The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
631 
Copyright 1920. by The GooUys<ir Tire & Rubber Oo. 
**l haul on pneumatics and deliver fruit utibruised—direct from tree to town 
—no reloading from orchard teams . Others here have ruined thousands 
of dollars* worth of fruit by jolting it on solid truck tires . A truck con¬ 
tractor has used two sets of solid tires since I began hauling on my Good¬ 
year Cord Tires/ 9 — F. A. Tufts , Lone Pine Ranch , R. F. D. 31 , Loomis , Cal. 
iiiiiiimiiiiimitiuiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiiiiii 
imiitiimiiiiiiittiuiimiuuimiituiuiuiuiiimtiiiiuumniiiutiiimiiutiumimimimiiiimiii 
iiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiimnmiiiiiuimi’ii 
umiimmiitiiiiiiiiit 
F N much the same way as that described above 
A farmers everywhere have demonstrated how 
thoroughly pneumatic tires equip motor trucks 
for all farm hauling. 
By affording traction, cushioning and quickness 
that solid tires cannot supply, Goodyear Cord 
Tires on trucks help users forget crop-moving diffi¬ 
culties hitherto requiring extra labor and expense. 
I he able Goodyear Cord Tires do away with need¬ 
less transfers of loads from teams to trucks, protect 
crops in transit and enable marketing with a 
promptness that catches prices at their highest. 
Iheir unflinching behavior in grinding toil 
shows that all the valuable advantages of the 
pneumatic tire have been made entirely practi¬ 
cal for truck duty through the development of 
Goodyear Cord construction. 
This construction furnishes the sinews of a tre¬ 
mendous ruggedness and thus fits the big pneu¬ 
matics to deliver mileages frequently rivaling 
those of powerful solid tires. 
Farmers’ reports, describing in full the effect of 
pneumatic truck tires in eliminating farm 
drudgery, assisting general motorization and 
increasing yearly income, can be obtained by 
writing to The Goodyear Tire Sc Rubber Com¬ 
pany, at Akron, Ohio. 
