Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 22, Number 77, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 June 1901 — SPRINKLING WAGONS. [ARTICLE]

SPRINKLING WAGONS.

The Modern Onej n Bljr Improvement on the Old Style. The modern sprinkling wagon is very different from the old timer. The chief improvement is in the spray head, which enables the driver to control the flow of water much better than the old style. Thus, whether it is a dirt or a macadam road or a stone paved or asphalted street, there can be supplied from the modern street sprinkler just the amount of water required to lay the dust in it without waste. The spray head on each side has its own valve rod running to the driver’s seat, with a step there for the foot The driver can operate both heads at once, or he can run only one head. lie can shut off one or open either one at pleasure. With this sort of wagon the expert driver leaves behind him dry crosswalks with perfiectly defined limits, and when he comes to a carriage or a street car upon which lie doesn’t want to throw water he shuts off the flow on that side and keeps the other going. Sprinkling wagons are made In various sizes, ranging from 150 gallons to 1,000 gallons capacity. There are 20 sprinkling wagons sold in this country nowadays where there were was one sold only a few years ago. This great increase in their use is due in large measure to sanitary reasons, to the great extension of good roads and to the common desire fop comfort. Sprinkling wagons are used nowadays commonly in many smaller towns and villages where they were never thought of some years ago. And American sprinkling wagons are now found all over the world wherever sprinkling wagons are used/ They are exported to Australia, Cuba, Porto Rico, South America, South Africa and Europe. The modern sprinkling wagon that the traveler chances to see in Paris or Berlin or Hamburg came very likely from the same factory as the one he saw here before he left home going through his own home street.—New York Sun.