"^(5^ JAOQGS l^a.V 123 



The Easy James Way of Erecting 

 Barn Equipment 



The pictures on the following pages tell an interesting story of the greatest 

 advance in barn equipment, since the time Mr. James first originated the 

 essential features of the cow stall. 



It is a plan that reduces the whole proposition of erection to one of absolute 

 simplicity. 



This James idea makes so simple and so easy the setting up of cow stalls, 

 and bull, cow and calf pens, that no experience is needed. 



It enables any man who is building or remodeling a barn to go right ahead 

 with the cementing of the floor, without waiting for the arrival of the equip- 

 ment itself. 



No delays — no grief while waiting for equipment — no concrete men idle 

 because the material isn't on the ground or because some necessary parts have 

 been lost in transit. 



You Can Start Cementing Tomorrow 



The identical principles of barn building and barn equipment that we — as 

 originators — have been presenting to the dairy world from year to year remain 

 as they were. 



All the basic ideas that have brought success to barn owners are preserved. 



We simply make James Equipment better than ever before by providing 

 a new and easy way of setting it up — a way that makes it unnecessary for you 

 to hire skilled help — a way that makes it unnecessary to delay your cement 

 work or other building operations a single day. 



James Anchors Only Thing Needed 



When ready to begin cementing the floor, all you need to have on hand in 

 the way of barn equipment is the required number of James Anchors. 



If your cement men are ready to go to work, have them come ahead. 



You will be ready for them — The James Way — because you need only 

 James Anchors to begin work. 



The anchors when you receive them, have templates (anchor spacers) 

 attached — the templates being scored and marked, with nail holes already 

 drilled. 



You mark off the proper spacing on the foiTn for the concrete curb, accord- 

 ing to simple directions furnished with each job. 



The anchors — which later are to hold the stall posts and stanchions — are 

 set in the form at the proper points, nailed in place and the form filled with 

 concrete. 



