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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAy. , OCTOBER 28. 1388.—SIXTEEN PAGES. . NATURAL GAS IN OMAHA=— The Chicago Edwards Oil Burner a Grand Success FOR COOKING STOVES, RANGES, HEATING STOVES and OPEN FIRES. Endorsed by the Board of Underwriters and by thousands of ladies now using them, who will not part with them, and who shout with one voice To Our Patrons| WHAT PEOPLE SAY ABOUT IT. \'To Qur Patrons IN THE STATE. —_—— —_— LT EIOME. Mrs. B. F. Bundell, 1047 Park Ave. ‘‘We have the burner in our Cook Stove and also a Petrolia heater; it is a perfect success.” S. N. Gustin, 2424 Hamilton St. *“‘Am confident itis a success.” Mrs. M. W. Stokes, 2701 Cuming St. *‘said thatshe could not say enough in its praise; that she considered it a perfect success both for cookirflf and heating purposes.”’ 3 rs. Dr. 0. S. Wood, 2530 Davenport, “was well pleased with the burner placed in her range, considered it a success.” ] Mrs. C. W. Axtel, 415 North 19th Street, *‘was satisfied that it was a success.” ’ . Miss Nuckols, N. I8th St. *““The burner is a success.” e Simon Anderson, 2Ist St. ‘“The half has never been told, itis the best thing of the kind ever invented. N . John Linderholm, Esq. Omaha.—Dear Sir: The Edwards Oil Burner is a perfect success, no more ‘“wood, coal and kindling” in mine. Yours truly, W. P. Spafard, 2028 N. 28th Ave. Chicago Edwards Oil Burner & M'f'g Co. 81 Randolph St., City. Gentlemen:—After using your Burner for several weeks. I find it perfectly satis- factory for broiling, baking, toasting bread, in fact for all purpo: for which a cooking fire is needed. I find it unequaled, and gladly recommend it to any intending to purchase. Very Truly Yours, GEORGE BROUGHANM. IN OMAHA. Our salesroom is located at 117 North 15th, where wo have the Edwards Oil Burner constantly in operation, both for cooking and heating purposes. We now have an expert from Chicago to properly place the burners, tanks, etc. We claim without fear of successful controversion that the KEdwards Oil Burner is a perfect substitute for wood and coal heating and cook stoves. The Edwards Oil Burner is not to be classed with the common patent rights. It is a grand success. A God-send to the good citizens of this treeless, coalless state, bringing cheap fuel to your very doors. These Burners will be sold to one dealer in each town who will buy them right out the same as he would a bill of hardware. He can buy one or a dozen. The Chicago Edwards Oil Burner is as staple as wheat. and no dealer will be asked to take a single one that he does not need, and he will be expected to pay for every one he does take. They can be placed in any stove, are easily managed, clean as a register, and 50 per cent cheaper than coal. No coal to carry, no ashes to lift. Your fire always ready. Oil will be furnished consumers at about 10¢ per gallon. If you have not heard of the Edwards Burner before, read this advertisement carefully, then write to The Edwards Oil Burner is clean, economical and saves ‘hours of hard drudgery. It will heat your house as cleanly, more effectually and at a third less cost than by a furnace, As an attest of its merits we point with pride to the list of our citizens now using this fuelsaving device, and whose words of unqualified commendation appear on this page. The following prominent citizens are now using the Oil Burner. F. V. Freeman, Gen. Dennis, W. H. Lowe, C. R. Simmerman, Mr. Lemon, Mr. Stokes, Mr. Ferris, Dr. O.S. Wood, Swanson Valin & Co., Mrs. J. W. Ward, S. N. Gustin, W. P. Spafard, A. F. Blundell, Simon|Jonx LinvkrioLy, Manager, 117 North 15th Street, for fur. Anderson, J. F. Hammond, Miss Nuckols, C. M. Haynes. ther particulars. CHEAPER THAN COAL, CLEANER THAN COAL, MAKES A BETTER HEAT THAN COAL. IS ENTIRELY CONTROLLABLE. No family once using the Chicago Edwards Oil Burner will do without it. Buy it, try it, and be happy. Call and see the Burner for your own satisfaction. THE CHICAGO EDWARDS OIL BURNER 117 WORTEII FIFTEEINTEI STREET, OMILII.A, ITEB. JOHNN LINDERIOILM, Manager. erality, the most covetous not more cau- tious 1 their distribution. Her polite- ness seems to flow rather from a natural disposition to oblige than from any rules on the subject. It is iong before she chooses, but then it is fixed forever; and the first hours of romantic friend- ship are not warmer than hers after the lapse of years. As she never disgraces her good-nature by severe reflections on anybody, 8o she never degrades her judgment by immoderate or ill-placed praises; for everything violent is con- trary to her gentleness of disposition and the evenness of her virtue,” Lord Baconsfield described - as “‘the severest of critics, but a perfect The Frivolons Girl. wife.” She was the widow of his friend, st Mr. Wyndham Dewis, and twenty years Her silken gown it rusties i The great affection " which As she goes down the stair; Andin all the place there's ne'er a face One-half, one-half so fair; But, oh! I saw her yesterday, And o one knew 'twas she, When a little sick child looked up and smiled, As she sat’ on my lady’s knee. Her fan it flirts and flutters, Her oyes grow bright, grow dim; And all around no man is found But thinks she thinks of him. But, oh! to her the best of all, “Though they be great and grand, Are loss than the sick whose smiles come a woman makes her tedious rounds why is she always relieved to tind people not in? When she can_count upon her fingers the people she wan's to s should she pretend to want to s others? 1s anyone decoived by it? Does anybody regard it as anything but a sham and a burden? Much the cynic knows about it! Is it notr v -p up what is called societ ary to have an au squaintances to invite to 1d what would become of body likes to them g ety calls the roll, 1 know the penaity of being left out. Is there any intellect- or physical pleasure equal to that of jumming so many pcople into a house that the n harbly move. R ing them to a Babel of noise in | win "1 (o0 h no one can make hersel 18 without sereaming? The like a reception in any un country. It isso exhilarating! When a dozen or a hundred people are gath- ered together in a room, they all hegin to raise their voices and to shout like poot sellers in the noble rivalry of *‘wa- 1 rious langwidges,” rasping their throats into bronchitis in the bidding of the conversational ring. If they spoke low or even in the ordinary tone, conversa- tion would be impossible, but then it would not be a reception, as we unde stand it. But does society—that is, the intercourse of congenial people—ad pend upon the elaborate system changing calls with hundreds of people who are not congenial? Such thoughts will sometimes come winter fire- side of rational-talking friends, o a dinner party not too large for talk with- out a telephone, or in the summer time by the sea, or in the cottage in the hills, when the fever of social life has got down to a normal temperaturc. We fancy that sometimes people will give to o real enjoyment of life, und limbs are clad, the more easy, hght,and sinuous are gait and movement. Nothing should wrinkle; nothing should “bag.”” There should not be too many petticoats, nor too many waistbands. The whole style of dress of the day, among other things, demands this taujt ness. Tights may not be quite pract - cable for every-day life. But women should get as near to the effects of them as they can. The following arrangement secms the best evolved for the fulfillment of these three requirements—warmth, lightne sinuosity—knit underwaist of silk or st wool (may be low-necked and ~sleeved except where lungs are delicate. the danger in the compiete | changes made when low-necked even- ing dressss are worn is thus done v with: drawers of the same snugly and perfectly ng the leg to the ankle; very long hose drawn high above the knée by suspension garters attached to the corset (circular garters impede the full play and “*swing” of the leg; corset- waist of very fine, thin, clastic stock inet—which may be low for the house and high-necked with half sleeves for outdoors. Th elastic corsets waists are an English invention, and one that was much needed, fitting in glove fash-.| ion as they do without ‘‘bunching,” as the very finest of starched cambric will. The little colored flannel shirt should be made on a d ilk yoke, and that and the longe irt of shot silk_pinked and flounched, and also yoked, which has taken the place of the white petti- coat, may be ‘*divided” after the man- ner invented by a popular actress,whose terpsichorean evolutions are the ucme ol the hall, ] of lithhsomeness and grace. This “divi- several ladies, conspicuous among oth- | gion» consists in sewing up the skirt in ers being Lady Beaconsfield. We are | Lt Gunaa e that “next in interest to the great | \igivided skirt” of the 88 veforme! speech of the evening were the sympa- | while the hideous and unfeminine exhi- thetic face of the orator’s wife and the | yj4,0n of the same is avoided. Forgoing way in which from time to time, the or- | ot the coldest weather & quiitad sill ator lifted his head, as if to ask for her iha ecldesk meashor h quilion ik human intercourse will throw AL 2 s petticoat is substituted for the usual | tht iuman intercourse wi throw approval. When_all over, Mr. | {hiy silk oue. The weight of all this | off this artificial and wearisome Disracli waited in the retiving room for | ynderclothing put together will be | parade, and that if women look back a short time and was then driven rap- | found very small. and there is nothing | With pride they may, upon their idly to the house of his host (Mr. Ro- | cumbersome about any one of its d. personal achievements and labors, they maine Callender,) in Victoria Park. |y i i will also regard them with i There Lady Beaconsfield awaiting | 0 . ment. Women, we read him, and no sooner were the carriag This snugness and warmth secured in- | FRA Ty N R E Fang priv S T T YT e | teriorly, the exterior garment need be g guts o ! pon the gravel than sk Sl Sl heir | men, and the education and amid the anxiety and agitation of pub- {“‘;‘I"""‘ from the *}r:n\'u.lu-rmm;‘ faahe. | NOUHEr SR ML ROE B AAATY 00 R in life of men. Aud yet. such Long Distance Telephoning. lie life bydomestic felicity. “Every [ hals rushed intothe avms of her hust | joqii0) 1o the full play of the respira- sweet self-sacrifice of their nu-| glectrical Review: Words spoken in v cire vanishes,” he said, “‘the moment T [ Pand, ombraced him rapturously, and organs; and long, deep breaths, | tures they voluntavily tuke on burdens | philadelphin can now be heard in Port- o pressure of 1,200 volts, Self-lubri- | torg tried | thereon: the enter my own roof!” His deseription of | SXaiimed O Dizeyt Dizzy this is the fafiating the lun s, make and keep | Which men have nover assumed, and | jund, Me,,a distance of 450 miles. A | cating bearings reduce the necessary at- | head” trolley system, the “third rail” s wite is too_long to quote, but we | & l“l ‘: nig : ‘i‘_h—T “(f"“- or 8l gh0"blood pure.give lustre to the glance, | WhiCH u‘l"")'“‘f'l““:d h":‘;fi"“_ m",“':“‘lf member of the Ih»\‘)iuw‘x- sl In New fendanco to w minimum. The lamps, | tho “slotied main” and tho secondury must give an_epitome of it. Of her | Cold Feet an elr Consequences. | buoyancy to the step. Tightening the [ YHeY ha 18G4 oy o 7 conversed with . Stafford, | 300 in number, are thirty candle-power stem. Th to furnis! heaufé he said it did not arise from fea- [ Mereury: Cold feet beget red noses, girl)h nediately about the waist is | if they consumed half their time in of the telephone exchange at | each. Light iron brackets from the “om the e gi..c}: tures, from complexion, or from shape; | blue lips, rough and corded hands, and | even less injurious than strapping the ying formal calls wpon each other | portiand, Me., on Saturday last, and | sides support these lamps at inte o ST SR o R LR “ghe has all three in a high degree, | that gray, pinched look in the face | chest across with a harsh, unyielding 4 v ‘!', P“;-‘.",‘*‘-’li‘;"‘:}; heard every word distinctl The | sixty-six and two-thirds on_each competing companies supplying their but itis not by these that she touches | which adds five yearsto the age of every | bodice which ereaks with every attempt 3 s 0t | Am lephone and telegraph com- | giving one lamp to ¢ thivty-three | own aparatus. But it should be re= the heart; it is all that sweetnessof | woman over eighteen. Out of ten | to lift the arms, and would give way | Feceive as many cards as they had dealt of New Yo hich Pres, | and one-half feet. ) L e T (VL AR 3o ey temper, benevolence, innocence, and | women seven always have cold feot. outright should the wearer be seized | Out to society? Have ithey not the . Nail and The lamps ace not placed as high as | systems is greater than others, though sensibility which a face can express, A vivid ciroulation—and, ergo, warm | with any sudden spasm of laughing or | tme? Have womenamore time, and, if | General Manager EQ. J. Hall, Jr., are | customary, it being quite an object to | in the long run being cheaper; others that forms her beauty. Her eyes have | feot—meun bright eyes, a goft epid Sobbing, That and corseting 00 high | they have, why should they spend itin | tho energetic and far-seeing exceutives | avoid the smoke accumulating in the | are better adapted to short lines than to nmild light, but they awe you when she | mis, lustrous hair, red lips, o warm | are the leading follies of fat women, | this Sisyphus task? AWowld the sociul | jg o he congratulated on the successful | crown of theurch. The plan of wiring | loug ones, and there are various other leases; they command, like a good | pallor—most exquisite of complexions!— | whose faces in & warm room turn n grad- hine go to pieces—he inquiry is | gLening up to telephone service of this [ 1s peculiar to the system. Six complete | yirtuesand defects which appear in in= an out of office, not by authority, but | for the naturally pale, a peachy glow | ual purple, and whose hands are cov- | Mmade in good faith uud solely for infor- | vagt and wealthy territory. What was | ci are required which T O R 0 s by virtue. Her stature is not tall, she | for the rosy beauty, Warmth is life; e Yope like voins gorged with | mation—if they maderational business | u¢ first looked down upon us a doul mon return wire forall. A “pole-box,” [ Ghad “Will ‘the companies risk the is not made to be the admiration of | cold is death. blood that connot flow back again. The | foF themselves to be attended 1o, or | yenture is now rapidly becoming containing a_switch and safety catch, | chance of snap judgment? And is the everybody, but the happiness of | No woman—only an exception here | method of the uverage woman is—un- | €VeD if they gave the time mow given s ono of the most successful and | connects it with the common | recomponse offored for th sucoess . tete one.. She has all the firmness | and there—can have warm feetin our | scientific bunchy, cold undergarments, | 1© ¢alls they hate to reading and study iye moves in recent electri return. arrangement permits any | ficicnt to the outlav? $hat does not exclude delicacy; | trying and changeable winters unless | and dresses as tight as possible. Fop | 8nd to making their households civil- | history, The large and important cit- | one or all sections to be lighted at will, o L She' hes all the softness that does | she wears “fannels.” ~Even if she | health,and therefore for beauty, the | i2Ing centersof intercourso and enjoy- | jesof Philadelphis, New York, Brook- | for convenience of workmen or trains. e, mot imply weakness. Her voice isa low, | chooses to be indifferentto the ill-health | modus operandi should be exactly re- [ Ment; und paid visits from other mot lyn, Albany, New Haven, Hure- | The tunnel in general is freo from | ; e saft music, not formed to rule in public | and discomforts arvising from the es- | versed. than “cloaring off the list?” Tfall the | @rd, Providence, Boston and Port- | leaks, but whero they ocour Clark’s | The provrietors of SANTA ABIE Rasomblics, but to charm those who can | chewing of “those horrid things!” it | @ 1o resume: Keep the feet warm and | 2rtilicial roundof calls and cards should | Jaq" ~ with intermediate towns | triple insulated wire is used. ave wuthorized Goodman Drug. Co., distinguish a company from a crowd; it | may begin to dawn upon her that rapid N 13 oy tumble down, what valuable thing | 4pe now in telephonic com- | The system is operated from the “east | to refund your money if, after giving poay pany 3 y beg ; ) the chest free. Have everything that life? v S : this California K 3 has this advantage. you must come close | and perfect circulation of the blood is | eovers the body vield with its motion would be lost out of our life? munication, covering 4 territory | end.” and is driven by adouble 134-inch | this California King'of Cough Cures a :ohcrm hear it. 10 describe her body, | tho simplo fundimeutal basis of all 3 — represented by soven Satos. By No- Leffel micing wheel. Tho falls of Mos- | fair teiul 28 directod t fails to givo sat- lesoribes her mind; one is the tran- | good looks; and that,in our climate, Society's Pet Foible. vemher 1 this company’slines between | quito creek, almos rectly over the " the ¢ ughs, Croup, soript of the other. She discovers the | only the “horrid things” will secure | Harper's Magazine: The eynic wants For Tired Brata Buflalo and Albany will' be completed, | cast portion, furnish & hydraulic bead | Whooplog Cough and wll throat and ¥ight and wrong of things, not by rea- | such circulation. But too heavy and | to know what s guined for auy rational Uas Hore udisAcld Fhombate: racuse, Rovaostery:| of 140 feet, with but 400 oot of plping. | Lung troublon, | Whon the dissase soning, but by sagacity. No person of | clumsy underclothing saps the nervous | being when a city full of women under- Dr. O. C. Stout, Syracuse, N. Y., sa) Y c.: will enter the long uring the dry season the r - B0t 3 \ B o) niew'_man can kgnow {ho world better, | strength, and permits no more ease nor | take to make and receive formal visits | gave ittoone patient who was unable to phonic system., nished by the steam plant, 1'4m_nlnungdul ILMA; }‘IE]‘\:‘I()I,'I l\ml(l.fl«l’l(‘; ”p‘a.u:n tive ng no person was ever less corrupted by | grace than that displayed by an ele- | with persons whom, for the most part, | transact the most oraiuary business, because There are at the present time over | a 50 h. p. high flm(sd llynl engine uln 8 ALIVOLST, AT-1 ' UR Thesd knowleege. She has a true gener- | phant. Actresses understand this, so | they 450 not wish tosee. What is gained, | his brain was ‘tired and confused’ upen the | one hundred manufacturiag establish- 60 h. p. eteel boiler. The q;';xxxl}lt} s are uulwv.::.mum_l“nn:«_‘\vn nfn;& equals as ity of temper, the most extr:\'ngnnt should women in privade life. The more | he asks, by leaving cards with all these | least mental exertion. Immediate benefit, | Ments in the territory adjacent- to New |.ranged to connect with either the en- remedies. Sold ut $1.00 @ . ‘eannot be more unbounded in their lib- THE LADIES' DEPARTHEN Sense and Nonsense for the Fair Sex. tem, either by leasing lines or by con- 1 g for so many hours per day, and these companies are all supplied with the improved long distance transmitter —the invention which, with the use of hard drawn copper conductors, made possible this wonderful and potent ad- vance in the telephon The extension of this sy land, Pittsburg, Baltimor ton, innatiand Chicage a question of time. It clectrically possible ence of the Ame leads to the belief that cessful from the stern dollars and cents. being used as an auy case, liary in the latter FLASHES FROM THE DYNAMOS, News and Notes in the Laboratories and Work Shops. Alleged Electric Sugar. Electrical Review: an alleged wonde ‘vican inventor and the practical application of it in Great Britain comes from a S swhich vouches Shines | for its . The diseo i i\“‘l'",‘\’\,"‘:::r\_ of a_process for refining sugar by O nown to b | tricity, and the inventor was Prof T y Friend, of New York, whoso s death occurred, it is said, on March 104 e of this year. ive, it is standpoint of | 54id: that he repelled all attempts to fas cilitate the working of his process by keeping the management of the mie chinery in_his own hands, and he was so fearful that his secrot would be dis- covered that he sent the machinery to Scotland piccemeal from differ of the country. He 3 labor and investigation to the “process, it is said, and only his wifo was ted into his secret. In his private ing room he posted a notice that it was death for anyone to cross the threshold, and when he died his secret would have been lost had not those in- terested in his scheme insisted that ho should make a written record of his ex- periments for use in such a contingency. No details of the new process are given, but it is declared that it renders the boiling of sugar nolonger necessa and th s much that is now wast The raw s is put into his machi and the first batch is converted into re- fined product in four hours. After that the process is continuous, the machine working us long as raw sugar is sup- plied, and turning it into refined sugar in an hour and three-quarters from the £ time it is putin. Ninety-nine per cent to corrode and clog the mechanism of Rhanl o Fitatianii ntaicEtEa the mps. The strong air-current i e i rted and th through the tunnel would waste the ca {otal coat 1n 0aly Rbout 80 cents & ton.. bons rapidly, or require the use of 3 1 globes, with con t loss of light. An economy was secured in attendance and cost of renewals, For these and | the Pullman company to the projectors other reasous it was decided My, H. | of the ous types of electric motors, S. Huson, the principal assistant en- it ed out, lead to tests of un- gineer, to adopt this system as being importance, because comparative. best adapted to the existing condi- are notquite sure thatthe motor peos tions. i ple will look with favor upon the scheme he plant was furnished by the North- | g proposed, and perhaps th western Electric Supply and Construc- | justified in declining to take tion company, of Seattle, W. T. It con- | The Pullm: people agr sists of a 800-light new style Edison | miles of road and would 1i municipal dynamo, constructed 10 run | various types of electric THOMAS AND JANE CARLISLE. LIGHTING THE STAMPEDE TUNNEL How He Showed His Love for His Wife—Two Statesmen's Wives —The Frivolous Girl— Woman's Kingdom. Alleged Electric Sugar—A Peculiar Accident—Inventions and Appli- cations in the Eilectric World his wife —Edisonian Literature. raph Again. In that interest- M (phlet, Notes and espondent announces startling resonance that on is not the inventorof the phono- graph. He has, h the tra i of a paper read befo iation. long before F peared, in which a **Phonograph” was described by a Frenchman named Scott (what a Gaul!) He says he can’t make out the date of the manuscript with cer- tainty, so blurred has it become, but he believes it to be 1839, *‘At lm?’ rate,” he E it is y found in the ‘Trans ions.”” Well, if it were so easily found, why didn’t he find it ‘before casting doubt upon the originality of a mechanism that has been accepted in good faith by the best minds in the world. Instead of doing so he goeson to douvt that Edison ~had any hand in putting the parts together and perfecting the ap- paratu How easily such a man could be convineed that the moon i e of green cheese! We have taken the trouble to 100k up the paper he refers to —to it was read in 1857, not in 1859 —and are, therefore, in a position to give him some inforn The **Phonauto; only in the ing sound, Lighting the Stampede Tunnel. . H. McHenry, the engineer in charge of the mpede tunnel, Wash- ington territory, sends the following in- teresting information to the Railroad Gazette: Th unnel is the sacond in length in nited States, being 9,844 feet long. on the Cascade d ion of the Northern Pacifie, and pierces the main range of the Cascade mountains at an altitude of 2,500 feet above tide. Itwas completed and opened for traffic the lat- ter parvof May of the preseut pear, re- quiring twenty-eight wmonths for its completion from date of contract. During the period covered by con- struction arc lights weve used with very good results, but it was decided to adopt the incandescent system for permanent use for the following reasons: Asa lin- ear distance rather than area was to be lighted, the distribution of the greater number of lamps in one line would be much more effectiy The gases and smoke from the engine were found Flectrical Revie ing little Engli s the habit of traveling with him on most all occasions. At a dinner-party a friend of the earl had no better taste than to expostulate with him for always taking the s with him. “I cannot unde aid the grace- less man, “for, know, you make yourself a perfect laughing-stock where- ever your wife goes with you.” Disraeli fixed his eyes upon upon him very ex- pressively and said, “I don’t suppose you can understand it, B——, T don’t Suppose you can understand it, for no one could ever in the last and wildest excursions of an insane imagination, suppose you to be guilty of gratitude!” On the 8dof April, 1872, D made a great speech in the Frei hall, Manchester. In a box at the end of the hall, opvosite the platform, sat quick, At the touch of my lady's hand. er little shoe of satin Peeps underneath her skirt: And a foot so small ought never at all To move in mire and dirt. But, oh! she goes among the poor, And heavy hearts rejoice, And they can tell, who know her well, To hear my lady’s voice. Her glove is as soft as feathers Upon the nestling dove; 1t touch o light I have no right "To think, to dream of love. But, oh! when clad in simplest garb She goes where none may see, I watch and pray that some happy day, My lady may pity me. Slectric Motor Trials at Pullman, ctrical Review: The invitation of ording or wri o s its name implies, but it couldn’t read and, of course,1t is the audible reproduction of sound that make: ph so wonderful a contrivance. and it ddison’s genius that suggested it and made ita practi- cal contrivance. Two Statesmen's Cassell’s Magazine: t long ago. when speaking of his wife, Prince Bis marck is reporteda to have said, **She it is who has made me what I am.” There have been English statesmen who could say quite as much. Burke was sustained Vives, closely, the more tautly, the nether people and receiving their cards? When aud ultimate recovery followed,” York that are daily patrons of this sys- | gine or whel, or with both, the cugine package. Three for $2,50,