April, 1920 



BETTER FRUIT 



Page 43 



Where the Going is Hardest 



On the clay roads of the Mississippi Basin — 



In the loose sandy soil of the California orchar'^s and along 



Florida's sandy forest roads — . 



On the steep and rocky slopes of the mountains of Pennsylvania, West 



Virginia, Colorado, and Tennessee, where the up-hill hauling is severest — 

 In Montana, the Dakotas, and Minnesota, where the snows are deepest— 

 In plowed fields, on country roads and mountain trails — wherever 



road and weather conditions make hauHng most difficult — 



You Will See International Motor Trucks 



The toughest hauHng problems are being solved with International Motor 

 Trucks. They are conquering the difficult jobs. They are proving beyond all 

 question that Internationals are built to do the work and keep going. 1 hey are 

 making good where others fail. 



That is why you find Internationals most numerous where hauling conditions 

 are most stubborn — they stand the strain of constant daily grind — they can be 

 depended on to force their way right ahead — they are always ready for hard ]obs 

 — they give dependable service day after day at low cost. 



Your farming will be easier, more pleasant and more profitable when you are 

 the owner of an International Motor Truck. Sizes to choose from, M-ton to 

 S'A-ton. Branch houses, distributors and dealers everywhere. Write us tor a 

 catalog and let us answer your questions. 



International Harvester company 



OF AMERICA 



(INCORPORATED) 



BiUings, Mont. Cheyenne, Wyo Denver Colo Helena Mon. 



Los Angeles. Cal. Portland. Ore Salt Lake C.ty. Utah 



San Francisco, CaL Spokane, Wash. 



WHEN WRITING ADVERTISERS MENTION BETTER FRUIT 



