THE OMAIIA DAILY ffEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1904. 13 STORY OF THE USION PACIFIC 'It is Told Abbw by Trunk Spearman In a Ifagatin ArtioU. BUILDING THROUGH MOUNTAIN AND DESERT Umw EidaNr) Raced Against Time WU1 Ratlom Waited for June tlea taat Would fnlte Ocraa aad Oceaa. Ths story of the building of the Union Paciflo never lnnra Its fascination. It baa been told over and over, and yet is alwaya aa entrancing aa the beat work of fiction. It la told anew In the current Harper s Magazine apparently from data furnished by General O. M. Dodge to Frank 6 pear nan, over whose name the article appears. The most Interesting parts are here repro duced: "General Grenvllle M. Dodge, who waa chief engineer of the Union Pacific, and in charge of construction during 1866 and thereafter, still survives, a Nestor In the honorable company of American construc tion engineers, and his name will always be coupled with the work of putting the first railroad across the Rocklra. Ills reminiscences throw a pretty side light on Lincoln's decision concerning the easP-rn terminus. General Dodge In 1S58 (aFslgnlng the date from recollection), after a summer of engineering reconnatscarcea west of the Missouri, camped with his party at Council Bluffs. Abraham Lincoln at that time was visiting the Bluffs. lie heard of General Dodge's return and of his surveys and sought him out Bitting with the mountain engineer on the porch of the hotel, Lincoln held him for two hours or more and drew from him the facts he had obtained, and his opinion as to the beat route for a rail . road across the continent and the possibil ity of building one. "In 18C2, while In command of the District of Corinth, Mississippi, General Dcdgo was ordered by Grant to proceed to 'Washington to report to the president; Lincoln had re membered the talk of 1868 on the hotel porch of Council Bluffs. The question of the eastern terminus for the newly au thorized railroad was then a national ques tion. In General Dodge's opinion there was from an engineering viewpoint but one na tional route for a railroad to cross Iowa, the Missouri river and the great plains. The route proposed by Mm was that along which ths Union Paciflo was afterward built. It offered the advantage of a great, open road from Omaha to Bait Lake, flOO miles of It up a single valley that of the Platte. This, In turn, led to the natural pass over the Rockies, the lowest In all the range, and to the continental divide at a point where It lay In a basin 600 feet below the general level Instead of on a mountain summit. Any engineer, In General Dodge's opinion, who should fall to avail himself of so rich possibilities should have hlfl diploma tsken from him. In designing the Missouri river terminus as he did Lincoln acted on these views. Made Tosnlble by War. "The political aspect of extending gov ernment aid In the building of the first con tinental railroad must alwaya remain an extraordinary feature In our national legis lation. 'The civil war alone made auch a tep possible. The period had rudely brushed aside constitutional and laissez faire legislators and reasoning and the men who stood In cqngrcss for action went In thla case to the other extreme. The build ing of a Pacific road had every war argu ment In Its favor. Buch a line. It waa urged, would bind California mora closely to the northern interest and would enable the United States more promptly to repel any attack on the coast ports. Moreover, It would enable the government easily to control Indian 'outbreaks among those tribes still unreasonable enough to object to being exterminated. "It must not be forgotten, however, that during the gloomy days of the civil war . Indian outbreaks, whether Justifiable or t not. were serious matters to a government : v:' struggling to maintain itself; and an argu ment Beaming iriviai now mignc nave seemed serious when people were excited or depressed by every rumor and portent. Even In 1847 Oeneral Sherman regarded the completion of the Paciflo road as an end to the Mormon question, and It was the real beginning of the end. "The very name used by congress In creating the corporation 'The Union Pacific Railroad Company,' implies a reflection of the union sentiment of tho civil war period. The use of the word has) been ascribed to the 'union' of various corporations and plans In the project But there is un doubtedly more than this to It By far the most powerful arguments In favor of the road were the war needs of the govern ment The word 'union' waa everywhere foremost In the thought and speech of the day and federal action waa meant to come aa a final answer to the demand of nearly twenty years for national legislation on the Paciflo road subject; to the foes of the union It was flung as an evidence of con fidence and strength on the part of the republican party and Its union administra tion. But of the burdens carried during those days by Abraham Lincoln there is no more pathetlo glimpse than this, that In the midst of the profound anxieties of his struggle to preserve the nation he was required by congress to determine the de tail of the proper track guago for the Paciflo railroad. Nor will It surprise any one conversant with the legislative spirit of the war period that after President Lincoln had lung and painstakingly con sidered the subject and decided on a track guuge of five feet, congress cheerfully and at once passed a law changing the guags to four feet eight and one-half Inches. Financing the Enterprise. "The act of 1862 was supplemented by a second act In 18G4 containing more liberal subsidy provisions and under this charter the Union and Central Paciflo railroads were built The coterie of capitalists who undertook the enterprise believed that their chief profits would come from the construc tion rather than from the railroad as an Investment, and In order to Insure these to themselves they acquired the charter of the Pennsylvania Fiscal agency a name afterward changed by the legislature of Pennsylvania, at the Instance of George Francis Train, to 'The Credit Moblller of America,' and the Credit Moblller not only constructed the Union Paciflo, but made for Itself and a number of American states men tho most sensational record of a long and exciting day of plots and counterplots in Pacific railroad history. For the begin ning of construction much work had al ready been done. General Dodge had crossed the Missouri river as early as 1S53 In the Interest of projected Iowa railroads which sought to ascertain where a Pacific road would' be "likely to fix a Missouri river terminus. Until the civil war General Dodge was busy with reconnaissances and surveys. "When he entered the service Peter A. Dey took It up and In 1S.62 put regular parties In the field on the first range of the Rockies, called the Black Hills, and over the Wasatch range, under a son of. Brlgham Toung. These surveys extended from the Missouri river to the California state line and Included 25,000 miles of reconnaissances and over 15,000 miles of Instrumental surveys. They were made al most entirely under army protection, but despite ull precaution men were scalped by Indians. "Ground for construction was broken nt Omaha, with a florid speech by George Francis Train, December 2, 1863, and actual construction began on the Union Pacific very early in 1S64. Lcland Stanford, on January 8, 1S63, had turned the first shovel ful of earth at Sacramento for tho Cali fornia end of the undertaking. In nine months the Omaha enthusiasts had com pleted the first eleven miles of one end of the transcontinental line. The Calif ornlans had come to a standstill with thirty-one miles. Thus the race started slowly, but at its end Jack Casement was laying seven and a half miles of Union Paciflo track between sun and sun. Route Long Famous. "The route the new road followed from the Missouri river had long been famous on the frontier. Spaniards had probably reached what la now Nebraska as early as 1541, but It was more than 100 years later when Indians on the Mississippi described to Father Marquette the course of the Missouri, and his map showing the Platte flowing Into the Missouri is still pre served. ' White men In 1739 explored the Platte as far as the present city of North Platte, In Nobraska, and French traders made a highway of the river for more than ICO years. The expeditions of Lewis and Clark, close upon the Louisiana pur chase, opened the country to American in fluence and St Louis became the greet outfitting point for the adventurers and traders who penetrated to the remote regions of the northwest. "In 1832 Captain Bonneville camped under Chimney Rock, and, penetrating Wyoming, skirted the Wind River mountains. Ho was the first white man to take a wagon aoroas the continental divide on the line of the future railroad. Here the Mormon pioneers began their long Journey to their unknown home beyond the mountains, for Fremont's narrative had decided Itrigham Young upon this great undertaking. Along the Platte, year after year, were strung the wagons of the Forty-niners, and In a calm made sweet by the blossom of the wild plum rose the cams Ores of the pa tient homeseekera following the overlaad trail. "But the valely scenes changed when the railroad contracts were let The grading camp made a rough companion to the aulet outfit of the emigrant Civilisation now really coming, advanoed In Its mask of vice the characterlaUo of Its rise and de cllne. The grader, the gambler, the crimi nal and the adventurer moved together across the plains with the tough town, til outlaw and the vigilance committee. The forks of the Platte were reached ty the tracklayers at the cloFe of the second sea son's building. 1866. but before these tlrt 24a miles were coincided some conception of the enormous difficulties of the under taking had dawned on the promoters. Obstacles that Were Overcome. "The Union Paciflo waa building across a desort with a base at Omaha, that waa likewise beyond aVallroad connection. The engine for the Omaha railroad shops was dragged across the country from Des Moines, The Central Pacific, building from the western coast was competed to get everything except ties by ship around the Horn or by way of Panama. Marine Insurance was upon a war basis, and tho capital of the Callfornlans was eaten Into by indemnity tolls. The Union I aclflo lacked even the tie supply afforded the Callfornlans by the Sierra Nevadas, and was compelled to skirmish hundreds of miles up and down the Missouri river for ties and bridge timbers. Moreover, the Indians of the plains had already filed their protest against the novel invasion. Before the rails had been laid 200 miles from the Missouri river Turkey Leg end his Cheyennes swooped down on Plum Creek, scalped a handcar pilot, derailed the freight train following and with the englneman and fireman burning In the wreckage plundered the box enrs and made away, heavy with booty. "Amid these difficulties construction pro ceeded with such materials as could be brought up from St Louis and St. Joseph during three months of water transporta- ! tlon, but on November 7, 1867, the last rall ' road link east of the Missouri In the trans continental line was completed. William B. Ogden had pushed the Chicapo & North western railroad Into Council Bluffs, and that road, then as now, a powerful ally of the Union Pacific, began pouring track ma terial Into the Council Bluffs yards, giving the latter road an actual railroad base for Its supplies. It was needed. The Central Paciflo party, taking advantage of the law of 18GG, which opened the continent to a race between east and west builders, was bending every effort to get to Salt Lake ahead of Its eastern competitor. During 1867 General Dodge had already pushed the Union Paciflo to Cheyenne, In Wyoming, which, after November 14, became the win ter terminus. "The whole country now awoke to the contest that the Union Paciflo and the Central Paciflo Vera entering upon. Which should reach Salt Lake first and which should win the big government sub sidies, ranging through the mountains from t64,0C0 to 296,000 a mile? Stupendous Oampalirn Planned. "The Union Paciflo chief engineer, after a New Yoifc conference during the winter of 1867-8, returned to Omaha, called bis staff around him, and laid out his plans. These centered upon Ogden, Utah, 602 miles west of the end of the track, as the ob jective point for 1868, and Humboldt Wells, 216 miles west of Ogden, for the spring of 1S69. Preliminary lines had been run, but no final location had been made west of Laramie City, where town lots were sold In April, 18G8. General Dodge had already solved the vital problem of the pa" across the Rockies by getting lost ono afternoon In the Black Hills if It is fair so to describe the accident which led to the remarkable discovery. For over two years all ex plorations had failed to reveal a satisfac tory crossing of this secondary range, known as the Black Hills, which, on ac count of their short approaches and their great height, la the most difficult of all ranges to get over. On this occasion Gen eral Dodge, returning from a Powder river campaign, leaving his troops, with a scout and a few men rode up Lodge Pole creek along the overland trail and struck south along the crest of the mountains. Indians beset the little party before noon And got between them and their trains. Holding the Indians at bay with their Winchesters, they retreated. It was nearly night when they finally escaped the enemy, and mean time they hnd rlddnn down an unknown ridge that led out of the hllla and clear to the plains without a break. That night General Dodge told his guide that If they saved their scalps he believed they had The Great Peruvian Catarrh Cure. People judge a medicine by the cures it effects. That is the way Visco has won its place In the front rank o family medicines. That is the way it will stay there. Visco gives results, satisfactory results. If you are a sufferer from catarrh in any form Visco will cure you. It makes no difference of how long standing or how ag- " gravated your case, or how many other remedies or doctors have failed, Visco will positively cure you. Visco cures all stomach troubles and kidney diseases and is recognized as a blood purifier unequalled. Ask for Visco accept no substitute. For sale by all leading druggists. If your druggist does not happen to have Visco on hand write to us direct. Trice, $1.00 per botle. Sent to any address. We pay express charges. V From Mra. George Marks, 153 Wirt St., Omaha, Nub. I bad kidney trouble for over a year, nd by taking two bottles of Visco I am aa well'aa any one could wish to be. I therefore gladly recommend thla medicine to any one troubled with kidney disease. Yours very truly, MRS. GEO. MARKS. QUICKXT CURED OF PELVIC CATARRH. For twelve years I waa very ill cauaed by pelvia catarrh. I tried all klnda of medicine aad all the doctors I could get money enough to employ. They told me they could do nothing for me.. I used three bottlea of Visco And U cured me a hen everything failed. MRS. J. FREDERICK, Spokane, Wash. I FEW REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD TAKE VISCO. It cures. It makes the Kidneys right It is pure and harmless. It contains no polsou. It acts on the liver. ' It purifies the Wood. It strengthens the Bladder. It makes weak sickly people strong. It benefits the heart. It aids dlgvstloD. It Invigorates the whole system. It clears the complexion. , It never dlsappoluta. It has no equal. " From Major H. Glafcke, Ex-Secretary of Bute of Wyoming, now U. & Internal Revenue Collector, residence Cheyenne, Wyoming: CHEYENNE, WTOMINO, June I. 190S. RIDGWAY REMEDY CO., Omaha, Neb. Gentlemen : I have suffered with catarrh of the head and stomach for more than fifteen years, and have tried every catarrh medicine that has come to my notice. None, however, huve been of any benefit to me un til I procured a tjottle of Vlaco. The first bot tle brought great relief and after taking three more bottles of the medicine I am now permanently curtd. My appetite now Is good snd I am greatly improved in e!l!,.er"'i hfjth. Every person who la afflicted with catarrh should try Vlaco. Youra truly, ' H. OLAFCKJ3. RJDGWY REMEDY CO., Omaha-.: Ageivts. OFFICE, 20-22 FRENZER BLOCK. OMAIIA, NEB. found the crossing of the Black Hllla Over this pass the trains of the Union Paciflo run today . Race Becomes Exeltlag. "Winter caught the builders at the foot of the Wasatch range, but it no longer stayed them. The spirit of the fight had got beyond that, and the frosen earth waa dynamited like rock. Track was laid serosa the Wasatch on a bed covered with snow and Ice, and one of General Case ment's track-laying trains, track and all, slid bodily oft the Ice Into the ditch! Even the Mormons roused themselves, and under Brlgham -Young's exhortation turned might lly Into the race. In railroading then, aa In politics later, the watchword was. 'Claim everything,' and the Central Pa clflo people astonished the eastern builders by filing a map 'claiming' to build as far east as Echo, some distance east of Ogden. "The two companies had 20,000 men at work. The Casement brothers of the Union Paciflo construction forces rose to the occasion. Eastern newspapers were carrying dally headlines, 'The Union Pa ciflo Built Miles Today." In the be ginning a mile a day was considered good work, but the Cascmenta had long been laying two miles a day and now were working seven days In the week and every hour that light gave them, and they crowned their supreme efforts by laying In one day nearly eight miles of track be tween daylight and dark. "The Central Paciflo people meantime stayed not for stake or stopped not for stone. They had fourteen tunnels to build, but they did not wait to finish them. Sup piles, . even to engines, were hauled over the Sierras, and the work was pushed until In the spring of 1S69 the opposing track-layers met at Promontory, Utah, The moment at which the law had de clared a junction must be made had ar rived. Driving the Last Salko. "On May 10, Leland Stanford, governor of California, and president of the Central Faclllc, and Durant, Duff and Sidney Dll Ion of the Union Pacific assembled with their friends to drive the spike that was to Blgnalize the completion of the great undertaking. A little company of regular soldiers with a garrison band from Fort Douglas preserved the military atmosphere of the long struggle. The Mormons, who had helped so faithfully with the roadbed, were thero, and the coolies from San Fran Cisco and the Irish track-layers from the Atlantic seaboard faced each other. Straw- bridge and Reed, the rival superintendents of construction, placed under the rails the last tie of California laurel. Spikes of silver and of gold from Montana, Idaho and Nevada were presented and driven Into It, and Dr. Harkness, on behalf of the great Paciflo state, presented the last spike, wrought of California gold. "The country waa waiting for the coming moment. Telegraph wlrea everywhere had beenallenoed to repeat the blows of this silver maul which were to ring from the little valley In the Sierras to end and end of the United States. The first engine from the Pacific faced the first engine from the Atlantic,, and amid the sllenoe of uncovered heads the governor of Cali fornia and Vice President Durant of the Union Paciflo drove the laat aplke. Pnbllo Joy Unmeasured. "From tho stages of theaters and on the first pages of newspapers particular an nouncement was made of the celebration to come on the next day. The rejoicing In San Francisco reached the extravagance of a kermess. In the bay the shipping was bright with bunting, and between gaily decorated buildings processions of jubilant citizens marched all day. What matters It that we know now the electric current suffered a stage fright, and the ring of the sledge on the last spike could not bo made to repeat beyond Omaha? Is It not enough that the chief operator was equal to the occasion and drove the heavy blows In dig. nlfied clicks at the telegraph offlje on the Missouri river? What is of consequence Is the way In which the clicks were received the blows repeated at Son Francisco on the great bell of the city hall, and cannon booming with the last stroke off Fort Point, and on Capitol Hill In Omaha 100 guns following the explosion of bombs and screaming of steam whistles. Capitalists, prominent citizens, volunteer firemen and horaeshoers could still walk happily in one tiresome procession when the last Paciflo railroad spike waa driven. Grant took the newa In the White House, Chi cago turned out a parade four miles long, New York was saluting the Pacific coast with salvos of artillery, Trinity chimes were ringing 'Old Hundred,' and Trinity voices were chanting 'Te Deum' when the earliest transcontinental line was finished; and In Philadelphia the old bell was ring ing in Independence hail. For American railroading surely those were the golden day a" THE NIAGARA FALL) HOUTE. To New York, Boston and the East. The Michigan Central has four splendid through trains dally between Chicago and New York and Boston. Two run via Ni agara Falls, stopping Ave minutes at Falls View. Ten-day stopover at Niagara al lowed on all through tickets. Chicago ticket office, 119 Adama street; central sta tion, lake front, foot of Twelfth street. RELIGGIOUS. The dean of Rochester Is the tallest divine In the Church of England. He is 6 feet 3 Inches In height. Kev. Dr. John Robertson, the well known and successful Scottish evangelist, la preaching In Brooklyn under the auspices cl-the Christian Endeavor. Rev. Dr. Charles H. Leonard, denn of the Tufts College of Divinity school, has reached the age of 82. He has been with the Medford (Mass.) Institution since 1869. Brazil has now thirty-one young people's societies of Christian Endeavor and six Junolr societies. They have a national union, local unions and an admirable Chris tian Endeavor monthly In the Portuguese languuge. The Presbyterians of America are cover ing the empire of Corea with mission sta tions and numerous native churches. They have a total force of 100 foreign workers. Dr. W. D. Reynolds, preacher, linguist and translator, Is devoting all his time to trans lating the Bible into Corean. The Salvation Army now has three colo nies In successful operation. One colony is in Ohio, within twenty miles of Cleveland; the eecond Is in the valley of the Salinas, near the Bay of Monterey, Cal., while the largest and most successful of the three colonies is at Fort Amity, Colo. The American Sunday School union hsa recently completed eighty years of work for the neglected children of America. The work of the union Is undenominational and Is helpful to the churches in every state. The number of teachers and scholars en rolled in the schools organized by the so ciety during the last year was 97, W0. Rev. Victor A. Schnell of Terre Haute, Ind., on Thursday last observed the thirty eighth anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood. He has been described aa a Frenchman by birth, a German by paren tage, an American by adoption, a aoldiur in the union army by patriotism and a Cathollo by divine calling. He ia a pastor of an Irish congregation. J. Plerpont Morgan has. It Is aald. In his Sossession a cone presented to the cathc ral In Asccll, Italy, by Pope Nicholas IV, for which he paid fiX),000. '.'he cope disap peared in 1902 while repairs were being made in the cathedral. The Italian gov ernment Is endeavoring to ascertain what Mr. Morgan will do with property which he acquired after It bad been atolen. Rev. Joseph Luccock of the Aabury Methodist Episcopal church, Milwaukee, has notified the executive board of the church that he wanta hla salary cut from Il,2u0 a year to 11,000. The reverend gentle man, who went to Milwaukee from Coving ton, Ky., not long ago, aaya he tRkee thla action because ne does not think the church can afford to pay the larger salary. If you have anything to trade, advertlie It In the Thla for That column la too fie Want Ad Pages. Orchard S Wilhelm Garpet (Bo. r 1 1 nAgflTir B We extend a cordial Invitation to vis I- 1 ill MCJ&llI W flit 31m tors to come and e9 our superb show-' "sbbbbbb ssaBsaaaaw mm mmmm mmm .BaHB hbskssb raM ng of Home Furnishings. Each department is teem in g with the ne westsji ggesfion in home decorations and a series of specials are being offered during the fail festival. Now is an oppirlunt tint to mike your selection in Furniture, Carpets, Rugs and Draperies. The saving to you will b: a considerable ffc.n, bzsidss you choose from the largest showing of dependable goods in the west. it E 1 ouches At one-third and more off a bona fid w ! 'faction iiaU on our entire stock of couches, note in the heart of the couch teason You'll ft ml here couches plain and fancy, laroe, medium and small, velour and Verona ami leather upholstered, all go in this sale Jfomiajf at a consider. able price concession' 1 ou can t afford to miss this chance. A coticA bargain sale ure such as has nut been offered be fore. All thoroughly constructed and finished. Xole somi of tlte redactions, conn early tohile assortment s complete. $9.30 couch, tufted top, velour upholstered quarter-sawed oak frame, claw feet like cut, reduced C A J.sfJ to $22.50 couch with adjust able head, finely up holstered, re- I f( duced to IO.UU 19.00 couch, mnsalve de sign, finely upholstered, T::d. 12.00 7.50 $10.00 couch, full size, up holstered In figured ve lour, tufted top, re duced to $12.50 couch, oak frame, claw feet, tufted top. upholstered In velour, reduced to $15.50 couch, oak frame, pnntnsote upholstered, tufted top, tt nc 11. f 8.75 reduced to. .. .' $15.00 couch, 30 In. wide, 0 ft. C In. loiigr. plain top. upholstered lu velour, re- Q AH duced to ,UU $10.50 pantasoto couch, oak frame, 1 C reduced to. $25.00 imitation Spanish leather upholstered couch, diamond tufted, ZT 21.00 37.00 Genuine Leather Couches $12.50 venulue leather couch, re duced to. . . $45.00 genuine leather couch, tufted top, pleated sides "TO PA reduced to..O.JU $48.00 genuine leather couch, massive design. reduced to $50.00 leather upholstered box couch, box cedar lMed, re- A A duced to....Fa4.UU 40.00 ! it Rug Section Never before has the department been so well equipped to meet tlie varied requirements of our patrons. Not only have we on hand an extensive assortment of rug, but they are chosen witlithe view of pleasing tin most critical taste of our customers. These rugs are selected with a view to durability as well as beauty and here yoH will find the best in every sense of tlte word. This collection is worth seelnfj from an artlstlo standpoint, possessing as they do, the peculiar soft, rich nnlnrinirs n snuirht aftflr in the Oriental ruirs. Nothlna so thoroughly makes a harmonious effect in a room aa a' good rug; good 10 coloring, gooa in assign anu goou ia quality, Note a few of our special items for A.k-Sar-Ben week: 9x12 Sanford and Smith Axminstor rugs, CA regular prioe $29.50, reduced to jJ 36x72 Smith Axminstor, regular price $4.25, O CI C reduoed to. ,JO 27x63 Smith Axmintter, regular price 12.50, I AC reduoed to JO 30x60 Jute Smyrna ru's, regular prioo $1.25, QC reduoed to J 0t 86x72 Smith Imitation Oriental rugs, regular M A A prioo $5.75, reduoed to TiUU Drapery Dept. Arabian Curtalns-IUsh grade, hand-made cur- 7.7g tains in tho new color, price, per pair Arabian Curtains Mounted on heavy French net,Q QQ extra wide border, large corner design, per palrv"v,x' Arabian Curtains Usually sold for $22.60 and $26.00. ws bought an unusually large quanUty and bought them from a manufacturer who was changing his 'J BtQ account so we can sell the $6 value for, pair." tw Cluny Curtains with linen lace edge, wide 3-Inch O OR double net on edge, per pair mzrj Cluny Curtains, French net, full site curtain, 3.05 S-ln. double net on edge, per pair . Cluny Curtains, white or Arabian color, with 5.00 edge and insertion, per pair Other values $8.75, $8.75 up to $30.00 per pair. Brussels Curtains We bought a large lot of these cur tains and are selling regular $5.00 values, 3 Qg at, per pair Brussels Curtains $25.00 and $30.00 flaxony, the best curtain mnde, made on the finest net IJ SQ money can buy, special, per pair 5-inch Bobbin" white or Arabian 13C per yard 54-inch Bobblnefr-'white or Arabian, extra HSc heavyfper yard mm... .- 96-inch Curtain Bwlss, dots and stripes, 12aC per yard . -.... a w A good extension rod, extends from 30 to 64 lOc Inches, at w A good window shade, 8x8 'feet, 25(f s- mnm-'-fii 'in, ' r Mr - XT ...... KaLjii: uf- tl . - fT'-ir "" '13$, THE NEW BEE BUILDING MADE BY THE BOILERS OMAHA BOILER WORKS The Bee Building has just installed two immense oilers to take the place of its old equipment. These boilers were made in Omaha, and are the work of the Omaha Boiler Works, Mr. John K. Lowrey, Proprietor, 12th and Izard Streets. The accompanying picture shows the boilers before they were ready to be placed. These boilers are of a special design, which is the result of years of experience and study of Mr. Lowrey, who is recognized as one of the expert boiler makers of the country. Each of these boilers has a capacity of two hundred horse power. They are designed to carry a pressure of one hundred fifty pounds and are built of unusually heavy steel to meet this demand. This particular type of boiler is adapted to meet the requSre- ments of large power plants, and has tome new features, which make it more efficient, than the old type of boilers, where large loads are carried. The same boiler can be made in units from one hundred to five hundred horse power, as the necessities of any particular plant may require. Visitors to the city during Ak-Sar-Ben week are invited to call at the Bee Building power plant, which is in the rear across the alley from the Bee Building, and inspect these boilers. They are now in operation and any one who is interested will be given an opportunity to look them over thoroughly. ESTABLISHED 1836. TELEPHONE 43. HENRY A. KOSTEILS WALL PAPER House, Sign and Decorative Painter, 109 South Fourteenth Street. Visitors Welcome. . Omaha, Neb. Bee Want Ads Produe Results. I 0 G 00 SEARLES & SEABLES Omaha. Nob. CURES 6UARANTEED Quicker and for LESS MONEY, than other SPECIALIST Cures all special die eases of men kidney. bladder and diseases of women, cured for life. Boon ovary aim. ivmntnm. inrm nn body. In mouth, tongue, throat, hair and eyebrows tf ailing out) disappear completely forever. frirlpati Vslnt rupture, enlarged and IIUIkBSB T0IIII knotty velna oured without cutting, pain or loss of time. Never fails. Quickest oure In the world. Wk. .enow Mid wa "$22& enrous debility, early decline, lack of Vigor and strength. Treatment by mall. Blood Polsoa M TBI Ann nor orrn. CUBSfUL PRACTICE XM OMAHA. Car aad Pwnlaa. aer oil Ufw Best of Everything The Only Double TracK Railway to Chicago Very Low One- Way Colonist Rates Montana, Oregon cad Washington Points Daily September i5th to October 15th. Offioo 1401-1403 rAMWAM OT. OMAHA o TKU B14-M1 ieS UBS ttfg Lmm TLajs All OtborsT DR McCREVV SPECIALIST. Treats all larva el I DISEASES OP MEN ONLY A Medical Bspert IS Years' Baserleace Is Vsara la Oaubs. Rstrtr M.M dm Carta ! rU.a. iiiMir. iMt. fc.rr.u ii.bintr. Uh ( stiwata a4 vuiity M all (trw el caroalt w ... Tmiaui kr auu. 011 m writ. Ba fas. aaM turn t aT swr Bssnia. .. .... VertwMle. rdrea.l.