January, 1922 



BETTER FRUIT 



Page Eleven 



Apples in Big Figures 



Ten thousand tons of apples, 20,000,000 

 pounds, will be dehydrated this season by 

 the King's Food Products Company, in 

 their slants at Salem and The Dalles. To 

 meet this requirement shipments have been 



drawn from a wide territory, even includ- 

 ing Roseburg anji Sutherlin, on the south, 

 and the Yakima district on the north. It is 

 said that the output was all sold in advance, 

 this select dehydrated product creating sucn 

 a demand that it can never be met without 

 an expansion of present plant capacities. 



Reasonable expectations from walnuts, 

 cultural requirements, disease and pest con- 

 trol measures, and directions for harvesting 

 and curing the crop are treated in a new 

 bulletin of the University of California, 

 at Berkeley. The bulletin is free to those 

 wiio wish to send for it. 



Lower Machine Prices 



— a factor in a brighter outlook 



for 1922 



MOST of the readers of this paper 

 know that we have reduced our 

 prices on farm machines for 1922. 

 The lower figures apply on practically our 

 entire line of grain, hay, and corn harvest- 

 ing machines, plows, tillage implements, 

 seeding machines, etc. 



Reductions in prices of farm machines 

 and other articles the farmer buys is one 

 of the many indications pointing to con- 

 tinued improvement in the farmer's situa- 

 tion. The War Finance Corporation is 

 steadily pouring aid from its billion dollar 

 fund into agricultural communities to 

 finance the farmer. Freight rate reduc- 

 tions on stock, grain, hay, etc., now going 

 into effect, w^ill save many millions for the 

 farmers. Land values are now on a sound- 



er basis. For 1922, better labor at lower 

 cost will be available, better marketing 

 conditions are being evolved, and recent 

 tariff legislation also should tend to in- 

 crease farm product prices. 



All these factors indicate that more 

 efficient production by modern methods 

 and improved machines will mean greater 

 profit for the new year. You cannot afford 

 to postpone the purchase of needed ma- 

 chines. Where repairs have been made 

 again and again, beyond the point of ser- 

 viceability, waste and loss are pretty sure 

 to follow. The present prices will enable 

 you to replace the old with efficient 

 modern machines so that best use may be 

 made of the opportunities that are certain 

 to come to the farming world. 



The International Harvester Line 

 of Farm Operating Equipment 



Binders 



Threshers 



Harvester-Threshers 



Headers 



Push Binders 



Mowers 



Rakes 



Tedders 



T/»aders 



oide-Delivery Rakes 



Sweep Rakes and Stackers 



Combined Side Rake and Tedder 



Baling Presses 



Corn Planters 



Listers 



Com Cultivators 



Corn Binders 

 Corn Pickers 

 Corn Shellers 

 Ensilage Cutters 

 Huskers and Shredders 

 Huskers and Silo Fillers 

 Beet Seeders 

 Beet Cultivators 

 Beet Pullers 

 Cotton Planters 

 Grain Drills 

 Lime Sowers 

 Broadcast Seeders 

 Tractor Plows 

 Horse Plows 

 Disk Harrows 



Spring-Tooth Harrows 

 Peg-Tooth Harrows 

 Tractor Harrows 

 One-Horse Cultivators 

 Culti-Packers 

 Kerosene Engines 

 Tractors 

 Motor Trucks 

 Cream Separators 

 Manure Spreaders 

 Stalk Cutters 

 Feed Grinders 

 Stone Burr Mills 

 Cane Mills 

 Potato Diggers 

 Wagons 



If you are interested in learning some of the new prices or in looking over any 

 individual machine, the International Dealer in your vicinity is at your service. Or 

 you may address your inquiry direct to us. 



International Harvester Company 



OF AMERICA ii e a 



Chicago i,Ncoi.i.oBATtoi u 5 a 



92 Branches and U.OOO Dealers in the United States 



