The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
873 
The Universal Tractor 
£)OES all field work—including cultivating, 
harvesting and belt work. One man operates 
both the*tradtor and the implement. The operator 
sits in complete safety in the usual place—on 
the seat of the implement. 
The work is always in plain sight—no looking 
backward. Tradtor and implement form one 
unit—can back and turn short. 
These indispensable features are particularly 
profitable at harvest time, when one man instead 
of two can cut the ripe grain at the rate of 40 
acres in 10 hours. 
The necessity for saving time and labor is the 
greatest consideration before the farmer today. 
4 • 4 
MOLINE PLOW COMPANY 
' MOLINE, ILLINOIS 
Branches at: Atlanta. New Orleans. Dallas. Oklahoma City, St. Louis. Poughkeepsie. N. Y., Baltimore. Los Angeles. 1 
Stockton. Cal.. Spokane. Portland. Salt Lake City. Denver. Kansas City. Omaha. Minneapolis. Minot. N. D.. Sious 
Falls. S. D.. Des Moines. Bloomington. Ill., Indianapolis, Columbus, Ohio. Jackson. Mich. 
Shorten ^our Harvest Days 
