59 
American Agriculturist, July 26, 1924 
11 * 
M 
xohy Fords on Tractors 
cost so little and give so much 
The Fordson Tractor does more, for less money, 
than any other farm power unit* It is a prac¬ 
tical, time-saving aid in plowing, harrowing, 
planting, mowing, harvesting, threshing, road¬ 
mending and scraping, timber-cutting and 
sawing, hauling, pumping, excavating—in fact 
every duty the farmer must perform which 
requires power* 
The Fordson Tractor makes farming easier and 
more profitable* The Fordson Tractor enables 
more work to be done in less time, thus 
permitting the farmer to have more leisure for 
making his life and the lives of his family hap¬ 
pier and more abundant* By thus lightening 
the farmer’s burden, the Fordson Tractor 
renders its great service to the American farmer* 
Between the American farmer* and the Ford 
organization, there has always been the 
closest understanding. 
By continuing its service to the farmer from 
year to year, the Ford organization is realiz¬ 
ing the Ford ideal—“greatest service to the 
most people”* 
To accomplish this, the Ford organization has 
acquired and controls vast timber lands, coal 
and iron mines, transportation routes, and 
channels of distribution; built giant factories, 
mills, foundries, furnaces, warehouses, docks 
and power plants. Without these vast Ford 
resources, the Fordson Tractor could not be 
sold for so little, could not give, so much in 
superior quality and service. 
iiiPif 
mm 
Hi 
Owning and operating coal and iron mines, timber 
lends, saw milts, coke ovens, foundries, power 
plants, blast furnaces, manufacturing in- 
dustries, lake transportation, garnet 
mines, glass and wood distilla¬ 
tion plants and silica beds. 
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