The RURAL NEW-YORKER 
977 
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Cold winter nights when the 
winds were howling 
T HEN the house shivered in the blasts. The frost 
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crept in and made you all gather close in the warm¬ 
est room. And that room was none too warm. Though 
you heaped more coal or wood on the fire it didn’t do a 
bit of good. The house was cold and uncomfortable. 
All that happened NOT so long ago. You can’t 
have forgotten the discomfort of it yet, even though 
today the world is once more full of warm spring 
sunshine. 
Other winters are coming. The same old bitter winds 
will blow again. The same old trespassing frosts will 
steal into the house again. 
And when they do, are you going to stand another 
winter of discomfort? Are you going to stand another 
winter of hugging the fire? Are you going to stand 
another winter of cold, chilly rooms? 
Or are you—when it is so very easy—going to have 
all the nice comfortable heat you want, and be able to 
laugh at the wind and the frosts, with the house as warm 
as toast? You can do that with an Andes System One 
Pipe Furnace. You can have one installed complete in 
just one day at practically no expense and with none of 
the usual confusion of tearing open walls and floors to 
put heat pipes in. And think of this: every day you 
use an Andes, it will save fuel money for you, and will 
give you the glorious warmth of summer sunshine on 
the coldest of winter days. We always guarantee that 
an Andes will give perfect satisfaction or will be taken 
out and the money refunded. 
Isn’t that a proposition worth looking into? Just 
recall last winter’s discomfort. Then send us the coupon 
below for a free book that tells all about the Andes. 
Send for it today. 
PHILLIPS & CLARK STOVE CO., Inc. 
DEPT. R GENEVA, N. Y. 
Manufacturers also of the famous Andes Stoves and Ranges 
SYSTEM 
ONE PIPE FURNACE 
Better Heatingfor Less Money" 
Gentlemen: —We are heating our 
house of eleven rooms with one of your 
No. 240 One Pipe Furnaces. Every room 
is comfortable and we use much less coal 
than we ever did before.— George B. 
Otto, Boiling Springs, Pa., March 11, 
1919. 
11 
“Now it’s spring we 
must do something. 
We can’t stand 
another winter with 
the house so cold.” 
