, . . . . - , . . f i THE BEBi OMAIIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1910. Public Utilities i X , i "" --I i-J-L-L-L U- tlf -.,:. '. . . , t : I " .... " .. ,!'L 1 .' . i 1 ,, , . i nn nun a ' am I ' 1 ... . ........ MANY IMPROVEMENTS IN GAS Year by Year Better Wayi Are Found for Adapting It to Uie, BETTER BUHNERS HELP MOST Omaha Plant Growl to Bait th O row ins Needs of the Cltr Mnr Mra lr Emplored All Year Around. All of man's comfort! come from hli abil ity to extract from the earth and from the materials of the earth the special products which he needs. One of the more natural elements for man to make use of Is the Illuminating; gas, a product easily obtained and useful both as a fuel and for lllumln at! on. But. like other natural products, rs can not be cot by each man for himself. It . takes a special effort to manufacture It, tV purify It and prepare It for use, and finally to bring to a man's house where It will be of Immediate service. 4 4j ini is um Bun ul ijiiub mat uigwusuu J capital, the public service corporation can do It is for doing this sort of thin that the publlo service companies are given privileges and franchises and on this basis they make their profits the return of their venture. When gas was first Introduced as an Illuminating material, the only way of burning It known was the fishtail or simple burner, which allowed a certain ouentlty of gas to escape and burned It free In the air. ThU sort of a burner consumed more than eleven feet of gas an hour, and the service which it gave was only a small per cent of the maximum lighting effi ciency of the gas. The first Improvement was the Argand lamp, which helped a little, but even with this new devloe, the quantity of gaa con sumed was very large, for a very small amount of light. The first real advance In gas burners was made In the year 1878, In the Welsbach burner. This invention, with its Incandes cent, white flaming mantle, immediately made a great change In the gas Industry, Its usefulness and the great addition it made to a lamp's burning efficiency were evident to the consumers at once. The new lamp used up about three feet an hour, and It gave a soft light of at least 100 per cent more brilliant than the ordin ary fishtail Cats Voleme at First. The Introduction of these lamps was at 'A KT V" .a. -a .at at si n . ft .ft .N fl j I CHAS. E. FANNING f j J Contractor of Publio Works T j'jt OMAHA. NED. i J j J enturlngn Vitrified Lng e' The Magic Cily Barrel Co. Dealers In all kind of SECOND HAND BARRELS AND BOXES. Also Jobbers of all standard sizes new slack barrels. W can furnish you a package suitable for mj purposo you ma muna. .... 319-21-23-25 North 25th Street. South Omaha, Neb. rraak E. Deaner - -. .Jt" IM-M Boyd Tbeelre Bldg. i alia suashebx tiy tti kill .1 Uoil iakti Tel. BeU Red 171. Omaha, Neb. GEORGE ZIMMER, Sr. FLORIST CUT FLOWERS Plants and Flowers Designs on Short Notice Mall Orders shipped mum day a received. Telephone Webster ISIS, 62SS North 28d Street, HI A. Doaoghue FLORIST 1607 Farnam Street Phones Bill, Douglat 100 It Independent A-1001. Cot Flowers and All Kinds e! Flora. Work. Flowers Fresh Eyery Day From Our Greenhouses 5425 N. 24th Street 1 1 1 tJSBXtl i i is i ri n n n , -t, t I I a a ri h H r Omaha Casket wmil 1618-24 Izard Stre.t Omaha, Neb. . V !pe eJ. A. SIMONES, Monagcp Phone Douolas HOfl first almost an adverse blow to the gas Industry. They burned so much less in miantitv that for a time the sas companies sold less than they had been selling-. It was not unUl their eKIolency Began xo acquaint the peole with possibilities of lighting that they had not thought of be fore, that the volume of trade was re stored. Tha final result of the Improvement was Just what always happens when a publlo service company puts In an improvement The first expensive step is paid for many times over in the later addition to patron age. When consumers saw the cheapness and the avalUblllty of these new lamps they were put in everywhere and the gas Industry continued to grow. It Is not by any means illumination alone that makes gas so useful. It is used as a fuel In thousands of homes and factor ies. The old fashioned coal range has been replaced by the modern gs range, which doee the cooking more qulokly and oheaply and saves the housewife work, worry and dirt. The boy of the household has wel comed Its introduction for It saves him th nM chore of carrying coal and in raci k mAi the coal hod no longer a neces sary household Implement. And it is not only the gas range, but tne gas iron, m. gas conveniences of every sort that are Amnm to the comfort of homes. in inrfiLtrv the use of gas has become a recognised faotor. In newspaper offices it ! used in the composing and eiectrotyp Ing rooms to keep molUa the lead that is used in up-to-date printing, in me oig wholesale grocery houses" It is used for nffM rnaiters and such machinery. Ons of the largest wholesale grocery companies In the west that has its main oinces ana factories In Omaha uses 8,000,000 feet of gas a year for its coffee roasters. Gas Supplants Coal. Although gas Is used only to a very small extent to replaoe fuel for generat ing power it has very largely supplanted coal in furnishing fuel for machines that require heat directly. The gas company In Omaha has been one of the most influential factors in the city's development Omaha has grown in such a u v that comDanles have had to assume heavy burdens In order to give anything like complete service. Tor a Jong time the progress of the city was slow and timid. It did not seem to have even the ordinary vitality of western towns. Then came a sudden burst of energy and the town began to expand. Specula tion and forced real estate booming took possesslon of everybody's mind and the true business good of the town was entirely forgotten. Without the slightest regard for .v... nn.hintta of future collapse or the .HQ ut-.-.,- - - disaster that was certain to follow Omaha went ahead to make a big city or nerseii. Th. mnm (lomnUT. BS Well SS SOOIS Other publlo service corporations, was oaUed upon to help. When some speculator wwum choose a spot In the woods upon whloh to locate a new city addition he would swing every possible influence to get a gas main .vt.nrtrf out to him. Then, as things changed rapidly, bis tenants or bis buyers might be gone from that part of the city by the time the gas was readly for them, a., .han the crash came and the town found Itself spread over four or five times as much territory as it could really laae car of. the sas mains that tne company had extended were absolutely useless. But since the exposition year the growth of the olty and the growth of Industry In ranaral has been steady and substantial. The unused mains of the gas company have been gradually drawn upon by tne ever growing suburbs and the open spaces in the city's territory are being filled with homes. Many Street Lamps. The publlo as a whole gets the benefit ol street lamps as well as house lighting and heating from gas. When the gas lamps were first installed in the streets they were fishtail burners, but since the Introduction of Welsbach's they have been used alto gether. There are now U26 such lights in the streets with a candle power per light of 13.S2. The street lamps are not as powerful or useful as slectrlo arcs, but a special sort of gas arc called a Humphrey light is used in oftloes and gives a more powerful il lumination than electric lamps. There were 1.S6S of these and similar Wslsbach arcs In uss last year. The aas mains of the Omaha company. if put end to end, would reach half way to Chicago, and ticking away at regular Inter vals along their ramifying length are M.U1 meters. To the consumer tba gas meter Is the embodiment and Incarnation of all the diabolical schemes ever Invented to beat hlra out of his money. Perhaps there Is a pyschologloal reason why he hates the meter, since It Is a machine and is per fectly impassive and unhurt by all the abuse It gets, but the fact of the matter Is that the meter Is almost Infallible. The exptrlments of the gas commissioner's office show that most meters vary about I per cent from exact measurement. It Is impossible to make them any better than that and more than that much they very seldom go wrong. They will wear out in time, but the wearing out results altogether in the favor of the consumer. They are constructed of leather dlaphrama and as the leather wears out they let more and more gas through without registering It. Many a consumer sees his gas bill going down rapidly until It stops altogether. Hoarcely ever does he say a word about it, although he knows that he Is burning as much gai as ever, but If it Is ever a. dollar more than he thinks It ought to be he mmedlately raises a complaint and wants his meter tested. How Gas Is Made. Omaha gas Is made from the combustion of coke and crude oil by what is known as the Lowe process of manufacture. The main factory, with its generating plant, Its purifying tanks and Its enormous storage tanks is at Twentieth and Centur streets. At night the factory Is a very picturesque and Interesting sight As the flames are taken off of the burning oil and coke they are allowed to shoot up Into the air nd at regular Intervals at the gas plant the whole sky Is lit up with a miniature pillar of fire. The storage tanks number three and the biggest one will hold 1,100,000 cublo feet of gaa The company maintains other tanks at Eleventh and Jones streets. if Two Hot Weathe jjj3 Necessities A Gas Range A Gas Water Heater By cooking with Gas you can save the price of a Gas Range in a few months. Heat your water with a Gas Water Heater enjoy real comfort. BBSS Our representative will gladly bring you one of our 1910 Catalogues, or wc will mail you one on request Omaha Gas Company fWATCH US GKQW I iMr J j Five hundred thousand people in Nebraska use the Bell telephone every day because it is the only telephone that gives satisfactory and universal service. Omaha's Census in 1950 Should Show 300,000 People Oar Census in 1950 Will Show 75,000 Bell Telepkeies in Use in Omaha ferslstent Advertising is the Road to Big Rsturna. WE GROW FASTER THAN THE POPULATION Four years ago Omaha had about 110,000 people, and the present census is likely to show about 130,000; four years ago there were 10,000 Bell telephones in Omaha, and now there are 25,000. From City to Country OUR GROWTH IS CONFINED TO NO LOCALITY Like a mighty spider web our lines have extended over the state, reaching hundreds of new subscribers every month. Our growth in Omaha for the last four years has averaged more than a dozen telephones a day. Reaches All the People Everywhere All the Time. One Policy. If One System. Universal Service. r W Every Del) Telephone is a Long Distance Station Qttk 1(0' t