'In every age and in every section of 
the world, the happiness and prosperity 
of the people, generally speaking, can 
be measured by their success in har¬ 
nessing power so that each individual 
can produce more with less effort.’' 
A score of years ago Henry Ford recognized 
this. 
And lest the happiness and prosperity of 
farm life, the life to which he was born, 
fall behind the industries of the city, he 
patiently tested, built and rebuilt in search 
of a dependable farm power. 
The farmer has been handicapped—com¬ 
pelled to sell the things he produced by 
slow and laborious methods and to buy 
clothes, house furnishings, farm machinery, 
and other material produced more econom¬ 
ically with the aid of power. 
The Fordson has changed this. The pro¬ 
duction of bigger crops, the opening of new 
sources of farm income are possible now 
with proper power on the farm the same 
as in city manufacture. This is being 
proved today on thousands of Fordson 
farms. 
Tilling in a matter of hours the same 
acreage that formerly took days, increasing 
farm income with work often neglected or 
left undone, replacing work animals with 
profit producing livestock, Fordson farmers 
have found life more pleasant and profitable. 
Ask any Ford Dealer 
