BRICK ROADS. 29 
Department of Agriculture Bulletin No. 347, shall satisf actorily meet the follow- 
ing requirements : 
Hardness not less than ten (10), toughness not less than five (5), and per 
cent of wear not more than twelve (12). 1 
The crushed stone for use in the concrete curb shall be clean, sound, and 
durable, and shall be composed of all that part of the product of the crusher 
which is retained on a screen having circular openings one-fourth (|) inch in 
diameter, or a one-fourth (i) inch mesh screen, and which passes a screen hav- 
ing circular openings one and one-fourth (1^) inches in diameter. A sample of 
the stone, when subjected to the physical tests as described in the United States 
Department of Agriculture Bulletin No. 347, shall satisfactorily meet the follow- 
ing requirements : 
Hardness not less than twelve (12), toughness not less than six (6), and per 
cent of wear not more than ten (10). 1 
Slag. — The slag for use in the concrete base shall be steel-furnace slag, broken 
to such sizes that all of the particles will pass a screen having circular openings 
two (2) inches in diameter and will be retained on a screen having circular 
openings one-fourth (|) inch in diameter, or a one-fourth (1) inch mesh screen. 
Not more than seventy -five (75) per cent of the particles shall pass and not 
more than seventy-five (75) per cent shall be retained on a screen having cir- 
cular openings three-fourths (f ) inch in diameter. 
The material shall be reasonably uniform in character, and a sample, when 
subjected to the physical tests, as described in United States Department of 
Agriculture Bulletin No. 347, shall satisfactorily meet the following require- 
ments : 
Specific gravity not less than two and one-tenth (2.1), hardness not less 
than fifteen (15), toughness not less than five (5), and per cent of wear not 
more than fifteen (15). 
Water. — The water used in the mixing of concrete or grout shall be free from 
oil, acid, alkali, or vegetable matter, and fairly free from clay or silt. 
Brick. — The brick shall be standard wire-cut lug or re-pressed paving block. 
The standard size of brick shall be three and one-half (3*) inches in width, 
four (4) inches in depth, and eight and one-half (8i) inches in length. The 
brick shall not vary from these dimensions more than one-eighth (£) inch in 
width and depth and not more than one-half (£) inch in length, and in brick 
of the same shipment the maximum width or depth shall not vary from the 
minimum width or depth more than one-eighth (|) inch. All brick must 
be thoroughly annealed, regular in size and shape, and evenly burned. When 
broken they shall show a dense, stonelike body, free from lime, air pockets, 
cracks, and pronounced laminations. No surface of any brick shall have kiln 
marks more than three-sixteenths ( rs ) inch in depth or cracks more than three- 
eighths (§) inch in depth, and the wearing surface of the brick shall not have 
kiln marks more than one-sixteenth (-^g-) inch in depth and shall be free from 
cracks. The brick shall have not less than four (4) and not more than six (6) 
lugs, all on one side of the brick, such that when the brick are properly laid in 
place in the pavement the joints between them will be not less than one-eighth 
(J) nor more than one-fourth (i) inch in width. The name or trade-mark 
of the manufacturer, if shown on the brick, must be recessed and not raised. 
If the edges of the brick are rounded, the radius shall not exceed one-eighth 
(i) inch. 
The brick must not be chipped in such a manner that the wearing surface 
is not intact or that the lower or bearing surface is reduced in area more 
1 The values given for hardness, toughness, and per cent of wear are intended to exclude 
unsatisfactory stone, but in communities where better stone is readily available the require- 
ments should be made more rigid. 
