Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1963)
Zinc made this difference in corn. couttRoN^ _ . _ aid tW* w c° Manganese made this difference in soybeans. Farmhand Model 25... Rakes cleaner,faster....costs less! FARMHAND’S MODEL 25 COSTS YOU AT LEAST $100 LESS than most other rakes. Yet it does a far better job . . . picking up all the hay there is to get—light or heavy—on even the roughest or rocky terrain. Since hay velocity is 45% lower than with bar type rakes, you save valuable leaves and seeds. Since windrows are fluffy, hay dries quickly and you have a better chance to beat the weather. Lightweight Model 25 follows tractor easily over any terrain. No PTO, gears, belts, ratchets, pulleys . . . virtually no maintenance. Today—ask your Farmhand dealer for a demonstration. J me NFORMATIONI | Writ* THE FARMHAND COMPANY Dept. RG-531 Hopkins, Minn. * Pleote tend literature or t I am a student, send spcciol Material [J | Nome_ | I Address_ I I MRMHANt MVIMRR Of rORPOMflRW I L_! HAND CRANK simultaneously lowers all five raking wheels to exact raking pressure you wish . . . raises wheels quickly for fast trans port at highway speeds behind car, truck, tractor. Farmhand Model 25 has simple one pin hook-up and only 10 lbs. drawbar weight — a child could handle it! FOR WINDROW TURNING, lower the rear two raking wheels. They’ll neatly roll the windrow completely over, putting damp hay on top. Another feature: you can offset rake so that tractor wheels do not pass over unraked hay. Optional wheel shields prevent tangling of hay in windy weather.