-THEY GROW BETTER • THEY YIELD BETTER 
.iv?"i' ™ "^r " ™' ' ^ Moline on Bomiynicad I'arms. Mr. Billet, Superintendent, says, "It is great; now a man with 
a Molme can farm from one year's end to the other without uny horses if he wants to. Why the 'Moline' does better cultivat- 
ing and destroys less Corn at the ends in turning than horses will do." 
tiyate 14 to 20 acres with a 2-row cultivator; drill 38 acres with a :o-foot drill; harvest 25 acres a day with an 
8-foot binder; mow 25 acres with an 3-foot mower or 30 acres with a lo-foot mower. 
This gives you an idea what you can accomplish in a single day with a Moline Tractor. Remember, also, that, 
after domg all this work, which equals that of 3 or 4 teams, you drive your Tractor out of the field into its shelter 
and you are done, whereas if the teams do it, when their day is done, yours is not by any means — unhitch, feed, 
water, clean, bed — then almost as much to do the next morning before the real day's fieldwork starts. 
Every Farmer, Whether Tenant or Owner, should arrange at once with us for a Moline Tractor — do not 
wait until you are "able" to get. or can "spare" the money — you lose almost the price of a "Moline" every year 
you farm without it. It is a business proposition. It makes farming proBtable, that is why so many business 
farmers are now tising "Molines" — it is the only Tractor that does all farmwork, including cultivating. 
Why Farm with horses? Edison says "A horse is the most costly motor ever built." He eats 12.000 pounds of 
food a year, the whole output of 5 acres; four horses require the crops of 20 acres to feed them. Think of it. The 
cost of your horse feed and upkeep is almost one-half of the total expenses of your year's farming. 
The Moline Universal Tractor and one man do as much work as any six or eight horses with two to three 
men — doing any kind of farmwork. 
What Happens During the Six Months of Winter? Your four, six, eight or ten horses "eat their heads off" — 
rather they eat the hundreds of dollars which should go to your bank account or to help pay off the mortgage. 
Your "Moline" works when you want it to during those six months of winter, — threshing, filling silo, grinding feed, 
sawing wood, scraping roads and the minute it stops work it stops "eating." 
Which Way Will You Farm? The modern "Moline" way, of course. Ask me how you can have a "Moline" 
at once — come, write or phone. 
Read What Some of the Enthusiastic Owners Now Using 
X Say About it 
'Moline' 
Mr. John W. Clemson, Halifax, says: "I have been wanting a Tractor for the last five years but never found 
any that appealed to me as an all-purpose Tractor, light enough, yet with power enough, to do all kinds of farm- 
work, but when I saw the 'Moline' I thought at once it was the Tractor for me, and since I have mine I am more 
than pleased with it." 
Mr. Harry Hetrick, Shellsville, says: "It is a wonderful machine. I would not take twice what I paid for it 
if I could not get another. With it I was able to put out 80 acres of wheat instead of 40 — and those extra 40 acres 
of wheat will pay for my Tractor. It is a real pleasure to farm with a 'Moline.' " 
Mr.E. B. Mitchell, 
owner of Beaufort 
Farms, says: "My Mo- 
line Tractor is doing 
wonderful work. We 
used it with six sections 
of harrows, hauling in 
corn, 6.000-pound 
load, plowing, belt 
work, etc., and I am in- 
deed pleased with it." 
Mr. E. B. Betser, 
Linglestown, says: "I 
cannot say enough in 
praise of my Moline 
Tractor. I have done 
most everything with 
it, plowing, discing, 
harrowing, seeding, 
threshed 20,000 bushels 
wheat- for myself and 
neigh bois and all kinds 
of belt work," 
With this outfit you, alone, one man, . ,ui li i 1 . . 1 1 . , 1 1 1 1 
date way and save the profits instead ol s])endini; tiiejii .ill loi bic I 
63 
ly. Farm this up-to- 
r^c-ieed bills and extra help. 
