The James Carriers 



HERE the manure is loaded on to the spreader and put on 

 the fields at once, the James Carrier makes it possible to get 

 the manure on to the soil with but the one handling — that of 

 loading the tub in the barn. 



That's some different, isn't it, from loading the manure into 

 a wheelbarrow — pushing it out through the barn, leaving a 

 trail of dripping filth — across a mushy yard and up on to a manure pile, trying 

 the strength and patience of the strongest man; afterwards loading the wagon 

 from the pile, losing the liquids; then hauling it to the field, dumping in piles 

 and later scattering with a fork. 



The big tub of the James Carrier holds as much as three or four wheel- 

 barrow loads; the earner can be run out and dumped in less time than a single 

 wheelbarrow and it takes no longer to load manure into the carrier than it 

 does into the wheelbarrow. The saving of time and work is very large. 



The James Manure Carrier not only saves much of the hard work, but it 

 saves you many dollars' worth of liquid manure which could not be saved in 

 any other way; the saving of liquid manure alone will go a long ways towards 

 paying for the carrier. 



When the wheelbarrow method is used, the manure is quite apt to be piled 

 near the barn. But with the James Carrier, it is easy to put the pile far away 

 from the stable, so that there will be no fumes of ammonia arising near the 

 building to damage the paint, rot the sides and sills, ruin the finish of vehicles 

 near by, injure the health of the animals, or taint the milk. You can keep 

 a clear space between the barn and the pile or manure shed. 



The James Feed Carrier or the James Feed Truck will save you so much 

 walking back and forth to the feed room, and will save you so much work 

 and time, that you will wonder how you ever got along without it. 



You can feed twenty-four cows or more the James way, with no more 

 walking and in the time required to feed a few by the basket method. 



Your feed basket holds enough silage for only one or two cows; the James 

 Carrier or James Feed Truck holds sufficient for twenty-four to twenty-eight. 

 And the James way is easier, because you have no weight to carry — the silage 

 being loaded into the tub at the silo or in the feed room, and rolled easily 

 along in front of the mangers. The James Milk Can Carrier and Harness 

 Carriers are also time and labor savers. 



SAVES 100 MILE WALK EACH WINTER 

 Paulson Bros., Independence. Wisconsin: "We are more than pleased, with the outfit, as it actually cuts the 

 chores in half. In the first place the feed truck saves us eight trips the length of our 100 foot barn, over carrying 

 silage in baskets. And the litter carrier, every trip you make with it saves two extra trips with the wheelbarrow," 

 "The cows can do better as one can keep it more sanitary for them. The swinging stanchions keep them com- 

 fortable. Besides, the modern steel fixtures make the barn lighter, 



"To sum it up, why a man can put on his best Sunday clothes go to the barn and do the chores without 

 being "mussed" up. And last but not least, you don't have to invite the cows a second time to come in, as we know- 

 some cows will attempt to jump over the doors if we don't open soon enough to suit them," 



