314 
You can be comfortable 
is Moncrief furnace heated- 
S UPPOSE the thermometer hits zero and the winds blow a gale, that 
Moncrief Furnace will keep your house well warmed, without drawing 
excessively on the coal pile either. You will have abundant heat, made health* 
fiul by proper moisture, and extra big casings assure absence of floor drafts. 
For thirty years Moncrief Furnaces have been 
maldng homes cheery and pocketbooks happy. 
The best of materials and unusually good con* 
struction make Moncrief Furnaces the biggest 
value per dollar you can find. Made in Pipe, 
Pipeless and Majestic-Moncrief, and in all sizes— 
there is a Moncrief exactly suited to your needs* 
If no Moncrief Dealer is near 
you, write our distributor regard* 
ing details of our special propo* 
sition. 
Distributed by 
E. L. GARNER 
177 23 rd St., Jackson Hts., Long Island, N.Y. 
F. H. HANLON 
Batavia, N.Y. 
Made by 
The Henry Furnace Si Fdy. Co., Cleveland, O. 
MONCRIEF 
FURNACES 
Pipe - Pipcless -ThreePipe - Majeslic-Moncrief 
Post Your 
Farm 
and 
Keep Trespassers Off 
We have had a new supply 
6f tresspass signs made up. 
This time they are made of 
extra heavy linen on which the 
lettering is printed directly. 
There is no card facing to be 
water-soaked by the rain and 
blown away by the wind. We 
have had these new signs made 
up of extra heavy material be¬ 
cause severe storms will tear 
and otherwise make useless a 
lighter constructed material. 
We unreservedly advise farm¬ 
ers to post their land and 
the notices we have prepared 
comply in all respects with the 
law. The price to subscribers is 
95 cents a dozen, the same rate 
applying to larger quantities. 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST 
461 4th Ave., New York City 
^GENUINE KID 
COMFORT SLIPPER 
99 
7*^ ARE bar gain in 
uine black vici-kid with flexible 
hand turned good-wearing 
leather solea 
and smooth in- 
ner soles. Rubber 
heels. Si7es3-1 
Wide Widths 
OrderNo. 
1 —, POSTAGE u money ■— 
check accompanies order; or you can PAY 
POSTMAN on delivery plus postage. Mentior No. 0X273, 
size and width or all numbers in shoe you now wear. 
Money back 
promptly 
if notde 
lighted 
Free Catalogue of wonderful values in men’s 
o ** women’s and children’s shoes 
^ N ,1 ER o SO, i. SHOE CO - lnc - Dept. 8R3 
102 Hopkins Place Baltimore, Md 
Stops 
COLDS 
La Grippe 
Influenzal 
Pneumonia! 
Keep strong. Be 
healthy and free from winter complaints. 
Hill’s Cascara Bromide Quinine is the 
quickest acting, most dependable cold 
remedy. What Hill’s does for millions it 
will do for you. Get red box bearing Mr. 
Hill’s portrait. ^tLLVTbce 30 cents. 
VV*^ (C-201) 
CASCARA Jl QUININE 
W. H. HILL CO. DETROIT, MICH. 
You can be quickly cured, if you 
j\ 
m Send 10 cents for 288-page hook on Stammering and 
'M Stuttering, “Its Cause and Cure.” It tells how I 
Iff cured myself after stammering 20 yrs. B. N. Bogus, 
• 5127 Bogue Bldg., 1147 N. ill. St., Indianapolis. 
'STAMMER 
PARKER’S 
HAIR BALSAM 
Removes Dandruff—Stops Hair Falling 
Restores Color and 
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 
60c. and $1.00 at Druggists. 
Hiscox Chem. Wks.. Patehogue, N. Y. 
Girls! It’s Yours 
BIG MA-MA DOLL « 
SWING AND GLASSES 
Yes, it is yours! Just think! This 
big, beautiful Ma-Ma Doll withglaxses 
and swing. She talks, walks, sleeps, 
and winks. Over 15 inches tall. It’s 
yours for distributing only 25 pack¬ 
ages beautiful Post Cards at 10c 
a package. It’s easy.because every¬ 
one buys Post Cards. Extra prize for 
promptness, so mail your order for 
Postcards Today, NOW.Ssnt Postpaid. 
SUN MFG,C0,Dept ssi Chicago 
American Agriculturist, November 1, 1924 
Plant an Indoor Garden 
Now Is the Time to Prepare for Winter Bloom 
I F there is any time in which we 
long for flowers, it is during the long 
winter months when all out-of-doors is 
bleak and dismal. 
November sounds the knell of the 
flower season. A few chrysanthemums 
still bloom in the garden, but, with the 
first frost, they, too, will have vanished. 
This then is the month we must think 
of our indoor gardens if we would have 
springtime indoors. 
There are so many attractive flowers 
which can be raised in the house—the 
hyacinth, the tulip, the scilla, all too 
well known to be described. In their 
brilliant reds and pinks, they add a 
pan and half-way over the edge of the 
dish. 
For the nature lover, the woodland 
bouquet is most attractive. This is made 
by taking a small fish globe and filling it 
with all sorts of sweet-smelling, woodsy 
things. For example, moss, carefully 
arranged, in which is planted the graceful 
partridge berry vine and the delicate 
trailing arbutus. And, if one cares to 
achieve a more artistic result, a few pieces 
of bark covered with lichens may be 
added. 
The care of such a globe-garden is very 
simple, water being needed only every 
six weeks or seven. While it lasts (and it 
PATTERNS FOR JUNIOR, MOTHER AND BIG SISTER 
No. 2110. Blouse with sur¬ 
plice closing. Sizes 16 years, 
36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches 
bust measure. Size 36 takes 
lyi yards 40-inch xcith . 1 
yard 20-inch contrasting 
material. Price 12c. 
No. 2249. Combination in 
long-waisted style. Sizes 16 
years, 34, 40, 44 and 48 
inches buk measure. Price 
12c. Embroidery transfer 
709,15c extra. 
TO ORDER: American Agri¬ 
culturist patterns are seam-allow- * 
ing and guaranteed to fit. They are 
up-to-date, yet simple enough for 
the busiest woman to use. Order 
several at once for your winter 
needs. Write name, address, size 
and number clearly, enclose correct 
remittance and mail to Pattern 
Department, American Agricul¬ 
turist, 461 Fourth Avenue, New 
York City. Coins sent at your own 
risk, stamps are safer. 
Have you seen our big new style 
book? For every design on our 
pages there are dozens in this useful 
fashion guide. You need it on your 
sewing table. Add only 10c to your 
order and say “ send me my copy of 
the Fall and Winter Catalogue.” It 
will go to you at once. 
No. 1354. Slip-on House 
Dress. Sizes 36, 38, 4 0, 42 , 
and 44 inches bust measure. 
Size 36 takes 3fi yards of 
36-inch material. Can be 
used as all-over apron. 
Price, 12c. 
No. 1681. Play suit forboys. 
Sizes 2, 4, 6 and 8 years. 
Size 4 requires 1}4 yards 
36-inch material. Ideal in 
khaki for the boy ivho is hard 
on his clothes. Price 12c. 
No. 2209. Slenderizing 
Dress for stout women. 
Sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 
and 48 bust. For size 36, use 
4 s /i yards 40-inch material. 
Price 12c. 
touch of sunshine to the most somber 
room. 
Another favorite with all indoor gar¬ 
deners is the dainty crocus. An acquain¬ 
tance of mine who grows especially 
beautiful crocuses, has formed the habit 
of saving all odd-sized pewter dishes. 
In November, she fills these dishes with 
crocus bulbs, the number depending 
upon the size of the dish. Inside each 
pewter dish is a garden seed pan in which 
the bulbs are sown irregularly, thus in¬ 
suring a more natural and a prettier 
effect. The seed pan (and this fact is 
one to be remembered) stands on a few 
sections of cork. Through this method 
of planting, the bulbs receive plenty of 
moisture and, at the same time, are 
never water-logged. Later, when the 
crocuses are ready to bloom, the seed 
pan can be hidden most successfully with 
fresh moss arranged in such a manner 
that it is half-way over the edge of the 
always lasts more than a year) it is 
beautiful, odorous and cheerful. What 
more can one ask of an indoor garden? 
Those who are adept in the art of 
gardening often grow orchids to ad¬ 
vantage. These plants, however, re¬ 
quire broad, spacious receptacles which 
take up a great deal of room. They also 
require a special method of watering and 
are not readily grown by the amateur. 
For first experiments, it is better to 
choose the simple plants and then, as 
one’s knowledge of gardening expands, 
choice of plants grows accordingly. 
The main thing is to have an indoor 
garden—crocuses in a sunny, bedroom 
window, a box of yellow tulips in the 
library, a nodding, fragrant bunch of 
hyacinths in the dining-room. These 
plants are the ones which bring spring¬ 
time indoors while winter is still without. 
Start planting them this month!—I. R- 
Hegee. 
