"KMEEL AN ITS 
easiest-running machine made. It has a 
shuttle, makes a lock stitch, and the shuttle 
and feed motion are in one piece and there is 
no possibility of its getting out of ‘’trim.” 
The Avery is made on a new principle, hav¬ 
ing an entirely new mechanical combination, 
which does away with a large proportion of 
the pieces and bas no need of cogs, cams, 
links and levers, thus making it simple, easy 
to keep in order, aDd running with half the 
power of the otder styles of machines. These 
machines are made by the Avery Sewing 
Machine Company., 813 Broadway, N. Y., in 
different, styles, the prices, varying from 
$45 to $05. We shall give to the sender of 
the ninth largest club a No. 4 machine, the 
same as shown above, with handsome iron¬ 
work. four drawers, drop leaf, and cover. 
Price $00 00. We will also guarantee one, 
delivered free, to any person who shall send 
40 subscribers Remember this is no old style 
muebiue. nor any imitation of any machine, 
such as ere offered by so many papers at from 
$15 to $22, and dear at any price; but a brand- 
new machine on a brand new principle and 
the best, easiest-running,highest-priced though 
cheapest machine in the market. We should 
have calls for a thousand at least 
No. 12. Charter Oak Range. 
Complete for coal or wood and with water 
front if desired. This is a magnificent range 
or cooking stove, with four or six holes as de¬ 
sired, and so constructed as to work very 
rapidly and efficiently with but little fuel. 
The perforated or gauze oven doors are the 
latest improvement aDd are giving great satis¬ 
faction. This stove is made by one of the best 
and most reliable manufacturing companies 
in the great West, and their business is 
very rapidly extending. Their reputation has 
been won by good work and honest dealing. 
This is among their best stoves. It works well 
open pans of warm water, and the air for 
ventilation is warmed to the proper tempera¬ 
ture before being ad mitted to the egg chamber. 
The eggs of a tray are all turned at once, by 
using an extra tray, and the batcher to be 
successfully run requires attention but 
twice in 24 hours, and then not over 10 
minutes each time. The nest of everything is 
used in the construction of the ‘'Success.” The 
wood-work is of first-class, well-seasoned pine, 
thoroughly paiDted; the tanks, tubes, boilers 
and lamp are of copper or kaiamein—a sort of 
iron that will not rust. These hatchers are of 
several sizes, and are made by the Success 
Hatcher Co, of Lancaster, Pa. "We will give 
a No. 0, capacity 200 eggs, price $50, to the 
pergon sending the 16th largest list of sub¬ 
scribers. 
No. 17. Crystal Creamer No. 4. 
This is the only creamer known in which 
the vessels containing the milk are made of 
glass. The cans in this are made of an¬ 
nealed glass and are tougher than common 
glass, and bold from five to ten gallons each. 
They are bung in an iron vat, like a sink, 14 
inches deep, tnrough the bottom of which the 
tapering points of the cans project,and through 
No. 10. Frank WIIsou'm l’atent Bone and 
Cora Mill. 
Scarcely a farmer but has tons of bones 
lying about, while other tons can be 
bought from surrounding farms at a mere 
nominal price, which bones, now only a nui¬ 
sance, if finely ground and applied to the soil, 
would add much to the productiveness of the 
farm. The best of the bones are also, when 
these points faucets are attached for drawing 
both the milkand cream. Tbeupper part of the 
can, that within the iron sink, is surrounded 
with the water and ice for cooling the milk. 
The cone shape of the lower end of can insures 
the removal of any sediment with the first 
Sow of milk. As the glass is wholly unaffect¬ 
ed by the acids of the milk, it is easily kept 
clean and sweet, requiring no scalding, and it 
is practically everlasting if used with care. 
These creamers are made of a capacity 
adapted to almost any number of cows. They 
are made by C. L. Kneeland, Franklin, N. Y., 
who will gladly send circulars toanyone. The 
price of the No. 1 Senior is $42, and we will 
take pleasure in sending it to the sender of 
the 17th largest club. 
No. IS. A Leicester Rain. One rear old, 
took, first prize of N. Y. State Fair at Albany, 
this year. Mr. W. S. Moore, Mt. Upton. N. 
Y., also donates the first prize one year-old 
Leceister Ram, bred from stock imported by 
John Clark, Delhi, New York. To say that 
he wod first prize at Albany State Fair as a 
yearling is all that need be said of him, and he 
is richly worth $40. The sender of the 18th 
largest club will get him. 
No. 13. Spanglers* Fertilizer Dlstribu- 
tor. 
A machine that will sow ashes or the chem¬ 
ical fertilizers now so extensively used, and 
doit evenly and rapidly is a great desidera 
turn. Much larger quantities of these w aid 
be used only for the hard and disagreeable 
task of spreading them. The Spangler is the 
machine to which we alluded in our State 
with the end in view, l have made great im¬ 
provement. and believe it entirely practicable 
to make the Merino the beet she^p in the 
world, namely a profitable mutton sheep, with 
long delaine wool Twenty five of my flock 
went last Winter without grain, sheared 
an average of 18 pounds, and my best 
ram sheared 7>£ pounds of scoured wool.’’ 
This is a fine fleece. Mr Moore this year at 
the New York State Fair received $172 in 
premiums on his sheep. The ram which we 
offer took second premium as a two-year-old, 
is worth $50, and will go to the sender of the 
14th largest club. 
ground, just what is needed for feeding the 
chickens and young animals. A certain 
amount is more valuable than grain. What 
is needed is a mill such as is shown in the cut, 
which can be run with from one to foot" 
horses, and will griud frotnfiOO tol,000pounds 
of bone daily. It is also provided with a set 
of burrs for grinding corn nr other groins, and 
with these it will grind from five to twelve 
bushels per hour. This mill is well made, the 
shafts being of steel. The burrs are of the 
best chilled cast steel and put together in sec¬ 
tions, so that when a part is worn out, it can 
be cheaply replaced. This is just what you 
need, it is made by Wilson Brothers, of 
Easton. Pa. Tee price of the No. 8 is $60. We 
will present it to the sender of the tenth 
largest club. Shatl it be you ? 
No. II. Quaker City Double-Reduction 
Grinding Mill* 
This mill is so constructed as to do away 
entirely with the objec tion sometimes urged 
against the iron nulls, that they cut the grain 
into small particles instead of mashing or 
grinding it. In its first reduction, which 
takes place in the bosom or larger part of the 
burrs, the griuding edges are sharp and so 
run together as to cut the grain into small 
pieces with the least expenditure of power. 
The rnenl then passes lietweon the fiat, outer 
portion or the grinding discs, on which the fur 
rows are reversed, having tbeir inclined sur¬ 
and gives good satisfaction. Here is a chance 
of obtaining, with little work, a good stove, 
that no one can afford to neglect, We gave 
away one of these stoves last- year, and we 
now offer another, hoping it may go to some 
of our young people. If there "is oue thing 
that pleases us more than another, it is to see 
our boys and girls forming happy unions for 
life and starting out to farm a few acre®, more 
or less, on their own account, and we ailwavs 
like to do all we can t > inakesm'h homes hap¬ 
py. and we would like to send this good stove 
into such a house Rural, girls and boys, will 
not some of you go to work and give us the 
chance to do so } And if a girl will win it, 
we will add the furniture on our own account, 
and some time come and dine with them. It 
was presented to U3 bv the Excelsior Manu 
factoring Company, 8k Louis, Mo. 
So 13. Syracu-e Sulky l’low. 
The sulky plow, after several years' pro¬ 
bation, has won its way into public favor 
and has secured a place of permanence i»n the 
American farm. For all purposes and for all 
kinds of land, there is u-> plow superior to the 
Syracuse. The reputation of this company is 
a sufficient guarantee that it is of the best 
manufacture, and its extended sale testifies to 
faces forward,aud receiving the small particles 
which are mashed and mellowed until exactly 
resembling the meal ground in the Buhr-stoue, 
actually enlarging one-third in bulk. So oer 
tain are the manufacturers that this mill will 
please ull who try it. that they offer to send 
it on u trial of ten days, and if not what is 
claimed, it may be returned; or they will 
receive it at any time within one year, in ex¬ 
change for a French Buhr mill at the full 
price paid for it. This mill will grind any 
kiud of grain, or cobs and corn, alio bones 
and ovster shells, course or lino, as desired. 
It can be run by any ordinary horse power or 
steam engine. When we consider the great 
advantage in having grain ground for fowling 
purposes it is a wouder tout more mills are 
not iu use. This anil is made by A. W. Straub 
& Co.. Station B, Philadelphia, Pa.; manu¬ 
factory, 8 787-89-aud '41 Filbert St. Price, 
$60 00, and it will be given to the sender of 
the eleventh largest club. 
its uniform success. All its import parts 
are of the best brand of Bessemer steel. Its 
wheels ar© of iron with ste-el spokes, light, and 
at the same time, strong. The boxes are of 
chilled Inin running on steel axles, and so 
made that they can l*e cosily taken out and 
replaced when worn out. It is made through¬ 
out of the best materi - Is and on the most ap 
proved principles. When in use the furrow 
wheel runs ahead of the plow and out of the 
way, but w hen raised out of the ground this 
wheel recedes until the plow is directly be¬ 
tween the wheels and supported on a balance, 
so there is no weight to he carried by the 
horses’ necks. The plow is lifted from the 
ground by simply pressing a catch on the le¬ 
ver, by the team, so that a boy or, for that 
matter, a lady can easily operate it and do 
first class work. It is made by the Syracuse 
Chilled Plow Company. Syracuse, New York. 
Price, complete, $50, We will give one, com¬ 
plete. with an extra point, extra jointer 
point, screw wreuch, neck yoke and whitffe- 
trees, to the person sending the thirteenth 
largest list of subscribers, and we guarantee 
one to every one who sends a club of 50, aud 
we will pay freight. 
No 14. A Thoroughbred Merino Prize Rum. 
Mr. W. S. Moore, of Mt. Upton, has been 
breeding Merinos on a sensible plan. He has 
been trying to develop more carcass, less 
wrinkles and more wool of longer and finer 
staple, with less grease. His sheep are of large 
bony, low on the legs, with a long, delaine 
fleece, aud he has reduced the horns to as low 
a proportion as possible. Mr. Moore writes; 
‘‘By careful selection of the rams every year 
No 19. Magee's Ideal Parlor Heater. 
This stove is a base burning, self feeding, 
bard coal steve. It is beautiful in design, 
works perfectly, and is a powerful heater. 
There is none better, and with this any 
family may laugh at the severest blizzard that 
Fair Notes from Albany. We examined it 
carefully, and we were well pleased with it. 
It will sow from .200 to 1,000 pounds per acre. 
It is so made that in sowing ashes containing 
coals or small stones it will either break them 
mto rragments so small as to easily pass 
through, or else push them out of the way so 
as at all times to sow the fertilizer evenly and 
surely. This machine Is strong, simple, and 
so positive m its action that it never varies. 
It is made by J. W, Spangler & Bro., York] 
Pa., and the size we offer is worth $50, aud no 
mistake. We will give it for the 15;h largest 
club, 6 
No. 16. The Success Hatcher. 
That chickens can be successfully hatched 
and raised by the use of artificial beat, has 
been made more and more certain by each 
year's trials and successes. And that the 
Success Hutcher has stood among the very 
best is attested by its four years of successful 
competition and its constantly increasing 
sales. Bur that it might distance ali compel 
itors, its manufacturers have at great expense 
added a new heating and regulating appar¬ 
atus. The heat is furnished by a kerosene 
lamp, and the improvement consists in con¬ 
structing this with a reservoir holding several 
gallons and so binging it permanently to the 
machine that it cauuot get tipped over or up¬ 
set, and as now made, it does not need filling 
of toner than twice a week. The heat regu¬ 
lator consists of a thermostatic bar inside the 
egg chamber and a chlorine electric battery, 
w hich, when set up. requires no attention for 
two years. The regulator is so sensitive that 
the variation of the temperature of one fourth 
of a degree iu the egg chamber regulates the 
lamp by turning the wick up or down, and 
also opens or closes the ventilators. The 
moisture is supplied by evaporation from 
ever swept over the western prairies This is 
also made by the Magee Furnace Co. of Bos¬ 
ton. and other places as menioned in No. 9, 
and this is a guarantee that it is well made. 
It is a No. 1, price $86, and will go to warm 
and cheer the home of the subscriber who 
I sends us tbo 19th largest club. We guarantee 
1 that 45 suoseribers shall take this. 
No. !IO. Stoddard’s Creamery and Refriger¬ 
ator. 
This creamery has 
three cans with ca- 
pa city sufficient for 
HFli 1 -1 the °f from 
_J seveu to nine cows. 
"- ■aitMT- L a * ?0 * ,<w a ? 00 
I St ! 's drawn off 
.8 S|l» iFr ”11 n ' e milk through an 
j|y>djustable tube hav- 
w ^ top, the tube passing 
down through the milk and out at the bottom 
