Tie U K A L NEW-YORKER 
855 
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Seems like some folks are crazy to buy a furnace 
inJune, I said- but next day I bought one myself 
I 
“ What kind of a contraption you got there?' 
THOUGHT I 
had a good laugh 
on a neighbor of 
mine one day just a 
year ago this June. 
I stopped him in the 
road. “What kind of 
a contraption you got 
there?” I asked. And 
when he told me it 
was a furnace, I 
laughed at him. “Seems like some folks are crazy to 
buy a furnace in June, of all times,” I said. “What 
do you want a furnace for now?” 
Next day, I happened to be driving by his place 
and I hollered to him, “How’s that furnace?” 
“All set up and ready for next winter,” he hollered 
back at me. “Come in and see it.” 
So I went in, though I didn’t have an idea but 
what the furnace was still crated up out in his wagon. 
I was wrong. He took me down cellar and there 
was the furnace just like he said, all ready for use. 
“Seems like some magic’s been happening around 
here,” I said, “but I’ll bet it’s not connected up with 
the house yet.” 
“Yes it is,” he said. “There’s only one register to 
put in, and that’s all done. It only took about eight 
hours to do the whole job, and I don’t have to worry 
now about keeping warm next winter. I got it off 
my mind. I’m all ready for the first cold day next 
fall.” 
I began to get interested and asked questions. 
First off I asked, “Won’t it make the cellar too warm 
to keep vegetables in ?” He told me why it wouldn’t. 
I wasn’t absolutely convinced then, but I’ve since 
proved it myself. With a roaring fire in the fur¬ 
nace, you can put your hand on the outside wall and 
it will be cold. 
He showed me a book all about the Andes called, 
“Better Heating for Less Money.” I sat down and 
read it, because I was beginning to recollect how 
cold and draughty our house 
was last winter, and how we’d 
made up our minds not to 
stand another winter like it. 
And we didn’t either. We 
bought an Andes right away, 
and the result was that this 
winter we’ve been as warm and 
cozy and comfortable every 
day, no matter how cold, as we 
could possibly wish. 
An Andes can be installed 
complete in just one day with 
no confusion or expense of 
BETTER HEATING 
for LESS MONEY 
/mzs 
ONE n PE FVRXACE 
He showed me a hook all 
about the Andes.” 
putting in heat pipes, and it saves fuel money every 
day you use it. The efficiency of a one pipe depends 
ONE PIPE FURNACE 
“Better Heatingfor Less Money” 
upon circulation, and 
the circulation de¬ 
pends on the inner 
casing. The Andes 
has the best type, 
the dead-air-space 
type, which keeps 
the circulation always 
at its best. It saves 
coal because it is a 
Won t it spoil the vegetables in the cellar? ’ 
one pipe; it saves 
more coal because it has this kind of a casing. The 
Andes is guaranteed to be absolutely satisfactory or 
it will be taken out and the full purchase price 
returned. 
The water pans in the Andes hold 8 gallons of water 
and have an evaporating surface five times larger 
than in any other furnace. They are placed low down 
where the water never gets hot enough to boil, so 
that no steam ever rises into the rooms, but the air 
takes up just enough moisture to make it healthy. 
A house that is heated with dry, burned air is 
bad for the health, because in winter when you step 
out of the house into the humidity of our northern 
winter air, the sudden change, almost like stepping 
from the equator to New York at one step, is so 
great that colds and catarrah are easily caught. 
The Andes One Pipe 
i! B jfyUf gives the air in the 
0 //$ home just the right 
amount of moisture 
to guard your health. 
It is a fact that a 
room heated to a 
temperature of 68° 
with moist air is more 
comfortable than a 
at 75 0 with 
room 
One of 50 houses in which F. E. if F. W. 
Wells, of Greenfield, Mass., installed Andes 
One Pipes. They write , “ The houses have kept . , , 
very warm, even at 20 and 30 degrees below dry, burned air. It 
i,Mts usine very UuU coa! " not only increases 
your comfort, therefore, to heat your home with 
Andes One Pipe moist air, hut it 
also cuts down your coal bills. 
If you are interested in comfort¬ 
able, money-saving heat fot next 
winter, now’s the time to send for 
our book, “Better Heating for Less 
Money.” Send today. 
Phillips & Clark Stove Co., Inc. 
Dept. R Geneva, New York 
Makers of the famous Andes Stoves and Ranges 
* I hillips 6 c Clark Stove Company, Inc., 
I * Dept, r Geneva. N. Y. 
Gentlemen: 
| j|i . * n 1 t f jreste d i/ysaving fuel money. Please send me your free, 
I 
Dept, r t Geneva, N. Y. 
... , , nterested in saving fuel ^ 
illustrated booklet called “Better Heating for Less Money.’ 
| NAME. 
I ADDRESS. 
6 i STATE... 
