. Better fruit. Fruit-culture. Orchard Work This Tractor's Specialty Reasons in TrackPULL Book MOST makers make a gen- eral-use tractor. We make a special kind, after 34 years' experience in building orchard machinery to meet special needs. The Bean TrackPULL Tractor will be as famous as the noted Bean Power Sprayer when as many are in use. Don't buy merely "a tractor" un- til you know the TrackPULL's spe- cial orchard features. When you learn all the facts you'll decide at once that a "general-purpose trac- tor" will not do. DEAN TrackPULL Tractor. The TrackPULL turns in a


. Better fruit. Fruit-culture. Orchard Work This Tractor's Specialty Reasons in TrackPULL Book MOST makers make a gen- eral-use tractor. We make a special kind, after 34 years' experience in building orchard machinery to meet special needs. The Bean TrackPULL Tractor will be as famous as the noted Bean Power Sprayer when as many are in use. Don't buy merely "a tractor" un- til you know the TrackPULL's spe- cial orchard features. When you learn all the facts you'll decide at once that a "general-purpose trac- tor" will not do. DEAN TrackPULL Tractor. The TrackPULL turns in a 10- foot circle with full power—tools deep in the soil. You turn back in the same row. No getting out. No stopping. Its low height gets under branches four feet off ground. Makes no difference how far off- center tools are hitched. New "After-the-War" Proposition We have a new "After-the-War" proposition which includes a bond covering a liberal guarantee on one season's work of 90 days, without expense for repair parts. This guarantee bond is furnished each purchaser of a BEAN. A reduc- tion in price is also effective at once and guaranteed up until June 30, 1919. Also manufacturers of famous Bean Power Sprayers Bean Spray Pump Co., 284 W. Julian San Jose, CaL Send rae TrackPULL catalog and full Informa- tion without obligation on my part. County No. of Acres ., ..Kinil nf f'rops the land is practically level, the water is handled by flooding little basins or checks made by throwing up plow fur- rows to form ridges between the trees, plowing in both directions, so that each tree stands in a little square by itself. Occasionally, when a good head of water is available or percolation is slow, every other row is skipped, thus throwing four trees in a group. The ridges usually rise to a height of eight or nine inches above the general level of the land, being made high enough to confine whatever depth of water is de- sired. Water is suppl


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