RURAL. NEW-YORKER 
1573 
October noons are warm enough- 
but well say October nights are chilly 
W HEN the wild geese fly south, when the chopping 
of an axe in the quiet woodlot can be heard a long 
way off and the bright October days are warm 
only at noontime—then you know that winter’s just around 
the corner, limbering up his muscles to have a bout with 
your heating system. Frosts and snow will come tumbling 
over the hills in earnest most any morning now. Take a 
warning from the chill in the air. Is your home going to be 
comfortably warm and cozy this winter? 
No matter how intense the frosts, no matter how bitter 
the cold or how the wind blusters, an Andes System One Pipe 
Furnace will keep you warm and happy. It isn’t too late, 
even now, to put one in, because an Andes can be put in 
complete in just one day. If you start putting it in this 
morning, say, why by tomorrow morning you can have a fire 
in it taking the chill off the house. 
Because an Andes can be installed so easily, because 
there is no need of ripping open floors and walls to put in 
heating pipes, because the Andes saves from one-third to 
one-half on the fuel you used to burn, it is a mighty econom- 
icnl furnace, and ii lasts for years. 
We guarantee that if your Andes does not give perfect 
satisfaction it will be taken out just as soon as the weather 
permits, and the full price returned to you. 
Don’t delay. All nature knows winter is coming and is 
taking pains to keep itself warm. Send in the coupon today 
and get the free book about the Andes. 
PHILLIPS & CLARK STOVE CO., Inc. 
DEPT - R GENEVA, N. Y. 
Manufacturers also of the famous Ancles Stoves and Ranges 
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. 
