OCR Text |
Show ; Of Inlcresl to ' the PubI3c December, January and Februniy ! are the monthB for big lighting Anticipating that "Coming Kven s Cast Their Shadows Before," we pu' , lished a series of educational a -Ivor-j tlsemcnta during October and Nivem-j Nivem-j ber on the economies of the Tun-j Tun-j Eten Lamp, commonly called bulbi i and globes. j Wo told you to use a Tungsten In the room where you use the mot light It would not be oconomy to place them where you now use four and eight candle lamps. Tho smallest small-est Tungstens aro twenty-fix candle power and use forty waits of electricity every hour while burning I An eight-candle Edison lamp usei ; forty watts per hour, therefore in thl; ; case you would not economize in c.i.- rent, but you would get twenty five ; candles Instead of eight candles f:r j the same amount of current co I turned. The slxteen-candle Edison Iru.i? j consumes sixty-five watts of electric-t electric-t Ity each hour whllo burning. The twenty live-candle Tunsstci consumes forty watts per hour. . li this the Tungsten saves you 38 j.ir cent in the current used and ZO itf rent more light received. In tho store Lf you change to tlia new lamp and do not lucrease LV illumination, you will save C8 to i) per cent of the current formerly us. -A The demand for increased Ulunifxia-tlon Ulunifxia-tlon Trill no doubt encourage you U displace thirty-candle Edison lamp and in their place Install eighty t) ICO-candie Tungstens. This will lo-crease lo-crease thc Illumination 150 per cec! and your bills from 12 to 20 per cent Our engineers aro at your sun!c to assist you in arranging your lamination la-mination to get the greatest effect with the smallest consumption cf cu- D. DECKER. Local Manager for Utah Light &. Railway Company. |