EXHIBIT 99


Cautionary Statements Pursuant to the Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995


The Company wishes to inform its investors of the following important 
factors that in some cases have affected, and in the future could affect, 
the Company's results of operations and could cause such future results of 
operations to differ materially from those expressed in any forward looking 
statements made by or on behalf of the Company.  Disclosure of these 
factors is intended to permit the Company to take advantage of the safe 
harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. 
Many of these factors have been discussed in prior SEC filings by the 
Company.  Though the Company has attempted to list comprehensively these 
important cautionary factors, the Company wishes to caution investors that 
other factors may in the future prove to be important in affecting the 
Company's results of operations.

Cyclical Demand -- Demand for new equipment manufactured by the Company 
tends to be cyclical, responding historically to varying levels of 
construction and industrial activity, principally in the United States and, 
to a lesser extent, in other industrialized nations.  Other factors 
affecting demand include the availability and cost of financing for 
equipment purchases and the market availability of used equipment.  Company 
management continuously monitors these and other factors that affect demand 
for the Company's equipment.  However, predicting levels of demand beyond a 
short term is necessarily imprecise and demand may at times change 
dramatically.

Consolidating Customers Base; Rental Companies -- The principal customers 
for the Company's new equipment are over 130 independent equipment 
distributors that rent the Company's products and provide service support 
to equipment users. In recent years growth in sales to equipment rental 
companies has outpaced growth in direct sales to end users resulting in 
equipment rental companies comprising a larger share of total sales.  At 
the same time there has been substantial consolidation in ownership among 
rental companies resulting in a more limited number of major customers 
comprising a substantial portion of total sales.  Unanticipated purchasing 
decisions by any of these major customers could materially affect overall 
demand for the Company's products and the Company's financial performance. 
More generally, during recessionary conditions, demand for equipment by 
equipment rental companies typically declines more sharply than demand for 
equipment purchased by end-users.

Manufacturing Capacity -- Despite continuous improvement programs that have 
achieved substantial improvements in manufacturing efficiency and 
throughput, the Company's ability to meet additional growth in demand for 
new equipment is constrained by manufacturing capacity limits.  Long lead-
times required to fill customer orders is a negative factor in the 
Company's ability to compete for new business and subcontracting costs 
incurred to increase capacity affect profitability.  The Company recently 
acquired an 109,000 square foot manufacturing facility which, when fully 
operational by year-end 1996, should alleviate capacity constraint for 
scissor lifts.  However, capacity to manufacture boom lifts, which comprise 
a larger percentage of sales, is becoming increasingly limited.  Given the 
cyclical nature of demand, this investment, or other capital investments to 
acquire additional lift manufacturing facilities involves significant 
risks.

Product Liability -- Use of the Company's products involves risks of 
personal injury and property damage and liability exposure for the Company. 
The Company insures against this liability through a combination of a self-
insurance retention and catastrophic coverage in excess of the retention.  
The Company monitors all incidents of which it becomes aware involving the 
use of its products that result in personal injury or property damage and 
establishes accrued liability reserves on its financial statements based on 
liability estimates with respect to claims arising from such incidents.  
Future or unreported incidents involving personal injury or property damage 
or unanticipated variances between actual liabilities for known incidents 
and Company estimates may adversely affect the Company's financial 
performance.

Availability of Product Components -- The Company obtains raw materials and 
certain manufactured components from third-party suppliers.  To reduce 
materials costs and inventories, the Company relies on supplier partnership 
arrangements with preferred vendors as a sole source for just-in-time 
delivery of many raw materials and manufactured components.  Because the 
Company maintains limited raw materials inventories, even brief 
unanticipated delays in delivery by suppliers, including due to labor 
disputes, impaired financial condition of suppliers, weather emergencies or 
other natural disasters, may adversely affect the Company's ability to 
satisfy its customers on a timely basis and thereby affect the Company's 
financial performance.

Foreign Sales -- A growing component of the Company's business has been 
export sales to Europe, Latin America and Asia.  Maintenance and continued 
growth of this segment of the Company's business may be affected by changes 
in trade, monetary and fiscal policies, laws and regulations of the United 
States and other trading nations and by foreign currency exchange rate 
fluctuations and the ability or inability of the Company to hedge against 
exchange rate risks.

Competition; Continued Innovation -- The Company faces substantial 
competition in the market for its products and some of the Company's 
competitors are, or in the future may be, owned by larger enterprises that 
may have greater financial resources and offer wider product lines than the 
Company.  Throughout its history, the Company has devoted substantial 
resources to product development and has generally succeeded in being a 
market leader in introducing new high-reach products or incorporating new 
features and functions into existing products.  New products introduced 
within the prior two years account for typically between 20 and 25 percent 
of product sales in current years.  The Company also holds certain patents 
which it believes are valuable.  Successful product innovation by 
competitors that reach the market prior to comparable innovation by the 
Company or that are amenable to patent protection may adversely affect the 
Company's financial performance.

Unanticipated Litigation -- The Company occasionally has faced 
unanticipated intellectual property and shareholder litigation which has 
involved significant unbudgeted expenditures.  The costs and other effects 
of any future, unanticipated legal or administrative proceedings may be 
significant.

Dependence Upon Key Personnel -- The Company believes that it has developed 
a strong management team which intends to continue the Company's growth and 
profitability.  However, the loss or unavailability of certain key 
management personnel, principally L. David Black, the Company's Chairman of 
the Board and President, could adversely affect the Company's business and 
prospects.