Outdoors Yet Indoors 



IN an effort to solve the fresh-air prob- 

 lem for city babies several enterprising 

 inventors have devised arrangements 

 whereby youthful Americans can be 

 given all the fresh 

 air they need and 

 given it in perfect 

 safety, at the same 

 time allowing their 

 busy young moth- 

 ers plenty of time 

 to do housework. 

 As a result, manu- 

 facturers have al- 

 ready produced for 

 the market tiny 

 sleeping- porches 

 which can be 

 placed outside any 

 window. 



An iron brace 

 capable of sustain- 

 ing a weight of 

 five hundred 

 pounds pre- 

 vents the porch 

 from falling. 

 Moreover, 



stout braces anchor the cage to the 

 side walls in such a way that the strong- 

 est of winds are robbed of all danger. 

 Another feature of the miniature sleep- 



One hundred feet in the air — a sleeping-porch for babies 



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