At last I have found a useful premium 

 that has the added charm of novelty. 



Did you ever wake up in the night and 

 wish that you knew what time it was? 

 Perhaps you must take an early train, or 

 get an early start to town. You wait to 

 hear the clock strike, and go to sleep 

 while you are waiting — perhaps oversleep. 

 It may be so important to know the time 

 that you scramble out in the cold, fish a 

 match out of your clothes, find your 

 watch, and learn that it is only two 

 o'clock. You go back to bed all waked 

 up — perhaps it is an hour before you go 

 to sleep. Perhaps you are caring for a 

 sick person who must take medicine at 

 stated intervals, and you must either 

 keep a light burning, or else strike a light 

 every little while. In short, where is the 

 person who does not sometimes wake in 

 the night and wish he "knew what time 

 it was?'" 



There is an easy manner in which this 

 can be accomplished, and this is by the 

 use of a "Search Light" clock, the face 

 of which can be lighted up instantly with 

 a tiny electric light, by simply pressing a 

 button at the end cf a cord. Inside the 

 clock is a dry battery that furnishes the 

 electricity. The clock may be set upon a 

 chair, or table, or bureau, or shelf, any 



place where it can be seen from the bed, 

 and the little wooden ball with the button 

 in one end placed under the pillow, or 

 laid upon a chair by the side of the bed, 

 or in any easily accessible place. When 

 you wake in the night and wish to know 

 the time, simply press this button, and 

 the face of the clock lights up instantly. 

 The figures are large and clear and the 

 time can be told clear across the room. 



But this is not all. It can be used as 

 an alarm clock. There is no alarm to 

 wind, as in the ordinary alarm clock. 

 Simply set the little hand, in the upper 

 part of the face, at the hour that you 

 wish the alarm to go off, and turn the 

 little switch at the right of the face, and 

 when the hour arrives, the bell will not 

 only ring, but it will keep on ringing un- 

 til you get up and turn off the switch. 

 It won't ring a few seconds, and then 

 stop and allow you to go to sleep again. 

 It will ring all day unless you turn of¥ the 

 switch. 



There is still another use to which this 

 clock can be put, that of a call-bell. It 

 can be so arranged that the pressing of 

 the button at the end of the cord will 

 cause the bell to ring. Suppose a person 

 is sick, the clock can be placed where 

 the nurse will hear it if the bell rings, and 

 the bulb with the button can be under 

 the pillow of the patient, and he can 

 press the button any time the nurse is 

 needed. 



Aside from all this, the clock is an ex- 

 cellent time piece. It keeps even time 

 with my $55 Waltham watch, which 

 does not vary a minute week after week 

 when compared with the regulator 

 clocks at the jewelers'. The clock is 

 finished in what is called old copper, and 

 is really a handsome piece of furniture. 

 The battery will last, probably about two 

 years, possibly three, and when it be- 

 comes weak, a new one can be bought 

 for 25 cts. at any hardware store, and 

 even a boy could put it in place. 



The price of the clock is $3.50. but by 

 getting them at wholesale, I am able to 

 send the Review free for one year to the 

 man who buys one of these clocks. That 

 is the Review one year, and a clock for 

 only $3.50. They will be shipped by 

 express from Chicago, charges to be paid 

 by the purchaser. Tha charges on mine 

 were 55 cents. 



Wo Zo HmtcliiliisoEio Flintp MIclie 



