1013. 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
y«7 
IReliae ility, 
UNIVERSAL 
on pletene§§ 
Satisfaction 
V-OUbtH 
William Louden, the Edison of Sanitary, Labor 
Saving Barn Equipment Has Solved the Barn 
Problems for - the Farmers and Dairymen 
Remodeling and Rebuilding 
Time is Here 
This is the best time to 
make arrangements for in¬ 
stalling Stalls. Stanchions, 
Feed and- Lit- 
t e r Carriers. 
Make up your 
mind to have 
the improve¬ 
ments put in 
this year—then, 
by next year, 
you’ll have 
them paid for 
by the savings. 
Be Ready for Frosty Mornings—You’ll 
Need Feed and Litter Carriers Then 
Have Louden Litter and Feed Carriers 
installed before cold weather, that you 
may cut down the exposure necessary in 
doing the feeding and cleaning. 
There is no Currier made to-day that 
Is operated as easily as is the Louden. A 
hoy of twelve is prepared to do all the 
heavy work in the barn if lie has a 
Louden Carrier. You can lift forty times 
as much with a Louden Carrier lifting 
device as you can with just your strength. 
The peculiar construction of the Louden 
Carriers gives them strength and they will 
outwear any other carrier to be bought 
to-day. So well has the work of opera¬ 
tion of the Carrier been distributed on 
the various parts, that there is little 
strain in any particular piece of the 
mechanism, no matter how heavy the 
load. 
lad the Price - Well, that is a pleasant 
surprise that awaits you. The cost is so 
moderate that Louden Carriers will soon 
pay for themselves, by the saving of 
labor, of feed, nod the elements of value 
in the manure. 
Why Net Economize in the Barn as Well ? 
Take Advantage of Mr. 
Louden’s 47 Years Experience 
Buy the Best—Louden’s 
Sanitary Barn Equipment 
It costs you no more than the cheaply made 
kind, has many more advantages, more val¬ 
uable features, and will last as long as the 
barn stands. Every piece in Louden’s 
Equipment is made of the best material 
that can be secured, and is manufac¬ 
tured and assembled in the Louden 
Factories by competent men. Louden’s 
can truly be called the 
“Perfection Line.” 
If vou could buv a 
t' 
shovel made of steel or 
one of tin, for practically 
tlie same price, you’d take 
the steel,—of course. 
If you have an opportunity to buy two kinds of 
sanitary barn equipment, at practically the same 
price,—and one is made in a thoroughly workman¬ 
like manner, and the other thrown together hit or 
miss, just any old way—you’d buy the best — 
You’d Buy the Louden Make, of Course 
Any barn equipment purchased today, will be an im¬ 
provement over the equipment of yesterday,—the old kind 
with deep mangers, the filthy floor, the rigid stanchion —but 
why not get the best at the same price. 
Louden Stalls and Stanchions and Litter and Feed Car¬ 
riers are as well made as many clocks. Every joint is fitted 
perfectly with Louden dust-proof malleable connections; 
there are no cracks or crevices to catch dust; and for 
strength, Louden Equipment will stand the wear longer than 
your barn. 
Strength 
Flexibility 
LAnimal 
(OM FORT(| 
fe>ANITATION 
IBeauty 
Ut/ftABfLfTY i 
ILabor 
Saving 
Farmers Profit 
Weakest Point the Strongest on Louden’s 
Some stanchions break at the hinge, but not so 
with the LOUDEN. The coupling pin at this joint 
passes through four thicknesses of malleable iron 
twice as much as on any other stanchion. The 
stanchion, like a chain, is as strong as its weakest 
point—and the hinge on Loudeu’s Stanchion is strong 
enough to hold an elephant. 
The illustration shows how the malleable pieces 
are reinforced at the joint, where the strong half-inch 
rivet passes through. There, it will be noticed, by 
the illustration, the material is much thicker, thus 
making up for the hole made for the rivet. The 
malleable parts for the Louden Stanchion hinge are 
four times as large as those of the illustration— 
so heavy that it is impossible for them to be broken 
by ordinary usage. 
w * 
You Should Buy Louden’s Stalls and Stanchions Because They /* 
Align the cow to the gutter, keep her clean and save the bedding. / 
The cow may swing her neck nine inches in any direction and scare the flies off her rump with / 
her head 
The cow can get down and up without danger of scratching her knee or brisket. Every part of 
the curl) and stanchions is round. 
The cut-out manger curb makes it possible for the cow to have her throat within ten inches 
t Louden I 
+ Machinery Co., ■ 
y 2 9 2 Broadway, a 
Fairfield, Iowa, g 
Louden Barn Equipment Will j 
Be Exhibited At These Fairs 
Connecticut, Danbury, Oct. 0-11. 
Illinois (State). Springfield. Oct. 8-11. 
Indiana (State), Indianapolis. Sept. 8-12. 
Kansas (State) Hutchinson, Sept. 13-20. 
Michigan (State) Detroit, Sept. 15-20. 
Minnesota (State) Hainline. Sept. 1-0. 
Missouri (State) Sednlia, Sept. 27-Oet 3. 
Nebraska (State) Lincoln. Sept. 1-5. 
New Jersey (interstate) Trenton, Sept. 29- 
Oct. 3. 
New York (State) Syracuse. Sept. 8 - 13 . 
North Carolina (State) Raleigh, Oct. 20-25. 
Oldo (State) Cnluuihus, Sept. 1-5. 
Oregon (State) Salem, Sept. 29-Oet 4 
Tennessee (State) Nashville, Sept. 29- 
Oct. 4. 
Wisconsin (State) Milwaukee, Sept. 8-12. 
of the floor when lying down. It also makes possible high manger curbs ou eticli side, 
prevents loss of food, as many cows nose a portion of their rations out. 
The mangel’ partition makes it possible for each cow to be fed the required amount 
each meal, and it is impossible for her neighbor to eat a portion of it. No half-fed or + 
over-fed cows in Louden Stalls. 
Every piece of metal equipment is galvanized or painted inside and out with * 
the host quality aluminum paint, insuring against rust. 
See your dealer or fill in the coupon and mail it to-day. We will 
mail you handsome books giving facts and figures of vital importance / 
to every man whether he owns one cow or a thousand. S 
Louden Machinery Co. 
Makers of 300 Labor Savers for the Barn S 
292 Broadway, Fairfield, Iowa / «• R He 
This + Without cost to me g 
f pend the book or books 3 
+ marked with an x: 
* ( ) Dairy Barn Equipment. ® 
f ( ) Facts on Manure Values, jj 
^ ( ) Hanging the Barn Door. * 
+ ( ) Catalog of Feed and Litter a 
, Carriers. I 
j will not bui,<1 a new barn -by-ft. jj 
f I wilVnot remodel my preseut barn this year. J 
y 1 keep....head of cattle and....head of hoc cs. g 
/ (Cross out Uie words that do not apply to your j 
+ ease.) g 
1 
. I 
I 
.*. I 
Name . 
* 
Tost Office. 
f U. K. State 
S Mr. 
equipment. His address is. 
a neighbor, is considering new barn * 
Dost Office. 
State. 
keeps.head of cattle and.horses. I 
