MICHIGAN ROADS AND FORESTS. 



CASE 8%xlO.,nch o Cy,inder RQAD ROLLER 



Time price, 10-ton, with Simple Cylinder, 

 $2,200; with Compound Cylinder, $2,300. 



Ten per cent, discount for cash. 

 Prices subject to change without notice. 



BRANCH HOUSES 



Where Stocks of Machinery, Repairs and Supplies are Carried 

 for Quick Delivery. 



Guaranteed to do all or anything that can he done by 

 any other make or design of 10-ton road roller. 



Alberta, Calgary. 

 California, Oakland. 

 Colorado, Denver. 

 France, Paris. 

 Georgia, Atlanta. 

 Illinois, Chicago. 



Freeport, Feoria. 

 Indiana. Indianapolis. 

 Iowa, Des Moines, 



Mason City, Waterloo. 

 Kentucky, Louisville. 

 Manitoba, Brandon, 



Winnipeg. 

 Minnesota. Fergus Falls, ' 



Mankato, Minneapolis. 

 MICHIGAN, LANSING, 

 Missouri, Kansas City, 



Saint Louis. 

 Montana, Billings. 

 Nebraska, Lincoln. 

 New York, Syracuse. 

 North Carolina, Greensboro. 

 North Dakota, Bismarck. 



North Dakota, 



Carrington, Casselton, 

 Cooperstown, Devils Lake, 

 Fargo, Grand Forks, 

 Harvey, Hillsboro, Minot, 

 Park River, Wahpeton. 



Ohio, Columbus. 



Oklahoma, Oklahoma. 



Ontario, Toronto. 



Oregon, Portland. 



Pennsylvania, Harrisburg. 



Russia, Odessa. 



Saskatchewan, Rcgina. 



South America. Ruenos Aires. 



South Dakota, Aberdeen, 

 Mitchell, Watertown. 



Tennessee. Nashville. 



Texas, Amarillo, 

 Dallas, Houston. 



Hah, Salt Lake City. 



Washington, Spokane. 



Wisconsin, Madison, 

 Oshkosh. 



SEND FOR ROAD ROLLER CATALOG 12, 

 WHICH GIVES FULL DESCRIPTION. 



Local Dealers in Seven Thousand Towns in the United States 



and Canada. 



For particulars, see our nearest Local Dealer or Branch House. 



FACTORY AND GENERAL OFFICES AT RACINE, Wis. U. S. A. 

 We Sell the Well-Known Line of Troy Dump Wagons and Dump Boxes. 



Address Road Machinery Dep't 



J. I. CASE THRESHING MACHINE CO., Racine, Wisconsin, U. S. A. 



(INCORPORATED) SEND FOR OUR CONTRACTORS' GEhERAL PURPOSE ENGINE CATALOG 14. 



WORK UNDER WAY IN KALAMAZOO. 



Grasping a big shovel, W. M. Bryant, chair- 

 man of the county highway commission, Kala- 

 mazoo, turned the first earth in the construc- 

 tion of the mile of new highway in Portage 

 township known as the West street road, lead- 

 ing into the city of Kalamazoo. 



Under the supervision of Deputy Sheriff 

 Loomis Nash, sixteen men from the county 

 jail were then set to work on the highway. 

 General supervision of the construction is be- 

 ing made by George D. Marshall, government 

 expert, assisted by Engineer Harris Fleming, 

 who has been assigned by the road construc- 

 tion bureau of the United States agricultural 

 department. 



As scon as the work on this highway- in 

 Portage is well under way, tents will be pro- 

 vided for the men for sleeping quarters and 

 a cook engaged, so that they will not be com- 

 pelled to return to the city every night. 

 Deputy Nash will then be left in charge of 

 the gang, while Superintendent Marshall and 

 Engineer Fleming will devote their time to 

 overseeing the labor of another gang in 

 Schoolcraft township. The road there will be 

 a difficult one to build, lying on low ground. 

 It will be diked up ard a new foundation of 

 gravel laid before surfacing is begun. 



Tt is expected that the entire work of con- 

 struction on the two roads will be completed 

 within a month. 



will be increased from 25 cents to SO cents 

 on each $1,000 valuation in the district. 



The Standard Oil Company will furnish ma- 

 terials for improvements <nd the superintend- 

 ent of the committee will provide two labor- 

 ers to oil a stretch of Xorth Canal street, 

 Grand Rapids, to show the effect of this treat- 

 ment in suppressing the dust nuisance. The 

 Tarvia Company will do the same on South 

 College avenue. 



Efforts will be made to interest the farmers 

 along the roads to plant shade trees. The 

 new state law gives a rebate of 25 cents per 

 tree for trees planted along the highways, but 

 'to an extent not exceeding 25 per cent of the 

 frontage in any one year. The company will 

 furnish elm and maple trees for planting at 

 40 cents each, and it is hoped the farmers 

 will take kindly to the plan. 



INSPECTING STATE REWARD ROADS. 



The State Highway Department has begun 

 a thorough inspection of all state reward 

 roads in Michigan. The inspection will be of 

 great benefit, as the experts of the depart- 

 ment will give minute advice as to the repair- 

 ing of the roads where needed and their up- 

 keep. 



for this year that is. the macadamizing of 

 the parts of the Fenton and Saginaw roads 

 already surveyed is completed, the first ma- 

 cadam road ever made in Genesee county will 

 be ready for use. 



$500,000 FOR ROADS. 



A bill is pending in Congress which seeks to 

 appropriate $500.000 with which to make ex- 

 periments looking to the formulation and adop- 

 tionof a plan of co-operation by the govern- 

 ment and the states and counties in a com- 

 prehensive system of road construction and 

 maintenance. It is argued that a policy of this 

 kind must necessarily begin as was the case 

 with rural delivery, when a small appropriation 

 was made for experimental purposes cnly. The 

 results were such that the people demanded 

 the extension of the service until now it is 

 one of the most impr.rtant branches of the 

 postoffice department, and its discontinuance 

 would not be considered for a moment. 



MORE MONEY FOR KENT ROADS. 



Robert D. Graham, chairman of the good 

 roads commission of Kent township, Kent 

 county, has announced that the commission 

 will follow a suggestion made last fall to keep 

 definite records of the work done with maps, 

 and also that an appropriation of $500 will 

 be made frcm the fund this year to keep in 

 repair the roads already improved. The fund 



GENESEE MAKES A START. 



The first stage of the building of trunk lines 

 of macadam road to extend from Flint north 

 and south to the limits of Genesee county has. 

 been completed with the surveying of the 

 Saginaw road from the new city limits of 

 Flint at the old Edward Black farm to a point 

 one and a half miles north, which will be ma- 

 cadamized from the north limits of North 

 Saginaw street, a portion of the Fenton road, 

 extending south from Flint one and a quarter 

 miles has also been- surveyed. 



The survey has been under the direction 

 of the county road commission, composed of 

 George II. Sellers, chairman; Linus Wolcott 

 and Wilbcr Becker. When the work planned 



INGHAM NEEDS AN AWAKENING. 



With the election of county and township 

 road commissioners, the question of roads for 

 Ingham county is now up for consideration. 

 Ingham county does not boast of the finest 

 state reward reads. According to the opinion 

 of the state highway commissioner, the 

 county has been strangely indifferent to the 

 advantages of good roads built under the 

 state road law. The miles of road built in 

 the immediate vicinity of Lansing are few 

 and far between, that r'ne to and out of East 

 Lansing being the most notable. 



The requests for good roads, to be built 

 under the state reward law, are piled high 

 at the state highway commissioner's office, 

 and the department is prepared for a busy 

 spring. Active interest has been shown in 

 the question cf constructing new roads since 

 the many institutes held by the commission 

 last fall and throughout the winter, and it 

 is anticipated that many miles will be built 

 as soon as the weather permits. 



