3 B ' HlU.t. J. V Farm Tractor; a Power Plant of Many Possibilities TArce in dei J in uSa at once X 1 1 1 . a I L', .V -v" C .T- " - -:w -rr-i- v vTC" -iiy ' Vt - v t,,H f.v ; .vy V V f -j-'-- .... --- i iTiTWirwwmimmTTrTr Thking the yrlieai to ihe elevatoi T HE tractor has added a new chapter to the romance of the middle-weat corn-belt farm. The pioneer broke the rich, virgin oil of the prairie with horses or oxen and an old v alklng plow. Then came the ' riding rlow, breaking a rlngle furrow at a time; then the gang plow, with a whole herd of horses or mules for power, and each change lightened the labor of the man behind the plow and made lt possible for him to turn more acres In a given length of time. Now the tractor la superseding ell these and changing the character of agriculture. Years and decades of heavy corn and wheat crops are beginning to tell on the fertility of our soil. For years we tilled only the surface, leaving the rich soil below unused. Now we are plowing deeper to secure the fertility that lies be neath the surface soil. To do this we must have power to pull the plows. Horses and mules will f urnish power 'if we have enough of them, but lt Is ex pensive to keep and feed a large number of animals that are in use only In- the plowing season. Here the Ingenuity of man comes In and furnishes us the Iron horse to fill this need. , '- - The tractor travel slowly -up shd down the . fields, pulling from one or two td twenty or more plows, according to the size of the field arid the power of the machine in us. It never tires.' It hevr takes fright at a wind-blown paper and runs away. In winter and Idle seasons lt consumes no . feed and requires no care. It is steady, reliable and powerful. At first the tractor was tired only, for plowing, but time and, recent Improve ments have shown us that tha tractor may be made an all-around handy ma chine on the farm. It comes In sites to fit the farm, and the price depends largely oh the amount, of power that can "be generated and the ' size ahd adaptability of the machine. The farmer starts his croj year In Juty or August, when he plows the' stubble fields in preparation for the fall-sown grain. Here the tractor does its first work, traveling hour after hour and day after day up and down the fields, under the broiling summer 'sun, never tiring, requiring no ' fee' and water at night, when the farmer comes in ' tired and hungry from his hard day' work. Not only does the tractor pull the plows, but behind , the'plows are attached the disc and harrow' and sometimes a roller, ro that the work that once took many days or labor, rouowinr the . team with one Implement afteY another, la now done- In one operation. At one time the soed bed is prepared and' moisture stored in the ground , and protected by a dust mulch, so; that It will remain until the seed Is sown and thus Insure good germi nation. . ' Then comes silo filling time. The trac tor Is -again put to work, and day by day the .silage .'cutter , hums and clicks, and the. partly .ripened corn or sorghum 1 hoisted, load after load, 4 into the top of th"e ' slid and pressed down, where It ferments sod 4 changes . Into the rich, Juicy1 silage that keens the cattle sleek and fat throughout the winter. The silage'' cutter fs not owned on every farm that has a alio. The tractor is thus the - basis of" neighborhood co-operation. Several farmers living In ths . sam vicinity buy a sl!pge cutter together. It takes a number' of -men to operate the cutter and fill the silo. At alio filling time the men who own the cutter work together, going from farm to farm and exchanging labor until all the silos are filled. The tractor is attached to the cutter and the work is done quickly, and when the slloa are filled the tractor hauls the cutter to ita place of storage, where It is left until the next season. .Then comes thrashing time. For years the threshing crew, with Its steam engine and big (hreehlng machine, has traveled about over the wheat belt, spending from a day to a week or wore on each farm, threshing out the grain. The tractor la changing all this. Instead of hiring the traveling crew, the farmer puts his own tractor to ue. The threshing machine Is now, In many cases, owned by a group of farmer, who work together aa at silo filling time, . threshing first one man's grain and then another's, until threshing time is over and the granaries are filled. The man with the tractor still needs many wagons to hold his grain, but he does not .need the men and teams that used to be necessary to haul it to the ele vator. Neither does he need to consume msny days making weary trips over the road with one load after another. He 2re7gin6 and III -JOtVCZ X.i V w V" - .. V-w. . . . , '--,9" V ; ' iHP -t ! ' ..'C;Y i ' is- Xfv:t' ' ZjaJjJU---,, r- .'..Ti'JAJg.g.J "i'i'i n nisi i..T' , loads hts wagons, hitches them all behind the tractor and sets olit with a long train of loaded wagons behind him, and ane trip may be sufficient for the whole big crop. City horse are fed baled hay, which Is compressed Into a mall rompaea and Is easily handkd. Tasking tills hay Into bales takes power, ami Is another field In which the tractor finds a use. On many a farm an1 ranch the hay, whether wild hay, timothy, alfalfa or rlcver. Is cut and cured and raked Into windrows. Then the tractor and hay press are taken out Into the field and the hay la gathered up from the windrows and pressed Into theae wire-bound, sweet-smelling bales, and hauled to the city markets, whore It finds a ready sale. The tractor and baler are In many cases also used to preserve the straw that Is left in great heaps in the field after the threshing Is done. Once the grain-belt farmers left this alraw to rot In the staok, where lt occupied and ren dered useless land that was ' growing more valuable year by year, or he burned It, and after harvest time the country was bright with fires that werw burning up the farmers' dollars. Now he spreads some of this straw on his fields, for ha has found that properly used it makes a valuable fertiliser, and some he bales for winter bedding for his cattle and horses. Later In the fall comes corn husking time. Then planting tlma for all the fall sown grain. Now. ths tractor la again taken Into the fields to prepare the seed bed and to sow the seed. Bven In the winter time the tractor naed not be altogether idle. There la grain to grind. Borne grind alfalfa, into meal for cattle. Sometimes the- tractor is put t work pumping .water tanks full of water for the house or for the stock. The Ingenious farmer can find a hundred ways to use his engine. And when Spring comes again the fields are plowed and disced and harrowed for tho spring town crops. Then the corn fields are ready to be prepared for seed and seeded. After the spring rams the farmer of the present day goes out and drag the road. He la oomlng mora and mors to a realisation of the importanos of good roads In his vicinity; He wants good roads between his ptaos and town be cause he drive over them so often in his motor car, and he needs good roads be cause they save hint tlma in hauling his produce to market. So he goes out when ever he has spar tlma and the condi tion are right and drags- the roads. His tractor doe the Job quickly and well. It also helps him when he wants to grade, A road grader la no trouble at all for the ordinary tractor to handl. Then cornea harvest time, and otto more the tractor travels the length of the fields and. back, and forth again, this time, pulling the. binder, and sometimes several bidders are used at onoe. Bo the tractor la an Important part of the machinery equipment of the farm. It has displaced many horses and mules and lightened the labor of many a man already,' and tractor farming la Just at 1U beginning- , A few years ago the trac tor was a clumsy thing. It was adapted only to use on the big farms and ranches,' wh-re plowing was a problem that ma-' ohlnery alone could solve. It was expen sive and complicated, and Its use neces sitated the constant presence of a highly paid and well trained machinist. The ordinary farmer, with his 1B0 or S30 acres, could not afford to' own such a big and expensive manhln for us during ths plowing season, but Idle during all the rest of the year. ' 'The decrease in me slss of the ma chlue, the Improvement ' In the engine, making It less complicated and more ess tly handled, the accompanying lowering Of the price ,aa tractors are made In In creasingly larger numbers, and the pos sibility of adapting It to various kinds of work, have all been factors in placing upon the markets of this country a large number of different machines which are praotlcal and not unduly expensive on the ordinary farm. To utilise the tractor to the best ad vantage the farmer has had to mak a few changes In his methods. There are certain things which the hors or mule will not and cannot do. There are also certain things which ths tractor will not and cannot do. Tou can't beat a tractor with a whip and force It to do what It has not been mads to do. You have to arrange your work In accordance with ths ability ' and whims of the tractor. Ths most Important change in farming operations due to the characteristics of the tractor la probably In the matter of ths shape of ths fields. It takes a trac tor' a much longer time to make turns than It does to cover ths same distance In a straight Una, and ths tractor cannot mak as short turns as a team can. On this account, ths farmer who wants to use a tractor on his farm must make his fields long and narrow In shape. The square or nearly square field Is not praotlcal with the tractor, as it requires too "much ' turning. The long, narrow field, with a maximum length of furrow an l a minimum amount of turning is th Ideal for the traotorised farm. Many farmers ' grow a narrow bono of hay Crop' around the ends of their plowed fields, and these afford a convenient place for turning the tractor without much loss of time, and at the same time utilise the land so that none of It Is wasted.' To Obtain That Satisfied Feeling The Drink Must Be o " I it-.. ' - ; , '..v..;'.:..;. 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' L" k K - i j' sy a. t ., i - '.. r' ) F BILL YOUR STOCK TO FEED AT THE 1 ds Yar remon THE PLACE TO FILL FOR THE OMAHA MARKET 1,600 Acres Tame Grass Pasture on the Platte River 30 Miles 50-Inch Mesh Fencing; 30 Pastures . , Electric Light;, Boarding House at the Yards 1 ' ' . sv ' ' ' ' CAPACITY Cattle, 94 Cars; Sheep, Covered Sheds, 35 Cars Open Pens, 18,000; Dipping Plant Capacity, 5,000 Daily; Set 10 Stewart Machine Shears; Ten Double Deck . . Unloading.Chutes, Five on Each Track AN EASY RUN TO FEEDING POINTS NEAR CHICAGO Fremont Stock Yards, Fremont, Neb. City Office, 111 East Fifth St. Telephone 93. Yard Office, Telephone 150 I- t FRErJIOWT, 3d mmm, pTc"iM' hwm