With Sulky Plow 
With Grain Drill 
With Corn Binder 
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W HEN you sell two teams and put the 
money into an Indiana Tractor you 
cut down the time you have to spend 
doing chores and raising feed for horses. You 
quit working a month or two a year for your 
horses and work all the time for yourself. 
Horses in excess of one team for hauling and 
odd jobs can be used on most farms only 90 to 
100 days during the crop season. But the 
high cost and trouble of keeping them runs 
on through the winter. 
The Indiana Tractor will do the work of four 
horses and do everything that they do. Plow¬ 
ing is only 15 per cent of what a tractor must 
do to replace horses. The Indiana plows more 
than two teams, and is light enough to go on 
the ground any time horses should. 
It attaches to all makes of harrows, discs, 
planters, one and two row cultivators, mowers, 
binders, corn binders, rollers, drills, culti- 
packers, potato diggers, and all orchard and 
vineyard tools. 
The regular implements you already have 
are the only practical size and type for row 
cultivation. The Indiana Tractor will use them 
with inexpensive hitches. In many operations 
it will replace six or eight horses. The driver 
tides the implement and has his work in front 
c>f him. The Indiana is the all-round, single 
unit, one-man tractor. 
H. P. Purviance of Logan County, Ills., say: 
“My Indiana Tractor certainlyis a success with 
the grain binder or anything else one can do 
with four horses. Used it on double tandem 
7 ft. disc, also on double corrugated roller and 
Nisco manure spreader. I like it better to cut 
grain than horses, for heat and flies do not 
bother it and the power is more steady. 
It stays on top in low spots better than 
horses.” 
An Indiana will work every day and the 
money you can get for four horses and the cost 
of keeping them a year will more than pay for 
it. Some owners do not have a horse on their 
places. 
Clayton McFarland, Tippecanoe County, 
Ind., says: “My corn is equal to any corn in 
the community and I cultivated it entirely 
with my tractor. I can plow 20 acres of corn 
a day with a two row cultivator. I can turn 
at the ends and break less com than with a 
team. I harvested both wheat and oats my-' 
self with no trouble from the tractor.” 
Many owners report cutting grain of all 
kinds at a fuel and oil cost of 10 to 12 cents 
an acre. 
You can get an Indiana promptly from any 
of our branches, get rid of four horses, and do 
two men’s work yourself. In the last four 
years this tractor has made hundreds of en¬ 
thusiastic farmer friends, who help us sell 
more Indianas. 
For 20 years the Indiana Silo and Tractor 
Company has been known for high quality 
products and fair dealing. Ask any of the 
75,000 owners of the Indiana Silo. 
Mail coupon for book of pictures showing the Indiana doing all the work horses do, and book cf letters 
from users. If you need a silo, we have one for you. We are the largest silo manufacturers in the wor . 
DEALERS: This tractor can be used more on more farms 
than any other. It’s the biggest dealer proposition in the field. 
THE INDIANA SILO & TRACTOR COMPANY 
43 Union Building.Anderson, Indiana 
43 Indiana Building .^ es Moines, Iowa 
43 Silo Building.No. Kansas City, Mo. 
_ j* "VtA flA \1 43 Live Stock Exchange Building.Indiana Silo y 
\ 1 of Texas, Fort Worth, Texas 
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THE INDIANA SILO & TRACTOR CO. 
Please send complete descriptive matter on the Indiana Tractor, and letters from users. 
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The WorldsTractor 
