Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 20, 1916, IMPLEMENT SHOW, Page 6, Image 6

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    6 T1IK nED: OMAHA. THURSDAY, JANUARY fJ0, 1H16. ..
Welcomes
7
if
Don't Fail to See the
AS!isCIia!mers
IT? IT jl
Farm
Price . .
$750
At the Auditorium This Week
PROF. HOLDEN, CORN
KING, TALKS HERE
Lecturei on Firming: and on the
Need of Selection of Best
Seed Corn.
GOLDEN AGE OF SERVICE
turlng the Implement dealers' conven
tion Prof. P. O. Holden, employed by
the International Harvester company, la
delivering agricultural Jectures In
I Omaha. Prof. Holden ia credited with
I beln tha "corn king" of tha world and
la known all ovar America, for his re
aearch work In tha production of corn.
I Prof. Holden haa Just completed a
J diversified fanning campaign, covering
seventy countlea in the atatea of Ten
nessee, Arkansas ana Mississippi, i nis
romprtsea extension campaigns that have
been held In twenty states. Diversified
farming, live stock, alfalfa and corn
have been the subjects taught In these
campaigns.
rrof. Holden In an Iowa man, and
his work haa done more than anything
else to put Iowa on the map as a great
corn growing state.
The International Harvester company
believes this Is tha golden age of serv
ice and does not confine its power to
the manufacture and aaJe of Implement
along. Holden's work here In Omaha
haa been assisted by W. R. Baughman.
campaign manager of extension work
for Prof. Holden, and H. B. Dewing,
Let the Devil
Your Work
The Hart-Parr "Little Devil" Oil Tractor
Burns cheapest kerosene and other low grade fuels.
Only small oil tractor in tne world
If you're farming only an average size farm, you probably have
$1,2 :0 to $1,500 or more invested in horses, and probably $300 to $600 more in portable or stationary gas
engines necessary to do this work of ONLY ONE "Little Devil." Working or idle, your horses require ex
pensive fuel but the "Little Devil" uses cheapest kerosene for fuel and' requires no care, costs nothing
when not actually working. i
v Sell three or four of your horses. Invest the money in a "Little
Devil." Then you can do half again more horse work and all of your belt work, without investing a single
penny more than you have invested. The "Little Devil" uses the same plows, cultivators, listers, discs,
drags, harrows, harvesters, corn binders, etc., that you now use with horses.
And best of all, it does all the horse and belt work ever so much
cheaper and more seasonably. It more than pays for itself in a single season out of what it saves. That's
why no farmer can afford to be without one. 1
The "Little LJevil" will plow deeper, cultivate more seasonably and
save you money at every turn. It burns cheapest kerosene reducing fuel bills to one-half and has auto
matic, liquid cooling system, preventing all damage to the engine from over heating or freezing, with conse-
quent costly repairs. ' .
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The "LITTLE DEVIL"
If you are attending the Dealers' Convention in Omaha, don't
go away without seeing the "Little Devil" at the Hart-Parr exhibit
at the Auditorium. Look it over. Judge for yourself what a
wonderful little outfit it is. Then talk it over with our representa
tive at "Little Devil" headquarters, 131-133 Paxton Hotel.
HART-FARM CO.
Factory and Main Office, Charles City, Iowa.
secretary in the company'a extension
campaigns.
The International exhibit at theAudl
tortum la extenlve and Interesting and
Instructive, and their display at their
permanent store rooms Is the largest
and most complete ever shown by this
concern.
Case Displays at
Both Auditorium
and Local Branch
The J. I. Case Plow works are making
strong bid for business at the Imple
ment Dealers convention being held at
the Auditorium. Mr. Hindelang, the man
ager, la determined that the big silver
cup awarded to the Omaha branch for
the largest Increase In business during
1915 of any Case branch will remain here
again in 1918.
In addition to having an exhibit at the
Auditorium the Case company haa also
been busy entertaining visitors at the
display rooms at Eighth and Jackson
streets. Here the company has on display
a complete line of all the goo it han
dles.
The lines carried by the Omaha branch
are the J. I. Case plows, harrows, plant
ers, listers, cultivators, stalk cutters, etc.
As a side line the Wallace tractor Is
handled. Other lines are the Rude 'Wide-
Spread" Manure spreader. Parry vehicles
and auto trailers and K. c. hay presses.
Boys Build First
Tractor at College
When C. W. Hart and C. H. Tarr were
boya In college they were earning their
own way. Turing this time they built
their first tractor. Before they could
build another they had to sell the first
one. which wss no easy task. Besides
that was fourteen years ago when peo-
Tle who had use for tractors didn't know
I, anit the tractor were not tha finished
product they are today. Now the Hart
Pnrr corporation ia eapltallied at 2.6"V
OiiO. The factory covers eighteen miles
of ground and la devoted exclusively to
the building or tractors.
The Hart-Parr company makes seen
sixes of machines ranging In horsepower
from 3 to 130 and In weight rrom ,vw
to 3M00 pounda to the machine.
One of tha machines this company is
pushing hardest Is "The Little Pevil,"
which has earned the repuiauon oi -ing
"a good little devil."
Mr. Frederickson, who is here wun mw
company's exhibit, is highly pleased with
the convention.
Light Machine Has
as Much Pulling
Power as Larger
& nw nrinelDle is employed in the
construction of the Nllson Farm trac
tor, on exhibit this week at tne Auai
i.,i,n th nrinrinle la in the con
struction and automatically controla the
gravity. With this construction ll ooes
not depend on the weight of the machine
for the "pull." but on the load. Thia
givea the light machine aa much pulling
power as sorae of the heavier machines.
This Is controlled by a simple principle,
which gives traction instead of weight.
The construction wee worked out by
Nils Nilson. a farmer, together with his
three sons, who merely applied the old
principle of the fulrum and lever to a
tractor.
Harold Nllson, one of the sons, who IS
now superintendent of construction at
the factory, is attending the convention
in company with C. Julsrud, vice presi
dent of the concern.
The "Nllson" uses the largest else
Waukesha motor and ia designed to pull
four, five or six plows. It hss a speed
up to six or seven miles an hour pull
ing eight to ten tone along a fair road.
Farmers Must Have
Tractors to Save
Expenses on Farm
C. F. Loomls of the ePorla Tractor
company haa the distinction of being one
of the pioneers In the tractor business.
Mr. Loom is, with Fred Olover of the
Avery company and D. M. Hartsotigh,
mads and placed on the market the first
four-cylinder tractor. This was over six
teen years ago.
"At that date the people were pretty
skeptical of the tractor for farm !ower,"
says Mr. Loomls. "My associates and X
didn't have an opportunity to bring our
machines to a fine big exhibit and con
vention like this then and have the deal
ers and farmers come in and take an in
terest. There has been a big change In
the business and right now we are facing
the greatest business that tractor people
have ever known. The farmers ahve had
it demonstrated to them that the tractor
will do their work cheaper and setter
than horses and they are uslmf them
they must have them."
The tractor the ePorla people are put
ting out now is a J -pound machine.
They have only one size. It has an eight
horse power pull at the drawbar and
twenty horsepower at the belt. Agency
contractors are coming in nicely, accord
ing to Mr. Loomls.
A, S. Borglum Speaks
Before Rotary Club
February 23 haa been set as the da
for the annual dinner and dance of the
Rotary club. It will be held at the
Fontenelle hotel.
A. S. Borglum of the Parlow Adver
tising agency spoke before the Rotary
club Wednesday noon at the Henshaw
hotel on "Advertising from the Stand
point of an Advertising Agency."
fME NDLSON
Automatic Traction Farm Machine
A Perfect Klelil ami Road Machine and a proficient power plant, possessed of utmost flexibility, en
abling the owner to dispense with maximum anlmal-pow er an Imperative essential to profitable
Kmer-fariiiing.
WHAT THE NILSON DOES
(Jrips the ground, according to load or resistance the heavier the load the greater the traction,
i'ullit easfily a 4 1 4-Inch gang plow five to seven Inches In sod, beven to nine inches In etubble.
Operates a 30 to 32-inch separator, also your ensilage cutter.
Hauls right to ten tonB over good roads at four to five miles an hour.
Does your flld work, road grading and ditching.
Its light weight alout three tons with extension wheels prevents Injurious packing of plowed
or harrowed soil.
TO THE FARMER
In buying a tractor, first consider quality and efficiency Without these, save your money and
stay with your mules and horses It will be cheaper.
TO THE DEALER
You csn't afford to sell your customer anything else otherwise spells failure for you both
customer and you. The MI.SOX has ample power and cArien-t principle of its application tractively.
Its lightness means economy. Its flexibility In action, dispatch. The quality tractor with the pull,
the Hi'P (hat holds in wh they are sold.
, Asuresslve, reliable, lite-wire representative dealers wanted. See the Xilson at the Auditorium
before jou leave.
NILSON FARM MACHINE COMPANY
Headquarters, Castle Hotel.
The Ideal
Threshing
Outfit
hip i;aii 'v-'j
L
"V I
- - , , - - . -
lliis simply illustrates that we have in the Parrett Tractor just what we say we
have, an ALL-PURPOSE TRACTOR.
This -Parrett Tractor
represents extraordinary working ability, not only in performing well a given kind
of work, but in being adaptable to many tasks of a wide variety.
Only a Tractor of this nature will meet the demands of your customers.
Let us tell you more about this ALL-PURPOSE PARRETT TRACTOR.
Our space is 15 at the Tractor Dept in Auditorium.
Parrett Tractor
Company
fQ(
Sales Office:
Factory:
Fisher Building, Chicago.
Chicago Heights, 111.
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