# 1>1X DOT Y 'S w )W AND CHURN POWER. -♦-•- "It is wrorth One Dollar per ^veelc in. any inamily."— iV^. T. Tribune. said, of itj^^-^Moore's JSural New Yorker It really merits all the good tliat can l>e ^5 -yi . sc -o / yr-.-i SEPTEMBER, 1865. M. €. BUOWNING, General Agent, 347 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Press of WrsKoor & Hallsb»iick, 113 Fulton Street CLOTHES WASHER and CHUi PDWER I THE MOST POPULAR, BEST AND CHEAPEST WASHING MACHINE EVER INVENTED. It is EASY to OPERATE, TAKES BUT J.1TTLE JtOOM, is VERY DURABLE, is CONVENIENT in EVERY RESPECT, is a GREAT CZOTHES SAVER, AND HAS BEEN IN USE LONG ENOUGH TO PROVE THAT Tlie Longer it is Used the Better it is Lili^ed. It is the best tiling ever got up for Washing Wool, and is highly valued by Wool Growers for that purpose. It makes Churning, with the good old Dasher Chum, FIVE TIMES EASIER. " The proof of the pudding is in the eating," therefore READ THE TESTIMONY of such reliable and responsible men as Prof. E. L. YOUMANS, SOLON ROBINSON, ORANGE JTJDD, And nearly all the Agricultural Editors of the country, who have given it thorough practical tests in their own frmilies. In 1860, first premiums were awarded this Washer by the New Enyland Fair, the Penn- sylvania State Fair, the Wisconsin State Fair. Family Size, $12 00 Hotel Size, - $15 00 Family Size Washer and No. 2 Universal (Cog Wheel) Wringer, $20 00 AAr.A.Ilie,^«i.3srTEID TO OI'VE S-A.TISI^-A.CTI02Nr, If properly tised. Any person purchasing a Washer of us at retail price, may immedi- ately return the same and have the purchase price refunded if, after four weeks' fair trial, according to the Directions accompanying the Washer, it Fails to give Satisfaction* On receipt of Price fi*om places where no one is selling our Washers we will send to nearest Railroad Station, Free of Fz-eight Charges. Orders should give Post Office, County, and State, and nearest Rail- road Station. ni nf CongresB, by R. C. Browning, in the year 1865, in the Clerk's " - ■ ourt for the Southern District of New York as i ^ ^ ^ DOTY'S CLOTHES WASHERS ARE IMMENSELY POPULAR. They have earned for themselves a popularity which has never before been attained by any Washing Machine, and sufficient time has elapsed since their first introduction to prove that they are not of the class of implements which people go into ecstacies over for a short time, then cast aside. THE LONGER USED THE BETTER LIKED. We have abundant testimony, from persons who have used Doty's Clothes Washer more than a year, that after long use they value them even higher than at first. Among this testimony we refer to the recent statement of the venerable Solon Eobinson in the N. Y. Tribune of June 17, 1865, that, with a good wringer attached, this Waslier is worth a dollar a week in any family. This was after nearly one and a half year's use, in his own family, of one of the first of these Washers made, and one which was in several respects quite imperfect and inferior as compared with those now offered to the public. By referring to our testi- monials it will be seen that THE LEADING AGRICULTURAL PRESS UNITE IN PRAISING THIS W^ASHER. Agricultural Editors well know that, as a class, the wives of farmers generally are overtasked, and especially on washing day, and naturally have been on the lookout for something to render household work less fatiguing. Wo therefore refer to the praises bestowed upon Doty's Clothes Washers by the Agricultural Press with no little pride, believing that it will be appreQ].ated by the intelli- gent portion of the community. IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENTS. It is one thing to make a good thing, but much better to make a good thing that will stay good. One of the "good things" about this Wjish er is the spiing power which does the greater part of the lifting or raising of the handle-frame ; but it has cost a vast amount of study, dis- appointment, and vexation, to say nothing of hundreds of dollars of expense, to learn how to make this good thing stay good. This, by recent improvement, is at last accom" plished. Other improvements, calculated also to insure greater durability as well as symmetry and ooavenience have been made. WHY ARE THEY NOT MADS LARGER ? The Family size is large enough to wash six shirts at once, or a good sized bed-quilt, which is the largest article ordinarily to be washed, and the bulk of a bed-quilt (large and small articles are washed together) is as much as a wo- man's strength can operate at a time to advantage ; thci e- fore it is as large as is really necessary for general family use, and any increase of size would make it heavier, take up more room, cost more for transportation, and render it more liable to injury from larger surface to sluiuk and swell. The Hotel size does the work much faster, but re- auires more streiigul* CHURNSMG IVIADE EASY BY DOTY'S CLOTHES AVASHER Notwithstanding the multitudes of devices for icndeiing churning expeditious and easy, the old-fasliioned dasher- cliurn is still almost universally in use. It is simiile, dur- able, easily cleaned, and makes good biiUer^-not greasy, or oily, as is apt to be the case with those patent churns which bring the butter quicker. But it is very tiresome to operate the dasher churn in the usual way, on account of having to lift the dasher at almost arms' length. Doty's Clothes Washer is now found to be capitally adapted to save this hard work. By attach- ing the churn dasher to the handle of the Washer, wliich is done by a thumb-screw attachment furnished for the purpose, the spring power does most of the lifting, the body is at rest, and the power is applied almost directly under the shoulder, saving the arms' length strain. Thus churning in a good old-fashioned dasher-churn is render- ed more than five times easier, without additional expense. The washer is well worth its price for this alone to those having much churning to do. " SHOULD WE BUY THIS WASHING MACHINE?" This is a question which will present itself to people generally, and, without wishing to intrude, we take the liberty of ofifering a few suggestions. The first question to be decided is, whether the machine is a good one and can be used to advantage. The abun- dant testimony of prominent persons contained in this circu- lar ought to be sufficient to settle this question, yet we have such confidence in the machine that we and our can- vassers are glad to leave it, on trial, with any who wish to thoroughly test it before purchasing. IT PROMOTES HEALTH BY SAVING LABOR Sometimes persons who acknowledge the excellence of our machine do not purchase, because they have * ' plenty of help and can do all their washing without a machine, " or " have not much money to spare." To such we addres this circular. Suppose you had half a dozen boys, would you throw the reaper or threshing machine aside, and harvest your grain with the cradle or scythe, and thresh it with the flail, just simply because you had ' ' plenty of help ?" No . You would either buy or hire a machine, because with it the work could be done so much quicker and easier. Then, so you should with the washing machine, for you certainly do not wish to have your wife, daughter, or servant stand for hours at a time bent over the wash-tub, with aching back and par- boiled hands, and breathing the steam of the hot suds into her lungs, thus endangering life and health, when, by 6 getting a machine that will do the work so much easier and quicker, those evils may be avoided. IT MAKES MONEY BY SAVING CLOTHES. But there is another feature of this machine which per- haps you may overlook ; that is, * ' The Great Saving of Clothes." When you see this machine in operation, please notice the gentle manner in which it handles the clothes, contrast it with the nibbing and scrubbing of clothes on the wash-board, and then remember that nearly if not more than one-half of all the clothing you buy is worn out in the wash-tub, and you will see the vast importance of this consideration. It is the opinion of all who have used Doty's Ma- chine any length of time, that, even in medium-sized families, it will save the price of itself in the wear of clothes in six months, and will last many years. Then if you have not money enough to spare to buy a machine, certainly you have not the money to spare to buy extra clothes that will amount in a single year to double theprice of the machine, and to six, eight, yes ten times its price dur- ing the time it will last. Therefore the only true answer to the foregoing question is : Yes ; Every Family should have this Washer ! We contend that there are few, if any other, ways in which either rich or poor families can invest the price of this Washer to as good advantage as in securing the Clothes and Labor-saving aid it is capable of rendering. To those having wool to cleanse or churning to do, its services are still more valuable. 6 A GK50D WHINGER SHOULD BE USED WITH EVERY WASHER. We fumish the famous "Universal (cog-wheel) Wring- ers" attached to our Washers when desired, charging the manufacturers' regular rates extra, (No. 2, Family size,) $8.50. The "^Universal" is the most durable and effective Wringer we have seen. With the Wringer clothes can be wrung out of boiling hot water, which cannot be done by hand. Is it wise to go on rubbing and twisting clothes to pieces — wearing them unnecessarily enough to buy one of these Washers and a good Wringer every few months ? Is it not better to save the clothes, save labor, time, fatigue, save the health and strength, and lengthen the lives of wives, mothers, and daughters, by a timely investment in these machines ? ►-♦-< TO PURCHASERS OF DOTY'S CLOTHES WASHERS. The greatest difficulty with beginners is in not having their suds hot enough. It should be really boiling hot. ' * Boiling hot ! ' ' exclaims some startled housewife- " you'll not get me to pour boiling hot suds upon my clothes !" So you should not in Aanf?- washing ; but machine washing is quite different. Do you suppose the wives of those persons whose testimonials are given in our circu- lar do not Jmoiu whether washing by our directions injures their clothes? They are sensible wives, and capable ol judgmg what is best for their clothes, yet they use hot suds. They once had the same prejudice against it to over- come, but have learned wisdom, and would now say : "Not use hot suds ! Do you think I would have my clothes rubbeil to pieces insuds 7iot hot enough to dissolvethe dirt andgreasc, when, with ;^ the aid of Doty' s Clothes Washer and boiling hot suds, the work is BO much easier and quicker done, besides the saving of clothes?" Go according to the directions in every particular as they do, and all will be well. You cannot have your suds too hot. Full directions for using accompany each Washer, Perhaps it will be objected that there is some hand- washing. True to a very limited extent ; but a sewing machine, for instance, will not do all the sewing on clothes — will not baste, sew on buttons, etc., yet no one wisely rejects it for this. It will do the great bulk of sewing many times faster than it can be done by hand, and therefore is a great Za6w-saver. So with these Clothes Washers ; they can be made to cleanse all, ^cc£pi now and then a streak, mang times faster than it can be done by hand, with easier labor — (far less exhausting^ because the inhalation of steam, and a bent position, are almost entirely avoided) — and far less loear of clothes. Therefore, they are both labor-savers and clothes-savers ; hence Rev. Mr. Mabon justly pronounces them a greater benefaction than tJie semng machine. Machines constructed to wash by rubbiiig prove failures because they must xoear clothes, and besides, must either wash so little at once as to require even longer time than hand- washing, or must work so hard that women in general can- not operate them. This is iDclieved to be tlie true reason of the universal failure of washing machines hitherto offered to the public. With these Clothes Washers the requisites for making ^Yus]ling easy are : Thorough soaping and soaking of streaks hot and strong suds, kept covered with the lid, right proportions of suds and clothes, to have the latter turn readily yet not float too much : and a motion of the lever or handle that will beat, squeeze, and turn tliem wdl. 6 TESTIMCOIVIALS. From "eat, squeeze, and TUISM the clothes, at each stroke. ICeep tBac Saids as Mot as Fos- silise, (except for fabrics liable to fade which should be left until the suds are partially cooled.) Change the suds when dirty, or too cool, and be sure to use 0001> SOAP. After all the clothes are washed tlirough and wrung out once, look them over, keeping- tliein a§ hot as 15 pos§ible to prevent shrinking of fibres and "setting" of dirt, Boap the dirty places, and proceed as before, bear- ing in mind that the hotter tlae *ttads nud. tSie clotEses are kept, the more eassly asid tiior- otigflsij tBae worli -will fee dorac. f^Two per- sons, one to sort the clothes and soap the " strcalis'' wliile the other works the machine, get along to the best advantage because there is no delay to cool the suds or clothes. If any parts are not clean after second washing, finish by hand. It is not necessary to boil clothes. Rinse and bluo in the Washer. The clothes are always kept on the grooved side of the swinging-board. The handle sides out, and the movable slide on top of swinging-hoard is to hold it fast to rub out streaks. If the Washer leaks or checks at first, wash right along, with dishes or dirty clothes under the leaks. The hot suds will soon tighten it. g^ Try sitting down on front end of cover with back to the Washer and handle frame passed down over the shoul- ders. This is the easiest posssible way to operate it, especially for children. Avoid sudden freezing of the Washer when water-soaked. Keep a little water in the tub when not infuse. Should the cover or any other part swell so as to bind, shave off a little . FOLLOW THESE DIRECTIONS and we guarantee you will like the machine. If the direc- tions are not followed, THE GUARANTEE IS FORFEITED. 16 SALESMEN WANTED TO SELH. The high testimonials by persons of national fame which have been bestowed upon this machine, render it easy of introduction into families for trial, and it is very rare that a housekeeper who tries it two or three weeks will dispense with it, if the purchase money can possibly be spared. It will certainly do all that is affirmed in our circular, if the directions be strictly followed ; and the saving of time and labor becomes apparent on the first trial. In every town of six thousand inhabitants there are about one thousand families; and an energetic agent, by securing a trial in a majority of those families, ought tc effect at least four hundred sales in a few months. At first this business will require time and special atten- tion ; but by first introducing the article into influential families and obtaining their recommendations, the public soon become familiar with their merits, and buy it as they would an ax or a saw, without trial. Many Wringers also can be sold with the Washers, very materially enhancing the profits. There never has been so favorable a time for this business as the present. Money is plenty, business is active, labor is high, the price of farmers produce is reasonably large, and the high price of cotton and woolen goods makes the SAVING- OF CLOTtlllSrG- a prime necessity. Besides, the introduction of Reapers, Mowers, Sewing Machines and other labor saving imple- ments, have taught people the folly of relying exclusively on the old systems of hand labor, and inclined them to look with favor oq inventions which show for themselves, and by the testimony of those who use them, that TMiY A\Ki MQ) MyBI®i@. Those who purchase machines for their own use are pre- ferred for canvassers, as they can speak of its qualities un- derstandingly ; but it is not always convenient for such to attend to it, and we give the EXCLUSIVE RIGHT OF SALE to the first responsible applicant who applies. The saving of both clothes and labor is really a great desideratum in every family ; hence it is not assuming too much to say that the introduction of Doty's Clothes Washers into a neighborhood is a piMic benefit, well worthy the at- tention of public-spirited and philanthropic persons. The testimcnials in the circular were given so freely and emphat- ically commendatory for this reason. The business is pleasant and healthful, and if properly pushed by a competent and energetic canvasser WILL PAY WELL. Dealers who have a good place to display the machine, or who will send them out on trial, are supplied where no canvasser has been appointed. A single Washer will be sent free of railroad freight charges on receipt of retail price. For wholesale terms (which are liberal), circulars, &c., ad- dress as below, giving plainly the State, County and Post Office address. Persons in Wisconsin, Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota, Kansas and Nebraska, address JANESVIIiLE, WIS. Persons in any other of the United States, address iJ. O. BROWNING, General Agent, 347 BROADWAY, NEW YORK LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 302 4 i ^7 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 182 302 4