10 
IVEST. 
Some New Implements. 
In this age of labor-saving implements 
nothing has yet been made destined to save 
as much “back ache,” hard work and time 
as the Daisy Garden 
Plow. It is made very 
simple, yet strong and 
elegant. Every thing is 
firmly bolted together 
and braced. The spindle being formed 
by bolting a short piece of turned gas 
pipe between the double beam, using 
an elegant Steel Wheel, it forms the 
lightest, strongest and best finished 
implement ever made. The entire 
plow is nicely painted, striped, orna¬ 
mented and varnished, and looks like a 
“Daisy.” 
All kinds of vegetables can be cultivated 
with this Plow most effectually, working 
equally well a bed of onions or rows of po¬ 
tatoes or corn, which no doubled wheel or 
shovelled plow can do. In fact, more and 
better work can be done with one of these 
implements than with any other tool made. 
The same shovel being adapted to all kinds 
of work, there are no bolts or wrenches to 
get lost. The ground is stirred to a greater 
depth and better crops will be raised than 
with any so-called “Cultivators.” 
A child can run the Daisy as well as a 
man and much easier than using a hoe, not 
considering the vast amount of time saved. 
1 he value and advantage of having a 
first-class Garden Plow is so evident that 
they have become more indispensable to 
every one who raises a garden, large or 
small, than the hoe, the only hindrance 
being their high price. In the Daisy this 
has been fully overcome, and with a supe¬ 
rior design which cannot fail to give satis¬ 
faction to all. 
DARNELL’S PATENT FURROWER & MARKER. 
We are always ready and willing to try 
everything new that’s offered as a labor- 
saving device, but it is seldom we get hold 
of an implement which pleases us so well 
as Darnell’s Patent Furrower and Marker, 
which is manufactured by H. W. Doughten 
of East Moorestown, N. J. We had often 
seen it advertised, and were rather inclined 
to the supposition that there were few 
farmers who could make the purchase of 
one at $20 pay them. But after putting it 
to a practical test, we have concluded that 
there are few who would do without it if 
they understood its merits. We 
planted our potatoes with it, and 
pronounce it a perfect success. It 
opens the furrows at any desired 
distance apart leaving loo.-e soil 
in the bottom. Then by reversing 
THE DAISY GARDEN PLOW, 
the discs to throw the earth together in a 
ridge, it covers the potatoes perfectly. It 
can also be adjusted to work well as a hiller. 
HERCULES POST HOLE DIGGER. 
The blades are made of the very best 
cast steel, properly tempered, and the irons 
of the best malleable iron. Holes can be 
dug of any desired diameter, and as deep as 
the full length of the digger. Holes three 
feet deep and nine incb.es in diameter can 
be dug within four minutes. No Nursery¬ 
man, Fence Builder, Farmer or Railroad 
Company can afford to be without it. 
To operate the Digger, grasp the handles 
together firmly—then force the Digger into 
the ground by repeatedly striking the 
shovels into the earth (at every alternate 
stroke turn the Digger partly around to 
form a round hole) until the ground is suffi¬ 
ciently loose; then strike the shovel in deep, 
work the Digger back and forth, then spread 
the handles and lift out the loose earth thus 
held between the shovels. Continue the 
