742 
SUPPLEMENT TO THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
NOV 8 
ysnudoumy 
well on uneven, dry, hard or stony land. 
Price »50. It will be given to the sender of 
the 10th largest club. Made by tne Syracuse 
Chilled Plow Co , Syracuse, N. Y. 
grain is a necessity. It saves much that is 
ordinarily wasted, aud it puts that fed in more 
digestible shape, thus enabling the stock to 
make moregaio with thesameleed. This mill 
operates easily with one horse, and will grind 
corn and cob both, or will grind any kind of 
grain: it can be so set as to act as a oorn- 
sheller, and afterwards be used to grind the 
corn. It will pay any farmer to use one. 
Made bv J, A. Field & Co , Ft. Louis, Mo. 
Price 155, W ill be presented to the subseri ber 
sending the 8th largest club. 
sure instead of being wedged. The Stude- 
baker patent axle truss is used, giving the 
greatest possible strength with the least 
weight. The Studabaker patent oval edged 
tire is also used, protecting the felloes from 
wear Evary wagon is painted in the (lno*t 
manner and with the best paint, the aim 
being to make n perfectly honest, trustworthy 
wagon—the best in the world. Price $70 
Manufactured by the Studehnker Brothers’ 
Manufacturing Company, South Bend, lnd. 
We offer one of these splendid wagons to the 
subscriber sending us the sirlh largest dob. 
especially for work. The manufacturers 
claim that not one of their mills ever failed to 
withstand the heaviest gale. In its construc¬ 
tion the best material is U‘‘d, the shafting lx 
ing cold rolled, and the boxes made long and 
fully babbitted; the spokes are hard wood, 
made round, and have no bolt*passing through 
them. It has no vane, led tig so constructed a < 
to turn on a |>eculiar frame, so as to adapt 
itself to the lighted, breeze or heaviest gale; 
they warrant it not to blow down bo long a* 
the tower remains standing. 
Every farmer who has water to draw for 
stock should have u wind-mill, and here is a 
chance to get one with little effort. Priee$90. 
Manuf«etured by Powell & Douglass. Wauke¬ 
gan, 111., and it will go to the person sending 
the third largest dub. 
No. 11. Zimmerman Fruit Drier, 
This drier is 24 indies deep, 26 inches wide, 
leet high; a substantial furnace takes 
two-foot wood or burns coal equally well. It 
has 12 galvanized iron trays 22 inches square, 
No. 0. Th- (JUpin Kulkjr Plow, 
This implement is |rTfect In mechanical 
construction, being made entirely of iron and 
steel, and, having no loose joints, or cornpli- 
No. 7. Charter <*nk It unite. 
Complete for coal or wood and with wafer 
front if desired, price $55, This is a magnifi- 
No. 4, The Crown Mower. 
During the past season this machine has 
provi d very satisfactory to the many pur¬ 
chasers. It is made entirely of the best iron 
and steel, is light, strong and durable. The 
crank wheel is counterbalanced to offset the 
weight of |>il man.giving a very steady,smooth 
motion: it has a most complete reel ing bar, 
so that the points of the guards can bo raised 
for rough ground or depressed to take up 
giving over 40 feet of drying surface. Capacity 
5 to 7 bushels of apples per day. It is abo a 
splendid linking oven. This drier is fitted 
for home use and will pay w ell. Price $50. 
It will lie given for the 11 th largest club. 
Made by the Zimmerman Manufacturing Co., 
Cincinnati, Ohio. 
lodged grass, which allows of its being used on 
very rough, boggy land. The gearing is all 
inclosed and protected from grass and dust. 
The truck is of the width of the swath and the 
inner shoe is directly iu frout of one wheel, so 
that the wheels always run on the stubble and 
not on cut. grass, th us making it run with a 
strong driving force, Jt has also a great 
range of motion to cutter bar, so that it can be 
worked on rough and hilly ground where many 
other machines will not work. Another great 
advantage of the Crown Mower is that thu 
parts are made to a gunge, to that in case ol a 
breakage and another piece i.s ordered, the 
o wner can bo sure It. will fit every time 
Made by the Janesville Machine Co , Jam s 
ville, Wis. Price $K0, and it will go to the 
sender of the fourth largest club. 
cated changes,it is light., strong and durable. 
It has but a single lever which regulates the 
d'-pth of furrow, the plow always leveling 
it,-elf at auy depth by reason of its crank 
axle. It is so very simple and easy to operate 
that any man or boy can run it. It is no 
cheap device made to rob the farmer, but will 
please all who try it. It runs far easier and 
steadier than anv walking plow, and does far 
better work. Every farmer should have a 
sulky plow, and this is among the very best. 
cent range or cook stove, with four or six 
holes as desired,and so constructed as to work 
very rapidly "and efficiently with but little 
fuel. Tne perforated or gauze oven doors ere 
the latest improvement and are giving great 
satisfaction. Hero is a chance of obtaining a 
good stove,that no one oan afford to neglect. 
Wo hope some of the young men, or women 
either, in the Rural’S great family, who are 
expecting to marry aud goto housekeeping in 
the bpring (there should Lie many such in so 
No. 12 . Nonpareil Feed Mill. 
This mill grinds ear corn, cob and all, as 
well as all kinds of small grains for feeder 
family use. The grinding plates, the only 
things that cau wear out, are made of the 
hardest w hite metal, and one pair will grind 
about 5,0(X) bushels, and can be easily 
and cheaply replaced Of course, it pays to 
grind all grain for stock feeding. We shall 
give this mill, jirice $45, to the subscriber 
No. 5. LcOell'N Improved Iron Wind En¬ 
gine. 
This engine is made entirely of iron, and 
mostly of wrought aud malleable Irons; the 
hub is cone-shaped, 16 inches long, having a 
Scaring the whole length nicely babbitted. 
A set of arms aie placed at each cud of the hub, 
which, being 16 inches apart, form a sort 
of double brace to the wheel and possess great 
strength. The buckets are three feet long, 
| having the 12th largest list. 
Miller, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
Made by L. J 
We shall present it to the sub¬ 
scriber who sends the niutb 
large-t club, aud we are sure 
he will be pleased with it. Price 
$50. Manufactured by the fa¬ 
mous plow makers, Deere & Co., 
Moline, 111. 
and two wide, presenting much surface to the 
wind, and giving great power. The manufac¬ 
turers claim it to be the lightest-running, the 
best regulating, and, at the same time, tho 
most durable made. It is made by the Spring- 
field Machine Cotnpanv, Springfield, Ohio. 
Price $h 0. It. will bo given to the sender of 
tho fifth largest club. 
No. Iff. SyracuseHalky Plow. 
The beam, jointer standard 
and l»Ue that carry the plow 
are of steel; t.lie wheels are of 
iron w ith steel tires and spokes, 
and run on steel axles with 
chilled iron box-s, w hich can 
be easily replaced when worn 
out. The circles, main lever 
and smaller parts are rnalle- 
No. 6. Stnilebaker Farm Wagon. 
The history of tho Sludobnker Brothers, 
South Bend, Tod., bad we space t.o give it, 
would !•« a valuablestndy for any young man. 
Commencing in a blacksmith aud wagon- 
repair sb< p 32 years ago, with less than $100 
capital, and making only t wo wagons the first 
year, by bard work and honesty they have 
built up a business and trade, till in lSStf their 
works covered over 80 acres; they enipl yed 
over 1,200 men and made over 30 tiOO wagons, 
or nearly 10 every hour of the working days. 
Think of a steady stream of wagons from their 
respectable a family as ours) will improve 
this opportunity to secure such a splendid 
range with so little effort. It was presented 
to us by the Excelsior Manufacturing Co.. St. 
Louis, 'Mo. It will be given to tho sender of 
the seventh largest club. If this prem iu m is 
taken by a qirl , wo will add $10 ourselves in 
the way of furniture. 
No. 8. Mound C itj Feed Mill, No. 7 
No. 13. Anno Ruling Cultivator, 
for corn and like crops, or for fallows. Price 
$45. 
At corn-culti vat : ng time most farmers have 
more horses than men; in this tool we have 
an implement on which one man can use two 
horses and do the work of two men. The 
axle is ol wrought lion and so cur' ed that it 
can boused in very tall corn; the wheels are 
high aDdhave broad tires. The beams may 
be coupled together to u s e with foot lifts, or 
be left independent, as desired. The teeth can 
be changed in pitch, to fit it to work on hard 
or soft land. When to be used on fallows, a 
middle section is added, when we have a most 
complete working tool. We are confident 
^ A able iron. The plow proper i* of cbilleddron 
_ Jf \ or stet-l. and is warranted to scour in any 
■ ■ SKT^wSri a} soil When in use, the fin row wheel runs 
f—- forward of tho plow; but when raising the 
J plow out of the ground, the construction 
is such that the plow moves forward while 
nj^nff s the wheel recedes, bringing the sulky level 
H H | ~ t- ^ : and the plow balanced between the wheels, for 
* •“ground by^the team, so that any boy who can 
All are becoming convinced that grinding drive the team cau operate the plow, W orks 
shop of one every six minutes! They employ 
every mechanical invention that will save 
manual labor, and their workmen are the 
best, und are held responsible for the quality 
of their work. Every spoke is driven in hot 
glue, by a powerful machine, which makes them 
as firm as though grown there; the wood¬ 
works ore soaked in boiling oil, the i-keins are 
made either of Lake Superior iron, or steel, 
and are fitted to the axles bv a machine that 
guarantees a perfect fit, while the skeiu boxes 
are forced into the hubs by hydraulic pres- 
