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T T T T L S L ' __ THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY JUNE 12. 1887..TWELVE PAGES, = ' ROSE ELIZABETH CLEVELAND | e tecwerest.cionciag, wosh: | THE - ELECTRICAL WORLD, | iaimhasthe tom o camdie-vower. | pasenger ses and » compmaion v | IYNEN'S HAPPIEST BOWERS, T o e what pronounced, and their tournures meanin, on% light of the usual effic- | occupies a closet bullt on one side of tho was only one spot where anything like n t were extensive and voluminous. They iency, from 01,000 candle-power by | baggage section of the car next to the flat dancing floor could be obtained, and | The President's Sister Enlisted in a Crusade muknhm[y intorest in the ceremonies | Digoovery of a New Foros, Which is Prac- | direct measurement.” gntrance to the smoking apartment. | Where the Husbandand the Wife Daily Add | the winning party at once ge- 3 Against Man's Horrid Habits. and seemed to b s much swayed by ically T 1t 18 quite possible, therefore,that it re- | There are sixteen incandescent lamps to Strength to Their Bond of Lova cured this cnviable position, while gaing L curiosity as the humble women with ba- tically Tested. ducing 1ts price more than 60 per cent the | car, arranged on each side, while ex- = the others had to put up with an inclined bies in their tired arms who stood — company proposes to compensate itself ]u-nmouls have also been made with a s plane or a few hiMbcks accident- CHO RUS GIRLS AT EVERGREEN | against dhe ropes and stared ABOUT ELECTRIC LIGHTING by reducing the candle power. 'Lhe ex- | huge 64-candle power incandescentlamp | AN ODD WEDDING INCIDENT, | ing the ballroom» floor. The ten to six« about them in undisguised wonder. istence of this possibility makes it worth [ in the baggage car, which is not con- teen couples belonging to each weddin, To the chorus girls as to the i M. fiwin Booth i while for l'elr«lvil. riml other ‘l\li«'lflgan sll_;lt-rn-(l n“prnv(i('?l or El(‘onollli(“:ll light. party ml‘v inclosed in a ring of b; ll:lm . Dedication of the Actor's Monument | gencral crowd Mr. Edwin Booth ywas the | o, = . | cities using the Brush light to inquire a | The small incandescent lamps of sixteen- | Fidgety Husbands—A Wise Youn, s, each rival band of musie ‘playing —Edwin Booth's Dignified Fall— | center of attention, and when that digni- New Uses for Electricity~Train Light little more carefully than they have ever | candle power, and differ from those on Wifo—Some Marriage Customs— 8 | awa y with heroie disregard }nr the 4 fied gmrxedhm threw up his hands con- ing—Plano Tuning by Telephone done ns yet into this matter of ‘‘candle | the Boston & Albany train in the con. R scorched ears of the listencrs, “‘Polkal™ eboed Feopte 8t the Opers vulsively and went down with the col- —Electric Locomotion—Tele- power.” The lights in this city, like | struction of the film, which is of carbon Marrying to Avold Banish- calls out the first groun; “Walzer!" roars Clara Belle's Letter. lapsing platform, there were not wanting graphic Habits. those in New York, have always hevq ized silk instead of bamboo fiber. Few ment=Connublalitics. the second, for 1t is a point of honor th fair singers to shriek in momentary terror X spoken of as *'2,000-candle-power-lights.’ lest the great ornament to the American people have noticed the huge cable con- It there is as little reason for calling them | cealed under the car which gives power each party’ should display a noble inde- 5 \ - pendence in taking its own line of action; New York, June 9.—[Correspondence | stage had come to harm. But it was to | Practical Tests With a New Kleotrical | 5o as there appears to haye been in New | to the dynamo, and the machinery runs Besat of Friends. and if, out of mere conincidence, two of of the Bek.]—All the week and industri- e noticed that although they uttercd Force. York, the city ought to know it. The | almost noisclessly. _Charlee L, Dean the bands happen to strike up the self- ously, too, I have beew studying the pub- lbn]mn jorjen ;;l fright their rosy checks | Now York Tribune. The latest impor- | knowledge might be of service in con- ¢ Oh, br‘:‘!_lgilmmh Wwho taught me how to | same tune, one of them is sure to change Yo manners of girls. It was not o chean | {00 eaimo to. singing tho “Hallcly. | tant advance in electrical scienco has | tracting for strect lighting, kbl ALR AL Who taught mo what no other friend could | poometiitie totaily difforent as soon as {t i awure he rtunate ake— Messiah,”” | been made by C. Langdon-Davies,of Lon- ebbictias L i ||r{"|u!-‘(?¢:?‘|u:'(’fl': fi?é‘v"?l'.ni"fi?f\‘{15%",‘3;5:' 1€ God Would give me whatso'er 1 wishied, c x‘:‘r”“"l',""i:‘; ot produced by this they attended sirictly to business,and the | don, who succeeded in utilizing for tele- [ S0 long ago as May, 1881, an_electric | vifo'avory moars of esoape and 1l the s 1 sk for you ' | system haflling all deseription, *“Ihat 18 grand old composition was rendered | graphic purposes u form of eleotric force | tramway opened near Berlin, and traffic | yiogt eloctrical alarms to notify guests | .. A nothing at all” said the worthy pastor, with an eftectiveness well worthy which can be separated altogethor'from has been regularly carried oun during th‘c of impending danger. Had not an elec- | Kings might wear crowns,with richest jewels | from whose garden I was overlooki ng high rank, Few oratorie soc 3 six years without a mishap of anyimpor- | yieal" fro.alarm communicating _with set the ne, laughing at the evident dis- promiscuous excursion, but on a private yacht, which conveyed a party of sc- lected swells . regatta, thiat I had one opportunity to study an enamored pair. If their names were here written down, jah” chorus from Handel's ety And statesmen gain the praise to greatness ) twice a8 many voices could the ordinary clectric current and which | tance, although the average speed is | thCd H & W {olte may with which 1 endeavored to s that of the fellow would be recognized | ace with the power and precision. both ass freely tarough insulators im- | twelve miles an hour and 100,000 passen- SYCES roow i the house of the Rich LI e et Rk B e Slgiie tok ton from his father-s wealthy prominence, | of rythmical accent and enunciation of seable by currents, Among other 1 annualiy. The line has | ponioned ‘the guests, the loss of life AR fad i {f“'zr)’ou_“o“ baALAL weddings at a time, each with their own and the maiden’s would be synonymous | words, that these professional comic | thingstelegraphic messages can be trans- garded more ns Perl | would have been at least five times as fiddiers, That is something worth hear itude v opera chorus singers did. Not a false 1 s06ivo inary | ment than asa type to be permanently | oo g wi ;vm;' social :Slzlmm-,. They calmly sat | BECt @ onation marred. the perforn. | Mitted and recoived through an ordinary | SERL SR TG F RYRD o be BRFERRCTE ity R for hours in blisstul unconsciousness of ance, and the girls had reason to feel | line wire, while at the same time othe | difterent kinds of gearing have been of the “Hess system,’ of the fire call the fact that the cabin full of passengers | proud. So did the three score, plain [ telegraphic messages are being trans- | tried, not for a few months, but in reg- could not save them ail, but, as the tes- were laughing at them. She lay back in ookilmz. plainly dressed, undistinguished | mitted and received through the same | ular work for several years in order to % ho ro voul 8 sofa chair i a languorous attitude, | gentlemen who s £ T timony shows, what the result would | Andwhen our souls had bade farewell to ng with them. | wire by the ordinary telegraphic appara. | test the durability of the mechanism | 1 vo Been without such an invention is earth, with her head pillowed on some shawls, | These were chorus singers also, but | ;s The instrument which seeures these | #Povted. To obtain u higher degree of appalling to contemplate. ‘That such a | And in immortal lands did live an ew, So rapidly did the house l‘n\fl: n(ngm :lmt?z ll;hlnr{':-‘hmmy tlyowcrs. ing, indeed!” s Instantane . Artists portray its beauty to our view, the instantaneous alarm | oiiF Rl \ttie us falker Spot. by tat, My house with you. Marrying to Avoid Ranishment. London Standard: The case of the no- torious Mlle. De Sombreuil came on for hearing April 30 before the French court of appeal. After having been expelled r wi ir last summer’s straw hats 3 economy an electric motor must run with | ¢t et ¢ J > | 1°d cravi or paradis 3— from France she returned, and, being while he leaned worshipfully over from m:.lxh“(;}l:[‘:-rl'smtt: s“utlhlqnv csou‘lnl ‘rluglt ll|>; é‘i‘.fl results is called the phonopore and when t ni‘m: ity, which must be greatly ;;,f{"','fl.‘ll :“"t‘l]',{,fi“” ;‘,',l{“‘l\f.'; ’;‘i‘“c ?,“ ”i',\ ST "u\":)llll‘:' EJ(&"%;‘.‘J‘}&"‘ b arrested on French soil, hud lu‘-vn con- another chair, and a pretense of | to bear the mark of their profession so | used in connection with the existing tele- | duced by the time its motion is transmit- At L Zing demned by the corrcetional tribunal to every room from the instant the clerk be- P‘I(lgelmbnndl- game aware of the fire, proves that the | (neinnati Enquirer: James Payne Richmond hotel Imlu.q ni'we been even [ yitos: 1 would solemnly warn all worse constructed than the average fire- ah 4 LA 60 ¢ stains b arrangement has not yet A . L s women about to marry to ascertain be- g et | trap hotel. In the absence of fire-proof | forthand that the contdmplated husband hotels, what 1s demanded of hotel men | i 10t what is ealled fidget. A les r is earcful management and the provid: | 1, intemperance may be greatly mitig: q ing of every possible precaution and in o husband by one kecping the cellar snapping at her chin. She caught his ear, at one of those dives toward her,and then he had to hold his head down close noticeably as their companions of the | graph systems will materially in ted to the drivinv’ axles of a tramway sex. I hapoened to ride back to the city | their working eapacity. It waswhile in- | ear; methods of doing that form the sub- inthe same car with five of these young yo.qlu.(l:\ti:)g the lenluc(‘\?n( n\t;lsosl n':u;s(:d ifr(s (I)( several patents, and it may be ; - °0 | women. They sat quietly by themselves, | in telephone wires that Mr. Landon- | that the be: enough 5o that she could whisper in it | pOEEL (LT SOt AN DY LIEISEIYes: | Davies made his important discovery. | been devieed. without lifting her head. ‘Then | yet were the targets for all ey He made the conclusion that the effects ns an easy thing to the uninitiated sho curled his moustache, stroked | passenger got in who did not t n?cr]nbcd !"‘i“d““';"“ ‘.“"'""]"f L‘lVidc!""’“I HEOOF 800 ‘;"'V""l‘)“”“"]"' Tk S"t““l:“ i oe i a glunce that they were stage folk, and | of the existence of a form of electrical | eigl of another; but when it has to be | y 3 ife | 1 i ! m:&h‘ghdfl“tz‘i‘.‘&mhg:"“fi',‘]' m"fifig i‘l:i u,‘;g point recogi ):A od, he m-g,,nc did not [ force which might be separated from cur- in connection with a tram car, _".';‘,Zri(;;lz:’fen;'t:,‘;“:om:lnlc';,mk“ human lifo | ey “"“l not allowing E“‘" any pocket mouth, This last performance gave | take eyes off the girls during the entire | rents and which would pass frecly | ve icle on which space is limited, noise bl A lll()m?);hlll]\hl_m({lmsr‘u f.‘,r being alway them another idea, and she would see | trib. The choristers did not scem to care, | through insulators impassible by cur- | objectionable,and dirt and dust in'abund- Measuring Lightning. before the ‘..‘l"“;‘ it is_difticult l‘,o repre how far into his mouth she could poke | they certamly did not pay attention to [ rents.’ Lis conclusions were justified by [ unce, one obstacle after another erops up | The length of a flash of lightning is Ll LG AL BHIL AT her finger and then draw it out again be- | it, and at the end of the route went qui- | experiments, but it was not until a short | to disapdoint the inventor who imagines enerally underestimated. The longest | 3 ’“‘“'l""“"“‘r-‘h‘f""‘ not be at the church foro ho could bite it. ‘This amused them | ¢tly towards ther respective lodging | time ago that phonoporic telegraphy | he has solyed the problem, On the Berlin- | Known was measured by M. P. Potitt, of | 900F until after the rubrical hour, und for a long time, But the car business | houses, and people passing along the | could be successfully employed. and that | Lichterfeld line one of the cars has run | Tonlouse. This flash was ten and a half | YOUr marriage be "‘s‘ll"’"“‘% for a day, seemed to strike them as the most en- | streets'turned their hewls ton Bhic atthem. | the principle could be utilized upon an | 76,000 miles since the opening, and has | inches long, The longest in. | than that he should prove himself s ?’oylhle way of passing the time, and | “There was interest, too, in the was at the | pulleys on meter shaft and car axles, rval over remarked botween tho | fidget by presenting himself at the altar two months imprisonment, The appeal court reduced the term of prizon to one month, on account of her promise that she would for the future respect tho French law. The court eyident lieved that she intended to ‘quit France A Y forever; but it is said she intends to remain, and, to prevent for the futnre any decree of expulsion being issued ngainst her, she 1s about to make herself French by marrying a French- man. It would be impossible for Mlle. De Sombreuil to act otherwise than in an eccentric manner, so she decided to pay A man an annuity of £48 for the service he would render her b; going through the formalities of marriage. She is said he | existing telegraph line whic ~ & e i rke edi ves i icl before the clergyman or yourself is have receiv i 0! ¢! uring the journey up and,back each one | people on the m tand, who were sup- me time being worked by the ordinary | with 'V grooves in which to run cords of | flash and the revort wag | Defore , I to have receive an immense number of B les eate wis miuriute i ‘many | posed to be eminent, behayed. They | instruments. 4 spiral steel wires. 'This device, it scems, | soventy-two secondy, which would cor- | Feady for him. —Your sclf-love may | applications from men anxious to confer times. The dust that gathered in them | were *‘It will certainly come as a surprise to | works without noise or vibration, though respond_ with a (lfsmnco of fourteen | Suggest that such haste is only | on her their name and with it the much- seemod to have much more attraction JUST LIKE THE CITORUS GIRLS many,"" says the London Times, “to learn | some little difficulty is experienced inad- | miles. Direct researches have shown |th¢ result —of — his cager devotion; for her eycs than_the landscapes, and as | in their cagerncss to see everybody and | that the plionoporic instruments have no | justing the “‘cords™ upon the pulley that u storm is seldom heard ut a greater | P4t ~do not deceive " yoursclves, him, Why, he would have let her pull | all that was going ¢ Thale garononts conducting ciremt through them, but | if too tight they will break at the j distance than seven to ten miles, while | JOUDE women—Le “0"19)‘“’;“"1’00" at out a tooth, and sat through it all with | wereinvariablyimpdsing examples of the | this is nevertheless a fact. The phono- | und if too loosc slip at starting—not the average are baroly heard over four | the chutch equall _e:\rw if it Hind been to the same ccatatic cxpression that rested | bighest stylo.” The " ¢hiackd of most of | pore gives uninterrupted —passage to | advantage, as thut is the most trying mo- | or five miles off. ‘This fact is more curi- | Pury you. Tompkins ““?““,, i 1n many on his countenance all that day. Noth- | them were redder thati the red, red rose | electricul effvcts capable of being associ- [ ment in all gearing driven by electro- | ous, ns a cannon may be distinctly heard | Fespects an excellent *“fi‘b?"l‘“ , and 1 do ing interrupted their attention from each | doubly distilled in carthine. Their cyes | ated with “sound, although it does not | motors. Other devices are employed, | doublo or trebla that distance, and in | Delieve he is very fond of but it is other. If the steamer had exploded I am | were lustrous as diamonds sparkling’ in chm the pussage of electric currents. | such as the pitch-chain, but the spiral | equal cuses much better. cliness first and_feelings' afterward sure they would have been seen flying | scttings of jet. This descaiption may be | In exterior form the transmitter appears | cords scem to be the best. £ —_ with him, [ know. When business calls through the air on the smoke stack un- sumfinslivu of “make up,” and the facts | to be an ordinary Morse key mounted on —_ Electric Light at the Winter Palace. | himon a journey only one eye drops a disturbed. would amply justify it. Those who were | a base about four mehes high. This base Gas ana Electricity. The czar of Russia, at his winter palace | tear at parting with his wife aund off- MISS ROSR ELIZABETH CLEVELAND really nctresses made a curious study ag | contains an instrument wlich somewhat | Boston Herald: While there scems to | on the banks of the Neva, possesses what | spring. ‘The other is fixed on the clock i8 really to become n teacher in one of | they desconded the steps from the stand | resembles an induction coil. Theim- | be no reason why tho gas companies in | is probably the largest pérmanentinstal- | to sco that the cab is sent for in time to the fashionable séhools for girls, and it | 8t the conclusion of the exercises. It is | pulscs are generated in a primary circuit | tho state of Massachusetts should not be | Jation of clectric light ever placed in a | catch the train. That ‘“‘catching the will become her'duty to take her tary | O0lY faIr to say that there were some | of improved construction over which is | allowed to make, distribute and seil clec- | single building. . The palace isoif 8 ilu | train” is the thought that makes him with the rest of the fi“,“"y in lecturing | Who pussed down and disappeared into | wound 1n place of a secondary circuit a | tricity for lighting purposes. 1t should be | minated by 12,000 incandescent lamps, | thin and that keeps him £, Much of his on politeneda¥or belles. I don't knovg the densc crowd as modestly and unob- | phonophore of two wires insulated from | said that the restrictions governing the | while fifty-six powerful arq ight up the | time is necessarily consumed in traveling but she wilFsay some things about men’s | trusively as parsons’ wives might have | each other throughout their entire length | right to manufacture and dispose of gas | frout and the various court-yards. The | but notnearly so much as spent in pre- behavior, too, judging by what she said | done; but the great majority were only | and at both ends, cach of these wires | do not properly apply to the manufac- | machine room contains cight engines, | paring for his journey. The day previous 10 an acquaintance of mine while here. too anxious to pause und pose. Half way | being, however, connected at one end [ ture and sale of electricity for illuminat- | capable of developing 2,500 horse power; | to 4n expedition is mainly occupied n The most unpleasant feature of the | 40Wn the steps naturally brought one | onlyto the line. ‘Their number of phon- | ing purposes. ‘Lhe gas™ commissioners | the dynamos,including reserve machines, ]’E"—' ng his carpotbug and writing out elevatod Tallrond " ahm baid after a ride | into the most advantageous position for | ophoric impulses generated in the trans- | are, with good reason, granted the power | are twenty-six in_number, The work | his dircction labels. He leaves over night on it, is the proncness to expectoration | being seen; she would then be separated | mitter per “second is regulated by the vi | to prevent the establisiment of rival gas | was planned and carried ont by the | 48 in a will, the most elaborate directions that overtakes the male passengers on | from the crowd behind and in full view | brations of an organ reed placed in the | companies in pluces where the needs of | engineers of the palace, in conjunction | for the procecdings of the next morning, the stairways. A journey up .,‘,5 down | Of the crowd below. So nearly évery | primary circuit. "Another reed tuned to | the people seem to be sufliciently met by | with the St. Petersburg house of Siemens | With 2 codicil appointing that he shall the covercd passages leading to the | Womun stopped there on her way down, | the same rate of vibration is placed as a | existing facilitics, for to establish a new | & Halske, and the installation has been | be called half an hour earlier than he at streets from the stations is fraught with | 10oked about over the heads of people in [ receiver at the distant station in front of | 48 company involves tearing up the | at work since the commencement of last | first considered soon enough. ~This last as much danger as going arouna the | 80 imperious way, turned her head | an electro-magnet, and the phonophoric | Streets and putting the people to many | winter. command 1s wholly superiluous, since he es from the transmitter cause it to | inconveniences not at alldesirable,unless always wakes of himself long before the coveted French nationality. In any case it will now be uscless for other Frenchmen to apply, as the woman has made her choice. Her future husband, wkom she has never seen, and whom she intends to see only once—that is to say,at the marriage ceremony before the mayor —is a peasant of seventy-three years, What Brid ds Wear. Harper's Bazaar: Bridemaids at June weddings will wear lace dresses made of the new silk lace in designs like those of the black nmn}uisu laces, and there arc also dresses ol Tlnin Brussels net, of lvoim d’esprit with its tiny dots,of striped ace, of the squarc meshed Russian nets, and of the polka-dotted net with lurge ball-like spots. V-necked, half-low waists gathered on the shoulder top, or else plain to the elbow, pufl there, are the corsages of stich dresses. 'The skirts have two or three flounces gathered all around or length- wise, or else festooned, and Marie Antoi- nette paniers short and full in the hips, with one or two long points in the back. White silk French lace in large rose pat- terns, made over a white moire skirt is a 1) o haughtily back to see if her companions | impul. Blec ! shi T m“g:l?ior éx{l?hucolgmiég t:h(fl;!tvl‘c’;mm: wors (oll);w'm:. and then continued her | vibrato. A new form of contact-breaker, | Some obvious gain is to result as a conse- | ¢ R padiBlenric lf"“h"' » appointed hour'and proceeds to ring the | fashionable combination. Ihe deev scal- men who so outrage decenc; i descent impressively, never deigning to | operated by the recciver-reed, completes | quence. But in establishing an electric | ome time ago electric lights were | house up. Previous to this he has kept | loped laco is dra "f‘l“ L vmu} cover- "This is the season of big sya.shcs Halt | recognize the presénce of the staring | a local relay circwit when the reed is | light plant aunoyances of this kind are | Placed in front of the treasury and other | me from my rest since earliest dawn by | ing the front and sides, while the buck has a lace_breadth in pleats down the middie, with a moire breadth each side of these pleats. turned over at the top in handkerchief points. A bridle of moire ribbon is down the left side of the lace front, and a great chou or loose rosette 18 on the right side. The moire basque is draped with lace, and has a8 high col- dios’ thousands. still, but breaks it whenever the recd [ ot to b anticipated. ~ The electric | public bulldings in Washingion, and a | perpetunlly” getting out of bed to sce :‘h;bl(:;ifipggm:szhfl%%m: 14_";?“33?15':'0‘1‘5 DSoclctK was startled n fow years ngo, | vibrates, thereby setting in action any | light wires are run either over the house- gg:"w\:::;:-agll: h;; l; s u "‘-‘v‘c'l;?“’.i!;“}v whetherit'is going to be finc. Unon this elimbing stairs, a woman catches up her }'h"ndl e Wcll( Known hfilm.nl\ll:u-mn roquibrot'l mstrument 1n connection with :gnint‘);‘\:‘m" ‘l;?‘]fis. :3:1 t]lyl"_um‘?g:‘te;l" Lg::l c“"““i“;‘ Aty hlm,“ 4 NA b fi:‘l;:indh!huwlIlltrcl;l?;ggélsc(x;cca‘t)‘?:(:“y;jlmll[l i ine timos Langdon, gave to youn, r. Belmont | any battery.” e .practica con- LE il H (i : ta s W of con ? :fl'fi.}ffl%fl‘ g;t',f::fie;;g‘s“:w‘égf,,gg 13::: his fi‘eedol‘fi. and declined to renew their K vractical test with the phonopore | Venience to any one, There would seem g:“’iivv"; t'l'f‘b":"“r O{ lh‘e .‘_m{:lil‘m. ’l‘“~= £0 | he does it should be strapped up at once steps behind her. This is an accident to | Matrimonial engagement, after months | was made on_u telegraph line running | to be no more call for the state authori- light, o v ‘.’\nur! ST FL with the other things already lying on the shudder at.. 1s an indelioato. subject to | 9f £00d bohavior and contrition. " Now | from London Bridge {0 Rolkestono. tho | ties to brohbit tho cstablishment of now | light owing to the attraction it has for | hall table rendy for departure; not o mo- write about, but we are forced to con. | another lady, not so well known, buta [ line being worked with the phonopore | and comyeting electric light companies sects, co thel >bs are | ment 1s to be lost. His toilet is hasty 4 i ; bl i rts ck tha o sedy, for in hi or | 1 ire ri Vi bow on the ) ohatming Worin, Koy de A b X ) than to prohibit the establishment of [ in some purtsso thick that portions of | enough, but not speedy, for in his eager | 1ar of moirg ribbox!, with a ) :'I‘:?': it efi?:!’(‘)‘l’:\?cl::dl:g '.oie}ien_ve o | Sharmming bo‘:mfi"h"“::“::a‘:g ‘25“23:.‘5 :;—‘;‘t‘;mm\bvorkivng"oln":lexglliv;g, 118 | W retait orocery. stores, ¥But the same {.hn architectural ornamentation are no | desire on retiring to rest to have every- left side. The full 00 sleoves rlm}flg a focular way,iow she would cure thel:: B | bonds that would have been rivotted by | has four singlenecdle instruments—at | frecdom which onght t be accorded to | longer visible. —__ thing ready for the moraing he has gen- d“i”" for br ‘clun 15" li’“ ifhe “!w"m ©f this habit, 2 | the church next fall. We all know why | London bridge, Nutfield, Shorncliffe and | ll new electric light eompanies should Concerning Candle Power. erally packed up his brushes and comb | color for bridesmalds® cresses, and ap- pears in watered silk skirts and_waists and sashes, with white lace or Russian net dresses, or else it is seen in India silk. for afull waist, and drapery over a cream nainsook embroidered skirt, h a border formed of five or six rows of picot- “1 think g d ith | Mr. Belmont got his conge, but the cause | Folkestone harbor. Two simplex phono- | be given to the gas companics to enter, | Eleetric lights were measured recently | OF some other indispensible “l“"K which s on L disgust e b Ml htroa e e ot || bate o os ke ahe et Tuploxiptiono ] ¢ thoy sec fit, into thismew form of ‘aup. | by Prof. Henty Morton, “of Stevens. in- |\fias tolbe/disentombed from thomortman: they all went in for it themselves,” she | Widely known. It happened in this way: | and the other at Folkestone harbor, were [ PIVing the people with light. It would | siitute of technology, it the city of New o e B Y oa T averignl; n,,{,.d half seriously. ‘“Let women | The lady has her dresses made in Paris, | attached to the line, each by a single | certninly be absurd to tell ‘the gas com- | York, and he found that the best of what il g, remb.e '"l'}*t' L il nerve themselves, and band together for | but_ler most intimate female friend pat: | picce of wi Five experiments were | Panies that because theyi were making | wero' called 2,000-candle power lamps | | LA ‘wt:“ lid bo B S . one week of this business. Chew some | FoRizes a mun dress builder here in New | arranged by Mr. Langdon-Davies and | and supplying the publie with ¢as, there- | gave only a power of 8)0 candles. He | I8 erforming that operation in his dress- edged yellow ribbon an inch wide run | saliva_provoking substance, and go | York. A Saratoga outfit was in process | successtully carried out: (1) A phono- | fore.they were prohibiteii from using | nssumes” that the term_ *2,000-candle | ingroom. e through the open figures of the embroid- abroad to spit about the streets and pub- | Of construction at this establishment and | pore message was transmitted along from [ another light modiume which a_great | power” hus become a_technical expres- An Odd Wedding Incident. ory. Lic places. By Saturday night the papers | the fiance of Mr. Million, (as we will | Folkestone fo London,and there received, | many. people believe to beuperior to that [ sion with theelectric light companies to | Chicago Tribune: An odd incident % ———- uld be full of anathemas, and the of- | hame him) went with her chum for a try- | working a postoflice universal relay and | now employed. denote a lamp of from 500 to 1,000 actual | happened recently at the West Arch CONNUBIALITIES, m.“g the women would be the one | ing on ordeal, During the seance a girl | ordinary Morse sounder; (3) a similar : x candle power. street Presbyterian church, Philadelphia. e bject of conversation. Possibly a re- | from the work roomsentered with a large | phonopore message was transmitted and . New Uses For Bleotricity. Death to Book Agents, There was to be a wedding there at half | Thercis a projeet of marriage betwaen the m by force of example would ensuc.'” [ box containing u costume to get some | received while an’ ordinary telegrapnio | Electrical Review: * “The lghtout-| . o858t Hore ol Kiaagh b past 7 o’clock of a young Iady of an ex- | Princess Louise of Wales and the Grand ‘Women do keep a much higher aver- | directions as to its destination. message was traveling in the same direc- | specding telegraph, ¢ Emerson, in Fe porm @ Srenchman, B | gopsive social conncetion in that and | Duke Michael Michailovitch, cousin, of the age of scemlinass'in public places than on't Jou leave that dress without the | tion Detween, tho same stations; (3) a | one of his poems in 1346, ‘*bears nothing | invented 4 telephone which costs 624 | other churches. There were great prop | C/r. Mike is a pretty zood ieliow, they say. e BanR s Bl or a theatre | bill is paid,” said the proprictor, in a | phonopore meSsage was transmitted and | on its beam’—but it did, even then; it | cents. Wherever the ordinary electric arations, and it so filled the minister’s Miss Lillian Bayard ‘Taylor, daugater of and see the'old boots and wrinkled socks | subdued voice. ‘‘Miss .}ewell'surllel‘ was | received while an ordinary telegraph | bore from city to city at least the market | button can be used the ""efihm’" button | 1ind that he entirely overlooked the fact | the dead poet. Is announced as engaged to maving in the air. Theg are all mascu- | to send the bill to Pine street inthe morn- | message was being transmitted in the op- | price of whisky. And if to such base | can be introduced. It will be possible to | tjat e had an appolntment to marry an- | 940 G. l“' m!'hl‘lml'lu modical student of ‘h‘f n",nfi’nem ‘mien mif dangling a leg | iDg, but be sure and have the dress home ite direction botween the same sta- | uxes the thunderbolts of Jove can be ap- | Zive or receive instructions by it, to | othor pair at cxactly the same hour. Upivoity 0 x""“.{;m,“'lgi""'“{'m‘{;“&'.;" - - a8 if it was a Baby with the stomach | to-Dight. You are taking my orders. | tions; (4) a phonophore message was | plied—thus misusing a force which en- | show whois knocking at the door, to | When a quarter-past 7 arrived, the large | jea for :ylmrnr:’men( et i . 1saw n man the other night with | Youv'e got time to go to Pine sireet now, | transmitted and received between the | Wraps the key to the mystery that lies | communicate, in short, by speaking as | church was as futl of poople as it could | “afiss Ilelene de Rothschild, the only datgh- s (made on the new principle of | and catch him. He'don’t goto his sta: | terminal stations while an ordinary telo- | around the very gates of lite—if the au- | well as by ringing. olomor possibly be, and the pavement on each 3, Paris, In- twenty-one inches makes a foot) and a | bles till 8. raph messuge was being transmitted zll!tli‘:hming! of heaven may be so Telegraphic Habits, Ea o tha projcc‘;mn awning was :fi:rn:x):"t:g lfi.‘:rg"m'.'.fifi“fi"‘{"&n"fls-‘..fii'?:r."n oane as big as his le; The foot *Very well,”” was the reply, “‘will I gelwccn two intermediate stations; (5) | abused, why need any one be astonished i crowded with the non-invited waiting for | youny officer of the Belgian army, The op- R Sk o Toobwas [, [, YOry Nely g phonoporo " messages were frecly " ex. | to learn that among the latest dovices for (ohe other night at a New York bureau | Fro con which th highest to the lowest | position of the lady’s mothier and. pthor. rel- E;' nd the cane was striking the | *I'd rather have the money,” was the | changed between " the terminal points | the amusement an depravity af men bt "‘,;‘r“:{.g,"",“-,‘,‘;,“1’5,';“‘,‘,‘0% telegraph | o joys—a peop at the bride. There wero Siyes willinrureny tig coremony from taking it ToaCLomion L thak 18 VOLY | FOY e bk o | R (b, I, had boon iscontinued at | (und women)is ol ihting b cleeri | Mgk s mows T wad naiea | ¢ lost. iy o snty cyringas i frombof | B : o possesses an immense fortune, and her dot ipulated the key with | the church. Among the, guests iu the | will ultimately amount to $30,000,000, ¢ Al the old foot ca K your business known i 8 was lhl‘ln:.m ":gfl"dmf 32;; 1 big-nosed, tall, thin Miss Jewell | absolutely broken. for such barbaric sport—which would | that while he ma : 4 g is right hand fingers he kept drumming | church were bankers, as, lnwyers, — beat Wus very anxious J at, dress; sh These and similar experiments have | better befit the brutalscenes once enacted | hié rig i H ? i " i i #at next » man who had the jumps ‘;’:l:lv:‘.’"l@m“mefl,%{ 1th" htm, too, I af(,ag:;mcsiggt;k;»i::“;!ié‘b.‘;’m:glek;fl!:‘l‘r;; (-flxi‘x:lx‘:s X:I‘m‘gg‘t"l‘,‘:lsm:‘;‘;‘v‘v‘é‘imggerf‘}{llg':fi: stopped so did the left. After watching | city’'s best social” adll ‘maferial pros. | of the system use Dr. J. H. McLean's ssme night. He would convulse and give a snort, dig his knees Here the convergatién“became indis- | and deputy postmaster general of Aus- | mysterious element that in one_form is th? ‘k‘"lm %"2"’ Izeyl sfiv“rtal 1o r{;‘:.‘,vfnis&:“:m:rffi'nph:w ‘jt:slgmxfi 'g‘m: i’i:_-:?nl’memng Cordialundihidolt Bt the back of thy seat in front of him, | tinet, but > tralia, and Sl Ol k has pointed out | utilized to bring the news of thoperform- [ MelS, @ reporier ventured =—to The juncture bride and bridegroom-elect No. legs, strctch them out till the hats | . THE ENRAGED WOMAN WAS QUICK. many advantages which the duplexing of | ance, was used in another shape one | TG, THt e Semerd voy nervous, The f A FES (AL BOG HOCERIREES OCh o Ais neighbors were kicked into the or. | Her lover's oflice was in Pino street. ' He | a telograph service by adding a simplex | night in the City of Mexico to light up | Qberator smiled, and said suoh was not [ = Who Bas been go to the church, drove . , and then start into the baok of | Went daily to his stables at 3 p. m. His phonopore possesses over the ordinary | the arena for a bull fight. Owing to the | the case, but that B per cont of the male | B¢ bCER T00 9 €0 10, Lo burts, drove : seat in' front again. ‘The oo | fatherhad abeaklike ashovol-nosedshark | dupiex system now in use. The cost of | Rovelty of this part of the performance, | {E\6RTADICES accompany the transmit: | U5 (B & ctlEaRe f9, the, BldS Cook and ~ oupant looked daggars, and overy time 4 | and was tall and thin asa lamp post. She | construction and of working 1s much less | “'an immense crowd’ was sttracted to IDE Haveme "s iaton Ky AAnes 0 thing was a8 quiet as if nothing was going the seat crack [ got nervons | betraved no interest in the scrappy con- | and inessages can be carried cither in the | the scene—President Diaz and the mem- lvl“ ’3'{,81 w‘\’hi’lc o‘t’l N8 ke u! oo ‘:’,: on. Through the door leading from the If. Botwoen acts he went out, and | versation, but as soon her_friend could | same or opposite dircctions. Moreover, | bers of his cabinet being among the [ {he tapie, While othiors tap tho floor with | @1 iR 10 GROF IEHERE trom the ni. he was gone I fixed things for him, | be taken away and deposited at home, | if the line i3 already working either the | spectators. *“The arena was brilliantly t-"c t f,m:i‘ g ,'\,c ope s! o ufpm crowded church, and just then the other availablo pin that put mo together | our elover young socicty lady flew to | duplex or diplex on the ordinary system, | lighted by ten eleotric lights,” and the | I to music. ‘An- gperator cmployed | orojdad ahbreh, and Just {hn the othor took out, and darned into the back of | married friend and iuvited her and her | the phonovore can still be added to it as dazzling blaze scemed to infuriate the "-"- ‘i]l :A'n]x o‘;m"fnm,-lu .?”";,:m]y 1:: by a bevy of radiunt bridesmaids, all in ~ that seat, points up, and an inch of the | husband to take them to the mentioned | if the wire were being used for nothing | bulls. The first one quickly killed four | ¢ s :vl(fl o ahan NI ‘f!-“; i d | golden-colored gowns and precedéd by a . polnt bent over, St. Vitus came back, [ theatre 'that cvening. Sure cnough, | else. Tho phonopores aroZensily worked, | horses and tore open and disabled as | DK bis left hand across his face and | £61SR-CHIORE GOWES ARG PRAsaded by o t an the programme. He danced | from the recesses of the box, which her | and in the trials mentioned the instru | many more, flung one swordsman,nearly ‘1"",1-“ g".l‘ th .Kdoég 'l;ld’ l|er| ope\"itxo,r up the aisle. It was n euriovs surprise | Dis log in the isle, then slouched in nis | party occupied, a close. survey of the | ments was worked at ono station by a boy | dead, over the bars, disubled tho mata. [ LuPHentes thq ots and dashos which | W8 (LG SFEE (€IS £ eRrions Suiprige “sent, 50 that his knees stuck up nearly as | house was unsucessful; but vmsemlly ]lhu of sixteen who had no experience with it. | dor and several picadors, and ramped | (18 AL hanc lorms by wiggiing the h n d A e A Tk \ i N ) nfl! \/ : i i : lobs of his cars with the idle hand. These | about ten minutes the church was empty. ¢ a8 the back of the heavily protected | front of the box opposite blossomed like — around the arena the lord and master of | (028 OF LIS CHIS ¥ 1085 3 While the last of the guosts were going % . He dug them in for a rainute,when | that rose as Miss Jewell, the well known Electric Lighting. the situation. These things are highly fv‘é,'.'.'o'.':'{fi'l'&?;.fin.é'r‘? noticesble among and the sexton wus |)ufiing out the hgh[s X an slipping down he s actress of an Opera Comigue fame en- | Dotroit Free Press: The reduction by = ’lb:,“ mhl,.: h.‘?uoum“l,“" n “;,“cc“‘m: tered Her companion stopped in the | the Brush [lluminating company of its palod on o bug safety pin. That was | back ground, but an animated pantomine | Price_for electric light in New York, d by several simple, common, | showed that there was an escort and not | from70 cents to 25 cents per lamp per day p*u—nll pointed, however, | ® sleepy one 1n the rear. Our young | Bight, seems to indicate one of two ‘0 had no more olimbing and I bet he | lady was vigilance itsclf as the cu things. Either there has been o consid- his prayers every way buton his | fell’ knowing Mr. Millions" partiality | erable cheapening of cost in the produc- PRy for A cigsttte” i e ‘toger Hot | o of the gt company fas e Chorus ve | Patience was rewarded. newspaper | S . g 1 Bt Yot "zl:ls :tn:lmu:’lmml ur:"w':’;‘k.; man went up to have a few wordnpwmn The chol}l).fillllug hlhe(‘x)\;v there is little to Bt Dpart wore present in sbundunco at | JeWell and know how she eseaped the [ SuPPOTt. ere has been no marked re- | the ceremonics attonding the dedicattion | Pill for a night, and Million went ou, | duction in the cost of coal or labor for i ndiog the dedicattion sha '“I'l ltl:.m lcllluur'eh' slt)\l'ull“up the '“"h'l" ‘l:?n‘::‘i‘;;l‘:a'l‘e:niv:::-s;nn{ll:!c '33&"35“32'&':53 0 and pul e ends of his blonde moustache, A i3 l':l!x A::Ol:e::‘uemlom%:m .nq“’" there was any comfort in antici- l’..m there can not have been any such "l‘tremul gen -~ here was K,m trouble,she réalized it in thinking | reduction in that as the immense drop of oomp. S R sanda of curi- | how little he drewmed of the impending “'fi,fif"mlbfln) woulll. indicate. v People who stood abont sad mshnd | 8torm. When he returned to the box an Laanheory tuatthe company boa beer i fol'mn "m o) Lol P‘;:‘"’ usher handed him this note: “'If Mr. g:_\;t.rgmg an 9.“0;"“0“‘ profitin the past ek B "“"l'“m O | Million is disengaged at 2 o'clock to-mor- {heatmare i Rirmony with what is H -mhnm ey Ry - ach ry‘l row, will he please call at 88,033 Fifih xur»;vn ;:|s to the history of electric light- “ mlho chorus girl in holiday array 18 as | AYenue. in order to got & ring left there | ing T ","0‘“.“"3'- Yet there is a third triking o mfl a5 any Vinaeias a2 | January end." ‘Then, as he read it in the posaibiliy w hich may, 1?crh-wl. moditiy ever plaved. Sho boars e st | dim rcl?:loul light of the back ot the | Public opinion as tothe extent of tho o the st a’y 3 ' 'n e stamp | joge he looked across, aud there, in the | Profit tho companies have been reaping. rq h‘uf‘ mfi oa uro.unruqn;em front of the box, sat his escaped prize, a | It transpired long since that there was a 3 apparen hvm out | jittle paler than usual, but with a tri- | 1arge margin for the companies between e-pe:- um‘rhnnt leam in hor dark eyes that | the ‘‘candlo power” at which their lamps woni away under. tho | told him plainer than words that the gem | Were rated or f““‘"‘“d and that sc- d vast | had been lost for an inferior Jewell. tually supplied. 'In a recent report to CLAKA BELLE, city of Bri leaport which we find quoted relished still in Spain—and our neighbor republic on the southwest is much more Telephones Around New York. Spanmish than Americ How much Few veople have any idea of the num- better are such scencs than those of the | ber of telephones in' use immediately colosseum—the “thumbs down” spec. | around New York. The number is acles in which human beings instead of | 15,000. On April 1 the New York and bulls were the sacritice. And what must | Long Island division of the New Jersey be the mntluence of such exhibitions on company had 3,438 and the New Jers the people who uphold them? division and News rkb had si.olu. New York city had 6,800, Staten Island 250, Will Use a Pail Hereafter. and Westchester county about 800, mak- Troy (N. Y.) Times: A leak in the floor | ing 14,552 within New York city reach. of the Western Union telegraph office, | Such a network of wires and service for corner of Broadway and River street, | intercommunication can be found no- allowed water to drip last evening upon | where else in the world. wires leading to the electric light in Wil- Y— —— liam Ahern's saloon underneath. The A Wise Young Wife. contract of the water permitted the elec- Boston Courier: *There,” said the tricity to escape, and the ceiling in | young wife, turning from the mirror to Ahern's place was ignited. Ahern seized | her husband and giving him a sweet a seltzer bottle and prepared to give the | smile, ‘‘what do you think of these bangs, flames an extinguisher. He was a sur- | Charles? Do they become me?” prised man, when, after having opened a Charles, who was at that moment en- stream from the seltzer bottle upon the | grossed in the task of reckoning up the fire, he was violently thrown from the | total cost of bonnets, bangs, dresses and bench upon which he was standing. The | so forth, answered with a clouded brow: glass of the bottle saved him from more *'I should think you would be ashamed severe handling. The stream of water | to ask me such a question, Mary. Your bad completed the ocircuit, and the shock | vanity 1s becomingactually insutferable.” was the result. Mr. Ahern has ceased to ‘“‘Charles,” she said, in a tremulous act as a bottle-holder in a fight with elee- | voice, “'if I am vain it is for you. You the minister married the second pair briefly in the chapel. The bride was in a plaintraveling dress and the groom in ordinary attire. When they came out to enter the solitary carriage that stood on the side street she was leaning proudly on his arm, and they looked at leust as happy us the other Transylvania Marriage Cuastoms. Popular Science Monthly: When the Joung cauple go to church t day nftor the wedding they are met at the church door by a group of masked figures, who surround them singing and hooting, and playfully endeavor to separate the young matron from her husband. If they suc- ceed in 8o doin;lg then he must win her back in a hand-to-hana fight with her ad- versaries, or else he must give a picce of money as her ransom. In gencral 1t is '”§7 E E 3 considered a bad omen for the married | wi'fin ,!“A' M ‘yldy &EL s“ life of the aunfi couple 1if the wife be fr lNlTALMIN‘I’.l‘ioeDl sold “orily to o NT d separated from her hushand on this occa- INSTAL! RADE, b s81Dg sion; therefore, it is customary for the | . INTALMENT Disiaws AR i younf husband to take his stand close by the churen door while his wife is praying within, and then be ready to catch ™ hold of her as soon s she steps outside. For greater precaution the man often holds her round the waist with f MAYER,S8TROUSE &4 CO. 412 Broadway, N. Y., Manufacturers. oy in~ the ew York Times—President | tricity, and will hcreafter e the pail. would not love me if { wasa slattern | both hands during the dance, which im- A SV L r——— S U ‘41 vre Henry Mflytonw‘ the E{evqg pstitute v i — P and a dowdy. It is for your sake that I | mediately takes place before the churéh, PILEs “Eu. Plano Tuning by Telephone. of Technology, Fald on (hls potnt: Trains Lighted by Electricity. try to make myself “as attractive as | and at which they assisu mercly as spee- " N o y have tq strive, A jirm of Birmingham wmusic dealers | ~ ] had occasion some time since to re about sixty of {nso disting- | was lately required to tune an organ to | measure the light of & number of the .;W':'P“D'L';u(oaolhufln arude, | accord with a piano in Moseley. [t was | lamps used in the streets of New York Y 155 tne “purpose of singing | impractioablo to bring the instruments | City and found that the best of them only par, I in the course of reached 800 candlos. It has been cus- Séros lv&gnmu‘:‘ hthnlru:.koirll together, but a happy pian was at length mil:uy ever since the first introduction and their lg‘ronuoovawd.thuy stumbled upon. A note of the piano | of electric lighting for the electric com- A few weeks ago a traim was sturted | possible.”’ ¥ on the Connecticut river read lighted by Having said this she burst into tears. electricity from the dynnmo in the bnfi- ‘Then Charles arose and gatherea her Ewe car, run by the car wheels, S. H. | into his arms and kissed her fondly and arrett, clectrician, had experimented | said: for weeks on his lnvenlhn::ul sinee put- “‘Your bangs are lovely, dear, and you tators, taking no active part, as it is not | S04.8) 'h:‘a considered scemly to dance in the church attire. As commonly several couples are mar- ried at the same time, it i8 usual for each v fi separate wedding suny to bring its own g g SR ‘ ; 7 ting ‘lnkbpncgc:‘lmi‘v;fi watched it nn:ilgvely, mml'lttnll wives h'efie as I:pnt I‘a’lmlllol ;n;xlflc, ln}:xc“dan:‘)c" ‘thhue! i(:.dlr\lpfnl; oK e 2 d abo comis . | Was struck in fron o telephone, an nies to call their inary street lam constantly an improyements, so | an ous of attracting the admivation | dently of the others. e oceasior ca, Bright's disen A hlc‘u“b““w :non p:h:?!‘::- the sound was 80 aceurately transmitted | B3 otalundla-»o'nmtm’ though they | that it may now be contidered. & practi- | of their husbands as you are there would | of a triple wedding I lately witnessed, it 'n?'.‘:u‘r‘.‘"':'m'&"' \WHLL LROCLE, Qrierisekas { their banged and fri to the distant tuner that he was soon able | j, sed any such actual ef- | calarrrangement, which is nreuy likely | be a great deal more conjugal happiness | was very amusing to watch the three | pay cvoress T Al ving full burtiea: of & forced 0t posses: to accomplish his task.and the oi was | fi . "If, therefore, you were to hold B O e e o orcod | sent m sgason for its Intended uso with | eionS fight b color that scowed ut s ais | the Miano 1n a concert, . to displace the methods of lightning by | in the world than there is at present. storage batleries alome, The experi- | There, m{lon. Now forgive me for my ment bas been tried o & truin of two | rudeness. wedding parties eoming down the street, | lars on appll each ucgc erating ite pn‘o« ull it came to | Welshaus, Pratt & Haines, Omaha,Neb be a sort of a race up tothe church door Manufacturers of Cereal Bpeciaities, your electric light company to the word- ing of their contract they might reason- \