21 



DOUBLE WHEEL HOES 



No. 11 



Planet Jr. Double 

 Wheel Hoe 



Price, $9.00 



Packed weight, 37 lbs. 



Equipment: 



One pair 6-inch hoes. 

 One pair 4 J/^ -inch hoes. 

 Four steel cultivator teeth. 

 One pair plows. 

 Two 3-tooth rakes. 

 Two 5-tooth rakes. 

 Two leaf lifters. 



All oil 

 tempered 



NOS. 11, 12, 13, 13V2 AND 14 DOUBLE WHEEL HOES all have the same 

 style steel frames, wheels and handles. 



WHEELS for wheel hoes, being but depth regulators, are most serviceable about 



inches 



and run steadilv. Ground 



light and easily handled 

 should be well fined and 

 prepared for seeding or 

 for working with wheel 

 hoes. 



THE TOOL FRAMES 

 for 1915 are made of 

 pressed steel instead of 

 malleable or cast iron. 



This is a radical improve- 

 ment and makes the ma- 

 chines almost indesstruct- 

 ible. The frame can be 

 set at different heights to 

 suit each kind or depth of 

 work, and change of teeth 

 or change of position can 

 be made in a few seconds. 

 OUR SEED DRILLS we do not make as an attachment for our Double-Wheel 

 Hoes, but we combine a Double-Wheel Hoe with No. 4 Seeder, as shown on pages 

 11, 12 and 13. 



Cultivating and stirring 

 deeply. 



Hoeing both sides at once, 

 throwing a little earth 

 toward the plants. 



John A. H. Owens, Charlestown, Ind., writes May 19, 1914: "Some fifteen years since I bought 

 one of your No. 13 Planet Jr. Cultivators and have used it ever since with success and entire satis- 

 faction." 



D. A. SouLE, Pittsfield, Mass., writes April 10, 1914: "I have used Planet Jr. tools for the 

 last five years and like them very much." 



William Smith, 17 Northrup Place, Buffalo, N. Y., writes April 22, 1912: "I purchased one 

 of your Double Wheel Hoes, No. 11, and am so well satisfied with it that I would not sell it for 

 three times what I paid for it if I could not get another one like it, for it is one of the finest 

 and best cultivators ever put on the market. In every way, shape or form I wish every one with a 

 garden owned one." 



Frank Hunt, Cross River, N. Y., writes February 25, 1913: "I have had one of your Double 

 Wheel Hoes (hand power) for a number of years, and like it very much. The field cultivator I have, 

 have had for more than twenty years, and I think it is about time I had a new one." 



