OCR Text |
Show LOOK TO YOUR HARVESTING MACHINE. I -. 1 The annual advertising of the International In-ternational Harvesting Company of America, warning farmers to look o their harvesting machines and be fully ful-ly ready for the harvest, should not go unheeded by our readers. Harvest time is fast approaching. You ploughed in season. You fcr- ' tilized your fields. You made the best seed bed possible. You leveled j and rolled the ground and you drill- j cd in the grain, and then you looked confidently to- Mother Nature to do her part. It has cost you lot a little in labor and money and you arc looking forward for-ward with considerable anxidty t t the time when you will reap your harvest. But you have another duty to per- , form. Nature is doing her part well. She is growing the crop rapidly more rapidly, perhaps, than you 1 think. Soon the crops will be grown and ripdncd and then then you must be ridy to harvest har-vest it quickly. There must be no delay. It may 1 0 necessary to cut and shock it all in a very few days in order that yo 1 may save it all. It is not a mntfr of willingness to work. It is a mat er of readiness with proper machines to harvest your grain quickly ami economically i matter of saving it all so you will reap the whole reward re-ward to which you arc entitled. You arc not concerned as to wha name is painted on your hnrvcstci or mower. But you arc greatly concerned con-cerned nUout the efficiency. You want your machine to be right working. work-ing. You want it to he sure. You will have no time to stop and make repairs when the harvest is on. You wil not tolerate waste. What harvesting machine shall yo'i "buy? You should decide that matter 1 without bias or prejudice. Decide it simply and solely in your own interest. in-terest. What binder or sowing machine ma-chine will be sure to serve your own interests best? Tlie International Harvester Company Com-pany of America olTcrs to farmers in the Champion, Dcering, McCormick, Milwaukee, Osborne and Piano harvesters, har-vesters, machines that arc standard. There can be no question that they represent the survival of the fittest I in harvesting machinery. Other har vesting machines by scores have been !' at various times manufactured for a few years and then their manufacture manufact-ure has been abandoned. The six machines named have been manufactured manu-factured for many years. The efficiency effi-ciency of each and a'l is attested by 1 - ' thousands of farmers in all parts of the country. As a farmer, you want dependable ncss. You cannot make a mistake no farmer can make a mistake in buying a Champion, Dcering, Mc-. Mc-. Cormick, Milwaukee, Osborne or Piano harvester. Thy arc represented repre-sented by different local agents in all considerable towns. Choice between be-tween them is largely a matter of personal preference. A catalog giv- ing the merits of any machine can be had by calling on the local agent of that machine or by writing direct to the International Harvester Company Com-pany of America at Chicago. An investigation in-vestigation for yourself is worth while. The purchase of any one of the International machines goes far ; toward enabling you to say you arc fully ready for harvest. : ,o |