THE IRRIGATION AGE. 



CANAL WORK 



THEMARSH-CAPRON 



"RAIL-TRACK" 



CONCRETE 

 MIXER 



is the machine big 

 men of large ex- 

 perience 



INSIST ON. 



They appreciate 



"MOST 

 MIXING 

 LEAST 

 FIXING" 



the trade 

 mark 



of the 

 j 



Fully covered by Patents. ^ "" ~" 



END OR SIDE 



DISCHARGE 



and In many other ways 

 ESPECIALLY ADAPTED to IRRIGATION WORK. Has Low Feed, Au- 

 tomatic Loader, and is Easily Portable. SELF-PROPELLIN'G if desired. 

 This machine is replacing all others because it "delivers the Roods" with 

 such remarkable efficiency and is so much nearer indestructibility than 

 any other mixer ever made. Study the four "spotlights." See the bearings of 



STANDARD ROLLED STEEL RY. RAILS 



running on FLANGED CHILLED STEEL CAR WHEELS. 

 "Adapt your outfit to your job. not the job to your machine." 



S MARSH-CAPRON MFG. COMPANY 



484 Old Colony Bldg., Chicago Hudson Terminal Bldg., New York 



water will be taken from Grand river at a point near 

 Cisco on the line of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad. 



E. J. Jeremy of Salt Lake City has filed an applica- 

 tion with the state engineer for six cubic feet per second 

 of the flow Green in Wasatch county, for the irriga- 

 tion of 160 acres of land. 



H. D. Boyle of Parowan has filed an application with 

 the state engineer to appropriate }/> cubic foot of the 

 waters of the Cottonwood Canyon stream in Iron county, 

 lor irrigation purposes. 



Jacob Magleby, of Monroe, has filed an application with 

 the state engineer for six cubic feet per second of the 

 flow of Monroe creek, to be used for irrigation purposes. 

 The diverting canal will be over five miles in length. 



The Fool Creek Irrigation Company has filed articles 

 of incorporation with a capital stock of $24,000. The 

 office of the company is located at Leamington. 



The cost of putting 31,000 acres of the Klamath pro- 

 ject under irrigation has been fixed at $30 per acre, and 

 this is to be paid in ten annual installments of $3 an acre 

 each. The maintenance charges are fixed at 75 cents per 

 acre annually, the total amount of the payment being 

 $121,500. 



H. Rabbes and Wm. Wagner of Klamath Falls, R. F. 

 Tuttle. C. D. Chorpening and W. J. Duncan of Bonanza, 

 have begun work on a large private irrigation project 

 These parties own about 3,000 acres of land in the Langell 

 Valley and have purchased a reservoir site of 160 acres 

 at the head of the valley. A company will be formed, with 

 the above named parties as incorporators, and work will 

 be rushed to completion before winter sets in so that they 

 may have water for next year's crops. They figure that 

 they can irrigate these 3,000 acres at less than $15 per 



TheLittle Roadster Grader andDitcher 



A New, Light Ditch Plowing Machine, 



Especially Designed for Cutting Small 



Laterals on Irrigated Farms, and 



Ditching and Grading Roads. 



This type of machine cuts ditches for 

 less money than any other tool or ma- 

 chinery, because it plows the dirt out of 

 the ditch with one continuous motion, 

 whereas all other ditching machinery or 

 appliances must pick the dirt up and 

 lift it out of the ditch and then dump it. 



The Little Roadster is a practical 

 plowing machine, being built with ad- 

 justable leaning wheels or rolling land- 

 sides which counteract the side pressure 

 of the earth on the mold, the same 

 leaning wheel principle which is used in 

 the sulky plow. 



It is made almost entirely of wrought 

 steel and the few castings that are used 

 are malleable and all parts are put to- 

 gether so far as possible with hot driven 

 rivets, so that while it is a light machine 

 weighing about eleven hundred pounds, 

 it is exceptionally strong and rigid. It 

 is designed primarily for two horses, al- 

 though four may be used. 



EVERY IRRIGATED RANCH OR FARM NEEDS ONE OR MORE OF THESE MACHINES. IT WILL QUICKLY 

 PAY FOR ITSELF. SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER AND LET US TELL YOU MORE ABOUT IT 



J. D. ADAMS & COMPANY, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA 



When writing to advertisers please mention The Irrigation Age. 



