^^3^ JAPQGS T>JA.Y 97 



The James cups giving the cows plenty of water at all hours of the day 

 or night improve digestion and keep the animals in better condition; James 

 ventilators help to keep the stable air fresh and pure; the drinking cups and 

 the manger divisions help to prevent spread of disease through the water and 

 the feed; and the triple curve stall partition helps prevent injury to udders. 



You will note from the pictures how little the stalls interfere with light, 

 that there is very little surface on which dust and disease germs can accumulate, 

 and the air has free circulation throughout the barn. 



Saves Bedding 



A. G. Abbott, of Wadsworth, Ohio, says that James equipment saves him 

 money "because less straw is required for bedding." 



In a stall without a manger, a cow ofttimes tries to get feed which is out 

 of her reach. In straining for it, her hind feet may slip and push the bedding 

 back into the gutter. 



Then, too, James equipment, by keeping the manure in the gutter where 

 it belongs, and not on the standing platform or the cow's flanks, lessens the 

 amount of bedding required. 



With the cows in James Stalls, the bedding does not have to be changed 

 as often, and this becomes an item worth consideration in the course of a year. 



Higher Prices for Milk 



Many dairymen who are selling milk direct to the housewives have dis- 

 covered another very important feature of James equipment — its use as a means 

 of getting more customers and a bigger price per quart. 



People in the towns and cities generally know that milk is one of the best 

 of foods. It is true they do not realize that at the usual prices, it is the 

 cheapest of foods, but this is a fact which can quite readily be demonstrated 

 to them. 



The consumption of milk could readily be increased — perhaps doubled — 

 if people fully appreciated its real food value and its cheapness. 



But even without any education on that point, people in towns and cities 

 would gladly use more milk and willingly pay a higher price if they felt sure of 

 the purity and cleanliness of the milk furnished them; and dairymen can 

 increase their business and profits by advertising CLEAN milk. 



Read this experience of a practical dairyman as an illustration of what can 

 be accomplished along this line: 



Mr. Franklin C. Bron, of Tiverton Four Corners, R. I., wrote us: 



"In my opinion. James equipment will last a lifetime, and it saves me money on a big basis. It has increased 

 my business 100 per cent, as I have been recommended by the Board of Health and doctors of Fall River to receive 

 fifteen cents per quart for my milk. The James equipment secured me the highest score by the Fall River Board 

 of Health, which was 97 points for sanitary conditions, the next party to me scoring 73. That amounts to some. 

 thing, as Fall River is a very strict city on milk. ! am doing a very good business, and I claim it all through 

 the James equipment." 



