Lakeview Seed Farm, Rochester, N. Y. 
wide, and by ^oing twice m the same 
furrow it will do ^ood work, and 
many times faster than the spade. 
It has drawing eyes to attach a rope 
for an assistant where the work is 
difficult. It can be used for hilling 
corn, peas, potatoes and 
other crops. The tool should 
be pushed a etroke at each 
step. 
The Planet Jr." Cultivator and Horse Hoe. Price, $8.00, 
This cultivator is unsurpassed by any now in use, in the 
variety of work it will perform. It is made entirely of steel and 
iron, except the handles, and has an expanding frame which can 
be closed to five inches or opened to twenty -four. The standards 
are of hollow steel, and being round in front and polished, it does 
not clog like other cultivators. By the use of different teeth it 
can be used as a plain Cultivator, or as a Horse Hoe, to draw 
dirt from the small plants, or to hill them up later in the season. 
It is also a first class potato planter, marking and furrowing the 
rows, covering the potatoes and rolling them down, and cultivat- 
ing and hilling them as thej' increase in growth. It is equally 
good in the cultivation of corn. By the use of this implement 
hand hoeing may be almost wholly dispensed with. The saving 
of labor in a single year -will more than pay the cost of the tool. 
{See Manufacturers' Illustrated Catalogue for fuller description.) 
Extra Cultivator Steels, per set of five. 
1^ inches 55 cents I 3 inches 75 cents 
2.1 " 65 " I 4 $1.00 
The " Planet Jr." Horse Hoe, with Furrowing- and Marking- Attachment. 
Furrowing- Steel (15 inches wide) $1.50, Marking attachment, $1.50. 
This cut shows the Cultivator with the furrowing find mark- 
ing attachments ready for marking and furrowing land for pota- 
toes and other crops requiring a furrow. All potato growers 
will appreciate this attachment, which can be readily attai^hed 
to the cultivator. When corn is manured in the hill, it prepares 
the rows very finely and quickly. It will mark and furrow rows 
at any width from "two to five feet, and much quicker and better 
than can be done by a sepai ate marker and plow. ' 
