612 



State Board ok Agkicultuke, &c. 



HORSE POWER 



On the farm is too rare. Farmers depend upon itinerant 

 machines for threshing, with aJl the attendant extortion 

 and inconv^enience. With a power, tliresher and saw, 

 owned on the farm, or jointly by two or three neighbors, 

 their use is nnich more economical and satisfactory, and 

 may be extended to the cutting of fodder, grinding grain, 

 turning grindstone, churning, etc. 



GKAY'S HORSE POWER AND THRESHER. 



