The Answer 
the Farm Labor Shortage 
and it can be if you adopt the right means. 
The Cleveland Tractor has shown the way on thousands of farms, 
It has successfully replaced muscle with machinery. It has proved 
itself the modern “ Man-oball-Work.” 
The Cleveland Tractor plows as much ground as three good 3-hof3e 
teams and three men—eight to ten acres a day. 
It actually does the work better. And it harrows. It plants. It 
reaps. It cuts ensilage, fills silos, turns saws, hauls manure spreaders 
and road machinery, drags logs, and does the hundred and one chores 
that mechanicab power can do about the farm. It delivers 12 horse¬ 
power at the drawbar and 20 horsepower at the pulley. But it weighs 
less than 3200 pounds. The 
Plowing 
Sawing 
Harrowing 
Grading 
travels on its own trades, lil^e the giant tank,s’* on the battlefields of Europe, 
and will go practically anywhere. With 600 square inches of traction surface 
constantly on the ground, it goes through mud, sand, clay and gumbo without 
miring, floundering or packing the soil. 
It steers easily—by the power of its own engine,—and will turn in a twelve- 
foot circle. It is so small that it can readily be operated under and among small 
fruit trees. It requires less housing space than a horse. 
Rollin H. White, the well-known engineer, designed the Cleveland Tractor. 
It is built under his supervision—from the best materials. Gears and tracks are 
Planting 
Orchard IVorl^ 
THE CLEVELAND TRACTOR COMPANY 
19009 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, O., U. S. A. 
The largest producer of crawler type tractors in the world. 
Reaping 
Hauling 
■. 1 li 
