IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I.I u &4 US lAO !:25 i 1.4 2.2 1.6 <^y ^ .> / /a ^^;c/ > %^j^ % % A. !-_• Sciences Corporation 33 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, N.Y. K5B0 (716) 872-4503 1 l\ V rv 6^ ^-b ^> ^v^ V. f/. CIHM/ICMH Microfiche Series. CIHIVI/ICMH Collection de microfiches. Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions / Institut Canadian de microreproductions historiques ^ ^^-^ Technical and Bibliographic Notes/Notas techniques at bibliographiques The Institute has attempted to obtain the best original copy available for filming. Features of this co,j)y which may be bibliographicaily unique, which may alter any of the images in the reproduction, or which may significantly change the usual method of filming, are checked below. D Coloured covers/ Couverture de coulcur rn Covers damaged/ Couverture endommagie Covers restored and/or laminated/ Couverture restaur^ et/ou pelliculie Cover title missing/ Le titre de couverture manque Coloured maps/ Cartes gAographiques en couleur Coloured ink (I.e. other than blue or black)/ Sncre de couleur (i.e. autre que bleue ou noire) Colournd plates and/or illustrations/ Planches et/ou illustrations en couleur Bound with other material/ Reli* avec d'autres documents □ D n Tight binding may cause shadows or distortion along interior margin/ La re liure serr^e peut causer de I'ombre ou de la distorsjon la long de la marge int^rieuro Blank leaves added during restoration may appear within the text. Whenever possible, these heve been omitted from filming/ II se peut que certainas pages blanches ajout«es lors d'une restauration apparaissent dans le texte, mais, lorsque cela 4tait possible, ces pages n'ont pas «t« filmtes. Additional comments:/ Commentaires suppiAmentaires; L'Institut a microfilm^ la meilleur exemplaire qu'il lui a iti possible de se procurer. Les details de cet exemplaire qui sont peut-dtre uniques du point de vue bibliographique, qui pauvent modifier une image reproduite, ou qui peuvent exiger una modification dans la m«thode normale de fiimjge sont indiquAs ci-dessous. n n n □ D D n Coloured pages/ Pagea de couleur Pages damaged/ Pages endommagies Pages restored and/or laminated/ Pages rastauries et/ou peiliculAes Pagea discoloured, stained or foxed/ Pages dicolories, tacheties ou piqudes Pages detached/ Pages diitachies Showthrough/ Transparence Quality of print varies/ Quality in^gale de I'impression Includes supplementary material/ Comprend du material supplimentaire Only edition available/ Seule Mition disponible Pages wholly or partially obscured by errata slips, tissues, etc., have been refilmed to ensure the best possible imcge/ Les pages totaiement ou partieltement obscurcies par un feuillet d'errata, une pelure, etc., ont iti filmies A nouveau de facon d obtanir la meilleure image possible. 7 s T y^ h d ei b ri ri rr This item is filmed at the reduction ratio checked below/ Ce document est film* au taux de reduction indiqu* ci-dessous. ^OX 14X 18X 22X J 12X 16X 20X 26X 30X 24X 28X ] 32X Th« copy film«d hcr« has been raproduced thanks to tha ganarosity of: D. B. Welrion Library University of Western Ontario (Regional Historv' Room) Tha Imagas appaaring hara ara tha bast quality possibia eonaidaring tha condition and lagibiiity of tha original copy end in kaaping with tha filming contract spacifications. Original copias in printad papar covars ara filmad baginning witJi tha front covar and anding on tha last paga with a printad or illuatratad imprea- sion, or tha back covar whan appropriata. All othar original copias ara filmad baginning on tha first paga with a printad or illuatratad impraa- sion, and anding on tha laat paga with a printad or illuatratad imprasaion. Tha laat racordad frama on aach microficha shall contain tha symbol —»>( moaning "CON- TINUED"), or tha symbol V (maaning "END"), whichavar appiiaa. ly^aps. plataa, charts, ate. may ba filmad at diffarant raduction ratioa. Thosa too iarga to ba antiraiy includad in ona axpoaura ara filmad baginning in tha uppar laft hand comar, laft to right and top to bottom, aa many frsmaa aa raquirad. Tha following diagrams illustrata tha mathod: L'axampiaira film* fut raproduit grAca A la gin^rosit* da: D. B. Weldon Library University of Western Ontario (Regional History Room) Laa imagaa suivantaa ont tt6 raproduitas avac la plua grand soin. compta tanu da la condition at da la nattat* da l'axampiaira film*, at w conformity avac laa conditions du contrat da filmaga. Laa axamplairaa originaux dont la couvartura an papiar aat imprimte sont filmte en commanqant par la pramiar plat at an tarminant soit par la darnlAra paga qui comporta una amprainta d'impraasion ou d'lllustration. soit par la sacond plat, salon la eaa. Toua las autras axemplairas originaux sont filmte an commandant par la pramidra paga qui comporta una amprainta d'impraasion ou d'lllustration at an tarminant par ia darnlAra paga qui comporta una tolla amprainta. Un daa symbolaa suivants apparaitra sur la darniAra imaga da chaqua microficha, salon la caa: la symbols — ^ signifia "A SUIVRE '. la symboia y signifia "FIN". Laa cartas, planchas. tablaaux. etc., pauvant dtre fiimte A daa taux da reduction diffirants. Lorsqua la document est trop grand pour dtre reproduit en un saut clichA, il est film« A partir da I'angia sup4rtaur gauche, de gauche A droita, at da haut en bas, en prenant la nombra d'imagaa nAcaasatre. Las diagrammes suivants illustrant la m^thoda. 1 2 3 4 5 6 C. AULTMAN & CO.. "MANUFACTURERS OF- STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. OFFICE AND MANUFACTORY, CANTON, 0., U. S. A. LEWIS MILLER, Pratident HENRY C. FOGLE, 8«or«tery ani] Treaiurer. BRANCH OFFICES AND PRINCIPAL DEPOTS. MANAGERS. '^tncUinaU. Ohlo-lSS Main St J. O. Stowe. Baltimore, Md.— 114 Oonway 8t H. W. Slatthewa. Chattanooga, Tonu.— 231 Market St. .„. .3. A. Oannlngham. MinneapoUs, Minn — 3d St. and 3d Av. , North. .0. J. CtotshaU. Chicago, ni.— 3r South Canal St 0.0. Whltacre. :i.oalsvtUe, Ky.-30 J West Main St IttcGIU & Truman. Froeport, IU.-5S-61 Stephenson St W. G.& W. Barnes. Peoria, ni A. O. Soherer. NashvlUe, Tenn.-33 Public Square . . . J. M. Hamilton & Co. Portland, Oregon Ch»». H. Dodd & Co. Sydney, New South Wales H. B. Chlpman. Note.— Letters of Inquiry for prices of our different machines and terms of sale, and appUoations for agencies and the address of agents, should be addressed to our oaise nearest to your place of residence, or to the home omco at Canton Ohio All inqutriea will receive prompt and careful attention. Copies of this Pamphlat are furnished In the GERMAN, FRENCH, SWEDISH, NORWEGIAN, or SPANISH Languages. JACOB MILLER. Suparintendant. BRANCH OFr'ICES AND PRINCIPAL DEPOTS. MANAGERS. Alton, 3U.— 13 Third St BUlnor, Auten & Co. Mechanlcsburg, Pa. O.N.Owen. Wheeling, W. Va — 1520 Main St B. K. Oiran AsCo. St. I,oiiis, Mo.— 120 and 122 South 8th St. . Wm. Koentg & Co. Forgo, Dak. Deere A Co. Council BluObflowa Darld Bradley & Co. San Framcisco, CaL Uawley Bros. Hardware Co. Paris, France— 59 Rue lAf ayette A. Bogy. Buenos Ayi'es, South America. Pedro Kurczyn. Threshers, Engines, Horse Powers, Complete Threshing- Rigs, Water and Fuel €arts. Clover Attachments, Swinging Stackers, and Saw Mills MANini"ACTUEEO BT C. AULTMAN & CANTON, OHIO. CO., THRESHERS. "Wo manufaoturo Now Model Threshers, in -which separation is effected partly by an endless apron and partly by the vibrating process. We aro able to jffer to our patrons the following sizes of THE NEW MODEL THRESHER : JJo. 4 'Sew Model, 24 in. cylinder, 30 in. reav. IlO. 7 Now Modely 30 in. cylinder, 42 in. rear. No. 9 New Model, 33 in. cylinder, 45 in, rear. No. 11 New Model, 36 iu. cylinder, 48 in, rear. With the abovo will be included Neck Yoke, Whiffle- trees. Stay Chains, etc., including Brakes for Truck, Side Canvases, Windlass and Rope for Stacker. For tho 'Gtoarod" machine, one extra Bevel Pinion, and one extra Spur Pinion icor same. With cither "BeU id" or "Geared" machine, wo furnish our co" '-' ion Biddies for oieauiug Wheat, Oats, Barley, ana .ye, all necessary belts, except Main Drive Belt, Feed Tables, Foot Boaixi, Run Boards, Oil Can, Wrenches, three Cylinder and two Concave Teeth extra, one extra Concave, Spike Wrench, and Spike Straightener. ENGINES. All tho Tarieties of Engines made by C. Anltman & Co. are knowa b\ the designation of "Canton Monitor." Wo adhere to the originskl type of Endne, Boiler, and Mounting first employed by us on the Canton Monitor, because said type nas proven its unrivalo.l adaptability to farm uses, in respect to simpUcity and endurance ; and especially in respect to safety ana economy. Fol- lowing are the sises we build: CANTON MONITOR PLAIN ENGINE. No. 6.— 6 'Horse Engine. Na, 10,— lQ>lIorne Eugin.e^ No. 12.— la-Horse En^ne. No. 16.— IG-Horse Engine. C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. HORSE-STEERING TRACTION ENGINE. No. 10.— lO-Horse Traotion, to bo ^ded by horses, ■with Link motion. No. 12. — 12-Horflo Traction, to bo guided by horsesj with Link motion. No. 16. — lO-Horse Traction, to bo guided by horses, with Link motiou. SELF-STEERING TRACTION ENGINE. No, iO.— lO-Horse. Self-steering Traction Engine, with Link motion. No. 12. — 12>Horse. Solf-steering Traction Engine, with Link motion. 'No. 16. — 16-Hors5. Solf-stooring Traction Engine, with Link motion. Each Engine will bo mnuntod on onr nmapprciehablo wrought iron and steol Trucks, and will bo furnished with Pole, Whiffletrees, Stay Chains, Neck Yoke, Brakes for Track. The above prices include all fittings neces- sary for the Engine, such as Independent Steam Pump, Governor, Oil Cups, Try Cocks, Steam Gauge, Glass "Water Gauge, Whistle, Locomotive "Pop" Safety Valve, Locomotive Blower, Pipe Wrench, Hose for Water and Hose for Steam Flue Cleaner, Fire Poker, extra Glass for Water Gauge, Water Screen, Funnel for Filling Boiler, Oil Can, etc. In fact, nothing is omitted that is convenient or necessary for Engine. We also manufacture MONITOR SEMI-PORTABLE ENGINES. This Engine consists of the Monitor adapted to sta- tionary uses. STRAW-BURNING ENGINE Parties wishing Straw-Burning Engines are invited to send for special circular containing a description of tho same. MONITOR PORTABLE BOILER, Whi?h is adapted to the wants of those requiring steam for any agricultural or mechanical purpose. CAREY HORSE POWERS. Wo manufacture Carey Horse Powers of these sizes: 4 or 6-Horse Mounted Power. 8- Horse Moantcd Power. 10- Horse Mounted Power. 12°Hor8e Mounted Power. With either of the above there will bo rieluded, — Truck eomploto with Brakes, Lever Racks and Sockets, and Ground Fastenings, Blocks for Tumbling Rods, Slodgo for driving Stakes, Whiffletrees, Neck Yoke, etc. Levers complete mth Irons, and Stay Rods or BraeoFi for Lovers, one Short Tumbling Rod. While these pow- cis are generally required mounted, they can also bo furnished without Trucks when desired. DINGEE-WOODBURY HORSE POWERS. lO'Horse Mounted Power. 12'Horse Mounted Power. PATENT SWINGING STACKER. Unless otherwise ordered our New Swinging StacKer is furnished 24 feat long. If a longer Stacker is desired an extra charge will be made. MONITOR SAW MILLS. Slnsrle Saw MUl. Double Saw Mill. In addition to tho above complete machines, C. A\ilt- man & Co. also make all tho various equipments which are best calculated to fit said machines for tho perform- ance of any special class of work, such as Timothy and Flax Riddles, Ooror Hnllinff Attnclt- ments. Side Gear witli Cover Complete, Tlirec Hitch Gear, Grain Baggers, Jointed ^^tockers, Swinging Stackers, Equalizers for four, Ave, and six Levers, Ground Jocks, Trucks for Threshers, Tracks for Powers, Water and Fuel Carts. COMPLETE RIGS. Persons who contemplate engn^n;| in tho threshing or sawing business generally require a complete eqr.ip- ment, either Steam or Horso Power, in tho start. Tho great bulk of our machines aro sold in that way. Com- plete Thresher Rigs are made up as follows : COMPLETE STEAM RIGS. No. 4 New Model (24 in. cylinder, 36 in. rear), with No. 6 Engine. No. 7 New Model (30 in. cylinder, 42 in. roar), with No. 10 Engine — Plain or Traction No. 9 New Model (33 in. cylinder, 45 in roar), v.ith No. 10 Engine — Plain or Traction, No. 11 New Moilel (36 in. cylinder, 48 in. rear), with No. 12 Engine — Plain or Traction. COMPLETE HORSE POWER RIGS. Either "Geared" or "Belted," as maybe desired. No, 4 New Model, with 8-Horse Moimted Power. No, 7 New Model, with lO-Horse Mounted Power. No. 9 New Model, with lO-Horso Mounted Power. No. 9 New Model, with 12-Horse Mounted Power. • A COMPLETE SAW MILL RIG Comprises either a Double or Single Saw Mill, and a Twelve or Sixteen-Horse Power Engine. Each machine named as belonging to any one of tho above rigs is furnished with all the extras belonging ^vith said machine, singly, as previously named. With tho Complete Rigs the necessary Drive Belts are fur- nished in add'tion. In short, our Coraple^^o Rigs com- prise all the appurtenances required to place tho estab- lishment on a footing for immediate and efficient busi- ness. REPAIRS. We furnish m the tool box of each Machine sold, our illustrated book of repairs and prices. Overhaul your machine several months before you expect to use it, seo what it needs, and put your machine in completo or-ler. Order your repairs, if any are needed, from us or from one of our own agents. Replace broken or worn out pieces wiih genuine pieces made by us from aecurato patterns. If obtained from some local shop or un- authorized concern, they are very liable to inflict trouble upon you and undeserved detriment upon tho repute of our machines. When ordering repairs, give : Ist. Yottt name, and town, county and State to which yon want tLom shipped. 2d. Say whether by freight or express. 3d. Your post-offico address. 4th. If not to bo sent by- express, C. O. D., send P. O. order or draft for tho amount l( 1 — 1 8 e 4 a -^^ N ijlaco of tlio orcjinary preface, wo have commoncod our catalogue by presenting, on its first two pages, a tabulated statoment of the Threshers, Engines, Horse Powers, and Saw Mills made by C. Aultman & Co. Tho roador thus has the sizes and capacity of all ova raachinos, and combinations of machines, where they may bo quickly referred t . So far as compaiative merit is oonoemed it can be said that some of the machines that find their way intr tho market aro good ; some are not good — some are worse than worthless. The ordinary methods of ascertaining their roliitiv: marit include the annual catalogue furnished by each house. It may, however, bo said that tho farmer who cousults each and all of those dooumenta will be apt to be confused rather than enlightened upon this essential point. Only the practical thresherman who has put the machine through tho roar and hurry of one or more campaigns has road the unprinted chapter that discloses this eecret. The machine mtist bo judged by the amount and quality of the work it is capable of doing wifli proper management, rather than by the ago of tuo ,^J manufactory producing it, or the size of tho factory, or by tho claims of its makers. H i We do not mean to say that the considerations last named arj without sigaiflcanoo. Just the contrary is true. ^^ • ! A manufactory of machines used in agricultural processes cannot have prolonged existence, nor can it attain any extended pioporHons, unless its products have tne approval and substantial patronage of the farmer. And it is with a pride, which is certainly pardonable, that we state the fact that the liouso of C. Aultman & Co., and its immediate prodocessor, have made a special business of tho manufacture of threshing machines every year since 1840 ; and that nearly one-half c! the resources and power of their works at Canton, which aro probably the most extensive in America, are constantly employed in the production of Threshers and Engines, wo shall make no claim for our machines which is not abundantly sustained by the experience of many disinterested and thor- oughly competent witnesses. In compliance with the requirements of custom, and of convenience as well, we issue this annual description of our machines. As an advertisement it must necessarily be of only secondary utility. A great shop advertises itself by its products. Every machine that is sent out paves the way for more and more, or for less and loss. If a machine masters the tasks given it to do in a superior manner, showing a profit to both thresher and ftirmor over the capabilities of its competitors, it will ultimately exact, even from the prejudiced and unwilling, a recog- nition of tlie fact. With a manufacturing recoi'd cf so many years we need hardly say that this house has built many different machines, aud has experimented with very many more. The existence of this industry spans the entire period from the fl lil to the great steam thresher of to-day. No part of all this period has been more prolific of radical improvements, having for their object a greatly increased capacity and at the same tima a greatly reduced wast- age and looS of grain, than the last five years. It is only by comparing a thresher like the Now Model with an old typo of vibrator or endless apron that the scope of tlioso improvements can be fully imderstood. In the Now Model Vibrating Thresher, Mr. Jacob Miller, the veteran Thresher builder, and Superintendent of C. Aultman & Go's Works, has embodied the fruits of forty years' successful experience with that claan of machines. Tho old models that have been made by C. Aultman & Co., some of which, in their chiy, challenged ouch hearty adiiiration as is only accorded to master-pieces of human skill have, one by one, been branded " Well done, etc.," aud been pushed aside to make room for Millers New Model, because, with the same power, it is capable of t^' 3shing more grain than any previous machine ; because it separates and saves tho most and wast J3 tho loast ; because it cleans cleaner than a,vj other ; because of its extraordinarj^ capabilities in all condi- tioug of straw, and in threshing and hulling special crops and seeds ; because of its simplicity, dural^'lity, and fti'oat facility in handling ; because it is free from the vices of choking, clogging, and brealdng grain; and because its real superiority to every other threshing machine is attested and insisted upon with that unanimity and enthusiasm which admits of no doubt whatever. In 1880, after four years' experience in building the Canton Monitor Engine, C. Auitinan & Co. erected a large noparate engine shop for its construction. Both engine and boiler shops received a full eqiiipment of the best available iron and steel working machinery. This important step was rendered necessary by the rapidly iucroas- ing demand for Monitor Engines, and has been most amply justified by our extensive trade during the past thieo years, Avhich has taxed this new addition tc our works to its utmost capacity. We continue to manufacture plain engines of six to twenty horse power, and traction engines of ten to twenty horse power, the latter being either self or horso steering as the purchaser may select. The horse-steer- ing Traction Monitor seema to be the form of machine best adapted to the requirements of most engine users, its sale far outnumbering that of all the other styles. E' ;■ year's record of steam threshing, sawing, etc., convinces us more and more certainly of tho superiority of tho /right boiler for portable uses. Its saving of fuel aiid water over the horizontal boiler, tho facility with which it is operated, the quickness with which it is sot and fired, its lightness, compactness, audits dura oility are excellences that would alone commend it sufficiently. But safety to person and property is also to be eon- fsiderod in the purchase of a boiler. Explosions attended by most calamitous results have been only too frequent. If any reader of tliis has taken the pains to inform himself as to the character of the portable boilers that aro responsible for the disasters that now and then shock tho reading community, he vhll not need to bo informed that the record of the Canton Monitor is absolutely without blemish in this vital respect. After seven years' use, and in view of the unexampled product and sale of the Monitor, its makers view this record with profound satisfaction. Heretofore traction engines have, in some localities, occasionally experienced difSculty in propelling them- nelves over slippery roads. We can now furnish a Patent Spur Traction Wheel which entirely obviates this trouble. We build two Horse Powers, the Carey, also the Improved Dingee- Woodbury. Both these Powers have their merits. Nothing more can be desired in the way of Powers, for no better Powers are made. C. Aultman us Go's Patent Lateral Swinging Stacker will be a welcome addition to the New Model Thresher outfit. It requires little extra power, and saves much hard labor. Tho Now Monitor Saw Mill which we furnish is described in this catalogue. In responding to tho call for a light saw mill by purchasers of our engines in timber districts v/o have been slow, but yure. The Monitor Mill is not oxoelled in swiftness, lightness, or durability, and is exactly what is required by those wishing a por able mill requiring from ton to twenty horso power. Many questions will arise which may, perhaps, remain unanswered in tho descriptive parts of our catalogue, hut answers to nearly all possible queries ^yiU be found in the course of tho letters printed in the latter part of tho book. Tho conduct of our machines under a great variety of circumstances is there commented on by thoso who have tho best right to do so. I( «l C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. MILLER'S NEW MODEL VIBRATING THRESHER. The Bliape and ^^onorai appcaranoo of the Now Mode) arc shown by our illustrations. It In built on a strong frame, the sills of which are cut, and art-hed with iron, bo as to al- i low the front whcicls to pass under the machine in making short turns. A iiltched roof carries off the rain, and the In- terior of the seiiarutor is well protected. THE JOINTED STACKER U hinged to the machine at the rear end of the sllla. It can be placed in position for work in a few moments by means of rope and windlass. The stacker can be folded back to its place for transport on the road, by one man, as shown ou page 39. THE WORKING PARTS of the New Modal are unique. It is not a vibrator, nor an endless apron machine, but it has appropriated to itself whutever merit there was in those venerable and, in their day, useful machines, and it has greatly Increased their effi- cacy by other valuable additions. The method employed by it insures the thorough threshing out, or hulling, of all grains and seeds, for the complete separation of the same from the straw, and for its separation from dirt and chaff, and delivery in good marketable condition. The cylinder and feed-board are placed high enough so that the machine is fed WITHOUT TIRESOME AND STRAINING EFFORT. We have no occasion to set it low, or otherwise difficult to feed, because the cleaning and separating capacity of the machine cannot be overloaded by any amount of grain that a set of hands can furnish to the machine. THE CYLINDER CAP I is BO shaped as to prevent the dust made in threshing from reaching the feeder. THE CYLINDER. In order to have the requisite power for its work, the cylinder must necessarily have considerable veight. This weight Is also needed to secure steady motion. The New Model cylinder is powerfully made, and its adjustment is in- trusted only to most experienced hands. It has a heavy shaft, the steel bearings of which run in wide, composition boxes. It is adjustable endways, an arrangement that is always reliable, and saves that important bearing from the wear caused by sefr-serews and makeshifts of that character. All threshers admit that we make the best cylinder. For the cylinder teeth or spikes, we get steel specially made, which is superior, for this purpose, to any material we have ever known to be used. The spikes are made in the best manner with square shanks, and are sure to give satirfactlon in wake, matenal, and quality. THE CONCAVES. The concave-holder, under the cylinder, is made to hold from one to five concaves, as the work may require. The thresher can use two, four, five, or six rows of spikes, ac- cording as his crop is more or less difficult to thresh. For threshing or hulling clover, concaves with three rows of teeth made for that purpose are used. The concave holder is under the control of the feeder, who can Increase or de- crease the distance between the cylinder and concaves so as to accomplish the best results. The concave slide is easily raised or lowered at Its rear end as well as in front, and the one is sotnetimes just as essential as the other. During the past four seasons the New Model has been largely and most successfully used in wet oata, Hax, and the most difficult crops ; also in clover, timotliy, rlco, red-top, orchard grass, and lucern, and with superior results in each and every in- stance. In damp, tough grain, the cylinder and concaves must be brought nearer together than at other times. The conduct of the New Model in all the crops named is well described in the testimonial letters from owners of the ma- chine, printed elsewhere in this pamphlet. TAILING SPOUT. Our new Tailing Spout has a screen In the bottom, which permits hulled grains and seeds to pass back into the ma- chine behind the cylinder, while the ^' white caps " and un- huUed pods are carried on into the machine In front of the cylinder. This prevents the breaking and bruising of the kernels. Two screens for tailing spout are furnished, one for seeds and one for grain. SEPARATION FROM THE STRAW. The threshed straw, still having in its meshes more or less grain. Is not carried from the cvllnder to the stacker on a level. The body of straw, as it leaves the cylinder, will stand eonr.iderable buffeting without dropping all the grain in it, but if the bunches of straw are well shaken and also pulled apart, the grain in them will fall out and be saved. The jilan of the New Model performs this part of the work more thoroughly than it is done by any other Separator, and it is a crowning merit. On If avlng the cylinder the straw Is carried to the top of the machine by a short grain carrier. At the highest point it is met by a beater, running at a faster speed than that of the "(traw, under whie> the latter has to pass. The straw is thoroughly disarranged and drops down on to the gang of five beaters, by the motion of which it is thoroughly shaken and tossed at different angles, the layer of straw being pulled apart over every inch of its surface, so that it would seem impossible for a single grain to be left in any part of the straw. From the gang beu'icrs the straw falls a considerable distance to the vibrating table where, owing to the different movements of t'uc beaters and table, the straws are again well pulled apart, leaving the grains, if any are left in the straw, to fall down into the shoe. The gang beaters work off the straw over more than half the length of the vibrating table, and thus leave this portion of the table free to separate out the gra'.n from the broken straw and fine stuff which, with the grain, falls down upon it tlirough the beaters, being, in fact, a double separation. PaH of the table is level, but there is an elevated extension at the rear. By a series of upward and backward throws the straw is tossed back and out upon the stacker. Other vibrating machines have generally been so made that the flow of straw was little broken or disarranged, and a great waste of grain was the result. More recently cer- tain expedients. In the shape of forks or kickers, have cheeked the waste on some of them. These expedients were also rendered necessary in order to cure said machines of a cb'onie habit of choking in case they attemnted anything like fast threshing. The New Model is entirely free from this vice. It is a CYLINDER-CLEARING VIBRATOR. The short grain web carries the straw rapidly away from the cylinders, leaving it always clear and free to perform its important duties without embarrassment. This web, and the top beater also, receive and save all the flying grains that are thrown forward by the cylinder, and which, in ma- chines that are level, and open from end to end, are thrown into the straw and lost. On the New Model the straw is worked off by positive motions from cylinder to stacker, just as well in fast threshing and damp straw, as in slow tlireshing and dry straw. THE CLEANING PARTS. Another great advantage of our machine over Other vi- brators Is this : Instead of admitting the grain down on the riddle over its full length, the New Model brings the grain back, by a return shoe, to the front end or the riddle, where all the mingled grain and chaff get the full benefit or the fan-blast. Thus nearly all the chaff goes out at once, and nearly all the grain goes through, greatly reducing the work to be done by the riddles, and leaving tnem free to do that' work in the most perfect manner, THE FAN. By the aid of devices peculiar to our machine, the fan furnishes both an over-blast and an under-b'ast, moving the contents off of the riddles ,freely, preventing choking, and cleaning the grain in splendild shape. C. AULTM AN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. A VALUABLE IMPROVEMENT. Tailing: Spout, which Assist, in Saving and Cleaning Grain and Seeds, and which .avc much Grain from being Broken and Bruised. fho Tallliiff Spout on our mnrhlnrs has a KPrrcn In tlio bolfom, Its Hhowi. in tli.. cnf. Two Hcrcnis cuii h,. u^cd' one for clover and (l.o ether for hii-ger grains. TI.Ih Hcef-il makes a clean job of sepralhi^^ out all (ho fhreshe.l ho.'.Ih, und aflmlts Uiu fiamo back Inlo the maehine. npon tlio eanler l>Mne vibrating table balance mlhi^iT""' ^° ^Y,^i?° P"^*' '* l°8t and the draft of the machine is very light. We use the end-shake shoe, and consider it a most valu- able grain-cleaning and saving apparatus, for a number of reasons ; It is so pronounced by all who have used it. It furnishes so much more separating capacity, admitting the use of such wide and long riddles. "•>-""» It runs so much lighter and quieter. It obviates the side shaking and waste of power It saves the necessity of screwing up wheels, and of braces to keep the machine from swaying from side U> side, ^^it cleans itself so thoroughly, saving aU poking and chok It is immensely superior to other shoes In flax, timothy. and clover seeds. •" This shoe is one of the characterizing advantages of the New Model, which has contributed largely to its great reputation. " * How completely and thoroughly the grain has been taken out of the straw, and how well it has been cleaned by the application of all the means we have described, we may safely leave all good threshermen to decide for themselves. We think that fhey will have to concede that the variety and effectiveness of the methods applied by the New Model for separating and cleaning grain have never yet beon pre- sented in any single machine. W e can assure them, and we will assure to every purchaser, in the most ample and satis- lactory manner, that the operation of the machine will most taUy justify every claim we have made for it. This machine is made to last, as every good machine must be. All violent movements are counterbalanced, and themo- wons of the machine at work are smooth, even, and uniform The purchaser of the New Model may fairiy count upon hav ng the longest-lived vibrating machine in the market for in respect to smoothness of running, upon which dura- bility chiefly depends, there is none In the market to com- pare with it. CLOVER HULLER ATTACHMENT. The attachment required to convert the New Model Grain Thresher into a clover huller can be placed in position by any thresherman without any extra help. Wo have fur- nished clover hulling attachments with our dilTerent ma- chines for many years, but no huller has ever given such excellent satisfaction in every single instance as the one we now make. An extended description. Illustration, and c^- ogy of this apparatus is not required, nor would" t'beabs^ lute proof of superior merit If it were given ever so cYabo^ ?^fk l^^K '' ,"'f. ^^'^ *>""*'^ ^^^'-^ ^'•'l do the'best work tested the new Model Huller practically, ana we betr to refer pWet." ' ^ '-''^ '"""' P'"'**''* elsewhere in t^hlspam- THE NEW MODEL IN FLAX. The New Model has been used largely in threshing flax the fnllZ^' "f ^"^Sive'^ most <.ou,plete satlsfuctlonli ever^ instance. A number of our niaeliines went through the en- tire season threshing scarcely any other cro.., and their owners, without exception, speak of the conduct and capacity of the machine In flax in the most flatteri.ig terms In certain regions, where flax la the principal crop such as Linn County, Kansas, the New Model has greatly%opu ar- zed Itself by its ability to separate out the*'cale seeTfron, the flax seed. One operator took out as high as one bush" of cale seed from ten bushels of flax seed! The arrange- ment of the beaters Is such that they are not liable to wrap in flax, or wet oats. In short, we can say that the operation of the New Model in these sometimes troublesome crons has been all that its manufacturers could de8ire,Thlcns saying a good deal. We again take pleasure in' referring the reader to our testimoniafs for confirmation of our state- uicnts* RICE. in the preparation of this catalogue we prefer that nnr statements sliall be founded on our own personal knowfedg" This being Impossible, so far as thresliing rice is concerned we are again compelled to borrow the language of one of our patrons Mr Geo W Lee, of Grand Prairie, La Mr. Lee says of his New Model : ♦J' I' '^^i*^ *1®?* '■''^^ thresher ever introduced into the rice dia- tricts of Louisiana. It breaks the least grain, and cleans mo^ perfectly for market, and it threshes as fast a« any machr^n ever saw. lam getting nearly all the threshing in ray seXn owing to the good quality of my work. " ^ secuon Bi much Grain 1 a ffrncn In tlio IIH. ThiH HCIOf'll thrcsluMl soi'ilH, Mao, iijMiii tlio len aro prcntly 9 our excluHlvo « cleaner (yrnln, ttio fan, without It. leir tendency (o iperiorlty of the , upon the addl- in. The broken yllnder a aecond of leir husk or nto ihe machine atlrely obviated, the wheat, and nportance.- The Irst-clasa shape, id directly from )f the machine, t none Is blown sta speak In the ly seed saver. We have fur- ir different ma- ?ver nlven such e as the one we tratlon, and eu- ould It be ab so- ever so elabo- I the beet work • i)atron8 have we beg to refer re in this para- AX. reshlug flax the action hi every hrough the en- op, aud their conduct and itterliig terms 1 crop, such as •eatly popular- cale seed from as one bushel The arrange- liablc to wrap : the operation Jiesome crops !slr(!, which is e In referring 1 of our state- refer that our al knowledge. Is concerned, ige of one of irie, La. Mr. to the rice dls- i cleans more my machine I in ray section 1 C. AULTMAN & CO.. STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. in — THE CYLINDER. Thlf Important part in con- atructed In a very powerful man- ner. Its adjustment Is liitnthted only to the most careful and skillful hands. liy means of the lever at the left side, all i ho spikes in the concave can bo moved nearer to or farther away from tile cylinder. Thin Is done in a moment, and without stop- jilng the machine. Ourcyllnders are very heavy, and are very accurati'ly balanced, securing sfeady n>otion and providing against danger from accldeiits. Shafts are steel, with brass boxes, the most durable and easy running journal In existence. The record made by the NEW MODEL during the threshing sea- sons of 1881-83-83 was one of the mokt brilliant ever known, fanners and threshers with one accord giv- ing it the FIRST PLACE, and declaring it to he The End ov thu TllKESUINO CONTROVERST. The steel of which our spikes are made Is made specially for that purpose Wo have tried both iron and steel spikes, and are coiitideut that no material equals that which wo now use. The spikes are made with square shanks, flttlng into squ.tro sock(tts, and aro shaped so as to do the cleanest and best quality of work. LUCERN SEED. We receive occasional letters in which the New Model Is hlshly commended for its capacity to save lucern. We will referthe reader to (mo from Afessrs. Jones & Gammon, of Utah, printed or another page. They refer to their ma- chine as " The boi \ thresher aud saver of lucern seed." In timothy and other seeds our experience is that the New Model has no superior, if, indeed, it has an equal. Wo will conclude this description of the New Model by alluding to a few of its good ijoints to ^hlch we have not yet re- ferred. THE REAR OF THE MACHINE IS WIDE AND ROOMY. The riddles are larger than in other machines, so that it is immaterial how fast the cylinder and separating parts may furnish the chaff and grain ; the riddles cannot bo o;er- loaded. Some of our customers assert that they have gone clc^ar through a long threshmg season without once having to clean their riddles. THE BELT TIGHTENER. The feeder has near his hand the lever which controls the belt tightener. This saves much time and insures reliable operation. The feeders can instantly stop the motion of the whole machine, behind the cylinder, without arresting the motion of the cylinder. This he is enabled to do by simply lowering the belt-tightener pulley. oiling! The boxes on the crank shaft are provided with self- oilers, so that a run of half a diiy can be made without stop- ping the machine to oil. All other oiling places can he reached without stopping and all the oil cups are well pro- tected. The concave shown with two rows of spikes is used for threshing grain. The conclaves with three rows of spikes are uned in threshing clover seed, and take the place oC the concaves marked A. RIDDLES. With the New Model, wheat, oats, barley, and rye are cleaned without changing riddles— an advantage over all other machines. Two riddles are used, a coarse riddle above and a finer riddle below. For threshing timothy, clover, flax, and other small seeds, we furnish the finer riddles required in cleaning the same only when specially ordered. Tliey a. ; extra. As a grain thresher nothing about the New Model re- quires regulating except the concaves, wind-board, and speed. With the New Model, when specially ordered, we also fur- nish other appurtenances that are required in ceitain locali- ties, such as baggers and a patent lateral swinging stacker. These are described elsewhere. The painting and finish of the machine never falls to elicit the most hearty enconlum. Nothing but the best material is admitted into the construction of either working parts or frame. When in full operation it is free from knocking and jar of any kind. Its smooth, quiet running is often a marvel to those who witness the strong flow of grain which it is capable of saving and pouring forth incessantly , We will only add that the New Model, though it is the newest system of threshing in use, is made by the oldest and most successful house in the business. It is believed to be what it ought to be, viz., the most rapid, economical, and durable grain and seed saver and cleaner in existence. C. AULTMAN ft CO.. STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. n C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. '^" ' I Tli'af "^ Bfcf " II II OUR PATENT SWINGING STACKER. C. AULTMAN & GO'S PATENT SWINGING STACKER. The thrcHhpnnan wlio includes in his outfit not only a Now Motlol TliresliLT and a Monitor Traction Engine, but also ono of oiu' Patent Swinxing Stackers, may pride himself on havinjf a grand labor-Having rig, as well as a most splendid grain saver. In actual operation, our new Lateral Swinging Stacker will stack all the straw threshed iu ono day with very littlo other assistance. One or two men can aid in ^ving shape to the stack — sometimes none at all, as smts the fancy of the farmer. The stack has a shape that is semi-circular, and well fitted to protect stock in winter. We are aware ti.at there are other Swinging Stackers, and that the claims made for them are very comprehen- sive. We are very sure, however, that a comparative examination will convince the inqmrerof the superiority of our Stacker in many important respects. It is lighter, simpler, and far less cumbrous than the other Swinging Stackers. The front end of our new Stacker is attached to and carried by the rear end of the separator. The rear is carried on only one castor wheel ; therefore, the Thresher, with Swinging Stacker attached, can be turned or backed with as much ease and convenience as the Thresher alone. Persons who have used a Stacker which is carried on two cr four wheels have had vexation enough in this respect to appreciate the convenience of our method of transport. The important characterizing features of our Swinging Stacker are patented. No. 1, on the above out, shows the Stacker ready to begin stacking at side of the machine ; No. 2 shows the Stacker swung around to rear, and elevated so as to top out stack; No. 3 shows the Stacker folded and ready for transport. GRAIN BAGGERS. Many threshermon wish to have a Bagger, by whiih the grain is elevated and sacked as it comes from tlie macnine. Such a Badger is supplied to purchasers of the New Model, but it is extra, and must bo ordered specially with tho machine which it is to accompany. The shape and place of the Bagger are shown in the illustration on tno opposite page. An elevator raises the grain from the grain spout to the top of the Bagger, where there are places for two sacks. \Vhou ono sack is full a gate, or cut-off, switches the stream of grain into the other bag. This Bagger keeps tally and regis- ters the number of sacks on a dial. It can be placed on either side of the thresher, as convenience requiiea. #llimfp BTKHAiasoMesr jtmcsA/csr. CST-^ -^CANTON OHIO.^ifrr ■^vwiat'i mm*^ mmmtm r 10 C. AUI.TMAN & CO ., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY OUR PIVOT SIDE-GEAR. The New Model for 1884 will have our patent Pivot Side-Gear, which yeaib of use have demonstrated to be much auperior to those used on other machiiies. The cylin- der shaft works in slotted boxes, so that it can be adjusted from bide to side, so as to control the action of the cylinder and con- cave spikes as readily as is done in the belt machine. This advantage is possessed by no other machine. With this side-gear the machine is easily and quickly changed from geared to belted , or the reverse. It hasa riuong iron frame affording a strong, imyieldin!; foundation. It 18 provided with steel shafts, . anning in self-adjusting boxes. They ere held by set screws, and adjust themselves, always presenting straight and smooth surfaces to the journals. These boxes are of the best composition material. We oaU attention to the fact that the slower gear is bevel, while the fast gear ne.:it to the cylinder, is spur. We can also furnish to those whose powers require a single gearing next the cylinder, a substantial bevel side gearing for that purpose. With tais side gear the tumbling rod should make 96 revolutions to one of the horses. Only furnished when specially ordered. We also furnish a three- hitch gear when specially ordered. be The New Model is not liable to Over-crowded or Choked. men we say that all other threshers of the Vibrator type are liable to be dioked m fast threshing, we merely sta< what must be the conviction of every one who has ooen a disinterested observer. This c Iioking or liability to ever-crowding of the parts which should be free to do the separ- ating, entails a serious loss of time and gram. It; ^s very oljeetionable. Various expedients, more or less temporary, have been resorted to in order to cure this de- fect. Re >'olving beaters behind the cylinder have been introduced by some machines, and others have tried forks or rakes m,:- J-^^ ^'^^ ^^^ °^^^^ liaa succeeded. I his difficulty has been entirely overcome by the New Model, but not by a resort to any of the expedients referred to The mechanism of this machine, behind the cylmdev, diflferd from that of all others, and 18 taaracteristic of the New Model alone in the whole Vibrator family. We refer to tUe mtroduction of the short grain web whi«A, besides aiding materially in both sepnrafan^r and saving grain, carries all the tiiieshed grain and Htraw quickly away leaving tae cylinder always clear and free to perform its functions without danger of obstruction. The straw is worked oflE by a positive motion from tho cylinder until )t reaches the stacker, just as certainly and completely in fast threshing as in «!nw ibj-esLing. This much cannot l>o tnithfuTly said of any other Vibrator. The oxeellenee ana superiority of this feature is insisted upon in terms of mc 3t hearty conmeada- tion on every hand. IDE-GEAR. 1884 will have our which yeaib of use le much superior to chiiies. The cylin- ed boxes, so that it de to side, so as to e cjHnder and cou- 8 is done in the belt ige is possessed by e machine is easily m geared to belted, riuong iron frame, elding foundation, el shafts, . anning They ere held by hemselves, always emooth surfaces to ses are of the best the fact that the die the fast gear, ipur. 1 to those whose > gearing next the )evel side gearing tais side gear the ;e 96 revolutions to y furnished when 80 furnish a three- y ordered. ot liable to be r Choked. Jther threshers of ible to be dioked lerely sta< what at every one who I observer. This >r-crowding of the e to do the separ- lo3s of time and onable. Various temporaiy, have ' to cure this de- jhind the cylinder some machines, forks or rakes. has suececdod, ntirely overcome lot by a resort to Bferred to. The ine, behind the ofall others, and ew Model alone ly. We refer to hurt grain web, verially in both a, carries all the • quickly away, B clear and free ithout danger of 3 worked off by o cylinder until as certainly and inff as ill sloyr \ lot bo tnithfully j The excellence ture is insisted rty "oirimenda- C. AULTMAN &. CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. 11 THE NEW MODEL IN FLAX AND OTHER SEEDS. Probably no machine of any kind ever gave to those who used it more complete satisfaction than the New Model, as a flax thresher, during the past season. Below we print some letters which will be of interest to expect- ing purchasers of threshers in flax-growing regions. We never liave asked any patron for a flax testimonial. The conduct of the machine in flax is, as the reader will observe, generally alluded to inei^tentally. This kind of vol- untary testimony ought to, and, we think, will have great weight. From the large number of letters we have on hand w^ select a few, more with reference to locality than to any special commendation of our machines contained in these over those whi-jh are excluded for want o* space : C. Atatman a Co. On^ND Prairie, La., October 8, 1883. Dear jjira— I wlsli vo say a word for the New Model I bought of you. I am proiiU to sav that it is the best rice tlire»lier ever introduced In tlie rice districts of Louisiana. It breaks the least lyraiii and cleans more perfect for marlcet, and threshes bm fast as any machine I ever saw. I am getting nearly all the thresh- ing In my section owing to the good quality of my wor j, and that when most of other machines are idle. Yours truly, GEO. W. LEE. LoNo r.i7K, Jepfbhson Co., Ky., September 10, 1883. Mcstrs. McOill 7 time As to the Engine, it will do all you claim fL r it This fall i sold ray plain engine and bought one of your lO-Horse Traction Eiigii.es with iron tank, still running the sama thresher wliich runsus we'las ever. By using the cart tank 1 can couple up short enough to turn any com 3r I am likely to find. There are nearly all kinds of machines run In this vicinity, but I placed my rig in the f-- jit tank, and propose to keep It there as long ub it behaves itself as well as it always has Yours truly, A. B. BENJAMIN. J. P. Byerly.Esq. Pi.ankinton, D. T., September 1, 1883. Dear Sir- Yours of the 89th August at hand and no*»d. In reply would sav that I think 1 can close out this machine all K. The one'l started out is giving the beat of Kfttisfaction— 400 bushels of flax per day, and ,'^500 bushels of oats is not a big day's work: for her. f tell you we are boss threshers down this wpy, and if you don . tlilnk it is so, just drop down and see us. 1 may be able to sell one or perhaps two more, because this one is getting up a reputation amonx the farmers, ond they all want it. Truly yours, W. C. GRANT. Nortonvillk, Kav., August 34, 1883. C. Aultman d Co., Canton. Ohio. Dear Sirs— I have run a threshing machine since the year 1874. an'j have used the Maraillon apron and New Massillon, and find them badly beaten on flax, and, in fact, on everything else. I can thresh more grain and '"lean and save more ^raln In the same given time with the 80-inch New Model that I have than any inAe.hini^ thftt T have ever nnen T have just flnished 160 acres Ot flax, on the farm of Joseph Dede. That made l.sOS bushels. I threshed the same with the best of satisfaction to all parties, and without clogging the riddles once, which no machine has yet been made to do. I will bet any mtn $10 that runs a Ntsw Mnssillon that he can't thresh 100 bushels of .'lax, and clean the seed fit for market as I did the 1,80.') bushels of send, that only lost two per cent. The 10 Horse Traction En- gine is all that any man uan ask for, and is always ready and willing to do the work that horses used to have to do in thresh- ing. My candid advioe to those intending to buy or have thresh- ing done, is buy or use a New Model and Canton Monitor to do your job, and you will be sure to get your grain clean from the straw, ond cleaned ready for market in whatever condition it may bo in. Buy it. It will do you good and save your grain that you have worked so long and hard for. Yours truly, JAS. W. RU3SEL. Utica. Minn., September 6, 1883. Mes*n. C. Aultman d; Co., Canton, 0. Dear Sirs— HaVing purchased one of your Monitor Traction Engines and New Model Vibrator Threshing rigs, we take Eleasure In adding our testimony in its favor. The entire rig, oth Engine and Separator, is highly satisfactory ii. every re- spect. We thresaed for C. W. Morgan, near here, 7,000 bushels of grain from the stock in Ave days, and could have done it In still less time if they had gotten it to us as fast [.3 we wanted It; 3,300 bushels of It was wheat, 600 bushels oats, and balance barley. The New Model Vlbiator does equally well In timothy and flax. The engine is easily flred, feives plenty of power, and the traction now used on the Monitor we like the best of any we have ever examined. We think you have got to the top round of the ladder in steam threshing rigs, .^un't see what you can add to better that kind of machinery. It Is good enough. Respectfully yours, GEO. BARTLETT. O. A. EARSLEY. Plbas ANTON, Kansas, August 90, 1883. C. Aultman Co.. Can^T'o^''' °^"'' November 12, 1883, days run, 31,499 bushefao^'arhA*^ thre«hed this fall, in 40 niorothai h^ been done hv„n®^'' fS**^**'"^ »'»'''ey' which is vioinity this fall ^ ""^ °"'®'" *"<> 'nachines la this BOodsk*tKt"onll^'°'\|'^u'i}i^?i]' tjrr '»"• which gives success. ^'''Wm'^i;^5u^T^»^^^^^^^^^ H^t*"" C!Aunm.an tt Co. Dailsviluc, Md., September 88 1883 C. Aultma^rcZ'^a^^^rr^^^'^'' ^'°''«'«ber 7. 1883. nL&t Tsa;SoVn°?f 'V?"""-^ of your agent, a D. thresiiing, and six months oA ft h«J.,''*''*' "r'"." ""•«» seasons little for repa rs T thre^l.^rt ^n "^^ "^ ^*2' > ^' '>*«cost me very 800 bushels^of c^veV''^iri'[s Vca7toh."^^ ^'^ ^-J f-HlFan"^ C.AuUman <£ Co., Cantol^o" ^"^''''' ^^- Novembers, 1883. yora'gfc^n^fc^^i'^e;^^^^^^^^ ^"'^^^ o' t.on. All the farmers say X New Wn^i.^'/^ ^fu''""? ^'wfac they ever had done by any thLH7 i,i^fK^°^^ ^^^ *^^*' work olover-seod attachment w4h ^oes aL m.^h° w" ^^ "iT ,»°' * tl:e seed as well as a. rB(''whinW*'' '^*' ^^^^^ »«». and when we come to a farmer that ha«^^m.*"7 "^'^'^ •^""fr- it for him, which don't takranvInn^Al?f"'f. "'"y?""' we hull run the same amount of straS?^hr^.^»h Vu™* "'**? " we would farmer has his cleat, sew! in hi., eu*^'' 'i"^ machine, and the day wiHi the nSablldust Thu^?."'*,?**" '^°,"'' suffer all weiffhtingold,andcosteon"r«50 Th-chf''"*^"' is worth its out this attachment We wo^ufj^ivT««i1?wh™*" *''*"' ^^ with- a thresher, not to fall to buTthe New Modil TMr*.5°l"«J« ''"y saver, and the fastestthreshe. in Z market " best grain You i-3 respectfully. boTT & ZAHN. Messrs. C Aultman!'c^^l'JS'"' *^°' ^^- S«Pt«'nber 14, 1883. I bXW's^'cn'! ^^el^siirart^r '^^^f ^^p-**"' last .July, has iriven tlin h^«t «?^.^' ^**?.'' Mechanicsburi?, Pa., us. WeVrSL^dabo t aSMbSLSsof'^™^" *°/e''??«"' ^^^ ^ tents of 1,460 acres of clover R«^„n/™'" ""J* ^^''^l *« con- pleased but one man but that t^L^^V^'.^/y.^'^'^y was highly chine's. (The Giver of all things d?d n^^^^l °"''«' '«»• ^''^ "'»- providing his crop with any seed so he fon^^.?°V^.^^"^ "^ same as l)ef ore, iut still blamed t>?« mo?.^7*' '^ ".C^"" threshed, keen pace with half of th.se who wantmrni^^'n ^V°"!? .""' while other machines were idle Wo cleare?! ^\JjT^^' """^ "'*' twelve Imndred dollars and tn „,„ i:^*'^?"', <^'6?r of expenses, worth oC repairs exceDtint*;. n^JJ 'f""wl''d«re hadn't a cent's „Thls year there are just tow^lnZf'if ^Y"*" ""^^ our fault. Models In this district^, ami tl^evcanM "^^.^^w wor<. Three mere machines wh?nn1rt^„?*^'° *° f*° *" '^e New Model Is to do; while ast rear thl*." "]* "^""^ "'«t the Susted. Farmers all told neYwon J no", L^;" """*'' ^ was dis- a wrong step. Also as a h.ii^v iT .^iriS"'' ^^^ ^".^ work ; it was it was Sot buUt fo?a ■n^e work now T ■"•'k** the work, as huUercan gut work through h^?e TW«iVr^f *",?, "° """Ki'lar here, and they will not bf taken nfffhlu."* ''^? VhUor huUors Mon.toristooU.k„^^X'*.^-,f,XryThin'^^^^^^^^^^ Yours respectfully. " ^. d. flERBST. C.AnWnanWo'^S^;,^^^^'' ""' '"'^''■' November 7, ,888. so^:'&vri]::.^ta^^^^^ Balrd * Robert- ers.a„a have run It twoTea"sVns"^„'*d'?v^''ht: t'h^"'Vo^sarit WRTOHT & STEED. C. AultmalTcT'''^''^' ^"^"^'^ 0°' P^'- August 27, 1883.* be^rri«l,''aVd'h^a°veren tCSh?n*.'^Jft?''l''%^'^ •'•^^ *>' Govern- 8,500 bushels this vear T w? »h.'^ with it. I have now threshed the best one I ever b/-; ' would not'J,'^^'' '""chines, and this ii use. For all kinds of threS wet o? d^r^"^ k *''f °"* '<"■ «»y for seed hulling it can't be W^' ^nri ?I,^7' ^^^^*' <"■ °«'s. »"«» I claim that itfs the best one thitfeverTad. """^ '° ^°'*' '^''^ - _™ „..^ „„„„ , over uaa. Y ours respectfully, ADAM FLEAGL. C. A ultman * Co Meohanicsuroh. Pa., November 89. Hu°.MaITst^fl'n^MrSrg''l^^y ^ATd V^iU^''^'^ little less than ten horns The MoZor Fn'ii'*'' -^^ '',"^'»«'» '" » success. iuomtor Engine ig also a grand . P. M. BOYfia Messrs. C. Aultman di Co^"'""""'' °'"°' November 10. 1888. Ne';^1iX^e"v7b'ra'tlSf^LSr'"tL^"li"?r'*Hfi"°'' ""'«'•''' James Nye, at MarilJ^Ohlo^/i^tVZ^hale'efjn" «?g?"*' S?Th;"at'Y„re"ry ^« ^- taeci'Xt^ SJ^gSsh-'e!^" Spo^fThrhaTd's^^^pTe^Ate^e'r^T^^^^^ -»? -'■ tttft^^^«iSS?«oLC!Sli- "'f,Vr''e'?li!i"t^',\""V°"Kh seSln^.'^f,^'°oorcttnr' *" '" wiVi' pu^.r'c 'rifi !eTro^^?"^ir;fd'^^l-^^^^^ "«»» •* trouble, and would run two Muara?n^»r^fir°"'^* without any honest than the firm of C Aultman * fv. „#' /f'l ''^*i ""ro cangiveyoumoretestLonlalsltdestre^d '"' ^""^"'^ We Yours most respectfully DANIKI, MARSCH. CHARLES SCHIMMEL PETER LAUER. .^««-.. C.lS^r-i^'^o''''*^' ^°- °'"°- Novembers. 1883. F.Waa;7>"''ou7h^"foII?'^^^^^ Model Sepirator Ipurcha^d fiSm^!f.V"*f-r^ 'i>« No. & New given me entire satfsfactfw atte?^,ffn"„S,'^?*' ^.''P^'""'" ''" Having used seveS other m«ir»» of »"^ J' for two seasons, severafyeare of nraet '«! ^x^rlen?e''*n ^1.^^^ "^ *'"^'r-« ^ad clover seed, I untiesita^'^ly S chLVf„^hr*iU"if •«'"i^" ;?'"» machine I ever ownei. Then mlr^rii ^ '*^ 1,' '« 'l>e best aa r.f .'i-:ttrl«I'.r~'K' r^ '^•" « ~ JONAH SLOANaCRE. Me^r. r. 'i^Z'ir^tV^Zn^on,''^''- ^°--''- ^' '«««• ofTour'^'?.'V'&'rd?rkTe,?e.^''Z3' {^."'"^""^Tenn., one bined, this season We freoiv sTvfMB?-, .^1°^*''. ^""^J" «>™- that wo have ever »eeV!!^ ..^.*','y '-'J?/*? ^''^a'' of any thresher •^ Yours truly, R. M. PYBtT.S J. y. NORTHERN. :hment. There is probably I troublesome task 3 little of the seed, their own words : ng, and ease of man- over Hulliag Attach- Jlled 3 bushels and 3 ■en with a six-horse RIGHT & STEED. I., August 27, 1883." 2oth day of Novem- I have now threshed lachines, and this ia ny other one for my , wheat or oats, and > easy to work with. ADAM FLEAGL. 'a., November 89. eshers and Clorer at and hulling my I as a clover huller illed 54 bushels in a sine is also a grand P. M. B0Y6H. )vember 10. 1888. id a3-iaoh Miller's ght of your agent, ve given satfifac- other grain. It 1 any other ma- ligh as 800 bushels cks that was wet. reshing an V faster the wet wheat by °,?JJi Wethou^t little faster. We I of wheat In 30 more in the same PR, but we find the the boss of all in cleaning, would say that It lads without any > same time. We to buy the Mil- Canton Monitor 1 reason to know t will deal more Canton, O. We !tfullv. MARSCH. 3 SCHIMMEL. AUER. vember 5, 1883. Greenfield, John y the No. 9 New le Separator has or two seasons. , and having had ihing grain and ay it is the bpst ■», for whom I 1, and well they ugh grain over ihing. 5L0ANACRE. mber 88. 188S. itin. Tenn., one sr Huller com- of any thresher niiig Kiain and the market, in ttle or no file- Its work per- PYntTS NORTHERN. C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. 13 CANTON MONITOR ENGINE TESTIMONIALS. BavsH CaHEK, Pa., November 81, 1883. C. Aultntan ie team rather than to foed two extra tearasand wait for the lioys to Are up after tliev (ipt lliere. Youi-s respectfuDy, , H. 1. HATHAWAY'. Messrs. C. Aultman eg Co. Wittens. O., November 10, 1883 Sirs— The engine I got of you last spring has given entire satis- faction, and does more tlian what sne was represented to me to do. I took the engine as soon as she wan delivered at my house and went wherever I wanted to with her, and I never hid any e.xoerience in machinery. I could go up any hill with the Separator attached. This is all the engine of the kind in this section of county, and it raised quite an excitement in the neighborhood. Yours truly. M. MERCKI.E. Belle Plaine, Iowa., October 2, 18). C. Aultman t your purchase, ns slii- isi i\\f f'lirnier'si tiieiul. T'.ilv yours, . JOSEPH E. HOLCOMU. , 14 C. AULTMAN & CO.. STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. '%i Ikm il I M 1.- 3 THE CANTON MONITOR ENGINE. The use of steam power by farmers has received a great impulse within the past few years. The advantages of steam had long been apparent, and the farmer only awaited the moment when the mechanic would give him engines at once safe, simple, easy to handle, portable and economical, to avail himself of them with eagerness. The first attempts in this direction met with small suc- cess. The horizontal style, while it answers well for stationary and railroad purposes, was little adapted to the ever-varying conditions and requirements of the farmer. It was too complex, both in mechanism and manipulation, besides being much more heavy and less safe, and far less economical than our upright Monitor, which has met with a welcome and an appreciation by farmers which leaves nothing to be doubted in regard to its superiority for agricultural purposes. No machine ha,% been more admired by the public and none has given better satisf actiou to those who have used it than the Monitor Engine. At the Paris Exposition the highest honors awarded to any machine of its class were bestowed upon the Monitor. The highest honors have been uniformly a warded to the Monitor. It received the grand gold medal offered by the Pennsylvania State Pair, September, 1880, this being Ww highest prize award- ed to any agricidUiral machine at that important contest. Committees composed of master mechanics and of the first steam experts in the country concede the superiority of the Monitor for agricultural uses in terms of epthusi- astic eulogy. This success is largely due to its upright form, which saves the boiler crown sheet from exposure, and the engine bearings from wear. The boilers are DOUBLE RIVETED, and tested to 200 pounds cold water pressure. The flues are the heaviest made, amply pro- tected, and being vertical, are easily kept clean. Steel is used for crank shaft, connecting rod, cross-head and piston, eccentric and pump rods — in fact, allthe working parts are steel. The Portable and Traction Monitor is the safest engine ; the most powerful in proportion to its weight; the easiest to handle and run; the quickest to get up steam ; the quickest to set for work ; the most economical of water and fuel ; has the best draft ; the best spark arrester ; is the handsomest, strongest, and safest in all respects. We hear of the completely successful employment of the Monitor in running threshers, cotton gins, clover hullers, feed cutters, cheese factories, saw mills, cane mills, hay presses, com shellers, and all farm opera- tions requiring power. The shape and mounting of the Monitor at once stig- gesto the well known form of the fire engine — a shape that is best adapted to the quick production and steady letenfion of steam power with the smallest fuel eon- sumption. Also the most convenient, and by far the safest, aud best adapted to portable uses. It is largely owing to the presence of these qualities that the Moni- tor is getting to be every 3'ear more and more prof eiTtd to the horizontals. Its superior safety can bo appreci- ated by the fact that its depth of water over its crown sheet numbers as many feet as the horizontal's does inches. The day cannot be far distant when horizon- tal farm engines will be just as rare as horizontal fire engines are at the present time. THE ENGINE. The place of the engine will be seen by the out. U is constructed on the upright plan, and is not affected by the heat of the boiler. Owing to the mov.ement being up and down, there is no weight nor perceptible wear on the Piston, Slide Valves, or their connections. The back a»d /orf A movement of the "horizontal" pistons wear the cylinder oval-shaped, necessitating a very costly re- pair bill. This is entirely obviated by the Monitor. The Main DrivingShaf t, or Crank Shaft, is made ot steel The Connecting Bod is made of steel, and its bo.xes are made ot the best gun metal that can bo procured. The Cross-Head and Piston are made of steel, and are always reliable. The Eccentric Rod is also of steel. In fact, no wrought iron is used in the working parts of the Monitor. The journals are larger than in other engines, insuring steady running and durability, and preventing the "pounding" incident to engines whose bearings are frail. Each and every journal and wearing part upon the Monitor is made adjustable, so as to take up any wear that may occur. The Packing Boxes upon the cylinder, steam chest, and pumps are of the most improved patterns Their upper ends are "cup-shaped," and the retention of oil and condensed steam in these cups keeps all these points well and constantly lubricated. The supply of water for the Monitor Boiler is assured by an independent steam pump, which forcos in what water may be needed, whether the engine is running or not. Tlio Steam Chest is placed on one side of the cylinder, which is well jacketed to prevent loss by condensation. The Slide Valve and Steam Ports are made that size and shape which numerous and thoroiigh experiments have demonstrated to be the nearest perfect. Our Slide Valve is now made with an extra, renewable seat. The face on which the valve works is bolt«d to the cylindor, and can be taken off for redressing, or renewal. The lli-ater is easily taken apart aud cleaned and drained in every part. Knowing that an inefficient Governor is quite as bad as uone, much care has been taken in selecting Gov- ernors for the Canton Monitor. They are set to run a given number of revolutions but can readily be changed to speed the engine at the number that is best adapted to the work in hand. In addition to the Brass Oilers for important bearings, we now furnish a new Automatic Oiler for cylinder which is an improvement on all previous methods of oiling that part of the engine. The arrangement is such that, at every stroke of the pistoUj a small quantitjr of oil is taken in by the steam and earned forward and distributed against all the bearings of cylinder and steam chest, thus keeping the same evenly and thoroughly lubricated, and preventing any waste or wear of those important parts. Brass Stop Cocks are placed at all points upon tho engine and connecting pipes, and every particle of water is quickly removed, so that none need bo left in cold weather to freeze and multiply the causes of danger and breakage so frequently foimd in the products of other manufacturers. The Governors, Steam Gauges, Safety Valves, etc., are each thoroughly tested and known to be correct before being used, by epeeial devices procured at great expense for that purpose. The Wheels — excepting the hub— and the axles are made entirely of wrough t iron. These Wheels will strand the heat, and will la Jt longer than any wooden wheels that can be made. The truck ia provided %vith Patent Steel Springs, fas"* led down when at work, and which take the jar from ..t aachine while on tho road, cur- tailing liability to breakage or dislocation of parts. Spring Seats and Brakes are also provided. In setting the engine for work all that is required is to turn the front axle at right angles witli the La'iince of tho machine. No further blocking is neoess.iry. This arrangement is also a great advantage in turning. as less space is required than with a farm wagon. C. AULTMAN & CO, SECTIONAL VIEW ±^:^2JI^MIl^»RESHWG MACHINERY OF THE MONITOR~BOlZ^ Nozzle. Water Space. Slay Bolts. Flues. Water Line. Upper Head. ing up steam is due to it« We and c»~ „"!,?• tributed heatlDK 8urfao« p5 ^ , *"* -^'^ ^'«- value their tim*. «-hii« „„»*■ 'nose who their fuel wiTvcL^lSc^th'ri::r "''""' ^"'^ .no.ho.toapprreLSthll':rrta~'' ? horse. 75; 18hors.e, 90; IShorse fnn ' a,' "^ i. ches in diameter by 45* inches In lln^^ %f ' * ilues being vertical all s«Himl„V» n ?^''- ^^^^e t'.e engineer Is savad alf «,i?!. ' ?"^ •''>^"- *'"i llilt^s^^cl-^aTsta?^ -- - ^"^ the t^»ie^TJrrsS;'w^^^^^^^^^ "^--^ oXt'*T^hr,s*'o^:Vfr'"°»^^^^^^^ e..erb.^;Sl7o^, ttr *^ *"^ ''-'-» v^rsally conceded to be the X^aive mide""'" Tl oylii tank man: inou: as ti to, o tract rear valv( The a taxi chast quire The scribe Engin requii gine f a Hem econo l.loM boUerihaTeateMlle T square Inch. A/Ur t»y rods, etc., bored, sr, the T,>rtlcal seams ng nearly double the oUer Is tested to 200 5 per square inch b«- cyllndriCal, which la uction. 9d, oval shaped. The » needs no comment, their places only by I, and will be avoided re posted. Besides , > upon an oval sur- ater carries it to the re "blowoff" and its removal. ^ Level is many times lorizontal construe- ' mrce is very remote stained in the crown se of extreme care- mav ahnost bo said trith water-heating The extraordinary tting up and keep- ) and care- .ily dis- port:onately to the boiler has a larger lier. Those who S up steam, and coal or wood, will Ivantage. «^; iallyfortheMoni-' d extra thickness, -welded. The as- nnts of other ma- se flues above the fng out and leak- ! protectors at the protect the ilues hey could by any «duce the flame given off. The engine, 61 ; lo- se. 100. Size, 8 in length. These 1 falls down, and adgery of clean- quires so much ny cleaning is lower used with le steam among ' get the super 1 from any other )uroe8 of saving Br other styles. I with holes, in I all parts alike rough the hot laced over the ! s to distribute I J. I !an be desired, f lere is no dan- | a ve occurred; arding against I o any desired h we fu -nish d. It is unl- alve made. C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. 17 WATER TANK The Water Tank we furnish is oylindrioal in shape, made of heavy tank iron, and built in the solidest manner. It is very compact, and mounted on iron wheels, the same as the engine. It ia easily attached to, or detached from, the rear of the traction engine, has a pump at the rear to fill up with, water and air valves, and a box to carry fuel. The saving and couvenienoe of such a taak will soon compensate its pur- chaser for all the investment re- quired. THE MONITOR SEMI-PORTABLE ENGINE. OUR PATENT SPUR WHEEL. TRACTION Just the thing for Muddy, Slippery, and Difficult Roads. The capacity and merits of this Engine are fully de- scribod on the pages devoted to the Monitor Portable Engine. It ia simply the Monitor adapte. i to stationary requirements. It can be recommended as a No. 1 en- gine for all uses that are in the range of its power. As a Semi-portable it retains the characteristics of safety, economy, and convenience, which have made the Porta- lilo Monitor famous. r' '13 When traveling over muddy or slippery roads it some- times happens, in some localities, that the wheels of road engines do not have sufficient tractile power. We have invented and patented a Spur Traction Wheel which will be a valuable addition to the Monitor Trac- tion Engine in places where the roads are liable to pre- sent the kind of diflaculties we allude to. This wheel is equipped with a set of spurs, or claws, that can be thrust out beyond the rim of the wheel, or drawn in, as required. The spurs are projected their full length, or half their length, into the ground at the lower side of the wheel, or they are withdrawn, leaving* the surface of the wheel smooth, thus adapting it to all' conditions of the ground, from soft and muddy to hard and rocky. The spurs are easily controlled by a lever within easy reach of the fireman, and without stopping the engine. If, inadvertently, the hard ground is struck while the spurs are yet thrown out, the spurs are forced back automatically instead of being left to project and thus impede the progress of the engine. The spurs may be sharpened by any blacksmith, and can very easDy bo removed from the wheel for that pur- pose. They ai-e of cast steel. .• The rollers by which the spurs are operated have chilled bearings revolving on tempered steel studs, which secures durability for the parts most liable to wear. A wheel will sometimes become encumbered with mud which is liable to be left on to dry or freeze. The stoam hose will remove this difficulty in a very few moments. The entii'e wheel is a fine model of lightness as well !iH of strength. It is extra. flJ^H^£14AN&_CO^STEXl7^ SS^^^^ J^.i?I,?,°?^NGINE w«h labor-Bavin? farm mflPhtt,^:"' ''• 1° »" our experience lined itself into such™ ^a-aXn'^i* experiment Ls oui^ . Owing to theereat dmfK , ^*'"^*"<"'es8. It Isaslafeon h!ll8Wes2,nn''/h''^*'"' "° "'« crown sheet Within easy reaoh f..i'?L"«.9° '«»« level. Tlie engineer has Within eT^y^TachXIhrottr '^^ ^«^«>- The en^"n^er has and the W controlHnf ^^?^^^^^^^^^ forward or backwarr! onVii, ;\? ^'"'^ motion. He mav o-n or cpmpensatinrg^ir h?rJ^fl'P°'*''«'^«ek"^^^^^^ quickly as a cart ^Portable^if sharp curves as easily anj In any position, adapted to Ce&t'"°f' '"^y ^o' wo"k Jarm operations requirinff nowtr f^'.^?'°«i *°'' «» other eteaming up in Jmlf the ""Ip^reoui^ If*'"^ i^'^ '"'^'» and a record for safety not d imm^^Mp P ^"f^^"**' ! with although our annual «aIo= „ ^ ^^^ 'oss of a einffle lifp other fouse In ?he world • much '^ •'^^^^^^ ^hose^f an^ far more power from the 'same rn?i'"*^^*'°°*""*'"»'' ^'ing less when full of wafpr h.? "*'' '^^^ water ; wefrhlnff entirely simple and easy 'to contrT'«.f "^^."^f ». «>« ^^S^ We speak with confidence bn^n^n"^*!. '^ *''« Movitor ^wrb^utd^&srS^^^^^ horse power. Fou?o'rflvi^'i? ^°^°«« «' W, 12, and Ift- With or without horseef 7s wh'enPt'h??"*';'*'" ^'^'' ««her only to guide by. ' ^'^^^ *^e latter are used it la shafteh^counterS'b^ ^T'^^^^ ^™ *"« fly-wheel chain. The sprocket geateZni IJT^'^'^ 'P'^^^H The whee 8 cannot from m,! f °^ evident advantages of repair as bevel ee8ra^JH,K'i^*i"^. °' "'e case, get out is easily replaced '^Th^ ^utll^^^ ,*". *'«• " a link breaks It as8i8tan^ce?n 8tartin?up"anrSit*''«'='^'''" Kives'St mlSdrtr?^«etfou*';h'eT T'^S* ^^^^ "e trans compensating gear. ^^'* through an intermediate, pS^^rh"'^rLs^"a^'?Jra/rL^^^^^ or to be tonarues, to be ffnirioVi iw Z. ^^^ prefer. Engines «•» h Owing to t^oub^^Sntefe'arrnll^r'''"^ p"'-S t has been found to be elieawe? «nd m^ Worses on the road, ong run to steer with hS Th^ " f*' «a"sfactoo' in the tion feature are onlv si iri^i,f'^iJ- , f^vantages of the trac- er the teams to haul tenSr^au?\°hre«f "^"^'^^ ""'^ '^a^ with, and hills, plowed fipI^B - l^' '^''" •'c dispensed causes of trouble i^movlnf'./^"^'' '''"'^'' *"1 similar regarded as obstacles. ^ engines, need no longer be |>en8";£S?n*Si;^^a°nd'l3^^^ ^'r' '« ^" '"<«''- into play at every moment w.^nfi.*^ ^^^ ^"^'"c. It comes deflected from 7 strS iTnT- "tS"'"?? ?f '''^ «"'-'"'« il nf-r-ircd augio tJie whe«»l thnt m.7i;^ *i I' '*Jraing at anv and setting, a featiir« fi.at ' "'® Monitor in handling backward or forward '/?.»'* *"' locomotives, for moving one seated against eachof fhol, ^^ .^^ '^o eet-screws, the engine.^To unTrew fwi"? standards in the rear of counter-shaft up 8Se„tlvto%*teach Traction Eneine iao/^^SZt moments. By this chauee the quiring hoZ to move 1?'^'^ *°'° " ^^""^^^ Portable, re! whel:'"'FL^l*e^^^^^"^lrti;^I™^^ raction cleats laid on dlalonallv^^o ^ «nf ♦^'P^'^^'* '^"^ JaMo^the machine, but wh^^Sft L"at*^r,ry ^ t&rc?^e^ ^-^'^'^o^^^^^ the thresher's sufficient bearing and san^rtW^'* ^^.^^^ the wheelf^ offer obstacles to the U8?^^r«oH„ "^ ''*''"'* t"- softroads Bhould be provided wi?h our ^Pa'ten? St '^f, P"?chase? tt^Sio^" -o^herpage.' ^^rilu'ZA^ZTsl^rft b/er&a^iir a^^Xr'^-^^^^^^^^^ Engine isthus "In running on the road it L ve^ ^mn?i ^"^ customers : all times, and, asa result, "our wa^er S low'Jr,^"* ^l**"' "* ■this you may permit to a ,rn^„tl^ P'f 'ow in your bo er. ^a^ « ^"'^-a? tt: -h^?h* Ta^ ^1^^ .lffc?;;t^S2fflotTh?Kitrrr\^'' ''^'<^-* hy a eents a striking contrast with «„,^ 7*?''"''° Engine pre- eomplicated T?aetlorEnS.es t w° «rp'. ^^^^''^ ""^ ^eag^eomplicatedrtr^^^o^P^J^^^^^^^^ to'fSftroVrctfoK'ift'r' P^l*' '"b«^"« able soiight after, because it Is th« "*'*! Popular and widely economical firm aSSroadeng netl?a?'h„r''' '^"ablc, an,{ in thp marlf* \" V .,^"B'"eiliat has evoi- v«t «^.,--__ i '.avegalShe Afo^tlurh^'l^.I''^* those-meXthat the farming public are not onlv ffn^^ ^^^'^ «' 'avor with mented bytlie addition of nn^fl""i^ ^"^^ained, ''Ut supple best skill and experience of /L*t'or,dP„''r'''"*'"*'' ^hatX our consideration and acceptance ever offering for \A C. AULTMAN ft CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. IB leJs move at the samo Monitor In handling uch valuable time is iginc. ' iteering engines have )motiveB, for movlnir the engine can bo ■ of the machine ap- ies the boiler with not. by two eet-screwB, cJardB in the rear of rews and raise the ! the pinions at each jy this change tlie onltor Portable, re- ts upon the traction are provided with Bot to Increase the ally to their tractile 3d the thresher's nt, over any ordin- •se wagon can go, pve the wheels a fflcul tor soft roads nes the purchaser r Traction Wlieel, ider him master of Ion Engine is thus our customers : It to get water at ow in your boiler. B'ith the Monitor B a decided ad- I be evident by a Btion Engine pre- s cumbrous and in the market, threshermen, we (iplest, strongest, orm of Traction Ide In being able ular and widely ', reliable, and er yet. .-spj-.r-ared ose merits that le of favor with fid, but supple- nents that the ver offering for CANTON MONITOR TRACTION ENGINE. '^^gfe-— «>--g"^:»^TTa A COMPLETE ROAD ENQINE, With Jack-in-the-Box Compensating Gear, giving Faster or Slower Motion to either Traction Wheel, for Turning Sharp Curves, etc. LOW, ARCHED CROWN SHEET, WIDEST SAFE RANGE OF WATER LEVEL, INDEPENDENT STEAM PUMP, AS SAFE ON HILLSIDES AS ON THE LEVEL ROAD. Th& Safest, Most Durable, Most Eoorwmlcal and Popular Farm Engine in America. THE MONITOR SAW MILL. ■ tradeamUlthnf^*' ^^®^ *^at ^''o can now *l"«^«?ror saw wiJi nAf I ^'^ «™all a MONITOR SINGLE Mr, , •'one HhahtA- i^""^^ invented Th« n ^ P"?^'" ^^O" «win^S"id? * '^f ^^' Whole Y. m m m Pd together with on timber. The >ng baves, seven 't. These boxes •oxes are let into ' bolts rmminff ' the paper fric- Paner pulley on 1 race, and the ■years. Three ?Ga from % to 2 to each revolu- a.^- The ear- ' either back or 9 same lever. «s one Patent i 5^vn ui the cut, ' sawyer gives ecessary lead '«h, and with- uin 12 inches !cfc is a rack «» opening 36 eeth on the • tiio set rig, , making the I'nch. The stand either a-rriage, and ill saw 20 ft leh Rubber sant-hooks, "t wrench, et A track- ooth saw • ! saws, aad ! 'leer, can C. AULTMAM A CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. 81 !"#> SiLv-inVifL'.., MONITOR DOUBLE MILL. t^^S^i^LJ^SSiSf^^^ - -- THE MONITOR ON THE ROAD impr^biWiLt^tsr^f-r^ rr r.'a^'h'Le*^ e'rvti^t^,:e^rh^a%:^^^^^^^ pptitlMztfti ing their pixrchasers better. Lth in satis'factl'rdrsMl^rt^he C^^^^^^ -« P'^7- DIMENSIONS OF CANTON MONITOR ENGINES. DESCRIPTION. (» HORSS POWER Size by Numbers Diameter of Cylinder Stroke of Crank Diameter of Fly- Wheel Width of Face of Fly -Wheel ...[""[" Revolutions per Minute as set to run.... Height of Boiler Diameter of Boiler [ Diameter of Firo-Box Height of Fire-Box Number of Two-Inch Fluew Length of Two-Inch Flues Number Square Feet of Heating Sm-face. . Number Square Feet of Grate Surface. . . . ( Whole Weight comploto with Wheels 7 33 7 No. fi. 6 inches. <( (I II 215 inches. 67 34 J^ 32 2C 43 II 61 inches. 119 4.93 4135 10 HOBBE POWER. 12 HORSE POWERjlfl HORSE POWER. Nd. 10. 7 k inches. 8 " 36 " 8 to 10 " 205 inches. 67 37}^ 35 26 44k II 75 inches. 155 5.94 4910 9 40 12 No. 12. 8 inches. II 192 inches. 68 41k 37 Ji " 27 " " 90 44}^ inches. 181 7 24 5122 No. 10. 40 12 74 43 k 38}^^ 30 45',:; inches. u 192 inches. 100 ; inches. ' 212 8.08 0081 Our in a call; nest ciat< in yt Ih slnct milt feet( Uurli Mfnm 10- 1?.' cotto a Va toyo tire s the d Siress liila all yo eaHil} heipe had! in a : Qadsc feet Mr. J Dea ed wi( you \t gine } pulled our a wogoi hills, < tor ftt horsM bottoi for it. lY. '1.^: II I ml C. AULTMAN ft CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. 98 C. AULTMAN & GO'S HORSE POWERS. Tho favorito phrMo with oxclimivo ...iKiiu. l„ii|,l„rM, tlmt " the Aayn of th(» Horso I'ower ar« numhoml " ln«k. THE CAREY HORSE POWER. ^7t!=£=i. ^»=i:::i :f;n:;r'.i.s. '^-^£:^r--,!!z^Pv^^ lever racke and HockctH and ground trnWrnu^^^, Hn.l the entiro powor in made in the BolideHt manner. THE IMPROVED DINGEE- WOODBU RY w , , ..M. , . HORSEPOWER. wheS'lrnck The Intni m.-Jrw ""u'" ^•"^"™^ ''^ '*'" P'^<"'«''«''- " *« always mounte.l on a four- i7t;'ThrNra.r:»rs EQUALIZERS loverT-" alTuDon 'the' h£ 'l«'l»!ff''n '".r "', ^/l"'j"^«'- ^^on ordered. Thiq EquaUzer divides the strain upon lovers, also upon the honK.«, ^o that neithor of the teams attached need do more than its fair share of the work GOTTON GINNING. S'.".7,'"",',°'' """° """ "•"'>' ■;'""'°f • '"''"« "■•*» ft»t ccmmonj'it ., 3ff, °nd "hit"'"', "il v i'Z» ii/».«.. A> ^ 1/ 'i'^JNOTON, NkwtonCo., aA.,Oct.H1888. Metnrs. C. AiiltmnH tt Co. I have been iislnjf one of your 8 H. P. Mounted Monitor EnKlnes Binee September, 1880, aird itdocH just all you claim for It In eln- "'nf "u."''''l'i'?' »n 3 000 feet of Inch lumber per day with BO^Ibs. of at*.am. My eipenaes during that time, all told, has not exceeded twenty dollars Very respectfully, JOHN T. HARRIS. „ ^ ^ tj . OADsnitN, Ala., Aug. 18, 1883 Afc««r«, r. Aultmnn r* Co., Canton, O. «■,•«». irL^"!lP'^'"*^ of your agents, Messrs. M. B. Rogers & Bro., one 10-H. 1 . Canton Monitor last fall, i first used It for ginning my cotton crop, ninnlng two gins, one of 10, one of m Haws ; and a Vanwinkel Cotton rress, and it is with pleasure that I gay to you that the tngine gave entire satisfoction through the en- tire season, doing all your agents pron.Lsed me. She would do the fleld work of my gins and press with from 00 to 80 lbs. pressure. Last April I also purchased one No. H Plantation Saw M Ml and attached It to my Engine, and It has done well ; done all your agents represented and more. They are simple, and easily to bo trained to saw. Mr. Rogers was very busy and helped me but very little In placing and commencing sawing. I had hut very little saw mill experience, but I went to work and In a Itw ito) 1 I hi. i sawed as nice lumber as hcs been seen in Uadsden I van mw with a fai.- n"; In one day 4,000 to 6,000 feet '\ Mica 'unlvr with a 48-ln " "' lattanooga saw. •V ..'! i;r«a' ieapect, your obedient servant. JA8. T. SUTTEN. Mr. J. C. Moore. McKinney, Texas, Feb. 7, 1883. Dear Slr-Yoiir faror of recent date, asking how we are pleas- ed with the la-Horse Canton Monitor Traction Engine bought of you last season, received, and In reply are pleaRed to say the En- gine has given us good satisfaction, both in threshing and gin- ning, and as a traction we do not think it has an eriual. We pulle,d over some of the roughest roads in the country carrying our 36-inch Cylinder Separator and water tank, and another wa«ou lashed on, all through the threshing reason, cIlmbinK hUls, creek banks, and deen mud holes, and never did th<> Mnni- loi fail to walk triumpiiantly over all, while some of our nefgii- hors who had the big cracked up hung in a creek bottom for two days. We find the Monitor all that Is claimed •o"' "• Yours respectfully, .1. D. COLEMAN. T. Ai COLEMAN. C. ^u/fm„n ,f Co. ^°''' "*"*"*"' ^°- ^'•* ' ^^^^ »' "^^ fh^rH^^'f.*!' °"V' y'?i""„"\?°'^ Canton Monitor Engines, of the 1880 pattern, from M, R. Rogers & Bro., Gadsden, Ala We have lieen running It two seasons. It gives satisfaction.' We ™IInin!i ;K ik"' Kj"" *'"' »01;m. of steam, one grist mill, .36.lnch. ninnlng 80 lbs. of steam. We had never worked a single hour ri^li M ''"^'"'' "" ^""KO' yours, and with very little Instniction fwrn Mr. Rogers, we have run the Canton M>>nltor all the time without an V other engineer; wo have had but little trouble with It, and would iiot give It for any other we have seen, and we have seen the Eclipse and several others. ' Yours, T. L. CHAMBERS & BRO. Mes^r,. a Aultmnn ,0 Co. '^'"™'''' ^'^ <^'^" ^°- *'^- '*« 8lrs-We bought from your agents, M. B. Rogers & Bro., at Oadsden, Ala., one of your No. ll-Horse-Power Canton Monitor Engines about the first of May, 1888, and can say, as to power it is not excelled, and as to durability, we have run It ever since In I'i^i"'^ ?"^ (tinning. Tliere has been no repairs required yet above what we could do ourselves. In short, it is a good engine and we are well pleased with it. o"B'"o Yours truly, riOX & GOLDING. Me^s. C. Aultmnn ^ Co.*"'*' ErowAuCo.. Ala., Nov. 7, 1883. Gents-- We have been using a lO-Horse Traction Engine of your make tor one year ; we have used It for sawing, grinding and ginning. Have used it on the road, and stationarv, and ironslder that it has more power and Is easier iiianage.l than any other machine of Its kind or class we have ever used. CHRISTOPHER STEWART. _ . „,„,,_, , Antioch, Oa , Dec. 15. •uM*?,. "°- ° Monitor Engine purchased of you last fall is all ~ry;: "j" m,.,^r. j ,.. .,^, it Ir. iiuimiy; a. au saw pin Wittl self feeder, condenser, and steam press, with from 3.1 to 60 pounds steam. Everybody who has seen It Is well pleased My engineer, who is thoroughly expeiieuced In tlie running of several dilTereut kinds of horizontal engines, says the Monitor la far superior to any of them. J. C. BREWER. NEW MODEL thr'^s ^===^^2!?5W^^i^r7^ "«nal "testimonial Trrite?'^, ^r''''"'^^ V one or more of Z.; " """"'^^ «°rtain tha^ 'n ^^ ^ ^^ ^'***'"^ volunteer teetimonyXoLlT ! '°°'''*- O""" Patrons win ^/ ^^^^^^ribixxg parties v"/^' ^'"^"^« ^^^^t can that we could not h^yVm^^^" ^''^ "favorable, %TastZ^ '"f^ *^« «t»«^ment tL. J '"T' ""' ^^' P'ofea Jng m wheat Is alx.ut 800 buT^^' ° *^*''*«« »' our thresh -''ours respectfully, g J, S^MAn'c. SCHKBER V?'"'" ^ Sl^ci.*^ "°- '^-•. November , ,8«3 Oenta-The Now Model T K , ^'•'■e. isaflrst-rate maciine S'/ '^°"- *^«"'' •^- ^ Fire J'ght in draft and clean! fk '*°*^ A^t-class work if' threshed two bushltfThol^Jr"'" ^ --anted 'z hive --«vera.e..we.ehundt]ri":?,SpX"^"- J^^ANS O. ERICKSON. O. Aultmnn earTandwn^ar ■iours respectfully, „ ~ ^ ^- ^- PALSIER C.Aultman * c"'^"' ""^^ Co.. Utah, November 8 :8S8 ' Gentlemen— I bou^hf ' ' have threshed 9,00,ruLTsSrit'' f " "'^«' ^'"rator^ and You« respect/*,;''*'''"""^"' ^'UisfactTn n' "■ '^-Horse-Powers and ?f f *"'^ ^' «• -rnCw«« .Si^'.'jr^ ""'"'^ ^- -pa"- '^TJl^ '"'''' -- it t. an w-ishin,:: z:z''"^''' ^-^ -^ -om: ROSS & OUTTERN. (^- Quitman ^ Co. ^•^^^"'d. Minn. Novemh. , Dear Sirs-i hav« i,„ Novembers, I883. Threshers for the, ^ttw" '"""'"^ °»« »' your 8w„ t-le to see most «V . "^^ seasons. Havino- h , "^^eps'akes them off It dnZ I ""^ hags to weichTho ^Z"*^® » scales I remain, youra truly -^ — D. E. E. Weboughtamachineof J w u ^""""""^^^ O. Nov S i«si '«t;;:!?^oStt'e^, "^"°^-' ^-- ^"^- «3. 188a: ;rrn'':r-"^«-^^^^^^ AuitCVCorT^'""''" '" -e^yXtr'rf ^'"-"""'t i^o of them anH*^ '""■*''"• ^°'' several yelr^ ' I '"*^'' '"" a., the starveT;rii''""^.';f- before I J^.r.?i:."^-' r*"'""' (fetsaway withTf.' .'i"""^ ""<■ "^e »>eaten- h,l ". '''°'''''' ""»' RV. C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM TFfRESHING MACHINERY. Sfi ENGINE «t Patmg tho merits of -the follow!.^ letter, ^traces of the profea. 7 ^'*^« Printed their "•agents. Wo regret '^ange of the country '«' nearly all possibie >Hio, November?, 1883 t we are very well piea«. yours, . ATKINSON BROS. C-. November 6, 1888. j"on Monitor Engines. '"gas much as most 'BEHT&PHiFEH. November 3, I883. ^your Sweepstakes f been to some trou- h'les.Idothlnkthe w Model. There Is be improved, and 'derive general sa^- d be the weighing ^bagger similar to 1 to have a scales 'em before taking "«bt, that it could r, ^D E. EVANS. 'oithe nextsoa- D. E. E. 0, Nov. 8, 1883 'tie York, O., and '• O'fl thrP.shers every way satis- -E & INOLE. Aug. S3, issa! ngines and Now ■k & Co., and it I 'mve run an fact wore out '"*■ Hodet, that ui- New Model 'Of grain with no choking or ■al years and sre near your Ne-..- Model. I hare esUbUobed a reputation for It here that will sell Mveral aaother year for you; In fact, believe tl ere will be nothing else sold but yours la this neighborhood. L. P. BOND. Plbasant Hill, Cass Co., Mo., Nov. 9, 1888. Affistrs. C. Aultman db Co., Canton, O. Gentlemen— The 10 horse-power Canton Monitor Engine and 33-lnch cylinder Miller's Now Modol Separator we bought of your agent, Mr. J. H. Vonihulz, of Strasburg, Mo., gives entire satisfac- tion. It more than fills the warranty put on It by you. We have owned and ru.n different kinds of machines for fifteen years. We must say, In Justice to your machine, that It Is the best grain cleaning and saving machine ever Introduced In this sect: :.n of country; and for durability, simplicity, and superior finish. It far surpasses any machine In America. We have not needed one cent's worth of repair during the whole season. We have threshed 5,800 bushels of wheat In 6 daya, and moved 8 milus In the same length of tirr.o; and 783 bushels of wheat in 2^ hours, and cleaned ii, well, and can prove it by a dozen dlffe:-ent parties. We think the Monitor is the safest engine, ana 'umlshes more power than any engine of »he same size In America. "Threshermen," if you want good grain-saving machines, then buy the New Model Separator and Canton Monitor Engine. Yours truly, HAYS & GLUNT. r- J It ji « « .. ^ AMmr, Pa., Nov. 6, 1883. C Aultman <* Co., Canton, O. Dear Sirs— We take pleasure in saying to you that we are higlily pleased with your No. 7 New Model Vibrator, which we purchased from your agent, Demas McCoUum. We like It better than any other thresher we have ever seen. It. has given perfect satisfaction wherever we have threshed. We don't think there will be any other kind sold In this neigh- borhood. It puts all other machines in the background. We havea.reshed 50 bushels wheat per hour, and 810 bushels oats per hour. No clogging of riddles at any time, and 110 wasting of grain. It's a perfect separator. We would advise every body wanting threshing machines to get the New Model Vibrat- ing Thresher, made by C. Aultman & Co. Yours truly, A. P. 8W.\RT, H. HUFFORD, D. H. SWART. Salina, Saline Co., Kansas, November 2, 1883. iilessrs. C. Aultman « ''•-her I ours truly, Q„ '■ ^^^-^S CHAPMAN «»»«». C. ^««man (t Co. ' ' ^"Kust 21. I888. thej^^f irhrv?h\i t:o°trse;:''Lrf "**''''"-' --^t 'take, but the Miller Vibrator wiIh ""' """^ '^« Sweep- last takes them all donn fnr .t '"'' P"'-«ha8ed of you jJL The farmers are all VelLZ / "*^ *°'' '='«'""°« wheaf New Model has been ™n« '*'' ''"'* ">« ^ew Model Th« we have al, we canTo, ^nd" a Vorh^/'"- - «t«tod U, a'd other threshe.. running abound bt„' T'' '"''''' «- two The other threshers went «r„.' *'"'f«°P'e know what is best "■•"P- Wedidnot Weae 'em "'' ^'^ter and enga^^; tfr::r,"'"^'''"^'-'^-«h;rsnhev''- ^'"''«- ^^^ ^^K thresh for them. The New Mol. .. ^ "^""^ '^"^ "sl^ed us to '» eveo way and respect V^tZ^ZT^ -''-^^-''or ^ "*-'*■■ J. ED. LUTZ ! p/s r.:'r; rrr »«™ -- rs New Model machine, ^vhich I h^v "". """^ ' '"'^« •'"••Sht a one weeic. and I can «»y jIJ J.^ ^« \'*'-'«d myself, and Z it With the New Model machine. I woiild T '"""" P''''^«ed to purchase a machine, try the mZ ^^ '" *^°^ who want r^ — — . ° «• SNURCKER. -^N;:vsCs::r:T^""'^'---- entire nati^faetion ' S I'nTc 'T '"" ""^--on.H.es yorritnr^'^'"'"--''"-^''-""'^ STROLTZFUS BROTHERS. r"^'- C'- AuUman d: Co ' ^' A"S"st SO. 1888 year, and we like it very wen a„^ ^-^^^ng Machines Ti^t "ever saw its equal for^tS hinf T '° "°' ''♦'^"-to to s^yTe kndsof grain. It is oasilyTandL ,vT''"^' *"'' '"^"n^g Tl! as any machine we ever sa^^andw' ? '""""•""I as durlbi" molTr^r '"^ P''^' - Sne hi":: '""• ^-'o-ers to say more than to any other machinronTi ""^ ''"" P*"" hushel np. We threshed last year over thtTT' °' ''' ^"o" ^'ean -^^jorenX^Twr-^^^^^^^^^ The above are ("apfM o-j lours respectfully, J. Y. ZOOK. E. A. ZOOK. ^- Z. YODER :^HNP. KAUFFMAN Youra truly, Cl,^ ~^'~' ■ ^- ^ '^'^ALL. ^r. George A. 7^^' ^""'"^ f^"- I-'-^^o. October 29, 1883 housand bushels and not Z I ' / ''"^^ """eshed flft^-six thresherssaytheyneversiwTnvn""'^'"'- ""^"^ ^'^'^ ^ood doasgoodworicincIeaning^u^fLT'""^ run as prettyTna One man that owned a S Rtl "^ ^'ain as my machS nachmedoasgoodworlc. jri^";«'"'J ho never saw any th.-ee years have been about i^O^rr °" """ Separator"^ Sa:r- r ''''' ''»'-- -Of" i,rr;aror"':^'""^' on.y wheTthr^S^'l^That" '''''" ^^ -"i T/^rnXn" wanting another I ^ouJdt; ^f you!" "^ ""'='""-• -^ '" w"s From yours as ever, "^OHN 8ANT JR e. ^»«.„, ^'J: «^- ^-'B. 8-. Ci.A,a Co., a.., oc, 26 ',8a," CHRIST SIM3HAUSER. ^•-4««„,anrf^Cr,. '^'''""°~' Somerset Co.. Ma. Oct *2« ,««:^ Tlin New Mil ' •> v>»-i. Pa., August 18, 1883. ■New Model machines, a rine. With Which I have must say that it gives ''"'•kwithitinaafyls ^tfully, JACOB E. PRY. . Pa., August 30, 1882. nd ia reply would say ■ ashing Machines lalt "ot hesitate to say we 'i'"g, and cleaning ail '> ">ade, and as durable 'our customers to say one cent per bushel ' '"' of Its good clean- ve thousand bushels Jer machines, and a ig: to-day at one cent machines that came y deceive buyers, but odel that he buys a lOOK. :ooK. ODER. P. KAUFFMAN. ' Augustas, 1883. you want to know 'ou. I can say it is ne fli-st machine I > I liked very well, ' J- C. KRALL. 'ctober 29, 1883. Bigliborhood, and threshed flfty-six Have had good "as pretty and as my machine, never saw any 3e Separator in e gearing must tor is about as ne in my barn, es, and if I was f 8ANT, Jr. Oct. 26, 188.3, '''*'•■ It takes lireshed l,iioo 'e. takes Very hreshing, and shauser. ct.'iw, isas. '"' Engine I *,' on wheels, ■lihie in this C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. a? county. Fanners in this section will have no other machine'but a New Model Thresher to do their work . They sent their wheat to market just as it came from the thresher. Farmers and threshermen, who caw It at work, say there is no room for improvement. The largest grain growers In this county who saw the above machine at work offered me one cent per btuhel more to do their work next season than they would give any other thresherman, as I have the only New Model in the county. The engine is the lightest draft, quickest set and flred up, the smoothest running, the steadiest motion, and consumes less fuel and water than any threshing engine I ever saw. I advise all threshermen wanting to buy a good grain-saving machine, to buy Miller's New Model Separator and Canton Monitor Engine. Then you will have a rig that will get you all the work you can do, and you will have one that will cost you very Uttle for repairs. Very respectfully, JAMES M. HUGHES. LovisviLLB, Carrou:, Co., Md., Sept. 13, 1883. To T. W. Davis, Butler P. 0., Md. Dear Sir— The No. 10 "Monitor" Engine and No. 7 New Model Vibrator we purchased, through you, in July last, is a first-class threshing rig in all respects. We have threshed 825 bushels wheat, and moved twice the same day. Have vhreshed, so far this season, over 82,000 bushels of wheat. Our customers are all pleased. Wo have finished several crops which were left unfin- ished by other makes of steam threshing rigs. We have all the threshing we can do, rjid I feel confident we have, as our work will show, the best threshing rig ever brought to Carroll County; Md. THOMAS BEASMAN. WooDBiNB, Md., Sept. 15, 1883. Mr. H. W. Matthews. ■ Dear Sir— H. A. Leisher, with Monitor Ten-horse Traction En- gine and No. 7 New Model Vibrator, threshed for Mr. Richard Hutchins, Bunker Hill Farm, (ftlO) eight hundred and forty bushels wheat, which was hauled on same day from machine to the railroad station for Baltimore market. Respectfully yours, N. T. HUTCHINS. Saleu, Salem County, N. J., November 5, 1883. C. AuHmnn cfc Co. Gentlemen— I purchased last June one of your 24-lnch New Model Vibrator Threshers, of Lindzey & Sickler, and am free to say that it beats anything I have ever had, or ever saw thresh. We have threshed over 33,000 bushels of wheat and oats since we began last July, and our machine Is In good repair, costing us nothing for repairs, excepting a few teeth that were broken out by feeding into the cylinder a piece of iron. It is well and sub- stantially made, and, with the proper care, will last us for years. I have been running several different makes of thresh- era the last five or gi.x years, an ith picosuro that I givo you a short statement of the working qualities of your No. 7 New Model Separator that I pur- chased of your agent, L. A. Baker, Boonville, Ind. I have been running threshing machines 23 years in succession, have run six different kinds of separators, and have had a great deal of experience in all kinds and conditions of grain. I must say that the New Model beats them all alike in doing first-class work. I have threshed wet and dry grain with my New Model, with mud in the straw up to the band of the bundles, and it separated and cleaned it nicely. For nice, smooth running I never saw anything that would compare with it. I have threshed for more than 55 farmers and they all speak well of It. I have about 80 more to thresh for yet before I am through. Some of my neighbor machines have laid up, others have 4 or 5 jobs and they are done, while I have plenty to do. There was one old style vibrator in my range and got one crop, but he had to go six miles before he could get any more to thresh. I have made more money with the New Model in the same length of time than any other machine : over handled. She is called Boss in my section of country. I have threshed 100 bushels per hour, and done good work. I think you will sell some New Model Separators here in Warwick Co. next year. Wishing you Buocess, I remain, respectfully yours, SIMON FLACK. Browntown, GrjunCo., Wis., Novembers, 1883. C. j^ultmanfSO.V. ^DTar^L^fZ"" '^ ^''- ^^«»'''». a "■^^^' '"•■' ^Pril. .888. runasa^^ij, lam fully satSL?.,"'"'"*^ '•>« ^'"'^r to tor ia very much better and safer fh ""^ '*"'P« »' 'he MonT can be for portable use audl^Lf ^ f "^ horizontal engine have climbed without dIfflcuUyTn! ^'^?''""'"''*"ffhllta. We ' tank at that) as steep hlUsMaXiv ""J""* ">« Separator and can pass xhe En^ne tr„li7mnt"' * '^'*™ '^"'' -^^o" "" '""'"'' '' --«''-''. '^"^ounECrhete'c/"- '''« OLIVER WOOD. HOWARD M ^... Si^ueU^ "'" °' ™«- ''•» «^«' to It. xv?,^^"°»^'^NOX. - J- H. MORRIS P- D. WATSON NICK DIEJIER OABiuEL Watson MICHAEL HOUCK ISAAC WATSON CHARLES MYERS JOHN OEARHART CLARENCE RHAMV •I03EPH OEARHART ■ — . -"» »r \IUU O.AuUman ^ Co.ZlZ' o"°""' ''°- «»"' • Oct. 25. ,883. a^Sefn-ir « iXr?:'*'-'^' »' ^'-stone your tried out here, which can be . ^^^^'^^^ that has ever bee, -oric.ltc.eans grail: fltformrrL7a'j f "''^ »>-« «een ^ is tTT'"' ?r'" ">« """chlnTiferowdf d " "°* "''^'^ * "^^"-^ 8 the most durable machine I Lv° ""^ "^'""'^ ^"'P'y- It Respectfully, • '"oney. -— ______fLBERT C. ANDERSON C ^«I• W. DART. tor Engine soUby^s'toH 0°^:' ''""•'**'"• '»»<1 « horse Moni -tisfaction. It tl^^he, ,,tf -\- * «ons is giCe^^*^ ' " and was about half weedJ.f f ' '^*'' «="' the iay hJJZ Voure iru],, " ' •'""B't Ihrough ____J5fSTEE s H0BB4BD " C. N. OWEN. omers this season than tfe'r ' r"'^*°"°° toourcuT We crowded the machine i^w, ^"^ '^°"« hy any Thresher couid be made to wasSagrS^d "'/"'' ""^'^ tltetl clean and saved all t , !t ^ ' *"^ ""o found th.af- if tt, u that Miller-s New k/e ^ IrT ^ ^ ™-'''- "V-^^^^^^^^^^ we have ever seen. We reTa"'" '^"^'' ''"' -Pe^I";'::; T A ^ ^''"'■s respectfully, '.^!!!^*__™--^-^ HAWKINS, G^uZfmanttCo ^^''^'s, Ha.vilton Co O a„ . Th. Th™^., ,■;,„ „„^,, °- O., A.S. ^ ,« FKANKYEAG2R, Ve" h""" * ^^ ^""'""^ a ^'^*"'<''=' O- August 85. 1883 -p^rS^^ --r-^™e„.have to-day Pow^lS^ti^r'^"^' •^'^^"^ «r«>:and^ever lacks steam or Stevens T a^ " """^^^ Yours truly, P- S.-The Monitor Enein,. t i . ^BED H. SHlRIf equally as well. ^"'"'' ' '""^^ht the same time S fi„g Messrs r ^T"" ^''*^'^'' ^°«Ks, York Co p .' Delr Sh-sl'Th"'"" '" ^"- ' ' "^^ ^' ^^■ Vibrator Tl.resh:r!^'w'S:':;,^^-'t«'- Engine and New Model entire satisfactlon'in ev y wa/t^r' ''""^y^^' has given „ are si.x other machines of diffe^.L*,'"*' ^ ''*^'* "'^l ''t There ^our machine i« far supoX "o .T^*''.'" °"'' "^'^hborhoo 7 threshes faster and cleans the J ^ °*"' '"ake. because f threshedir: .trtL""" ''' ''"^ '"' th^p^ L:,^!'-'-- to has detained us som. 'uuToru'^^"""^ '^-'-'^ "^^ ear ''oesin othergraln. we eart^^artrL'li"!;-- -d^ it i_'Lf "• C. lIANIPOtD You,^ a.spectfully *' ^°°'' «« _ BOMAN & TEAOUE. ■^^S^WwBBi^'5f?T?T'?^^3rqj5-w«r«^ ' f faw. separates per- '•ket.andhasthecapa- of men can get to it. ''HaEL houck AC WATSON ^•RLKS MY£R8 ■N OEARnART RENOERHAMY EPII OEARHART. O., August Id, IS8.3. r and 6 horae Moni- ons is giving entire cut the day before cured at all, and it It straight through ER & HUBBARD. •' August 14, 1883. "•">«: reports from s MO equal in this >eginningtoflndit 'he number of ma- teiTitory to fill my P,*''« selling ma- m have given the C. N. OWEN. August 80, 1888. say that the New 'hat it is repre. ^oroughness, it is a-hand machine the fall of 1883 »t- I am free to lachine, as it is D H. SHrRlf , 8 time is doing '^"ff- S8, 1883. nd New Model I, has given us '«J it. There lelghborhood. l^e, because it "er, and is so experience to ?»t date have Wet weather -•• seed as it it. iNIFOLD. er 28, 1883. resher with ^ & how, is t thousand 'to amount as good as C. AULTMAN & CO.. STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. 29 eaoue, ^ A ,1 ^ « Secor, III., Sept. 5, 1883. C. Aultman < e, , o* . Gentlemen-We have been running the No. 10 Engine and No. 7 New Model Thresher we bought of C. & T. B. Dorman, Con- neaut, O., about a week, and will say, so far. It works splendid ly. The engine does its work well, and requires no grips or blocks to keep it steady. The New Mod-1 cannot be beat in separating and cleaning any kind of grain. In short, we think it a boss outfit. H, H. POOL. F. J. BILLETT, . D. A. BEMAS. C. Aultman A Co. ^"'""'''^' °^^" ^°- ^°' ^"^^^^ *^'' '^- Gents— We purchased one of your New Model Separators of your agent, John B. Deeriug, of this place, and we wiU say that It beats all of them. We have threshed twelve years and run several different machines, and this boats all we ever saw. It there is anyone that wants a machine we would advise them to try a New Model, as it will do the best work of any that is made. We have threshed all kinds of grain, and It will go in the market without any more cleaning. Yours truly, [_ LEABO & HAUTES. Evans Citv, Pa., Nov. 9, 1883. Messrs. C. Aultman <& Co., Canton, O. Gentlemen— I have been running one of your New Model Se- parators for the last three years with horse power. This season I bought one of your ifihc: se power Monitor Traction Engi,ies, also a portable Saw Mill. I am perfectly satisfied, feeling that I ha^e the Boss rigs for Sawing and Threshing. I can cut with good ordinary oak logs 4,000 feet; in a day. I have cut on a short run 100 feet in 10 minutes. The Engine saves me considerable money over the horse power in threshing and moving on the road. I also move my entire Saw Mill with my Engine, which is •a great saving of money to me over employing teams to move engine and mill. I consider the upright Engine the best in use, e.s it does not require to be set strictly level when setting to run, which saves time and labor. Also, in running on the road, it is very difficult to get water at all times, and, as a result, your water gets low in your boiler. This you may permit to a greater e.\tent with the upright than the horizontal boiler, which I con- sider a decided advantage. Yours respectfully, CHARLES PFEIFER. ^ . ,. . « Hematite, Jefferson Co., Mo., Nov. S", 1883. C. Aultman d: Co. Dear Sirs— We have purchased one of your Machines, th« Canton Monitor Engine, and New Model Vibrator and Separator. Expense on Engine, none ; on Separator, 75 cents. We have used it two years. We are well pleased. Y^oure respectfully, OSCAR OGLE. JAMES OGLE. ir r, , ,. ^ ^ SuL.rc Lick, Pa., Nov. 15, 1883. Messrs. C. Aultmuhr.',i;^^^^^^^^^^ ''" """"'>• "">• ""-■■ mend it as a good machine, and one 'th' VLri' be ^Z^r' Yours, etc., . JIAIKEL & BRO. ^W. a. Aultma- ,/c:XX:' ^i^" " ^-— '>"• ^^■ Dear Sir-New Model Vibrator, Sfl-inch cylinder 4fi inni, gave ..niversal satisfaction In work and sl.n^H . ^S'''"■• authorized a^ent George w s! < simplicity. Your more ^^^ sa.dThlher Zn - at aZ to ao ^n /^'^ ""^ had no 800 or l.OW rushel Ths rr '' "■""• ^"'"'^ "« threshed for wer^ all Slitd TmlT^oSTZZ^r t:l rearrerfX 'rec"""'"^ *? '"^^ ^^r^^^.Z tor. made by C. iultml^ rco T" "" ""'" *"^'' ""'"■*■ a good thresher anit convinc'e^ ""' ""^'^ "P«'=""« ^ ''"^ | h^rW^K7k.s|%„^ i JOH N WINDHORST, JR- I C ^u».„,. ^ Co.'Son'*o " '°- ^"'^^^' °'''°''«'- '' '^■ mS^Le^SrS fhinstrcLrt^ '^°; " .'"■•^--Power ability. I consider themunsuZZ Tm^' ''^' "' ''"'■• over 50. bushels per day. TeTpe'Suy' y'r':, "^^ ''^^"'^^ °^ HORBERT SMITH. I C. ^u/- and have cuf 60^ f^^f"!:^'"";""'^''"^^^ """^^'"^ ""'"^ '>°«-- ' Yours respectfully, WHITENER & FOX. Messrs. C. Aultman ^ Co., cZ'::T''''' '""' '"'^ ''' ^^^ Gentlemen— I have just met Mr R ir t. i ^ i ■ „„v. 1 'he "y wheel on the eneine was <■ f..,., inches larger that he could thresh out the world I Very respectfully, .. W. U. HOOVER. I C. Aultman <, cT,Calf::V''"''°'' ''°' '""' '''''' ««' '^- \ anSu:;Sr Serfll^s iTn 1 T ''°'^' ^^*^''-^^- Yours truly, ISAAC SNYDER & SON. W.Jff;iB^ti3ii&4eS^7.i February 14, imi. .Henry Ludnip. ims Ixint by nriy oMier no Ho have tliresht'd ^roik'l. AVo recoiii- finiiol be beaten to., iMAIKEL & BRO. fovember 12, 18S3. Under, "IS incli rear, simplicity. Your did not claim any lo satisfactorily to hresh grain as fast ^hine. No choking splendidly; better ve run. Sorry we in. Customers we woric, and told us bigger jobs next ^ew Model Vibra- i ' expecting to buy >HORST, Sr. V INDHORST. Jr. DHORS T, Jr. j October 27, 1883. Ijreshing Rigs for ■ Upright Canton New Slodel Sepa- ler manufacture. and quantity of ttle madhine per inch capacity of m any other ma- t cannot be sur- Iwith our? now. ' have exjiended he .same brasses • The engine is fine in the mar- SNER & FOX. July 81, 1883. :er, whose rig I port, from Mr. h tlie machine, scan get to the ;ine was a few J. HOOVER, l^pril 26, 1883. Jel Separators general satis- >ose tliree sea- of grain and son we have 100 bushels of > beat. )ER & SON. C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. 31 ^ , „ ^ LovRTTsviu-E, Va., Novembers, 1883. Messrs. C. Aultman & Co. I have been running a New Model for three seasons and it beats anything we have run yet. Truly yours, J. S. WENNER. n A „ ^^, ^ A ^ Alma, Neb, January 88, 1888. C. Aultman i, bought of your agent, Richard Thew, of this place. We have been threshing for nine years; have used the Garr-Scott, Aultman & Taylor, Huber, end now the New Model, and are free to say your machine surpasses them all. The work we did this year in cleaning was so much better than our competitors that many farmers waited weeks to give us time to reach their jobs. In one case in particular, a Huber was ordered to stop in the commencement of the job, and the farmer waited for us to come nnd finish it. The machine runs very light and quick, not a single stop from fault ot machine during the season's work of over 80,000 ■ bushels. We speak in highest possible terms of the machine, and make particular mention of its cleaning and separating capacity. . Respectfully, SAMUEL CROFT, NELSON MYERS. Zane.sville, O., November 10, 1883. Me'srs. C. Aultm.an d Co., Canton, O. Gentlemen— The Monitor Traction Engine and New Model Thresher, bought ot your agent, T. W. Lewis, last summer, have made a splendid record. Thelrcapaclty is very great, and their work of the most thorough character. I recommend the rig (n emphatic terms. ALVAH JAMES. „ . ,, ^ ^ St. Peter, Minn., August 27, 1883. C. Aultman t!; Co. Dear Sirs-Please send the notes given for the Model Separa- tor to First National Bank <>t St. Peter, and we will pay them before the first month hos expired. We like the Miller New Model Vibrator first rate. It does flrst-class work. Wo liHve now threshed six days, including the starting, and turned out 4,02.5 bu.shels of wheat and 1,000 bushels of oats, and are well satisfied with its work. Kespeclfully yours, J. WEBSTER. „ , ,, Little Yoke, Moxtgojjbrv Co., O., C. Aultman ■ Skvkir Co.. Utah. October 30, 1883 C.-Anltman a Co., Canton, O. aentlemen-The Miller New Model Thresher w« hn,.»i,f , yo..r agent. Mr. G. A. Lowe. Salt Lake C, ^1 "ve'°Ser°a -Atlsfactlon. We think, ami so do our patron, ^iVaT J? to h.t ...Chine in this ne^hho-hood^'^rth:' h^ ^^k .r and at times ,^n out as much as Ave busheU of oats per mnu.e and done good work. Very respectful ly, . L. P. CH RISTEXSEN & CO. n A„it J. ^ Hamilton, III.. November 5, 1883 C. Aultman eft Co., Canton, O. ' Gentlemen-Four years ago I sold a lO-horse Monitor Enirine best down boiler and engine made. They go up hill or dowL Separator, tank and all, where a wagon will go , T. J. POTTS. C. Aultman YLKT0N. lu., Nbv B ISM Mem-s. Wm. Koenig * Co., St. Louis, Mo ' ' M^r.V" ""^^'^ '° ^°"'' ""1"''7 as to how I Hke the New out ol h"! f °'7 ''°" '''"'' ^ *'""*^ °' ''• " takes the grain out of the heads so completely that no unthreshed ffrain nr heads come up through the elevator to be run hrough ag^in as Is the case with all other separato.^ that I have etr seen' wasTaTlu ILT" 'rV:"' '''•'^ thoroughly.VausInrno a7crt^?wh?arLngrrr;;^^^^^^^^^ machines do, and therefore I .ItTuci mo ^ wo r^rtht' most of my competitors. Lots of farmers in «!^«7 .• t the present day need to"t.y " ^'^ ''''''='' '"'^'''"^ "^ Yours truly. AUGUST KLEINK. ..rirsiU'rrrcSc:^^^^^^^^^ Dul.a.ne.1, Z Aad^TwTi:i'"voC;,:Xt U ^"1""'" ■^• tire satisfaction In every particular I/. *''''"'" ^"• Cleaning Wheat, in our es'tiSn",'! has^lXnor" ^'''''' ""' K Ti „., Respectfully yours, W (7 ^ t^ n ^"'°°''^' KKWAU.VIS Co., Wis.. May a is&l arrd'te^.- uirjbrsiTnd" I' ''' '"'' -'^''""' '»>«- '« than any rnachln:revrrw.''"/..k'eT/rra?:."'''- ""^ '"''^ Yours, etc., JOS EPH BOUFFIOUX. ^. O. ^ rr. Barne,,^Z7orTnr''"' ^''- ^'''- ^P"-" ««• be^ tSrir lly^'Sri^^^^^^ ' 'r^'^ --" ''o- farmeraallUkeitwell anTwn f "j'^hlne I ever had. The do their work forS New ZZ, "°* """^^ """"""• «'"-•'>">« '» clean, and there Ire no ulf.! '^"^' "' "^" »■•*'"• ^^n^shes , ofmy^ustome«"rmeTatr«'^.rT'°'^^ ^- bushel mo. than If it ^^^^^l^ ^^^^Zl:;:^!:: Yours truly, . A. HERBIG. ^- G. * W. Barnes, FS-eeport ^^""' '"""• ^P''" «>• '**«• otLTmt^„i\;s:vrttfh:^rth. -rr"°" "- -- farmers all like It as It thr»T ^ this neighborhood. The cleans It wel ^'^'''^' "f' '^^^' *" ^^^ ««'"• '"'d Yours, etc., ^ . JOHN R03INSON. does not waste grain None of ,Ty I' ^""^ '*'''"• *'"» before, but nevertheless we started "St "and "'° " ''"^«'- I threshed for was weU satisfied wTh our wo, k jT'^ °"" ^^ for the market. Yours etc I' deans ready I ' FRED. HAMEMAN. I have followed thresWng 'forS^yZ^tnSt. ^''"«'*<="""- anythingtoequalltasa^erfecfgra'^aver " ""'*- ''*'^" ' cei;'?:r%^rs%replr Jl^SeS ;-^^^ as good now as when I flrst runlt out """""■' '^ '" seJrrw^r^^LTe^tc/otr *° ^••r '"''^-«'"- New Model before thevrouM^p.^'"''"'""^" ^^'^ ^ •'"y » New Model was known!^ *" ""^ ""'"''''"^ "''^'^ MJller's Respectfully yours, . IRA PHELPS. Dear Slrs-For threshing and cinanin-' -"air. th- " -. we bought of you has no eaual wTo ° '^I *''°"^ ^*''^«1 thresher Is oaJabloT^^rLg^the'^l^'/^^i t' 7 ^'''^'• completely as the New Model With^ur th^ , t ^^'"""^ we th^shed 5.0 bushels of o^^n"^^ Z.'Zlti:!':;,^ November fl, 1883. (iLTslgned farmers, J., had our wheat Kiel Tlueslier ami nt, 5Ir. William J. mtlthasKivou en- 'gards savliijf and uperior. >, t ALDERSON, 'DLE. IS., May a, isai. ■ machine there is better and faster .Us. BOUFFIOUX. . I",., April 20. I >ught of you does I ever had. The I >ther machine to 9 grain, threshes >ssoftlme. One 'orth five cents a h any other nia- ' A. HERBia. April 30, 1888. action than any hborhood. The the grain, and R03INS0N. June 5, 1883. ! thresher that eans well, and un a thresher every one we ■t cleans ready HAMEMAN. ibergfl, 1888. Model Separa- f satisfaction, e never seen lot been out a appears to be or them after had to buy a I'here MJller's PHELPS. ary 8, 1883. j New Model hat no other the straw as och cylinder lours, which .^}^^I^'^^^^ ^^' STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. 88 is pretty good for a small machine, and the amount threshed In the time shows we got all of it. Truly yours, M^S. & J. D. SNYDER. ,.r r, ^ ,.r FOHRSSTO.V, OoLK Co., Il,L,, April 15, 1888. W. a. ft W. Bamet, Fneport, III, Dear Sirs-Tho Monitor Traction purchased from you con- tinues to givo the be.st of satisfaction, and furnlHl.es abundant power for all ordinary p.uposes. It is easily handled, quickly set, and the most economical In the use of fuel and water of any we know. We can take tank, wagon, separator, and, if necessary, a full set of hands on top, over any plowed field or up any ordinary hill in the countiy. It has not cost a cent for repairs since we have had It. The New Model Thresher also works like a charm, and handles any kind of grain, either wet or dry. It threshes fast, and as a separator and cleaner it has no equal. With our Canton Monitor Engine and New Model Separator we can get away with any thresher in the country for money, both for fast and good work. We threshed 380 bushels of oats In oae hour and twenty minutes, and can prove It. The work ..aswell done too. The farmer who has his grain threshed by the New Model will save enough grain to pay for the thresh- ing that would be wasted by other machines. Yours truly, O. N. & J. F. BYERS. Ill, December 83, 1883. DnHAND, WwjraBAoo Co. W. O. Ary 8, 1888. W. a. unse for le country. lAMILTON. Cy AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MAC HINERY. 85 Oairanv Ckntkh, U., November 11, IS?'). ('. Aullman,t Co , (Mnt„n, O . „, o ir Wan^ {*«nts-I thl« Beanon bought of your agent, Mr. n. F. wog^, of Orundy C-nter.onoof your N.nv Model Thr.-sh.TH and - horse-pow.-r Enginos und an. fully, and in f.act, more than Katls- ned with th.. work of Iho .nn.-hltu.. Early In the season I bought a new Massllon Tbn-.t...r, and not being satisfied I sold It and bought the New Model. I would recommend the New Model to any one wanting the best maolih.e made, At one tl.ne ,hr.Md>- ed oats at the rate of six bushels a minute, and saved « ' <>' Jhe grain. C^ABUOLLTON, Ii.L.. November 9, 1988. J. P. Morrow elng tb« most p.,werful engine and tl.iesher In the country. I havo t.nkon my Monitor Knginn over bad roods that would stall as many horses ns you could hit.d» on to the same load. It Is ever handy an.l reliable, costlt.g mo less money to keep up and doing more work than the same amount of money Invested In horse, or mules. Wishing you Hn(-eeBS, I am, .,»„fa Yours truly, JAMES E. HANEH. Uppkr Cross Roam, HARTFono Co., Mi>., February 19, 1883. Iluyh W. Matthnrs, General A>,ent. Tv,~.h..r The No. fl Monitor Engine and No. 4 New Model Tht«sher and SeparaU,r I purchase.l from you last August give entire satisfaction In quantity and quality of work done, and In economy of fuel and water used. I have more work promised than I can do. ISRAEL A. 8CARFF. Wabhinoton, Iowa, November 8, 18H8. Me^nra.C.AuUmand Co., Canton, O. - „ ,„ Oentlemen-Tho New Model Thresher we bought of your agents, Messrs. Wm. Wilson, Jr., & Sons, of Washington, Iowa does its work In a very satisfactory manner, and wo regard it as near perfection as any machine made. It takes the grain and seed clean from the straw, separates well, cleans both grain and seed really for either mill or «"»'";•'*"'?'[''''« ^^^ have not tried to thresh the greatest nuuiber of bushels to the minute, or hour, yet we believe the capacity as great as any machine of its size. The machine is well made, "f K^of /""t;;^ lal, runs light, and we take pleasure in recommendmg the New Model to any one wanting a thresher. Yours very truly, DUSENBERY BROS. LONOMOUNT, BoULDKR Co., Co.,., October 89, 1883. II. C. Babcoik <& .Son, Denver, Col. Your favor of October 37 is at hand. I can say the New Model Thresher I bought of you this season is the best thresher Thave ever used, a.>d 1 have threshed for 18 years. I thw.k is the best cleaner, saves the grain the best, and Is the most easily managerl, a,.d will clean more grain in one day and save a befter th^ a ;y other machine I ever saw. 1 have threshed McI^O bushels thLeason, and it has given entire satisfaction Very -spect^ful.y^^ ^_ ^^^^^_ Har-foro CotTJJTY, Md., September 7, 1888. I have owned in the past 80 years several threshers and engines efferent makes, and after two years' trial, desire to s^f I can do more and better work with my No. ied four bushela of wlioat t». Gentlemen— We consider the New Model Thresher No. 7, we bought of your agents, F. A. Hosier & Uro., the best machine we have ever seen. It is doing more and better work than was claimed for it. Wo can thrush 1,000 bushels of wheat per day vithease. MOap:a BUXTON. JOHN A. TROBUIDQE. < Sbcor, III., August 24, 1883. C. Aultiniin (t Co, The New Model and Monitor Engine I bought of you through Jrour agant, II. Ludwig, at Secor, has given me better satisfac- tion than any machine I hove ever had. I have had four differ- ent threshers, two J. I. Cose, one Nichols & Sheppard, and your Sweepstakes, but the New Model la superior to them all, and In fact, superior to any machine 1 have ever seen. The rid- dles run from morning until night without any trouble whatever. Tho Monitor Engine pleases me better than any engine I liavo seen, and we have had no trouble with it. It is always ready for work from morning to night. The farmers for whom I have threshed are decidedly satisfied with our rig, and the work wo have doue for them with It, and I have lost no time since I owned the rig. I have tlireshed over very rough and heavy roads, but the Monitor has always pullei the New Model, woter tank, and load of goods over them without faiihig. Y^ours, JACOB HEXAMEH, Jii. OSKIDA, Oneida Co., Idaho Teb., November 1, 1883! Messrs. C. Aultman . I nevnr saw any machine tliat comes U|i to the Now Model, I havo run the New Model for .9 years. It gives the best Bitiafaction that 1 ever law In my life. 1 havo had all the work I can do while there la any wheat to thrfwh In the country, I havo tlirenhod In 7 houra \,(m buHhelM, anil moved ond Hot two times in that time with your 30lnch machine. It was the largest straw that I ever aaw, it wiis 4 to feet long. We did not have any one at the table to stand and feed. .lOHN M. WOODS, Drake, Oasconadb Co., Mo., October as, 18(0. C. Aultman <«■ Co., Canton, <). Tho New Model Thresher we bought thia last season of your agent, H. W. Htoemer, at Hay, Mo., I.s doing first class work. We threshed over ao.flOO buaheU of wheat with It, and had no trou- ble with It at all. FRIED SCHMIDT. SIMON 08TERMAN Denson, III., Septembers, 1888. Stenger (t Sharp, Washburn, III. DenrSlra-In answer to your letter would say I am getting along first rate with my new rig I bought of you. The New Model is a daisy In all khuls of grain. The Canton Monitor walks away with any engine In our iicighhorhnod. We did not lose ten minutes' time since we started to thresh. We have given better satisfaction than any otiier steam thresher In this r-ighborhood. Yours truly, JOHN HOCK. Washdubn, III., September 5, 1888. Messrs. Stenyer dt Sharp. Otmtlemen— The Canton Monitor Engine we bought of you gives entire satisfaction. It runs our Now Model Separator to perfection. We can beat anything In this neck of the woods for threshing. I> D, CLARK, THOMAS McKEE. Grundy Crntkr, Ia., November 13, 1883. Messrs. C. .iultman ct Co., Canton, O. Gents— I have run one of your New Model Threshers this year, sold by George F. Wass, of Grundy Center, I)wa, and will say that It ia a good machine, and does good work, and s.'vvos grain the best of any machine I ever saw. I think that it beats any- thing that I over saw run for threshing grass seed, and would recommend it to all wanting to buy a thresher as beingtho best machine in the market. I have threshed eight falls, and with about as many different machines. Respectfully youi-s, ROBERT BARTON. Tooelk, Tooblk Co., Utah Ter., November 6, IH8.3. C. Aultman (t Co. Gentlemen— In answer to yours in your Inquiry os regards tho machine which I purchased of your agent, George A, Lowe, I must say that it is the boss machine, according to my judgment. I bought the Miller New Model Improved Vibrator. For durability and economy and power of work it has not an equal in the section of tho count ry wherein I reside. It has met with the favor of the farmers. It has thrown all other machines out of employment. It has taken the field, and to my judg- meht it is the very beat macliine in the country. With respects, I remain yours, P. De La MARE. i )ber 3T, 18M. (xlttl Macbfiit) Lli all kliiiU of icvm" mxw any ) run tliu Nuw at I «w«>r law lliuro U any ri 7 himn l,n« 116 with your 1 over saw, It it tliu table to M. WOODS, bcr M, 18M8. itxacn of your OHs work. We had no trou- DHMIDT. '8TEKMAN iber 3, 1888. I am Retting >u. The New iiton Monitor Wk did not ih. We have 'eaber in this riN HOCK. ber 9, 1888. ught of you Heparator to he woods for C;r.AUK. VS MoKEE. >er 13, 1883. lers this year, and will Hay 8.1 vo 8 grain it beats afly- d, and would •eingtho beat lis, and witli BARTON. ber 6, 1883. y as regards , George A. irding to my led Vibrator. t lias not an . It has met ler machines to my judg- la mare. C. AULTMAN & CO., STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. :i7 SviiM, LmAxox Oa, Pa., H«pt(iinbor I!), two. C. AuUmnnACo. Deu- Sir-Mr maohln* li aa foUom ; Flnit, Canton Monitor Engtoe No. «, and Mcond, at Inch Miller'* Now M<>(l«l Vibrator. I am Twy mnrh pleased with thla mochlnn. I can thresh from 3(Xi to 400 tmaheia of wheat in a day, and cltianiw U flt for market It gtren entire aatliifactlon In quality, quantity, tx-on- omy, durability, and very little repairs. Ucorapeteasiioc«mrully with any machine of the saino size tu thresh clean ami f ant. It il approTMl by all my patruus to uxool any otlwr foroleauinx. Youiii niHiiuctfuily, DANIEL KUNK. HnwKi.i.vnj,a, Oblawahb Co., Pa., September 1, 1883. C. AuJtman <* Co. Dear Sirs— The Ohorso Engine ond 8Hnch H«'parator I pur vhnjKd of your a^nnt, n fov/ mouths ago In all that you claim. It Aiyea Its work well, and wherever It has bi'i-n usdd has given per- fect satlsfacUon. Yours truly, EM UN 8TACKUOUBE. Olymk.v, Smith Co., Va., Ootober 10, 1883. R. F NlchoU, Kiq., Marion, Va. Dear Sir -In reply t« yours just at hand, will say, after test- ing the No. 4 Now Model and Horso Tower we purchaiiHl froiu you and manufacturod by the old mllahle firm of C. Aultmaii & Co., of Canton, Ohio, vto find them to be all they claim It ^\■n.^ lata in August when we raoelved It, and we run It 81 days with- out losing one hour, making an average of 810 bushels per doy. The crops In this community were small; we put down at one pUce for 8'4 busheUi. Our patronsnre well pleased, and say they never had their work done better than we did It, ond as to cleaning. It was good enough for any market. We can, in }.rood grain, thresh 1V< bushels per minute, and we believe wo con take our team and thresh as much, and clear more money than we could, if we hod purchased an S-horse engine. We think It is the best, and ore certainly glad we bought from you. 'Vours very resi)ectfully, •A. J. HUBBLE, n. IIAXMEN, II. T. HUBBLE. Uay, Qasoonadh Co., Mo., October 28, IMS. O. Aultman db Co., Canton, O. The New Model Thresher wa bought of your agent, H. W. Stoenner, In 1883, wont through two seasons. In 1882 we thresh- ed ivith It nearly 40,000 bushels of wheat, and the last season 85,000 bushels, and wo are proud to soy our customers are well pleased with our work, and we have no trouble to get work for our machine. W. C. 8CIIULTE. "'^ C.ROBERSON. ED. WILEMAN. Hitiwouo, Jbffkbson Co., Mo., October 89, 1883. Messrs, Aultman <6 Co. Sirs— The New Model Machine bought by us Itasbeen running thr«e years with the eicoptionof some "changes in Seporator and now splices, which naturally wore out. It has not cost any- thing for repairs, doing very good work for threshing and cleaning. The Canton Monitor Engine is all that a man can wish for. We have moved It over roads that were considered too rough for wagons, without any trouble. We have not had a minute's delay with it. I consider the Canton Monitor the safest andthJeaslestto manage both in movin,' and threshing for a man who is not a practical engineer. We can do more thresh- ing with the same amount of fuel and water than with any other make. We remain respectfully yours, JOHN CARREY & CO. Engines, which I hove operated the post two snaaons with en- tire satisfaction to inyself nnd customorw. I have no hesltatioti In sayln.t that they are the most durable and tutC Iday s this fall and earned Sl,S80, and the price for threshing has been two cents per bushel for oats and four cents for wheat. Wo have often turned out over 1,1C0 bushels of wheat a day, which is at least 200 bushels more than any other machine in this section has been able to turn out per day. Wo have not had a s'nglo breakage Oi .toppage' the whole season, and havo not expended one solitary cent for repairs, ard will conclude by saying that although we have seen a good many threshing machines in operation, and ran various I:!iids for the last nt'teeii years ourselves, wo never saw a mate to the New Model as a fast, clean, and steady thresher. Respectfully, JOHN & ANDREW -WEBSTER. Windsor Mills, / ;iitabula Co., O., Dec. 21. 1883. C Ajilfman tt Co. Sirs— Having bought one of your New Model Threshing Ma- chines, a 30-iuch cylinder, of .1. M. Walteis, of Caiardon. I can say it does its work Iho best of any machic that 1 1; ^ve ever run, and I have run six different machines ; my customers were well pleased with its work. It beats them all for nice work. Yours truly, B. F. BRIGHAM. U.Mo.v CiTV, Tknn., Deo. 14, 1883. Messrs. C. AuUman d> Co., Canton, O. Dear Sirs— I purchased of your agents, Messrs. Haydeu & Barrj-, of Union City, one of your S-Horse Separators, and can truly say I fmd it perfect in every respect ; it lias given entiro satisfaction. I remain, vvy truly, POLK CARTER. SALisnuttY, Md., Aug. 2, ISSy. Isaac H. White, I ::'i., Salisbury, Md. Dear Sir— The Kl-llorse Self-Steering Monitor Engine, and No. 7 New Model Threslier and Separator vi' purchased from you is catistaotory in all respects. The Aionitor is safe, convenient, and handy. Wo can go anywhere that a yokj of steera can travel. Woiiave threshed 500 bushels of wheat ready fur mar- ket and moved four times in ona day. Givo us tlie straw and wo can thresh v.\ first class stylo 1,000 to l,20:j bushels in ten hours. We shall be ready to start our saw mill on or before August 18. Respectfully, • JAS. A. TRAVER8. FRANnr? .1, FVANS. Hexdhtobdiio, Belmont Co., C, Nov. 8, 1883. Messrs. C. Aultmun dt Co, We bought ono C-iforsa Engine nnd one Now Model Separator l^'o. 7. W o • Qentlemen— We are pleased to say {he No. 7 New Model Thresher and Separator purchased from you last March, fills th3 bill completely. We havo all the work wo can do at better prices than our competitors. Our No. 10 Monitor Engine which wo bought of ycii two years ago is now asgood as uev/. It has not costusacopp.r for repairs so far. Tlie steam rig is ps- teemed by a'l v.e havo done work for as the best in our county. Wishing you abundant success. Yours truly, S»JiIL. J IIOPiaNS&BRO. Hudson's Mill, Va., July 26, IK'TJS. Sfr. Hugh W. Uatthexns, 113 Co. It gives us pleasure to testify as to tho merits of tho li-Horso Traction Monitor Engine, and Miller's New Model Thresher and the saw mill bought of your agent, W. C. Petty. We gave entile satisfaction, doing the work as rapidly and as well as a:iy thresher in the country. The mill does its worka.s well as any mill can; it is simple, e£ sUy handled, and is durable. In fact tlio v.-.iole rig is an exceptionoily good one and in our opinion can- not be excelled. Yours respectfully, B. TRH'LETT&BONS. C. AuUman <& Co. Cisco, III., Dec. 7, 1883. In answi r to your inquiries aliout tho Separator, ivo would say that it runs nice and does as good work as any one in use. It doe;; perfect cleaning and does not back lash any at all. Beaters do not wrap any, and it is i aaily handled. Yours truly, AYERS & REEVES. PiuA, Smithviuj£, GnAHAM Co., AuizoNA Ttii, Nov. Sa, 1883. Ma)srs. C. A^Utman d: Co. Dear Sirs— I will say for the New Model Tliresher, it has no equal tliat I havo yet seen for rapid work, thorough cleaning, and giahi saving. I have seen nearly all kinds of threshing inachiii-a at work and liavo owned different kinds, but none equals the New Model Vibrator. I remain yours truly, 3. D. HOLLADAY. Jn. ♦ K f of foi bo thi in (lai \ ha' no\ tha .sat Mei SI Flii clee roc< als« goo f Nor. 8, 18S3. del Separator I represented, have threshed !sota Chief in tlie bi'st woric 9 run i)Ui' ma- . We're run- , while other real£8 and re- 3ur machine Wo liavo set utes, while it going to buy- make. Y & LYNN, uly a 1,1883. It. Farmers , HUGHES, .ug. 9, 1883, New Model It March, aiht 1 do at better Sngino which new. It lias im rig is ps- our county. KS&ERO. dy 26, lfj::3. Iiresher and •hoofl In the n TOO to W er Machhu>, ly yours. ITUIWON >v. la, 1883. tho la-Horso hreaher aud 3gavQuutu'e well OS a:iy I well as any . In fact tlio opinion caii- r&B0N8. ec. 7, 1883. ir, wo would ' one in use. 1 any at alL UEEVES. V. Hi, 1883. sr, it has no ;Ii oleaning, if threshing Is, but none ruly, iDAY, Jn. AULTMAN & CO^,STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. ♦ K I f IL ^^"'(?""* * *^' Hancock. Minn., Nor. 18, 1888 ,.f, J.?,, ^^'^.°^^',S''??'^*°''a"^ Monitor Engine that I boucht foH3?fhTA£;«^;^T"??'r^ "' HancoolJ, Ls more th^ S* bouLht 1 wlC?ar»„f^i'l,'",^.Hf'^ "«.^°°^ '"^«'- "^s i' was when th^fttie that C« fh^*? ^^^^ **'^'"1''' "°'« ""-eshing engine lu in na ^n,t,i „i^i , »* "freshed as much as ray Monitor Las that is m ns good order to-Usiy and without repairs o , ^ CD. OIDDINOa. 89 Fahoo. Dakota Tbh., Nov. 30, 1883. haTiThr^h^'°^A^T Model Separator purchased of you we nevir w^kPd ^,^h''"„*M"' "^ ,«■■*'" *"i.''.'"» '"e season. We °ork wTth the N^ M ,? »'V""'''''^' machine before ; but our th„« o^ir .u New Model has given much better satisfnctlon ^H^fl*"?*?'^®"" "!?«*""« '" the "Jim River Valle-," and wo mo .satisflecf that we have the best machine In the market C. W. & D. N. SICKLES. C.Aultman A Co., Cantwi, O. Kekpvillk, Pa., Nov 28 188.T Havmg used one of your New Model Separate -s, 33- nch cylin- der, also one of your lO-Horso Traction Etfglnes, the past soasoS I cheerfuUy give my testimony In favor of both, as superior to any I have ever seen or used. The quality of work done is ex- cellent as those for whom we have threshed can testify Be- low I give you t he names of a few farmers who say t^y are con- vmoed that our machine can't be boat. Farmers. J. B WICKWIRE. W. RANDALL. Engineers. WILL N. FROST. E. E. KEEP. Me^Tc. S^Sf-^fe^"" °°- ^'™' F«^"'ary3, 1883. l?ihi!i^™f il*^ "*^®J Thresher we purchased of W. H. Shaw Fhnt, gives good satisfaction. It beats anvthinff we ever sW r^^S^^ { I* "■ '^i''" ^^^^^ machine we ev«r saw or used We W;'W. STEELK L. E. SHERMAN. Clio, Brown Co., Tex-vo, Jannarv 24 1883 i,,IJ*™yi'!!^i"~/'^*"f^°'"S,''®P'''"'"»''"y thresher and I have lost my book of repaira. Please send me, by return, a book of MP?*r°J,*^f New Model End shake, I bought one of yew New Models, 24x:M and have run it !ast year, and my exnense for repairs was $1,36. For good work I shall run ft SsTany ^^}^^^^IP^\ up, I have run eight different makes, but for good and fast work give me the New ModeL Yours truly, G. P. COLANDER. C. Aultman * |^«™°^' S-'-^'^a Co., Pa., August 23, 1K3. >r^*.'^*"u?'"1"'J,.*" "***« *" yo" oir surprise at your New Model Combined Thresher and Clover Huller. As a ijrain thresher, It is perfect and can't be beaten; and as a clover huller, it excels any regular huUer we have seen. S. E. PAWLING H. MOYEa OUR STACKER— Easily placed in position for work or transport by one nan. \ 40 ^^^^^^ ^ ^Q' STEAM THRESHING MACHINERY. ^ THE NEW MODEL IN CANADA tho foSriMlMZSZT^''^lti:'7l^^^^^ '' Cf-^'*' -« hereby informed that supoHorit, ot- our .acI^rii^reTe^fU^^^^^^ Ti,„ T f Irl'^./'ir ^'O'i'*'"'. OndYn the United States. The Hall Company I .;vo been makinsrsonie very Inter- esting tests, to a.scertain the r.-al merits of the macSno m a p.-ftii. saver. A platform wvis built at the ron r of the machine w.tl, a slatt.',l bottom so that all the straw fell upon the slat^; ?,V't?'\'*'™"f *i ^Z '?^* * ".in '=°"''l stand on eithl^side of the fin th^"'l.'''j?'"' ,*^^ ^*"' '^"' °; "^« •"■•»"'• «° "« t'> allow it A >!S^.!. "* ■'''. " ? s'a*f . throwiHK tlie straw over on tho ground t^^P.E^'' 'm?** '"""^ "/"'"^ the platform, and under tho hoppern faiinfng-miU was placed, -rfien fifty bushels of train was threshed, beginning at the rate of sixty bushels an hour, and wiirkinK up to one hundred and twenty bushels per hour After threshms: fifty bushels at each of the varies sK, the giSfn U'™*^?^^?'"''"?,:'",'" ''""' '■•••••"'«'' "P »"'< weighed. It can be f^aruy seen tnat in this way a test caubemadewhich will indicate ex- actly the quantity of p;rain which would be liable to go into the straw stack. Ten tests I were made only a I short time ago, I nnd the worst re- sult was a loss of five ounces of wheat ill thresh- ing ten bushels, which was equal to a waste of one bushel in nine- teen liuiKiredand twenty. Tliis is a truly wonderful result, and i - valu- able because the test was made in ft most thorough and systematic manner. Allhinds of grain have been tested, and the re- sult was equally satisfactory. ,> Jnti!'i° ^""'^^ Catalogue of the Joseph Hall Co. aro o,t«r^. y^^'^P^'^'l^'T^ of mechanics and fanners of H^lfA«?', M 'I^'*'^ ^P^"'' °^ the New Model in the highest possible terms. We append a few samples : ./o.ep/1 /Aa« ManT, Co.. Osi^Tat it cannot Ikj l>eatas a s^p. a -ator, It separa es the grain from th(! straw wonderfullv ancl tliero s no fanning-mill that ever I saw to clean anvkhi.? of grain like .t ; no waste of any kind of grain I can Kh very Yours very truly, JAMES ABM8TK0NG. T!^ Jo^rphnall Manufacturinr, C^.^S^' ^"^^ '' ''^^^ t,rhnf,ZL^^' '""'" V""f'""^ '•■'■'' With my New Model Vibra- toi bought from you la.st .season, and it is a iierfeet success I t(K.k out the lower sieve, leaving i„ only the large sheeTLn xJ,>h H,!!!"'.']'''?'' punched in, and then put in the new Eit^nston "wK™"?'' holes in, which you furnished me. ^^^wnsion fw.SfV.f' °"t nl* the concave teeth but one row and have &'Jo1^'f'^m?"e1i\?otr' ''"''' °' ^'^ '^^ '^ the e"a?fre'r^ most successfulUresher I have ever operated ' ' '^ ^^° Yours respectfully, WILLIAM COWAN. neJom>h nan Manufacturin., Co.'^SJ,^"'"^ ^*"- '' ^«*^ f ,,r T^iriT?~"*T'".^ properly tested your New Model Separa- tor I feel It is my duty to write to let you know how 1 like it nnrt what th.jfarmenUhlnkof it where I have b^n threshing i am an old thresher, and have hail twelve machines of different kinds before I bought this one. As a thresher it is tho fastest machine I ever had; no man can feed it down. Wo can run with twenty pounds less steam than any other ma- chine I ever had. Secondly, as a separator from tlie straw it is perfect, not one grain having iK'en found thrown out yet, and as for cleaning grain, the farmers are taking it to mar- ket from the ma- chine. Tlie fiiim- ers here say it is the most perfect machine they ever saw, and off.,.. ,., K„ .1 7 , ; they are running af tei u.-, by tho dozen every day. while others are laid up The farmers sa,y there will be no other machine running but your Now Model Vibi-ator for the next five years Yours very truly, CIIRISTOPHEK L. UOODMAN. Tj... T 1. T^T „ ,r u, , . ConTMBtrs, Dec. 7, 1883. Ihe Joseph Hall Mamifactuniig Co., Oshawa Gents -The 3(»-inch New Model Vibrator Uiat Mr. Dryden and I purchased fro.n you is giving us entire satisfaction. It is easy indrauglit. thj-eshes clean and quickly, and we believe that it is as goodaniacliineasiJossilily can beinade for the purpose. \nv person wishin,- to hear anything further about the Nt-w Jlodel Vibrator we wiU gladlygivo tliem any information they desire. Yours truly, SAMUEL HOLM AN. T ~_,i. IT .. ., >. . . „ Tai-ntoh, Dec. 12, 188a Jcseph ifnJl Manufacturing Co., Osluxwa Gentlemen--We have now thoroughly tested our Now Model ViDrator ,and 10 Horse Pitts' Power which we purehaseil of you dunngt us .season, and are ple!v.s<>d to say that it ^'ives us un- qualified satisfaction. It threshes the grain out of Ihe straw completely, and saves every kernel of it more succes.sfully than any other machine wo have ever seen or u.sed. It cleans the grain almost fit for market. In this respect it is sumrisingly aliead of alt other threshers and cleaners. It is light on the horses, does not get out of order, easily managed, and in all re- stx'^cts IS a (Treat step in advance of other thn'shing machines Youat^> at liberty to refer any one tons who desires to know our opinion of the New Model. We purchased the machine al- most eiitiriily fort he use of ourselves and a few neighbors, and ore well pleased with our purchase. Yours truly, WILLIAM LANDER JOHN LANDER. M