THE OMAHA : DAILY BEE : STJXDAY , SEPTEMBER IT , isoo. Great September Sale of Furniture JL Wo desire to call your special attention to the WHOLESALERS AND RETAILERS OF FURNITURE. Desire to inform the public , . , , , , , r , , . . i i i fact that our great September sale is half over. that oil merchandise on our main You cannot be in too great a hurry about buying your furniture , for the floor such as Dry Goods Groceries and Shoes will be , , , reason that prices have taken on an upward tendency , Wo have , however , hold them down for the reason that we made extensive preparations in an- sold for cash only. Merceandise on every other floor , tisipation of the advance , But when our present stock runs down wo such as Ready-made Wearing Apparel , Millinery , Furn might be forced by the manufacturers and in consequence be compelled to iture , Carpets , Stoves and Household Goods , will be sold advance them. At present we continue the low prices that has created a as heretofore either for cash or on stir. Wo offer some extra specials for tomorrow you should not miss. OMAHA. The Plan. .An extraordinary opportunity don't ' let it slip. THE rEtJl'MJ'S Ftm.MTUUi : .t CAIU'ET CO. Easy Payment . SOLID OAK SIDEBOARDS with three ex Stoves Sale of Fine Carpets and tra largo drawers , cutlery drawer velvet lined , with largo French bevel pinto mir The largest carpet room In the west. Three sootlons llko the ono Illustrated hero rors , elegant carvings on top , solid filled with now and beautiful carpotd , ever 101) ) braes handles , worth fully $20 , _ _ . _ . only 1275 BEAUTIFUL INGRAIN ( URl'ETS the newest designs , worth uOc a yard , only LARGE CHIFFONIEIIS antique finish , with largo plato mirror , nice carvings on FIBER CARPETS now fnll designs , at- top , 5 drawers , solid brass ban- _ , - . o tractive patterns , worth fully 63o dies , $15 value , for el.c/O a yard , only SOLID QUARTERED OAK CHINA CADI- NET with heavy glass doors and sides , 4 * RIOH VELVET CARPETS rare beautiful largo adjustable shelves , nicely designs , $1.25 value , yard . . . . . finished , $20 value , for ELEGANT TURKISH COUCH full size AXMINSTER AND MOQUETTE CARPETS with best grade No. 2 otccl springs , largo beautiful designs , goods worth $1.25 a roll head , finest silk velour covering , 1900 MORRIS CHAIR beautiful yard , sale prlco design , $16.00 value , September _ HANDSOME DININO ROOM frames , rich upholstering , sale prlco only 7 > BEAUTIFUL MAHOGANY CHAIR handsome carvings , full set splines , worth ROCKER cobbler or wood cane teal , worth _ _ fully $12.00 STAR ESTATE STEEL WHITE ENAMELED IRON BKD has heavy corner posts vciiii 'ftvok t > uiiu luiiy " * - „ RANGE nicely niado , , seat , richly carved , extra $1.23 , sale price . . . .7iJO sale prlco very JFine Oriental 4 value rot\t design , brass trlmraon , ? , only full size , a positive $5 value of heavy wrought steel , high- Kugs. BEAUTIFUL ENAMELED BED September sale - } y polished full nickel trlm- has heavy corner posts , strong price < jj Del 'mlngs , has duplex grate for BEAUTIFUL RUGS slzo 39x30 , of fine mo- wood or coal , worth quetta , velvet , tapestry and axuitnatcr fitoel side rails , handsome brass Sp'o'J &arg'n fully $45.00- worth fully $1.60 , special solo prlco - tt * r\ trimmings , worth fully special $10 , sale prlco GRAND SEWING MA ELEGANT ART SQUARES slzo 9x12 , very CHINES every machine FOUR-HOLE COOK STOVE beautiful designs , rich patterns , worth $7.00 $ COTTON TOP MATTRESS covered - t full - very heavy castings , aalo prlco ered with fancy ticking , well I warranted , -written guar nickel trimmed , good slzo filled , worth $3.00 _ antee given These machines even , guaranteed a good bak KIOTA RUGS rara nnd beautiful designs , ealo price * embody all the Improvements er , worth $15 , sale handsome patterns , direct from the orient , „ . of the best sewing machines , Blzo 9x12 , $25 valus jtt > prlco only WOVEN WIRE SPRINGS f adapted for all kinds of plain hardwood frame , worth and fancy sewing , light run NEW SPLENDID OIL Department of Fur Rugs fully $2 , sale prlco . . . ning , worth fully HEATER a good burner , , Second Floor. The largest line of brass and cnamolcd beds In the west , over 200 styles $10 , Sept. warranted perfect , no smeller . 3-PIECE BED ROOM SUITE flno oak fin or smoke , $7.00 val- ish , beautiful carving , large dresser with uc , only Sale of Croolzery , Housefurnisliings & Lamps. sale beautiful prlco plate only glass mirror , worth $22 13 85 HOME CORAL BASE BUR Lace Curtains , Draperies and Bedding. NER hns heavy castings , PARLOR LAMPS In endless variety , the Fine Nottingham Loco Curtains full ulckled , largo flre pot , a elegant deV Flno Feather Pil newest designs , beautiful and artistic our good steady heater , and a signs , very beautiful patterns , 3V4 yards lows , worth $2.60 e. special for Monday Is 50 beautiful lamps coal saver , worth _ - x-v long , our own Importation ' pair , sale - * * > - - with fancy decorated globes complete with $28 sale prlco . . 2t > . OCI $2.50 values for 2.2t > price only C/OO o/- % front , burners , chimney , worth PENINSULAR BASE BUR fully $7.50 ale prlco only 4 NER hns very heavy cost Beautiful Tapestry Portieres all shades Prime geese Feather ing's ' , with full nickel trim- * and designs , over 300 different patterns , Pillows , worth fully Stone Jar * , BOl- 75o benntlfal Jnr- mlngs , largo fire pot , a worth sale . good $5 a pair prlco * - * -v * - $4 a pair special Ion .Sc tllnlerca 4Uo heate-r , worth fully only 2.98 Milk CrocUd , lOo White Granite . . trillion So ly $37.50 , only price * lOo tup nnd snu- ite Platen Oo ESTATE OAK air tight Beautiful Rope Portieres worth BEAUTIFUL INDIA SEATS , Paragon Blankets , white , 11-4 , worth ccr canclii . . . .Go 25o White Gran guaranteed to bold flre 48 fully $3.60 , only , .1.98 . sale 100 PIECES DINNER SETS beautifully ISo half ite Bnkera . . . . 15o concaved , nicely finished fully $1.75 prlco * -io gallon STRONG BUILT hours , with soft coal TRUNKS WOO . . . . only tifully decorated Engllshware , fine . . . worth fully $1.75 , Brian * Jusa ; . .9o 25c While Granite . 9OC covered with sheet Iron , worth fully $15.00 _ _ Chculllo Table Covers rich designs and underglazed , neat designs , worth lOo srlnnn Crcum ite Scallop * . .12o only 9.7.O Fancy Colored Blankets , superior quality , nicely Japanned , nicely lined , special only patterns size , 4-4 _ . . . . . . . fully $12.00- _ , PHchem .no lOu pic Plates So „ worth sale special O.o 0 > HANDSOME TABOUR- complete with hat box and SILVER GEM RANGE worth ' .ully 75c , only 4tcrC fully $3 , special fS" Q JL-4O ETTES solid top , antique tray , also other convenient prlco only - or 6-PIECE TOILET SETS COPPER BOTTOM WASH BOILERS heavy castings , ilargo oven , a pretty mahogany , an ornament to partitions , solid etcel corners good baker , full nickel Largo slzo Comforters , filled with white Heavy Wool Blankets , superior quality , the patterns , Engllshwaro -t c r\ heavy tin , worth fully 85c „ any room $1.00 with brass lock , _ _ trimmings , $20.00 cotton , batting , nicely covered , kind generally cold for $7.60 , * - . price.ltO9 -r\ . . . . worth $2.50 sale Oc/O o O O , special : prlco only / value O9O worth fully $6.50..4.JD ! value worth fully $3 , sale prlco .1.48 aalo prlco O > e/O LIFE AMONG WIRE-PULLERS Incidents that Break the Monotony of Tele phone Line Building , STRANGE TOOL WITH A STRANGE NAME How the Gangs Go from Place to .Vlnan Carrying ; Their Commissary Ueunrtmciit with Them : for Including all hands , from pretty girl " " " " It "operators" to brawny "groundmen" takes 30,000 persons to kcc < p the telephone business of the United States moving. ' ( Twenty-eight thousand are employed In the operation and maintenance of the com- pletad lines , the other 2,000 are hustling -oonatantly In the stretching of now line's. There Is much of the humdrum and the monotonous in the life of the 28,000 , for Iholr duties , mostly of a routine nature , are gone through with week after week and year after year , without much variation of method or change or scene. Monotony Is an unknown quantity among the 2,000 ; they nro continually on the rnovo , for tlephone exten sion Is going on In nearly every stfcto In the union , and they encounter new com ? fclnatlons and novel problems almost dally. The laying out and building of a line of speaking wire requires tno services of Individuals following runny different occu pations men of profound scientific and technical knowledge , shrewd professional men with political aptitudes , men trained to & dozen different trades and common laborers not counting those who draw the Wire for the line or those who make the Instruments and the numerous minor essen tlals of construction. It would not be easy to say ulong which Una of activity the energies of the tele phone men aye first exerted In actual con- ntructlon , but , logically , the man who lays out the line makes the start , with a great cumber of county nnd city maps , covering the territory to be crossed , spread out he fore him. When the line Is several hundred nillea in length his examination of these naps Is long nnd tedious. Both telegmph and telephone wires are almost Invariably strung along either railroads or highways that repairing linemen may reach them readily. Railroads offer tbe shorter routes , 04 n rule , but telephone lines generally fol low the highways , because the telegraph , being earlier on the ground , had pre-empted most of the rallrcud lines before ever a telephone > wlro was strung. It Is the duty of the man who lays out the line his title Is engineer of construction to determine what roads shall be followed In order to set ( he shortest route and provisionally to Indi cate Its exact location In vivid red Ink llnea en the map ot every city and county be tween terminal points , Courier * . A thousand men are preparing the material for construction , meanwhile , but the work next In order , logically , la that of those ad vance couriers of the telephone , the "right- of-way men , " Their flret task IB the secur ing of franchises or other legal permits from all tbo local authorltlcn to go ahead. These vero often overlooked In the early days of telephone construction , but never are now , lack nt formal permits bavins been taken advantage of In some places by the Ill-dls- poaod , to the great Inconvenience of the publlo as well as the telephone folk. It In In doing right of way work that the profes- lonal men with political aptitudes are em ployed. They are generated by a man who has had much previous light ot way expert * once In various parts of the country , but local characters , possessed of ' 'pull" ' with councllmen , town boards and other homo tu- wo nftcwMuwUy Ulcon OB , from on * nd of the route to the other. Besides fran- hlses , they also secure permission for the placing of the poles from the farmers and other property owners In front of whose premises the line Is to pass. This must be rery carefully nnd thoroughly done , hence awycrs are employed mostly , and well paid or their services. The title of every piece of property Involved must be looked up and when there Is a mortgage the mortgagee's consent , as well as the owner's , must be ob- alned , otherwise , In coso of foreclosure and sale , the new owner might cut down the poles , thus crippling the line seriously and still be within the law. Naturally , the right of way men operate n harmony with the surveying party. The surveyors are as important In laying out n elephone line as In laying out a railroad. As a t as franchises and permits are got the poles are located nnd tholr height deter mined. There Is variation 4u height only when the country Is broken ; then poles of extra length are employed to overcome Ir regularities of the ground. Telephone men ; erm this ' 'grading. ' " At curves In the line : ha strain on the poles Is equalized by guy ing. A stake Is driven by the surveying party ito show the exact looatlog of every iflle , Instructions as to Its length , whether It s lo bo gujod or not , etc. , being written In delibly upon the top of the stake which has jcen emoc'tohod off for that purpose. Dynamite anil "Headmen. " The construction party follows the survey ing party as rapidly ns maybe. It taken a iarty of about eighty men to build a line of on wlrcn through a well settled region. In cluding all the extras , 100 men at least are needed for construction across a stretch of new country. They are placed under dis cipline , almost military In Its severity , the party ns a whole belng _ In charge of a con struction superintendent and each division being controlled by a foreman. The "ground men" coma first after the locators. Ground men dig holca , of course , and are armed with crowbars , picks , shovels , augurs and dynamite. Formerly dynamite wu ( not used when rock was found near the surface ; now-a-dnys holes are dug only a lit tle way down with pick and shovel , oven In the softest soil , after which n boring Is made with a two-Inch augur ac deep as the pole Is to be > set , half a stick of dynamlto Is In serted and the hole Is "blown out. " The use cf dynamite has Increased the rapidity of telephone construction vastly nud It has also tended to make construction gangs unpopu lar In some places. Thus In a certain New Jersey town the blowing out of a hole lo cated near a back yard , where ai week's wash waa hung out to dry , resulted In sprinkling the spotless linen on the lines with a lib eral deposit of fine rod earth dust and called for the payment of a crisp $2 bill to a highly oxcltcd housewife. The "eroctori'1 follow the ground men closeJy. Each erecting gang carries a "but ting board , " "pike poles , " a "deadmaa" and a "plumb bob. " The butting board Is placed upright in the hole for the pole to "butt" against so that the hole may not be enlarged during the process of erection ; the pikes are for the pulling and hauling ot the poles this way and that. The curiously named "deadman" Is a tool used only In setting telephone nnd telegraph poles. In length tha "dcodman" Is a llttfe lesa than six fe t , to correspond with the average live man. It Is made of heavy , strong wood. Ono end Is shod with a piece of pointed Iron eo that It will penetrate the earth a llttlo way ; the other end is hol lowed out for the reception of the pole and furnlshod with a stoarp steel pike. Tie name dead man was Artt used after the killing of a live man who filled the place now filled by It. Erectors use the deadman as a prop while raising the pale. Having fitted the pole to the butting board the small end of the polo Is lifted by main strength till It Is about six feet In the air. Then the deadman la put In place under neath and the polo allowed to rest on It while the Mvo men get a fresh hold and lift It a llttlo higher. When this has been ac complished the deadman Is shoved a few feet nearer the big or hole end of the polo and these operations are repeated till the pole IB up. After the erectors the "align ment man" comes nlong with hlo plumb bob to BCO that the pole Is exactly vertical , and he and the tampers complete the setting ting ot the polo. AVorUlnir In the Air. The vilro stringers follow about two miles behind. They work much more rapIdly - Idly now than formerly. In the old days they were content 'to ' put up ono wire at a time ; now they string ten together. The first wire-stringing operation ) s per formed by a man who drives n horse haulIng - Ing the "runnlns ropo. " To It Is attached the "running board , " formerly made of wood , but now of steel , triangular In shape and fitted with "snap hcoks" nomowlmt Ilko those on harnesses , to which the wires , as unwound fron the reels , are attached. The rope Is carried over the cro&pleeen of the poles nnd a halt In made for each pole as soon aa the wires have reached It. While the horse has been hauling thorn n lineman has been shinning up the polo , He attaches each wlro to Its proper Iniu. later with fingers so expert that the work Is done at nn Incredible rate. Then he ! cllmta down , mnkoa for the next pole , 130 feet away , and repeats the operation. This goes on at the rate of forty poles to the mile nnd two and one-half miles a rlay (100 ( poles Is a standard day's work ) , mile after mire and day after day , till the line Is completed. At every three-quarters of a. mile the wires ore cut , temporarily "dead ened" to the Insulators and now lengths ot wlro taken up. While the latter are being got In place the wires already strung are carefully stretched by another gang of men working with "block and fall. " This cause no end of confusion among telephone subscribers. After the stretching comes "transposition" of 'the ' wires. "Transposition" means cutting two wires carried by the eamo cross-bar and crossing them at definite Intervals so that the current travels first on one eldo and then on itho other nldo of the line of poles. This is often overlooked in telegraphic construction , but never In long distance telephone work. A complete explanation of Its whys'and where fores would need to bo a treatise on induc- hustllng progress across the country and their materials must always bo at hand. The method of conducting the commis sary department varies according to the nature of the territory .passed through. In thickly settled regions the men oat and sleep at hotels , farmhouses and boarding houses along the route , hotels being pre ferred. The advent of a gang of eighty men creates no end of excitement In each neighborhood , and , of course , their accom modation fills , all the spare bedrooms and INCIDENTS IN THE LIVES OF MEN WHO BUILD TE LEPHONE LINES. Is done In order that each wlro may bo of exactly the name length as all the others and under the same strain. Wires cxaotfy equal vibrate In unison when the wind blows and never strike each other wires of varying tension vibrate variously , often striking together In wind } time * , nnd BO TWO IMPORTANT ADJUNCTS OF A TKLnPHON U CAMP. EEJJ iliM tlon and other intricate electrical phenom ena , but a hint or two may bo given. In modern telephony metallic and not ground circuits are used ; that makes two wires nec essary for each circuit so that ten wires mean only five circuits. Experience has shown that the mystic current plays all sorts of pranka with the transmission of Bound when a lot of wires running straight along are btrung on the eamo poles. The pranks are mostly eliminated by transposing the wires , but curiously enough , It won't do to transpose two eots of wires whlch _ run over the same line of poles at Identical points , for this leads 'to ' "complete parallelism , " a phenomenon which alj telephone men dread , but which few outsldo the business have ever heard of. Accordingly , a 'transposition ' "scheme" hao to bo wrought out for uvery line , and when there nro several wires the scheme Is a highly elaborate affair. Like the man who fastens tbe wlrca < to the insulators , thu ono who transposes them spends much of his time bhlnnlng up and down poles. Ho must have great expertncsa , but his knowl edge of electricity need not bo great , no matter how complicated tbo transposition scheme , for It Is made ready In advance and ho has only to follow Instructions , He is tbe last man to pass over the line. When toe has finished the wires are as nearly ready to talk as tbe overhead construction party can make them , Coiiiiiilnimrr untl 'Material. ' So much for tbo actual construction work between towns. Tbe comtnlbsary and ma terial departments are quite as Important , for the men must be housed and fed in their the eoctra places at every table. Every construction gang Is preceded by one or moro men hunting for boarding places , nnd those men are also charged with arrange ments for the transportation of the force to and from work mornings and nights. From seven to eight mllea Is about as far na they can bo taken economically , and there Is , Ui ore fore , an average distance of about fifteen miles between headquarters , When the country Is thinly settled tbe party la furnished with vans great spe cially constructed < wogons , somewhat like circus wagons some containing berths for sleeping purposes , tome being fitted with ranges and cooking utensils to serve as food for the- men , fodder for tbe 'jorses ' and miscellaneous supplies. A camp Is pitched nt the close of each day's work and the number of men in tha party U augmented by teamsters , cooks , Walters and doers ot all sorts ot odd job * . Houseboats were built to accommodate tbe party which constructed a line along the course ct a certain southern river through a region ill-supplied with highways , and nil hands were floated down the stream by night be tween days' works. That party was hltily unfortunate ; the men insisted upon dr.luklns the river 'water , a lot ot there fell sick ol typhoid fever and several died before its ravages could be checked , 'flatting poles , wires , cross-plojea am other essentials of construction to tbo men promptly is as necessary aa feeding am bousing them. Thla work la In charge o the material man , who precedes < the con structlon party , and must be possessed o unusual executive ability , He must be In close touch with the polo-buyers scattered all over the country , the engineer wtoo drew the specifications for the line and the su perintendent of construction. Working in mrmony with the material man la the 'framing gang , " whoso members assemble and put together itho croBS-plecea and polos. Their -work Is satisfactory only when the construction party finds everything It needs ready to hand at all points along the route. Tha commissary and material departments make extensive use of horses and mules , which are generally hired from farmers and others along the line , in the hauling of poles , wires , etc. , and In the transportation it the men between sleeping places and heir work. It Is not at all unusual for a larty of telephone builders to use from , wenty to thirty teams , nt least ; somo- Imcs a teamster will follow along the ontlro dlbtance , but not often. IIroad Trail of Money. It will bo seen that telephone construc- lou leaves n broad trail of money through out the regions traversed. Almost everyone ono In every neighborhood gets sctme of It. loardlng house and hotel keepers , grocers , rakers , farmers anii general dealers all come in for a share. Possibly the saloon cccpers get least , since drinking among the men is frowned upon nnd discharge follows drunkenness with the certainty ofate , From time to tlmo dismissals for this and other causes make the gangs short-handed nnd new men have to bo token on. Thus t falls out that nearly every existing tele phone party include 'members from all eee- lens of the union , cast , west , north and south. Entering towns , building and organizing exchanges and connecting the same with .ho trunk lines are the final operations , though gencraly carried on simultaneously with the wire-stringing. Formerly towns wore entered on poles , but the tlmo Is un doubtedly coming when burial ofwires will be Insisted upon In nil municipalities , and , therefore , the long distance telephone now passes "tho limits" Invariably underground. Thla necessitates the employment of sub way builders and cable-layers Instead of groundmen , erectors nnd wlro men , nnd of tile , wooden or metal conduits in place of poles. The erection of exchange buildings , the laying out nnd Installment of switch boards , the putting in of batteries and dynamos , the establishment of lightning ar resters , the threading ot the subways all these operations call upon ns many different sots of men as are employed In general construction , and all must complete their several tasks before the pretty girl opera tors may seat themselves before the switch board * and. begin their Interminable "hello- ins" to the talking wires. Visitor What kind of a building Is that , Johnny ? 'Is ' it a summer kitchen ? Johnny No'm ; It's a tannery. Visitor A tannery ? Johnny Vcfl , that's where dad Uus us. Ho calls It a woodshed. Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Itartlflclally digests thefoodand aids Nature In strengtheuing and recon structing tlie exhausted digestive or gans. It Is the latwit discovered digest- ant ana tonic. Ho other preparation can approach it in etllclency , It instantly - stantly relieves and permanently cure. " . Dyspepsia , Indigestion , Heartburn , Flatulence , Sour Stomach , Nausea , 6ickHeadacheGastragiaCrampsantJ ] , all other-results of Imperfectdlgestlou , orcoared by E. C. DeWItt A Co. . Chlcaao-