WALTER S. SCHELLS QUALITY SEEDS FOR MARKET-GARDENERS 
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This is Joiin \V. Kuiikle, of the Cumbler Dairy Farm. Highspire, Pa., harvesting his wheat with his Moline Tractor hitched to 
his Deering Binder. He did it ail himself, for the Moline is a one-man tractor. He kept an exact account of the gasoline used, and 
it cost him 2j cents per acre. Can you beat that? Say, men. John Riinkle had another kind of tractor first and says he slung 
himself by looking too long at the cheap price of the other. He sold it at a big sacrifice and bought his Moline and now is he happy? 
is he pleased? would he sell his Moline at double what he paid if he could not get another? Ask him. His Moline. next to his 
wife and children, is his best chum; he just simply loves to farm with it. So will you. Buy yours tiow — don't sting yourself as John 
did, for even though you buy another tractor first you will eventually buy a Moline. 
The Wonderful IMoline Universal Tractor 
THE MODERN METHOD OF FARMINO 
There are two great difficulties the majority of farmers have to face: First, never able to get through with their 
work. From long before sunup until long after sundown it's work, work, work — and yet never done — not a day 
nor an hour to spare to rest and live. Second, in addition to all these never-ending, long days of work, the money 
you must pay for extra help and for the enormous feed-bills to keep your many horses in shape to work, takes most 
of the money you have earned during the year by such hard effort. The value of any investment is not what it 
costs, be it much or little, but what you get out of It. You can stop those long tiresome days, you can save 
those hundreds of dollars of feed bills and make your farming a real pleasure, void of its burdens, with time 
for you and your family to live and be happy if you will farm the modem way, with a Moline Universal 
Tractor. 
See what you can do with it in any 10-hour day! You, one man, can plow 9 acres; disc 27 acres with a 
7-foot tandem disc, or disc 38 acres with a lo-foot disc; harrow 76 acres with a 20-foot peg-tooth harrow; you 
can plant 22 acres a day with a two-row planter; cultivate 14 to 20 acres with a 2-row cultivator; drill 38 acres 
with a lo-foot drill; harvest 25 acres a day with an 8-foot binder; mow 25 acres with an 8-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 doing 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, tiniether 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 profitable, that is why so many business 
farmers are now using "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." 
Do not be misled by wrong impressions given by some salesmen selling other tractors. We have learned that 
many are made to believe they must buy all new machines to attach to the Moline Tractor. This is far from the 
truth. You can attach your binder of any make or size, just as Mr. Runkle did his Deering. as shown above, or 
your mower, spreader, disc, harrow, etc. — the plows go with the tractor. Talk the whole matter over with us; 
ask any question and get your information correct. 
Which Way Will You Farm? The modern "Moline" way, of course. Ask me how you can have a "Moline" 
fit once — come, write or phone. 
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