The Omaha Illustrated Bee NTJMEB 329. Entered Second Class at Omaha FostofSce Published Weekly by The Bee Publishing Co. Subscription, $2.50 Per Year. OCTOBKlv 1, 1P05. The Omaha Water Company and Its Up-to-Date Plan! at Florence v f Everything Is Provided to Meet the Enlarged bemands of the Inhabitants of Our Rapidly Growing City and Its Adjoining Suburbs that Are to Become Greater Omaha How the Supply ot Water for Omaha F - TVC I- X 1 A i::' -rr M-M O-Vl TWENTY MILLION GALLON iITC XT th. knurl ft o man tnn 1 even for a second hie lite sues Is no less vulnerable than a man. It. -tOO, has Its heart which pulsates ceaselessly, night and day. Every second it Is throbbing, sending Its llfe-iflv-Ing current through Its v. Ins. Should It cease operation for a brief time, the metrop olis of Nebraska, with its 13,000 people, would, under certain conditions, perish. Omaha's heart Is made of brass and steel. The fluid It forces through the veins -and arteries Is water. , Sixteen beats to the minute Is Its record, and at every - one more than lS.oOO gallons rushes through ' Iron network of pipe which penetrate to very portion of the city. It Is a wonder-' ful heart. For over fourteen years this on has been beating with scarcely a rest. Sometimes It stops, but before it does, an other on takes Its place, and the city1 lives on. The magnificent water works system, of which this Immense steel heart Is the cen-' ter, will soon pass Into the possession of the city. If all goes smoothly. The city has begun proceedings to acquire the plant under the original contract, and the ap praisers have nearly finished the valua tion. It la not boast to say that as a water riant Its like does not exist In the country today. Perfect In every detail, adequate with the new additions made In the last five years, to supply the needs of Omaha for years. It Is a marvel of the architect's and designer's art. Concededly the finest plant of the kind In the world, Omaha may point to It with the usual "pride" so fa vored by the political platform. HesTam In ISSfl. The original plant was begun In the year 18S0. at which time Omaha had a popula- tlon of only about S0.00O. The system was completed In 18S3 and when the pumts started In the house at the foot of Burt street, they forced water through twenty eight miles of mains. Today the mains. If placed end to end. would extend 232 miles. The consumption of water In' 1886 was 8,000.000 gallons a day. Now It has grown to 18,000,000. Addition after addition has been made to the plant, as the needs of the service required, and the year 1905 finds It strictly up-to-date In every re spect. ' ' It was In the latter part of the 80 s that the company officials arrived at the con- elusion that the little pumping station on the river bank was all right. In Its humble way, for the time being, but that. If the future of the city was to be considered, another station of unlimited capacity would be needed. . Pumping Missouri river water Is not tha MSlest operation in the world. Indeed, to take the Big Muddy's fluid, separate It from Its sand and sediment nd purify it sntU It Is fit for drinking purposes, Is ex tremely difficult. Besides, the river Is as Sckle as a summer girl, and as will be recalled In .the case of Nebraska City, Is liable at any time to change its course tnd leave the Intake pipes sticking Into the air instead of the curren of the river unless restrained by rock and riprap bonds. Inspected Hirer Bank. It was with no little degree of care, therefore, that the officers of the company Inspected the entire river bank, from the Burt street station to a point some miles above Florence. When the examination was complete, one valuable bit of knowl edge had been . gained. At Florence was the only point on the river where a per manent station could be erected, with any assurance that it could be maintained there. The company at once bought a large tract of land and began the Installation of the present magnificent plant. i The pump house was designed to be built of cut stone, situated near the river, and cspable of being added to as time should require additions to the plant. The river was riprapped along the west bank to pro tect it from eddying currents. On the hill great reservoirs were laid -out. - Complete In 1888. All these Improvements were completed la 18f9, and August 1 of the same year, the new pumping station was thrown open to the public. If It was handsome then It Is perfectly handsome now. No smoke haa dimmed the dressed stone from which It la built. The floors are Just as clean today as they were sixteen years ago; the brass work shines -even more brightly, the grounds have been beautified until they have put many a city park to shame, and the machinery la the station Is a marvel to all those who see It. Hydraulic engineers of repute say It has net equal la the world. -a.. LOW-SERVICE PUMP AT FLORENCE. although It Is now being extensively copied. The Mlnne-Lusa pumping station, as it has been named. Is one of the favorite re sorts of Omaha's citizens on Sundays and holidays. The interior of the building la cool and scrupulously clean. The grounds are marvels of the landscape gardener's art. Although there are 107 acres In the com pany's plot. It Is kept with the same care as the millionaire's lawn. Flower beds may be found here and there over the smoothly mown lawn, adding a bit of brightness to the expanse of green sward. Trees, trimmed with ' the moat exacting care, dot the lawns. Fine Views Possible. On the reservoirs may be had one of the finest views In this part of the country. Away to the south arise the bluffs, while the "Big Muddy" is tumbling along below. To the north lie more bluffs, though one can see far up the winding river. On the west is the pretty little city of Florence with her wealth of trees. And down In the valley, close to the river, stands the pump house from which comes the soft musical throb of the monstrous engines which send Omaha her water supply. In a solid stream three feet in diameter and six miles long. There Is a history to the reservoirs, and as ono stands at their sides, one little realizes that it almost cost several men's lives to wrest from nature the secret of purifying water without the aid of chemi cals and niters. As one looks at the five Immanse storage tanks, with the water gently flowing from one to the other In thin sheets over what seem to be mlniatura falls, one wonders why this form of con struction is used. The question may be answered- , the language of Captain Frank Reynolds, the late chief engineer of the company. How . the Plan W mm Discovered. "More years ago than I care to remem ber, I was a sailor. The season to which I refer I was on a sailing ship, and when, we got among the Terra del Fuego islands the good ship went ashore. "There were many of our men thrown on the rock's, and although we had managed to obtain some food, death in a horrible form stared us In the face. There was no water on the Island fit to drink. At least that was the way It seemed to us. True, tumbling down the rocky side of the moun- tain close by was a limpid stream of sparkling water, but there were thousands of birds which nested on that rock and their tilth polluted the water. . "It was maddening. We lay In the shade and watched that water fall all around us, when we could not drink a drop. Some of the men made little water wheels with their Jackknlves, and In order to amuse them selves took broad rocks and directed the course of the filthy stream from one to the other in the shape of tiny waterfalls. Thus It turned one wheel and then an other. . t "At last I could stand the torture no longer. I went to where the water di verted from the main stream, fell from the last rock and, stooping down, tasted It. It was fresh and sweet! We all drank heartily, and in time were rescued. Later I began to wonder why that water had purified lt.ielf and how. At last I discovered the secret. In flowing over those broad rocks it had broken itself up, been thoroughly aerated and made sweet and pure. "When I came to Omaha to take charge of the water plant, I determined to try the same principle with the Missouri river water. We made the experiment, and it Is an unqualified success. Flowing over the weirs in thin sheets, the water Is thoroughly purified, and where some cities have to use filters, we use nothing at all but a system of miniature dams, or weirs. I learned that secret In a contest with death, and death almost won. too.". PnmplasT the Water. The water is taken from the river and pumped direct Into the first - rescrvbir. which has a capacity of 15,000.000 gallons. Here It settles thoroughly. The bottom of this reservoir, and, in fact, all of them, Is provided with a mud gate, through which to flush out the precipitated matter. That this is a. very necessary precaution will be understood' when It la stated that there are 100 tons of sand a day pumped Into this flrpt reservoir with the river water. Were It not emptied freouentlv. tha reservoir would become filled In a few days. From the first reservoir the water flows Into the second, also of lfi.000.0ut gallooa Consumers is Brought from the Missouri River, Filtered and Then Distributed VIEnV OP FLORENCE BASLNS TAKEN FROM THE TOWER OF THE i"Tlirf It ... n Ark"! si ' ' . tt capacity; thence to the third of the same capacity. Here It passes Into No. 4 reser voir, which holds 20,000,000 gallons, and finally into No. 6, of equal capacity, from whence It is drawn Into the great thirty- 1 Y Inch mnln M thu iltv tVhn t h A uratpr hft8 through the first four reservoirs It is perfectly pure, and so free from sedl- ment that but a very light precipitation may be obtained by allowing a gallon or two to stand all night long: In some vessel. These are the principal basins of the company, but not the only ones. At Walnut hill there are two others of large capacity for storage purposes, while the original Burt street basins may still be used In an emergency, but seldom are. The Walnut nl" basins are situated on the highest Plnt within, the Immediate environs of Omaha, save onej Just east of Krug park Is a tract of land a little more elevated, and there the company purchased a site for another vast storage basin of 100,000,000 gallons' capacity, which It would have built in the near fu ture had nop the city taken steps to ac quire the plant. The Immense engines which force the water Into th huge mala loading Zrom H.r 1! M Mill U G r MINNE-LUSA STATION, FLORENCE. Florence to the city are marvels - of the designer's art. They were the first of the kind to be built, and are probably the finest of the kind In existence today.. Description of the Gaglnri, The engines are a radical departure from the usual form of pumping engine. Instead of being of horizontal construction, they are upright, and are almost exact dupli cates of the engines In the steamers New York and Paris, plying between American and European ports. A feature of these machines is that they are of condensing pattern, and there Is no exhaust of steam Into the open air. ' By this means the atmos pheric pressure in the largest cylinder the engine Is triple expansion does as much work as the steam In either of the other two. The'hlgh pressure cylinder is forty Inches In diameter. Steam Is fed to this at a pressure of 120 pounds. From here It Is exhausted Into the second or Intermediate cylinder,' which measures seventy Inches In diameter. It Is here expanded the sec ond time, and la exhausted Into the low pressure cylinder of 104 Inches diameter. Here It works the piston and is then con densed Into water. The vacuum resulting allows the air pressure to brier the piston 1-L 9- ft? "t. "' ; li J .y2W. f: UhJ ; Mh f XIOaTEKN J11LUON QALLO BIQS-6ERVICB PUMP PUMPINO STATION. 1 r r r n't1 ' . back to the top of the cylinder. This engine was, in great part designed by Captain Reynolds. His brother was for many years at the head of the Allis company at Milwaukee, which built the machine. Captain Reynolds after running the old Holly pump of horizontal compound pattern for several years, arrived at the conclusion that pumping engines were be ing built on the. wrong principle. He de signed the present machine and sent the draft to his brother to figure on. When it was returned as satisfactory, the company purchased the engine, which cost about J125,000, without any of its connections. It was Installed twelve years ago, and the perfection of the mechanism is such that It has run almost continuously1 ever since, making between fourteen and six teen revolutions per minute. It Is occasion- ally necessary to stop the engine for the purpose of taking up a little wear In the valve motion, or inserting a new piece of packing ir. one of the cylinder glands, but it has never broken a single part, and It has never been necessary to shut It down for repairs. Rise of the Marhlne. The size of the machine may be imagined when It U stated that the mala shaft. AT FLORENCE, -V. u m..-.j-..... J TTTB LATB PAPTATTT W. F. RETNOLDS, OMAHA WATER COMPANY. which bears the fly wheels, measures eigh teen inches In diameter. On an ocean liner, this shaft would do all the work, carrying the .screws. On the pump It merely carries the fly wheels. These are two in number and weigh 80,000 pounds each. They are necessary to the smooth operation of the machine. Pumping water is one of the hardest duties which an engine can bo called on to perform, especially when the fluid Is pumped under fire pressure of 125 pounds, as at Omaha. The plungers to the pumps, which, by the way, are located directly under the steam cylinders, weigh 64,000 pounds each. It Is necessary, then, for the steam cylinder to lift this enormous weight as the plunger goes up. When it starts down there Is a pressure of 108,000 pounds against the head of the pump plunger. As there are three1 cylinders and three pumps, the engine takes a practically Instantaneous load of 54,000 pounds three tlu.es during each revolution. The elasticity of steam Is so great that were it to work directly against the pump plunger. It. would "stag ger." The great balance wheels prevent this. The nicety with which the pump Is de signed will alBO be observed. The plunger weighing 64,000 pounds. Is lifted "by steam. Going down, it falls by gravity until It lakes the load of water. This being 180,000 pounds the steam has the difference be tween the weight of the plunger and the load of water, or 64,000 pounds to work against Thus the steam pressure Is bal anced In each cylinder all the time. There Is another advantage to this type of machine which is probably more appre ciated by the owners than by the public. Before It was Installed It used to require about three pounds of coal per horse power per hour to work the then used pump. The new engine uses only one and one-half pounds of coal per horse power per hour to procure the same results, which Is a saving of 60 per cent. This Is said to be the most economical engine In the world. , Its saving, where 20.000 tons of coal are burned yearly, as at Florence, is naturally 10,000 tons annually. This amounts to some thing like flf.000, as the coal costs about 11.65 a ton. The capacity ot this great pump Is 18,000,000 gallons a day, against a pressure of 140 pounds. It runs slightly In excess of this when the pressure Is only 126 pounds. The present owners of the plant have recently installed a duplicate of this en gine, save that it has a capacity of 20,000,000 gallons dally. This additional service Is secured by making the pump cylinders six. Inches longer than In the first machine. An Improvement was made In building the water chambers of gun metal Instead of Iron, which makes them three times as strong, and practically Indestructable. With the new pump installed, the Flor ence station has a capacity of 62,000,000 gal lons a day, against fire pressure, there be ing still kept, ready for service, the old double compound Holly pump of 14,000,000 gallons' capacity. These pumps are called "high duty" machines, forcing the water under high pressure. In addition, there are In the Florence power house' three low service engines, which take the water from the river and lift It only into the settling basins. Two of these are l,4o0,0i)0 gallons' capacity each, the other, which has been recently Installed, is of 20,0u0,0u0 gallons' capacity. Steam far all this machinery Is fur nished by a battery of sixteen seventy-two and seventy-elglit-lnch boilers, burning the cheapest slack coal. Yet one S"ldm sees any evidence of the smoke coming from the stutlon chimney. The reason for this Is that In each furnace is a simple but perfectly reliable device. Invented alao by Captain Reynolds, which burns the smoke, perfectly. It consists of an arrangement of the fire bricks in the fire chamber, by which the products of combustion are matjo to take a certain course over whit) hot bricks until they are consumed them selves. Other Machinery Seeded. Themachlr.ery at the Florence station, while the principal part of the pumping plant, Is not by any means all thai is owned by the company. It is comparatively simple to pump water from Fleience to the city that l, the lower sections of the city under hlKh pressure. Hut when It comes to serving such sections us Walnut Hill, Hanscom park, ltenson und Dundee, the big pump is not strong enough. To overcome this obstacle the company still maintains Its Hurt street station, where there Is a low service engine of 10,000.000 gallons' capacity; one high st vlce engine of B.Ote.OiK) gallons and one of 7,000,000. At Twentieth and Poppleton there Is a high service, triple expansion engine of COQO.OoO gallons' capacity, which pumps the water into the high service mains when Accessary. At Walnut Hill 1 still another pumping FORMERLY CHIEF- ENGINEER OF THE station, where there are three high ser vice engines; one of 2r0rt.000, one of 8,500,000 and one of G,000,000 gallons' capacity, re spectively. Ordinarily, this stntlon Is run ' continuously, and is able to take care of the higher parts of the city without the Assistance of the Twentieth street station; but steam is kept on the boilers at the ' lust' mimed plant, which can be started at a moment's notice. If necessary. Maine of U:tO Miles. The system of the Omaha Water com pany lias over 230 miles of mains and about 15,000 services. The large mileage Is duo to the very sparse settlement of our mu nicipal area. Omaha , has a much more scattered population than most cities. The mileage of water pipe is sufficient to serve two or three times the present population, as Is seen by comparison with other cities. Hre It has been necessary; to" lay fifteen and one-third miles of main for every 1,000 services. Kansas. City haa ' but eleven miles per thousand. Omaha, ' ' therefore, has 40 per cent more mala per service than Kansas City. The two cities have been built up In much the same way, but the population oC -Kansas City is more condensed. It may bo partially due to the wider streets of Omaha. More than half of the territory ooverred by the pint of the city proper la ' taken up by streets and tilleys, wthout counting parks and publio grounds. If Omaha had as many water services per . mile of main as Kansas City we would number a population of 170,000 or more. St. Louis has 9.S7 miles of main per 1,000 services and at this rate Omaha ought to ' have 190.000 people to show for its 230 miles of water mains. Los Angeles gets along with five and four-fifths miles ofwater main per 1,009 services, while Omaha lqulres 1B4 per jent more. If we had as many people per mile of main as Ixs Angeles our present popula- tlon would' be 315.000. ' , Erie, Pa., has nine miles of main per 1.000 services, which ratio would give Omaha a population of 2o0,000. Harrlsburg. Pa., has 1.000 services for each three and one-half miles of main. If the Omaha mains did as well as this we would have more than 600.000 people much more than" Cleveland, Cincinnati or Buffalo.' Wo " would have a city almost as large as Bal- ' Umore or Boston. ' Many Mnlna Heeded. ' -' As compared with Omaha's fifteen and . one-third miles of mains per -1,000 services, " Harrlsbufg represents the ' greatest den sity of population with three and one-half miles per l.sx0, and St. Paul the least, with twelve and four-fifths miles, out of forty or fifty of the principal cities having less than 250,000 people. In none of them haa It been necessary to lay as much main pef service as In Omaha. In addition, Omaha's mains are of larger average diameter than those of other cities, partly because necessitated by long run and partly because the water company has been liberal In providing for the fu ture. For Instance, the average diameter of all water mains In the Omaha system' Is ten and one-fourth Inches, while In Kan sas City the averuge Is seven and eighty-slx-one-humlredths inches. Figures have lieen recently published to show that the Kansas City Water work are worth $S OfjO.Of'O to $12,n00.0M). Anyone who knows the two plants must Inevitably conclude that if the Kansas City works are worth anything like $1o.ri0,0O0, the Omaha works are certainly worth not less than 11500.000. What, with larger mains, of at least equal mileage, better and larger umps, better pumping stations, Immeasurably su perior settling basins, the comparison Is greatly In favor of Omaha. The Florence system of H'lttllntf busins Is recognized as the most efficient In the country. Kansas City has no excess pumping ca pacity, while the Omaha Water company lias duplicate pumps f,,r both services. The Flo re ice stutlon alone has a dally pump ing capucity of 6;.ni",fn gallons high serv ice and tK.Wioo gallons low service. The Omahu sst-m pumps wati-r against the uiuiHiial hi(;h heail of 3n7 feet, which la the elevation of Walnut Hill reservoir above the river. What this means may be understood when comparison is made . with such cities as Detroit and other lake cities, where water Is pumped against less than 1"0 reet hea'l. In Detroit the pres sure in the business district Is about twenty-eight pounds; In Omaha It is over 100 pounds. The present officers of the Omaha Water company ere: . Theodore C. Woodbury, president; E. M. Fairfield, general man ager; A. Ii. Hunt, superintendent; Ifenry Ruatln. chief engineer; BlockUm Uath, Ueaauier. .