausages, baoon, lard, eto. Our
"past performances" giro war-'
rant for the prospect of fair dealing
on our part for many a year to oome.
Whether yon are or are not on oar list
of patrons we will be glad to see yon
here any bosy day in 1907 long after
that we hope.
City Meat Market.
Telephone 144.
J.H. AHLF. . Prop.
THE' PUTTY W.ESTHOM
r
4
Cole's
Hot
Up the Chimney is Where Half Your Fuel
Money Goes When the Ordinary Stove Is Used
Stove putty is universally used by stove manufacturers for making
tight joints in heating stoves. While the stove is brand new the putty
does the work asked of it. A hot fire for a few months cracks tha
putty, it drops out of place, leaving the stove full of air leaking cracks,
allowing the gases in the fuel and a big part of the heat generated to be
sucked up the chimney and thus wasted.
More than one-half of all the fuel you put into the putty jointed
stove is lost in this way. If your old stove eats up more fuel and does
not keep fire as well as it did at first, the reason is the stove putty has
dropped out ot the joints.
Original
Blast
vVttv
Coal Stoves and Air Tight Wood Stoves Save all
Fuel and Heat Wasted by Other Heating Stoves.
No stove putty is used in the construction of
these economical stoves; it is not necessary, owing
to the patented construction which makes the
stove practically joint leas. Cole's Hot Blast
Coal Stoves and Air-Tight Wood Stoves are the
only heating stoves in the world which are
guaranteed to remain always alr-tlght. On
account of the absolutely air-tight construction
of these patented Stoves, all asea in the fuel are
held back until they are consumed and both
gases and heat which escape up the chimney
with other stoves are thus saved to your profit
and comfort soft coal is half gas. As a result
of this saving the fire is never out and the
rooms are heated for two or three hours in the
morning with the fuel put in these wonderfully
i J economical Stoves the night before.
Scientific Construction
Liowr iron fire boa inside, and the guaranteed smoke-proof feed door placed at the front
f of the top in Cole's Hot Blast Stove, shown by cut No. i, doing swsy with
u-icBKing puny joints ai iop anil noitom ol tire pot and around the door
frame on other stoves aa shown by cut No. a.
The water-tight steel bottom and patented compound hinge for ash door, also
the Tjetetited ateel collar tVtr ininino tVi n ih. v. .. i t 1
ewfc!SZ that It cannot be loaned by action of the fiercest heat, while of only technical
J" " interest, are special features In both the Original Hot Blast CoU and Air -Tight
Wood Stoves which combine to make them the most economical heating stove in the world. We are Exclusive
Agents avoid Imitations.
Save $50 00 to $200 00 . You etaaat fforl to y to yourself, '"My old stove or an
Ti C fOU'UU 1" PVU.UU imitation stove at a little less price will have to do this winter. "
Other style stoves and aU imitations of Cole's Original Hot Blast and Air-Tight Stoves are made with stove
putty iomts, and when yon stop to think that i.oe saved on the first cost of the stove means the loss of I50 to f joo
in fuel during the life of the stove, you will readily see the advantage of buying the Original Hot Blast, and Air
Tight Stoves which hold fire just aa well and are just as economical in fuel after years of use as the first day they arc put op.
SOLO BY
HAIR-RIDDLE HARDWARE CO.
VtV
rUTTT'.fW- -"snf
fSVUMV jo.mt--'' la)
' ll'-
kiunlog rkCaa1
Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic
has stood the test 25 years. Average Annual Sales over One and a Half Z2ca
bottles. DoeMswx?cHofwer : wppeal foyou? No Cure, No Pay. SOx
IT.- . fv- t '- t - Te ; ,.- of Oove a lUnck Root, Liver Pills.
L