Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 10, 1916, Page 4, Image 4

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THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1916.
The Greatest Tractor Show in the History of Power
THE MOGUL 8-16
The Popular Tractor
at Fremont.
The direction of the wind is told by the weather vane,
and at the great Fremont demonstration the tractor the
farmers are buying tells the direction of popular favor.
...'"-'At the end of the first real day of demonstration,
twenty farmers had placed their stamp of approval by
A buying the Mogul 8-16 tractor as the most practical and
. economical iarm power.
,, There are reasons why the Mogul 8-16
leads in favor. .
First The Mogul 8-16 delivers its power upon
kerosene, this makes the running cost less than half of that
of a gasoline tractor. '': ") f. ' '' : : :'; K
Second The Mogul 8-16 is so simple in construction'
and operation that it appeals to the farmer as a practical
power proposition." .
Third The Mogul 84 6 is designed so that all parts
are easily accessible and "readily understood by the
j operator..-' .v..v, " - " "" " " ' " '
Fourth The Mogul 8-16 has two drive wheels with
the proper distribution of the load for good traction. -;
Fifth The Mogul 8-16 .tractor is real economy trac-.
tor and is already demonstrating that fact on thousands
of farms throughout the country. , ,, ,-. .
See the Mogul 8-16 at the great Fremont demonstra
tion show how the high cost of farming can be reduced..
1 V
1 !
The International Harvester
Company of Amisrical
(Incorporated.) , '
Omaha 'Lincoln Council Bluff Sioux City Crawford
Successful at Hutchinson, Cham
paign, Fremont and Bloomington
Demonstrations! of 1915.
.lJnj
t V ' I ' V'h 't t't
"ALLWORIC"
Light Tractor
A Four-Wheel Tractor, Depend
able as a Horse, Pulls Three
Plows Easily.
A simple, durable, powerful machine selling at a
price most anyone can afford. ' Two-speed transmission
working in oil, automobile type front axle, roller-bearing
rear axle; steel gears thoroughly protected from dust and
self-oiling, radiator and fan that cool absolutely, 12-inch
face rear wheels with 4-inch extensions. A sensible, prac
tical tractor, built by a company with an established repu
tation and numerous machines at work in fields today.
Almost every farmer is a prospective tractor customer
and ia looking to his IMPLEMENT DEALER to tell him
what to buy. .. For this reason you should study the "All-
work," for it is m profitable tractor for you to handle; one
you can conscientiously recommend to your trade j pays a
liberal commission and will add several hundred dollars
to your profits this year, v
, See the "AUwork" tractor at the Fremont Demonstra
tion' this week. ; , :
ELECTRIC WHEEL COMPANY.
BOX 264, QUINCY, ILL.
COB TRACTOR INTACT
Live Cub is Placed Near Big
Machine Which Made 1,000
Mile Bun.
GETS AWAY, CLIMBS TREE
jmmammmmmmm mi j.yiuiiniimwiuniniMwwmiuiiiiiwi.ia.MM.iimii ,..
, --,;; -vhy,;4 f- . ;. :;: , '. -.
ftajSailW
Among the moit interesting "tent
exhibits" at the Fremont national
power farming demonstration i that
of the J. I. Case plow works, selling
agents for the "Wallis Cob" tractor.
The chassis of the Cub, which suc
cessfully finished its unprecedented
1,000-miIe durability run from Cleve
land, O., to Fremont, Neb., is being
shown each day. No Darts have been
removed on this machine and the pub
lic is invited to carefully inspect the
tractor for wear.
It it remarkable how well preserved
the Cub is after that long cross
country trip which was made during
the constant raini of last spring.
Live Bear Cub. '
An interesting feature of the "Cub"
exhibit was a live cub bear which wis
captured by the Wallis people before
the car started on the circuit. Mon
day it created quite a stir by break
ing loose and climbing the. tallest
tree in Fremont on Maple street .
Many representatives of the com
pany are in Fremont, including H.
M. Wallis, president; L. N. Burns,
general sales manager; H. M. Wallis,
jr., secretary; Clem Michael, chief of
designing and engineering depart
ment; Earl L. Woods, tractor sales
manager; C. G. Howell, advertising
manager; F. I. Hindelang, manager
Omaha branch; Bert Thompson, E.
B. Mussock, drivers; Gross, E. C,
Anderson, G. R. Anderson, Schneck
loth, Clark. Lauss, Mansfield, Sva
boda and Hughes, salesmen.
Twenty-One Tractors Are
Using Waukesha Motors
H. L. Horning, general manager of
the Waukesha Motor company,
Waukesha, Wis., is spending the week
at the tractor meeting Fremont.
Speaking of the Fremont show Mr.
Horning said: "I have been attend
ing automobile shows and similar ex
positions for many years, but I have
never in all this time seen anything
to compare with this present exhi
bition, either in arrangement or in
tense interest of the visitors in trac
tors. It is wonderful and J do not
believe that there will be anything to
compare with it any place in the coun
try."' The Waukesha people have made a
specialty of building motors and so
efficient have they become and so
strong is their reputation that a farmer
who knows motors never questions
the power when he is told a tractor
is equipped with a "Waukesha." This
in attested by the fact that twenty
one different tractor manufacturers
are now using this motor.
Visitor Praises the
Fremont Tractor Show
"There it a great future for the
tractor industry and the management
here at Fremont is to be congrat
ulated on the work that has been done
here to create interest," said a visitor
to the Fremont Tractor exhibit.
Watch This Tractor at thej
Demonstrations
i
Standard-Detroit
TRACTOR
, ONE MAN ,
'THREE PLOWS
Price' $1,065
;';v
e. Pf-Wfi-
; t; A tractor, which has made good at the. Dal-.
I. f las and Hutchinsori demonstrations '
under conditions far from favorable.
Made by the men who are directing one
of the largest motor truck companies
, in the United States, the' Standard-"
Detroit tractor has the advantage of
automobile construction insofar as it
' is suited to tractor duty.
The outstanding features of the Standard
Detroit tractor are
SIMPLICITY Ths construction Is such
, i that any man who can run a gas
engine can operate and care for
this tractor without trouble.
'( UNIT POWER PLANT Motor, clutch
i and transmission are built into one
self-contained unit, oiled auto-'
' matlcally from the engine snd en
tirely enclosed in a dust-proof case.
MOTOR Of the powerful valve-in-head
type. It will turn the drive
wheels no matter what the load.
RADIATOR Special design and un
usual capacity. Of cast-tank type
and assured perfect cooling at all
times, t
DIRECT BELT DRIVE Motor - seta
crosswise with the frame, giving
direct belt-drive and doing away -with
differential and differential
troubles.
REAR WHEELS Of the drum type,
without spokes to loosen or break.
. The wide drums crush stubble or
weeds in plowing, yet the light
weight of the tractor does not pack
the ground.
GEARS Cut steel and
of the spur , type. .
' Ground true to size
' after being heat
.treated. Tiansmia-
jiioD gears are
- mounted . on Hyatt '
.high duty roller
. : bearings. .
Specifications:
............. 1-M
Dmw-fcw kom pewM.
(maximum) ' W.'..1B
Bndra ktM nmt,
(muttaam) .....IS
Bated n.
.;.,...J. ...! dm.
Motor Ifcxf-mck
NumW I wh.Mlt... .4
IH ta I mtlM lion.
Drire eksta
Tnnratuloa Bauhitl.
HMtt u4 imw
CftpAoltr . f.. eaaellH '
unk ...... SO i11oimi
Trpe CJoollue
tern radiator
Shlpphir might m
pound! 4.00S
Ratal! Prieo tl.Ott
Important to Mid
dle West Dealers
Tha Standard. Datrolt Trutot
it at tha Framoat Damonatn
tlon thta waak. ' Ba lura and
aaa thia traetor bafora yon aisra
up for your' territory. Wa ara
ready ta talk with you.
The Standarid-Detroit
Tractor Co.,
1506 West Fort Street,
Detroit, Michigan.
S B
BUREAU ESTIMATE
OF NEBRASKA CROPS
Forecast for August Shows
Decrease of Thirty-Three
Million Bushels.
CORN FIV1! MILLIONS OTT
Washington, D. C, Aug. 9. A sum
mary of the August crop report for
the state of Nebraska and for the
United States, as compiled by the bu
reau of crop estimates (and transmit
ted through the weather bureau).
United States Department of Agricul
ture, is as follows:
CORN state: Aunat 1 forecaet,
000,000 buahels; production laat year (final
mllmete), 319,000,000 buehela. United
Stataa: Audiet 1 foraeaat, 1,710,000,000
bushela; production laat year (final eotl
mala), 1,004,515,000 buahela.
WINTER WHEAT State: Preliminary
eltlmate, ll.SOO.OOO buahela; production last
mar (final eatlmate), ss.011,000 buahela.
United Stataa: Preliminary eatlmate, 455,.
000,000 buahela: production laat year (final
eatlmate), 555,045,000 buahela.
SPKINO WHEAT State: Ausuat I fora
eaat, 4,560,000 buahela; production laat year
(final eatlmate), 5,530,000 buahela. United
Htataa:. Ausuat 1 foraeaat, 100,000,000 buah
ela; production laat year (final eatlmate),
S55. 460,000 buahela.
OATS State: Ausuat 1 foraoaat, 7S,
100,000 buahela; production laat year (final
eatlmate), 70,400,000 buahela. United Btatea:
Ausuat 1 foraeaat, 1,270,000,000 buahela;
production laat year (final eatlmate), 1,640,
369,000 buahela, ...
BARLEY state: Ausuat 1 foraeaat,
S.FJO.OOO buahela: production laat year (final
eatlmate), 1,365,000 buahela. United Btatea:
Ausuat foraeaat, 16,000,000 buahela; pro
duction laat year (final eatimate), 337,
000.000 buahela.
nVE State: Preliminary eatlmate, 3.070,
000 buahela; production laat year 'final
eatlmate), S.500,000 buahela. United Btatea:
Preliminary eatlmate, 41.000,000 buahela:
production laat year (final eatlmate), 40.
110,000 buahela.
POTATOES State: Ausuat 1 foraeaat,
9.310,000 buahela; production laat year (fi
nal eatlmate), 11,660.000 buahela. United
Btatea: Ausuat 1 foraeaat, 004,000,000 buah
ela; production laat yew (final eatlmate).
861.103.000 buahela.
HAT State: Ausuat 1 forecaet. 3. 050,000
tone; production laat year. (final eatlmate),
4.30O.OO0 tone. United Btatea: Ausuat 1
forecast, 84,000,000 tone;' . production laat
year (final eatlmate), 16,316,000 tone.
PASTURE Btatat Ausuat, 1, oondttlOD,
70, compared with the ten-year arerasa
of 78. rutted Btatea: Ausuat 1, condition,
86.9, compared with the. ten-year averase
"'aPPI.ES State: Ausua'!l forecast, 983,
000 barreta; production laat year (final ea
tlmate), .1.367,000 barrala. United Btatea:
Aucuel 1 foraoaat, 71,604,000 barrala; pro
duction last year (finer eatlmate), 70,870.
000 berrela. r .-j
PRICES (The flrat prioa slven below ta
the averase on Ausuat 1 thla year and the
second the averase on Ausuat 1 last year)
atate: Wheat, 81.08 and 8101 per bushel:
corn. 70c and 08c per bushels; oats, Mo
aod 41c per buahel; potatoea, 660 and 8o
v.er bushel: hay. 86.80 and 6.60 per ton;
cats, 17c and 13c per doxen. United Stataa:
Wheat, 81.07 and 81 066 per buahela; com.
79 4c and 78. 0c per buahel; oata. 40.1a end
46.40 per buahel: potatoes. 96.4c and 66.3c
par buahel; hay, 110.70 end 811.90 per ton;
cotton, 812. and S.lo pes pound; esse.
30.7O and !7o par doaen.
Surprised at Interest of
Farmers in the Tractor Show
i J. D. Oliver, president of the Oliver
Chilled ; Steel Plow company, is at
tending the Fremont tractor demon
strations this year for the first time.
'.'I had 6 idea this show was so big
'of so complete or that, it created the
amount of interest among real farm
ers as I see here," said Mr. Oliver
Tuesday;
Prominent Aiito
Men Go to Fremont
To the Tractor Show
A party of fifteen men, well known
in the automobile industry, passed
through Omaha in a special car to
attend the national power farming de
monstration at Fremont. They were
the guests throughout the trip of Al
fred P. Sloan, jr., president of the
United Motors corporation, and vice
president and general manager of the
Hyatt Roller Bearing company.
The party includes the following:
H. H. Bassett, general manager of
the Weston-Mott company, Flint; J.
W. Bate, chief engineer of the Mitchell-Lewis
Motor company, Racine,
Wis.; C. L. Bsrnes, formerly of the
Willys-Overland company, Toledo,
O.; B. W. Currie, member of the edi
torial staff of the Curtis Publishing
company, Philadelphia, Pa.; E. A.
Deeds, vice president of the United
Motors corporation and president of
the Dayton Engineering Laboratories
company, Dayton, O.; G. W. Dun
ham, consulting engineer of the Saxon
Motor company, Detroit; C. M.
Eason, manager of the tractor bear
ings department of the Hyatt Roller
Bearing company, Chicago; H. T.
Ewald, Campbell-Ewald company,
Detroit; C. F. Kettering, vice presi
dent and general manager of the Day
ton Engineering Laboratories com
pany, Dayton; B. G. Koether, general
sales manager of the automobile de
partment of the Hyatt Roller Bearing
company, Detroit; R. S. Lane, chief
engineer of the automobile depart
ment of the Hyatt Roller Bearing
company, Detroit; G. S. Mott, presi
dent of the Weston-Mott company,
Flint; G. W. Nash, president of the
Jeffery Motor Car company, Keno
sha, Wis.; A. P. Sloan, jr., and J. G.
Weiss, works manager of the Hyatt
Roller Bearing company, Newark,
N. J. '
Report on Causes
Of Rise in Gasoline
Prices Are Ready
Washington, Aug. 9. The federal
trade commission has completed its
final report on the causes of the rise
in gasoline prices and probably will
send it to congress next week. Mem
bers of the commission today declined
to discuss it.
The final report, it was said, will
go into detail as to an apparent lack
of sufficient competition between
companies producing gasoline. No
recommendations for prosecution of
any concerns are expected and none
have been made to the Department of
Justice. It is understood, however,
that congress will be told that the
remedy for present conditions lies
in some sort of regulation of gaso
line manufacturers to insure real com
petition or as a last resort in crea
tion of government machinery au
thorized to fix prices. Legislation
by congress would be necessary to
effect either proposal.
Persistent Advertising Is the Road
to Success.
Many
Crowds Flock Around the
C. 0. D. Tractor at Fremont
W. T. Clapp of the C. O. D. tre
tor was one of the most enthusiastic
boosters for the Fremont demonstra
tion on the grounds at Fremont this
week.
"I suppose," said Mr. Clapp, "that
I am doubly enthusiastic because of
the wide interest aroused in the farm
ers of this section in the C. O. D.
tractor. We have had a crowd of In
terested people around our display all
the time and sales have been ery
satisfactory."
The C. 0. D. is built along practical
lines, simple in construction, light in
weight, powerful, strong and durable.
It is neat and compact, with all parts
lubricated and easily accessible. It is
built in two models and burns either
kerosene or gasoline successfully. The
drawbar test made on the grounds
was one of the most satisfactory.
Cars of Turloch Melons
Are on the Omaha Market
Many cars of Turloch cantaloupes
are being received by the Hays-Skel-ttxi
company, 1004 Howard street.
These fciloupes are being shipped
by the Turloch Merchants and
Growers, Inc., of Turloch, CaL, made
up of some 700 growers of canteloupes,
who in order to have their products
reach the consumer in the bset possi
ble condition, have adopted trade
marks and after melons have passed
a rigid inspection they are labeled or
stamped, "Sun Belt," or "T. M. G."
Nothing but the large, uniform fruit
is allowed to carry the trade mark of
the Turloch Merchants and Growers,
Inc.
Rocky Mountain Region
Lures Tourists This Year
Gerrit Fort, passenger traffic man
ager of the Union Pacific system, with
headquarters at Chicago, passed
through Omaha at noon on a busi
ness trip to Denver and Salt Lake
City. .
"Passenger traffic has been very
heavy on the eastern part of the
Union Pacific and comparatively light
on the Pacific coast," said Mr. Fort.
"The San Francisco fair last year
drew very heavy traffic to the coast
and the travelers prefer the Yellow
stone and Estes park regions this
year."
Eighteen-lnch Ears of
Corn Being Exhibited
J. C Suttie of the Northwestern of
fice is exhibiting some eara of corn
that he picked on the farm of William
Lonergan, about four tnilea north oi
Florence. Mr. Suttie aays that the
ears, which are sixteen to eighteen
inches long and just beginning to
dent in long straight well-filled rows,
are fair samples of a sixty-acre corn
field. ;
Man Found in Unconscious
, Condition at Union Depot
Henry Corhin, aged SO years, who
was found unconscious at the Union
station Tuesday night, is reported to
be in a -serious condition by those at
tending him at St. Joseph hospital. .
WALLIS CUE) TRACTOR
GIVES FINE DEMONSTRATION
Yesterday at the Fremont National
Power Fanning Show the famous Wal
lis. Cub- Tractor put up a fins demon
stration, plowing 8 inches deep at its
normal speed of over two miles an
hour. ,
This nationally known machine,
which has been s big' favorite at the
Fremont demonstrations in years past,
again proved its superiority in yester
day's field teat. '
BURNS KEROSENE.
In this afternoon's exhibition at
Fremont the Cub burned kerosene,
proving-beyond doubt to skeptical
farmers that its specially built four
cylinder motor can successfully pull Its
heaviest load on cheap fuel. During
tha demonstrations at Dallas, Hutch
- inson and St Louis few ' spectators
could detect which grade of fuel the
Cub was -using..
FREMONT BOUGHT CUB. '
Further proof of the fact that the
Cub is real quality tractor and
not an experimental engine is found
in the judgment of the city of Fre
mont, which municipality, after look
ing over all makes of machines for tha
past three years, decided that tha
Wallis Cub best answered its require
ments. .
This is no mean compliment to "Cub
construction" and should go a great
way toward convincing farmers that
this tractor is in a class by itself.
SEE THE CUB AT WORK.
Make it a point to see the Cub in ac
tual field work before the Fremont
, Demonstration is over. Then you will
appreciate the value .of its spring
mounting construction, its short turn
ing radius, its dust-proof compart
ments, its perfect lubricating system,
its power and ' speed and the many
other strong features.
J. I. CASE PLOW WORKS
SELLING AGENTS FOR THE CUB
RACINE, WIS. :-: OMAHA, NEB.
nsn