1G THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE 19, 1911. HIVES OCCUPIED BY THE BEE-From Small, Humble Fort? years ago the flnt Omaha Be was laiued from a pine frame home. The issue of today goes out from a palace of granite. Iron and marble. Then The Dee waa no more pretentious than Its habitation. Now the Imposing structure that bears Its name Is typical of lta pre-eminence among the great newspa pers of the west. In the successive changes by which The Bee rose from Its obscure birthplace to its present palatial surroundings Is chronicled the history of its trials and Tlctories. The necessity for more commo dious accommodations grew with the development of the paper and each change of quarters indicated that another forward movement had been achieved. . The first home of The Bee gave no indication of its subsequent progress. It stood on the southeast corner of Twelfth and Dodge streets, a point then In the business center of the city. The building waa two stories in height, rough and unpalnted. It stood close to the sidewalk, and as the street was brought to grade the basement was rendered useless. It was owned by the Redfleld Bros., who' ran a printing es tablishment that was fairly well equipped according to the Ideas of the period. From this structure the unassuming sheet which was destined to develop into a great newspaper went out to sink or swim. While it was soon deserted by The Bee in favor of more convenient quarters the old Redfleld building con tinued to occupy that corner until the spring of 1889, when it was torn down to make room for the brick building which succeeded it. Second Home of The Bee. After The Bre had been issued from the Redfleld offloe for three months Edward Rosewater leased the building which occupied the adjoining lot on the south, and here the p. per flourished until the building was burned down in June, 1872, about a year after the first copy wss Issued. The building was scarcely more pretentious than the former quarters, but it ex ulted in a front porch and a wooden basement. It had previously been used as a fourth rate hotel under the name of the Cedar Rapids house, and it now served for the first business office and composing room of The Bee. The press work was still done by Red field Bros., but The Bee was now fairly launched on Its career as a permanent establishment, with a build ing devoted to its uses. At the same time that this building waa occupied Mr. Rosewater purchased the Beobachter Missouri and the Pokrok Zapadu, of which be had also been the founder, and which were all issued from the same office. ' ' - ' I Third Home of The Bee. When on June 11, 1872, an incendiary flre de stroyed the entire building, with all Its contents, the establishment was moved to a two-story and base ment brick building, located on Farnam street, be tween Ninth ana Tenth. This building had been erected by Mr. Rosewater in 1869 and It now afforded abundant space for the three papers. An entirely new plant, Including news and job type for all three papers, was purchased at Cincinnati and St. Louis, and, as the revenues of the office were still limited, the purchase was largely a matter of credit. This building answered all purposes for six years, and dur ing that time no particular improvements were added to the facilities of the establishment. In 1879 Mr. Rosewater leased the wooden structure on the lot east of the Farnam street building and eventually the lot was purchased from Milton Rogers for $5,000. This gave The Bee a frontage of forty-four feet on Farnam street, one-half of which was occupied by the original brick building and the remainder by the two-story frame which stood on the Rogers lot. An entrance cut in the east wall of the brick afforded communica tion between the two buildings, and together they answered all purposes for another period of six years. In 1885 this building was reconstructed and merged Into the four-story brick which now occupies the property. The counting room was then the most elegant in the city. The floors were tiled with. mar ble, the walls were handsomely frescoed and an ex pensive cherry counter separated the counting room proper from the lobby. As The Bee continued to flourish additional space was secured by leasing the upper story of the Strang building on the west, so that the plant practically covered forty-four front feet in addition to the one story brick on the east. The Great Bee Building. The building at Seventeenth and Farnam streets, now occupied by The Bee, situated upon the highest point of the business district, will remain for genera tions to come a magnificent monument to' the success of a great newspaper and to tlje enterprise of lis pro genitor. The distinguishing feature of The Bee building is the impression of solidity and durability which it gives to all beholders. Its broad foundations, mas sive pillars and imposing superstructurepromlse to resist the encroachments of time until long after the Omaha of today has become a memory. As an office building it has long been conceded to be unequaled. While the general plans were worked out by the architect, they were designed after the personal ideas of Mr. Edward Rosewater, and during the period in which it grew Into its finished grandeur no detail was too unimportant to command his per sonal attention and supervision. The minutiae of its construction was as carefully planned as its most im posing feature. Nothing was overlooked and noth ing slighted, and the result has abundantly justified the additional expense and labor involved in such an undertaking. Area and External Architecture. The Bee building occupies one-fourth of the entire block, with a frontage of 188 feet on Farnam street and the same on Seventeenth street. While Its erec tion had long been contemplated by Mr. Rosewater, no active steps were taken until June, 1887, when 8. S. Beman of Chicago, famous designer of great office buildings, was directed to prepare the plans. Several months were occupied In deciding on the de tails of the undertaking and in letting the contracts for the work, and It was September before the excava tion was begun. Work on the foundations was com menced a month later and from that time the build ing was vigorously pushed to completion. The general structure of the building Is of rough faced brick. It rests on an Impregnable foundation, the walls being from three to five feet thick at the base, with assisting piers eight feet thick. From this point they gradually decrease to a thickness of twenty inches at the parapet. Their strength is augmented by Iron columns which are enclosed in the brick piers above the first story. The granite which composes the walls of the basement and first story Is from Wau paca, Wis., and In color and textile qualities it Is con sidered fully equal to the famous Scottish granite. It is a brilliant red In color and the effect is height ened by the rough rock finish. The granite la but tressed at the corners of the building and above each a beehive Is suggestively carved In the pilasters. The main front on Farnam street Is supported by eleven polished pillars of the same material. Beginning with the second story, the granite gives place to the brown brick. This Is trimmed with terra cotta of a Shanty to the H -- ' ' Vlp, ! u t'; vVMV , , - V , ; ;'rr ' f p P rcj)V 1 M M ft I W , . .. . ... -Xu,-j4 ; iMd-. s,J r THE PALATIAL similar color and brown stone, moulded brick and carved terra cotta serve to relieve the severity of the vast stretch of masonry. At the top of the walls at the seventh story a frieze of obsidian brick delicately carved Is In simple but effective relief. On the Farnam street side an eighth story extends for sixty feet along the center of the building. Aside from adding two or three very pleasant rooms to the capacity of the building, this addition serves to break the effect of the long lines of windows which stretch across the main wall. Above the eighth story two small turrets rise to a height of 115 feet above the sidewalk and between them the inscription, "The Bee Building," in plain Roman letters graces a terra cotta panel. Striking Central Court. The most remarkable feature of the building Is the great central court, a 'comparison to which Is scarcely to be found In any office building In the coun try. Whether it is seen in daylight or by the com bined radiance of the numerous incandescent lamps that line its walls, it presents an unparalleled viBlon of architectural magnificence, and has been' pro- nounced one of the finest examples of Interior treat ment known to architecture. It is based on the ground floor at a level with the street and Its walls rise in unbroken white to the skylight 120 feet above. The court Is forty-three feet square and In the center a handsome fountain, with a fish pond, adds an appro priate touch to the simplicity of the design. A series of pilasters which ' extend to the third floor divide the court into three bays. In the base ment story these pilasters are crowned with an en tablature of a severely classic design composed of architrave, frieze and cornice. The frieze is orna mented with -circular and diamond-shaped panels, while a simple dentil design adds to the effect of the cornice. The pilasters, which extend through .the first and second stories, rise from this entablature and are surmounted by a semi-circular arch around the third story. The whole Is crowned by a hand somely moulded modlllion cornice, underneath which the spannels are wrought In an Interlaced Moorish fretwork. The capitals which bear the arches are beautifully moulded with a delicate French detail ornament. The decorations of the fourth and fifth stories consist only of simple lines of molded cornices and still courses which are in architectural harmony with the more elaborate ornamentations of the lower Henry D. Estabrook's Experience as City Editor I presume every American boy, normally consti tuted,, with perhaps an extra literary kink in his men tal makeup, has had an ambition to become an edi tor, and has Indulged this ambition whenever and wherever opportunity offered. From the eruptive, semi-occasional periodical published at tne age of 10 appropriately printed on foolscap with the aid of a lead pencil and a protruding tongue; for which pub lication, I may add, hla immediate relatives were the only subscribers, and of which his darling mother was the only reader from this earliest manifestation of the symptom, I say, up to the age of 16, and his first anonymous communication to the city press (over the quaint and curious nom de plume of "Vox Popull") he has simply been pluming his wings and preening himself for the glorious career of a full fledged editor. At the age of 16 I sent to the editor of our dally paper, The Omaha Bee, an item of news over the nom de plume of "Vox Populi" of course. I was proud and happy when it appeared in print the fol lowing morning. It was considerably altered as to language, to be sure; still, the central Idea the great and luminous thought expresseo that Is to say, the item of news, was there in all its glory; my manu script bad been accepted. Later on, when I fell In love, I tackled the editor on poetry. But that manu script, for some occult reason, was not accepted. Finally there was presented an opportunity of a lifetime. Mr. Rosewater's city editor, who was also his only reporter for a newspaper man in that time played many parts bad been given a vacation, and previous to h's departure bad visited the high school to engage one of the larger boys to assume his duties. Present Palatial Bee Building w cy a lAfe.'vsA. .jwa jw, BEE BUILDINO FARNAM AND SEVENTEENTH stories. A double set of pilasters surround the upper or sixth story. One set forms a continuation of the main pilasters below, while the othor serves the pur- poBe of mullions between the windows. These are crowned by capitals of the same style of ornamenta- tlon as those below and the openings are surrounded by semicircular arched heads with a label molding. The whole Is overhung with a deep frieze and dentil cornice which displays the same rich architectural sentiment that pervades the entire Interior of the court. Access to the upper floors Is afforded by means of two modern fast passenger elevators of the latest type, and an elegant stairway, which is constructed Independent of the building. In the rear of the build ing is a huge freight elevator and another iron stair way, also constructed Independent of the building. The lighting and plumbing are features In which ,The Bee building excels. The greatest care has been taken to afford the best possible sanitary arrange ments, and such a thing as an unclean odor has never been known in the building. All offices are supplied with running water and Italian marble basins. Each floor is provided with separate toilet rooms for men and women! The entire building la provided with combination fixtures for gas and incandescent lights, and the current for the latter is furnished by a sep arate plant in the basement. In the matter of flreprooflng, every precaution has been taken that modern skill can suggest. All the partitions, furring, floors, arches, etc., are of fire clay tiled, and all the structural work Is of the heaviest iron. The result is that each room In thebulldln g is for all practical purposes a fireproof vault, but a ddl tlonal protection for boks and documents Is provided by seventy-four separate vaults in various parts of the building. For many years the business office and counting room of The Bee was on the main floor of the main building, while the editorial rooms and composing room were on the top floor. This arrangement was looked upon as excellent at the time the building was completed, but the later growth of the business of the paper, as well as the exigencies of modern methods of publication demanded that both publication and ed- itorlal offices be brought closer to the public and closer together. To achieve this, the editorial rooms were removed In the fall of 1904 from the upper floor to the main floor, contiguous with the business office. At the same time the composing room was removed I was the lucky chap to be invited, and I accepted with alacrity. For two whole weeks I was not only to write just what I pleased, but what I wrotu was bound to be published. Moreover, I was to have $20 per week Into the bargain. The first morning I was at The Bee office bright and early. Mr. Rosewater dropped into my 2x4 sanc tum to wish me good morning and success in my ex periment, and to Indicate my route. Incidentally he remarked that a quartet of male voices had serenaded him the night before and It might be well to say an appreciative word about their singing. I did. I said that four roysterers had made last night hideous with their catawauls, and had selected the editor f this paper for their especial and particular victim; that men with such voices as thelra ought not to be per mitted to run at large, etc., etca The fact Is, I was a songeter myself, and belonged to a rival quartet. When I arrived at the office next morning I met Mr. Rosewater going out to post a letter. . He gave me a stony glare and hastened his footsteps. I afterwards learned that this letter was addressed to the absent reporter commanding his immediate return. Mr. Rosewater had scarcely made his exit when the sec ond baBso called and stopped hla paper stopped tt off short never to go again. He also said In his most raucous voice that be wanted to see the responsible editor of that dirty sheet. I told him that the re sponsible editor had just stepped out, but that be might consider me the irresponsible editor, if be were so disposed. He laughed a nollow. mocking, blood-curdling sort of a laugh and vanished. During the day the remaining members of the quartet dropped in one after the other and cancelled their subscriptions. The cheerful Idiot who edited a STREETS. from the seventh floor to the ground floor, being In- stalled in the space originally occupied by the press room and mailing room, which bad to be removed to the basement in 1898, at the time of installing a'new press room equipment. This arrangement was soon found inadequate for the proner handling of a stead- ily increasing business, and the publication office of the paper was removed to quarters on the ground floor, at the corner of Seventeenth and Farntfrn streets, where the office force Is now installed in one of the most commodious and adequately equipped Of fices known to the newspaper world. At the time this move was made plans were laid and later carried out for the erection of a workshop building, in which the great operations for the publication of a modern dally newspaper are going steadily on. day and night. Later Growth of The Bee. Across the alley from the main building tn annex was erected, in which were installed the city editor and his forces, the night editor, the telegraph editors, society and club editors, sporting editor, the editors of the Twentieth Century Farmer, the great agricultural paper that succeeded the Weekly Bee; the staff artists, the photo-engraving department, the composing room, with all its costly equipment of special machinery, the stereotyping and electrotyping department, equipped with the very latest of mechanical appliances,' and the boiler plant. In this great annex is the manufacturing plant of The Bee, with the exception of the preBS room, the dynamo room and the mailing room, which are yet maintained in the main building. The office of the editor-in-chief and the managing editor are still on the rear corridor of the ground floor In the main bulldlhg, and the quarters left by the local and tele graphic news forces are now occupied by the adver tising manager and his staff. The whole disposition of the working forces Is planned to achieve a maximum of result in a minimum of time. A central telephone exchange, together with a "house" system provides Instant communication between the many departments, and permits each to be instantly connected with the world outside. In this way the publication of the sev eral editions of The Bee is possible without the dis- turbance or annoyance of any tennant, the only knowledge they may have of the operations being gained from the bulletin board in front of the busi ness office. That the experiment began in 1871, admittedly as column in our "loathsome contemporary," called the "Public Fountain," took up the cudgel on behalf of the quartet, and through the medium of bis column Intimated that the ad Interim reporter of The Bee was not yet dry behind the ears. I retorted that that was because I was in the habit of washing my ears, and thought it would be'sanltary If he would occasion ally follow my example. "Wash 'em in the Public Fountain," I said, "along with your dirty linen. What an appropriate freak of chance It Is, any way, that such a fountain should be run by a squirt!" On receipt of bis chief's letter Mr. Al Sorenson, for whom I was substituting, shortened his leave of absence and hastened home, but not until I had time to be thoroughly licked by a saloonkeeper named Taylor; not until Mr. Rosewater's life had been several times threatened on my account, and not until I had Involved The Omaha Bee In a $20,000 libel suit. Then the editor came out In one of his famous editorials, over his own signature, and explained to a bewildered publlo just what happened. He commented severely ' upon my Inaptitude for a journalistic career, and at tributed his recent sorrows to what he called my , "trick-mule performance." And yet I swear when I hurled my reportorlal thunderbolts Indiscriminately at the public, It mas more for the fun of manufactur- lng thunderbolts than for the purpose of injuring those who happened to be in the way of them. But that phrase, "trick-mule performances," stuck In my craw. If the much vaunted liberty of the press would not permit gentlemen to indulge in a little personal join a profession which would! So I quit journalism and entered the law. HENRY D. ESTA BROOK. an experiment and not with any Intent of becoming I Permanent Institution, dnvolnnrd lntr nn of tha rnnni 7 Important of the world's newspapers, a journal of recognized standing throughout the world, Is due solely to the persistence of Its founder. Edward Rose water found in his path such obstacles as would dis courage a man of unquestioned grit, but la him the greater the obstruction, the greater his desire to over come it. Within a year of the publication of 1U first number, The Bee was burned out, fired by an Incen diary. Once again It suffered the same way through a similar agency. Its editor was assaulted and a des perate effort made to take hla life; he fought against poverty and underwent the severest of hardships, but he would not give over the work he had set about. And Inch by Inch he fought his way, little by little he made progress, until he got hla enterprise on a solid footing, and then he went about to make his paper what he had dreamed It would become, the leading journal of the west. During all this time he did not waver In his policy. He boldly attacked corruption wherever located; he championed the weak against the strong; he set himself against the domination of the afalrs of the public by the corporations, and fear lessly opposed the leadership of men who were active In the interest of the moneyed oligarchy that sought to control. His sympathies were always with the people, and his advocacy of their cause never slack ened In the earlier days of the struggle itsle of The 'Bee against the many Influences lined up up against It, its editor felt many times that the life of his paper was to It. At the end trembling by a thread, but he stuck to of two years It had grown to proportions where he must enlarge Its size, and although the panic of 1873 was at its height, he bought more and better machin ery and entered upon the real career of a journalist. Varying Size of the Prr. At this time he entered the general field for cir culation, and In return found such a welcome from the people outside of Omaha that the next year saw another enlargement of The Bee. In March, 1874, It was Issued as a nine column folio, the old "blanket sheet" type, the fifth time It had been enlarged since Its birth three years before. On January 1, 1875, The Bee issued the first illustrated number ever pub lished In the west, a review of the city's activities, Il luminated with cuts of buildings, Individuals and other matters of interest. In 1878 the Bee Publish ing company was formed, and the great paper was launched on Its wider career. Ample capital, a aolid financial basis, provided for new and improved ma chinery, and a general plan of expansion was com menced. The morning edition had been added some time before, and both editions were enlarged to eight pages. In 1881 a Council Bluffs department was set up, and four years later Lincoln was taken In. From that time continuously The Bee has had Its own rep resentatives In both of these cities. A special repre sentative has been maintained In Washington since early In the 80s, and for more than a dozen yeara a resident staff correspondent has been kept at pes Moines, thus giving The Bee Its own representatives in the great news centers of the country and the Btates It especially serves. ' From its very start The Bee found great diffi culty In getting Us news servioe from the world out side. The local field was easily enough covered, but the gathering of news by telegraph was accomplished in the face of discouraging conditions. The telegraph , companies would do nothing to aid the paper, and for many years It paid outrageous tolls for its tele graphic news. It was denied entrance to the Asso ciated Press, and as a result, while the other Omaha nnnnra wnro nnvlnz but a small sum. around 875 ner " r - a V t ' ' month for telegraphic news, The Bee was held up fWJ from $500 to $800 for what it got. Finally, In 188r It was admitted to the Associated Press on the pay ment of a cash bonus of $9,800. This exorbitant fee did not seriously affect the splendid system of special correspondents that had been built up, but made It possible to use the force to better advantage, with the result tnat It made The Bee pre-eminent as a newspaper. Connections were' made with the great journals pf the east, and an alliance with the New York Herald that continued for many years, or until the Herald became involved In an effort to sustain a rival to the . Associated Press, when the connection with The Bee wss broken off. Superb Ifews Gathering Source. -. It may be of interest to recite at this point a fact that Is little known, but is of significance as showing the Importance of The Bee In the news-gathering func tion of the great American press. When the United Press was about to go under, In 1896, a conference was held in New York, at the instance of Mr. Bennett, and arrangements were then made for an association of newspapers that would gather the news and serve it to their clients. In this combination were included the New York Herald, the Chicago Tribune, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat and The Omaha Bee For somw rsflinn never exDlalned. Mr. Bennett withdrew over 4 night from the agreement, and the Immediate reorgan- izatlon of the Associated Press rendered further ef fort on the part of the others to provide for a central news-gathering and distributing agency unnecessary. The United Press went under and the Herald came into the Associated Press. In 1885 the mechanical equipment of The Bee was expanded to meet its growth by the addition of a web perfecting press and complete stereotyping out fit. August 1, 1886, The Sunday Bee made Its ap pearance. Up to that time the morning edition of The Bee had appeared on Monday, but not on Sunday. The success of the new venture was In keeping with the enterprise that has marked its career. In 1889 The Bee moved to its present home, and even during the times of depression that came In the 90s, it con tinued Its growth. It was in 1893 that the battery of twelve linotypes, the first in the west, were ordered, ard the production of the paper by machine set type w is commenced early In the following year. In 1898 tie two Potter perfecting presses were displaced by two Hoe presses, each of more than double the capacity of the ones taken out. These In their turn are being displaced by others of still more than double the ca pacity. The battery of linotypes has grown to fifteen, each working sixteen hours a day, and producing an output that measures far above the average of the country, as shown by the Mergenthaler tabulation. Not alone In mechanical appliances has the paper grown. Its news connections are the most complete of any in the west. It covers the world every day. giving to its readers the dally story of human activity in all lines, the cream of the news, carefully written and presented attractively and accurately. Its editor long ago solved the question of what is fit to print, and his views on that point are fixed law in The Bee editorial rooms. No Item Is published In malice, nor to needlessly wound any, nor is ever an Item to be published whose reading would offend good taste. that have sprung up through unusual hours of clos- v ng malls and the like, and to secure delivery of its J editions daily, but these are so ordered that each sua-( scrlber gets the full news of the day. ( :1