57 



TWO HORSE CULTIVATORS 



N0.76F 



Planet Jr. Pivot Wheel Riding Cultivator with 

 Spring Trip Standards 



PRICE, $53.00 



Weight, 562 lbs. 



Roller bearings, $5.00 extra 



Equipment : 



Eight 2'^ X 10-inch cultivator steels with 



spring trip standards. 

 One pair 7-inch plows. 

 Two 8-inch shovels. 

 One pair 14-inch discs. 

 Spring lift. 



No. 76E. 8 spring trip cultivator teeih. 1 pair plant shields, 2 Price Weight 



pairs of plows, 2 8-inch shovels $51.00 550 lbs. 



No. 76H. 8 spring trip cultivator teeth, 1 pair 7-inch plows, 



1 pair plant shields 49.75 542 lbs. 



No. 76G. 8 cuhivator teeth, 1 pair plant shields 48.25 531 lbs. 



NO. 76 _TWO=HORSE CULTIVATOR is shown above with spring trip standards. 

 The increasing demand for spring trips is such that we now offer No. 76 equipped 

 with them as a separate machine. Some of our customers say that a stone as large as 

 a man's fist, imbedded in clay when it is fairly dry, is sufficient obstruction to cut off 

 a break-pin, and that they prefer to pay the difference in the cost for the spring trip 

 which takes care of itself. 



Spring trip standards are, of necessity, heavier than plain ones, but the new spring 

 lift makes very easy work. 



Andrew Gleim, R. F. D., Wheelersburg, Ohio, writes June 9, 1914: "I think the No. 76 is 

 the finest cultivator on the market to-day. Especially for potatoes this cultivator is worth a half- 

 dozen other makes.'" 



F. H._ Jennings, Rome, 111., writes June 2, 1914: "I am using several of your tools and find 

 them all right in every respect." 



Nick B. Bunn. Nashville, N. C, writes June 15, 1914: "I have two of your No. 76 Riding 

 Cultivators. Have been highly pleased with their work. In both cotton and corn, and on hilly and 

 rough land, they are not to be surpassed by any cultivator that I have yet seen. It seems a great 

 pity that we of the South continue to waste so much time in working one-horse implements." 



H. A. Hermann, Chief of Department of Horticulture, Estacion Experimental Agronomica, San- 

 tiago de Las Vegas, Cuba., writes June 6, 1914: "I am familiar with the goods that you make and 

 have obtained excellent results from them for many years. Each time the opportunity presents 

 itself, I take pleasure in recommending them." 



