because of the giving out, of their sup ply of lumber in the Minnesota pine ries. Thii is the beginning of the end in the loefel sawmill industry. But while the available timber in this sec tion of the country is rapidly coming to an end, the demand for lumber is increasing, and increasing bv great strides. There was only one thing for lumbermen to do to meet the demand. Get the timber from a distance and ship it in by rail. Of course this meth od is more expensive than simplv float ing logs down a stream to a mill and selling them from the oiigmal millyard. Saving GREAT BUSINESS GROWING JC UP AT TRANSFER It Will Become the Great Lumber Supply District for the Northwest^Huge Storage Yard for Pacific Coast Shingles Almost Completed by Transfer Company. HE Midwav bids fair to be the great lumber district of the northwest. Every year more sawmills tributary to the twin cities are obliged to shut down VIEW OF SHINGLE STORAGE -SECTIO N OPERATED TRANSFER COMPANY. And ru.t lumber is consequently much ijjgher today than if was a decade ago. Pacific Coast Lumber. The Pacific coast is each year looked to more by local lumbermen for keep ing up their stocks. At first, simply a shipments to fill in stocks were few needed. Today it is necessary to keep yards of Facific coast timber on hand to niPet the focal demand. Ami what place could he more desirable for the establishmont of Paril ooast lumber yards than that section of the Midway district adjacent to the Minnesota -Transfer a. location convenient for receipt of cars, and whore, from one point, cars can be reloaded and sent out on any line of railroad entering the twin cities with like convenience and without any additional switching charges? Thus it is that the Midwnv has al ready become an important lumber dis-' tnct. And because of the increasing necessity for the receipt of Pacific coast timber at the most convenient point, it is assured that the Midway lumber dis trict is now but in its infancy. The first lumber company to establish itself at the Transfer was the Brooks Lumber company. For many years not only has this company had a' large yard there, but also a sash and door shop which has had a practical monopoly on the Midway business of this nature, being the only one in the entire Mielwav territory. The, Brooks company is not located, however, where the iiew in dustrial district is springing on the Minnneapolis side of the Minnesota Transfer tracks, but is on the St. Paul side of the Transfer tracks, on the north side of University avenue. On account of the increased building thruout the Midway, this long established company is doing all the business its men can attend to. The Brooks yard, however, now has important competition at hand, and more in sight for the near future. A Big Storage House. The Menz Lumber company of Min neapolis has recently erected an im mense storage house, mainly for the storage of ito Pacific, coast timber. The building will be used also for general storage, and for convenience, the stor age business has been incorporated sepa rately under the name' of the Midway Storage company. Their storage build ing is 256x210 feet, divided into five di vision*!, and these in turn, into 160 sec tionq. The building is modern in every respect, and capped by a number of cupola. ventilators. Tt is furnished with electric lights in every section, and lrs gravity carriers thruout. The building contains 50,000 square feet of floor space, is located on a. gpnerous Bite of (M, acres, with 2,000 feet of private railroad trackage. Already the establishment is proving a good ven ture. Everv kind of lumber is kept on hand in quantity- George P. Newmyer, manager of the Midway Storage com any building, is an experienced man, been in the- lumber business a number of yoais. A Center for Shingles. Not far from the big building of the Menz company the H. B. Waite Lum ber company "of Minneapolis has pur chased a five-acre tract, at the corner of Wabash avenue and Montgomery. The "Waite company will make this a great center for storage of shingles and lumber of small and large dimen sions. All their lumber will be under roof. On the Waite company's land will be erected a number of substan tial lumber storage houses. One will be 75x506 feet andther, 80x300 feet and five shingle sheds ir: addition will each "be 40x200 feet. Within these build ings will be carried all kinds of joists and timbers up to fifty feet in length, Washington ftr, spruce, red cedar and California redwood. The stock will be between 4,000,000 and 5,000,000 feet of lumber. The whole will represent an investment of $150,000 to $200,000. The Waite company contemplates ulti mately also' doing a general storage business."' Other Companies Established. Some three years ago the Transfer ^/N^^Vrf"S^^*VN/V/WN^S/V^ Midway District. Special bargains in lots on easy monthly payments. "Without interest. Prices from $150 to $200. Telephone 6018 Twin City: 5c fare to either city. 1 D. I ELDER, Manhattan Building St. Paul. *m Lumber company established a yard .here. This company carries on hand a large stock to fulfill the general re quirements of northwest retail yard trade. Every variety of Pacific coast timber is on hand ready for quick order shipment. The Citizens' Lumber company also has a yard in this territory, and carries on hand a large assortment of lumber of all varieties and sizes, including Pacific coast cedar shingles and larfje dimension lumber. The R. B. Thompson Lumber company recently purchased a Tranfer site, facing on University avenue, and con templates erecting a lumber storage house for retail business. Their proper ty is placarded with a sign announcing BY THE MINNESOTA the establishment there in the near fnt ture of a retail yard. A company for the manufacture of telephone and telegraph poles is about to establish a large business adjoining the Transfer company's tracks. This business, however, does not necessitate the erection of a la.rge building, most of the work being done in the open. Bigr Shingle Storage Yard. The greatest shingle yard in the cen tral west for the storage of Pacific coast shingles has recently been estab lished at the Minnesota Transfer by the Transfer Railroad company. Busi ness conditions compelled the erection of such a depository. Pacific coast shingles are every year in greater de mand in the central' west. It has been the practice of western coast shingle dealers to ship carloads of shingles for the east without designation of desti nation at time of shipment, and sell them en route, the terminal point be ing designated about the time the cars reached the twin cities. Shipments finally became so extensive that it was impossible to sell them all en route, and it was necessary to use cars for storage, sidetracking'them till the sales were made. This every month tied up more cars for the railroads, and finally, as a way out of the dilemma, it was decided to establish a shingle storage yard at the Minnesota Transfer. This has been done entirely by the Trans fer company, at its own expense and on its own property. The yard occu pies twenty-five acres. It was former ly a wooded district and the ground very uneven. A man was found who contracted to clear it up in return for the timber cut. Then came the grad ing. Sixty thousand cubic yards of dirt had to be handled, and the whole .lob represented an outlay of $12,000. The work of putting trackage thru out this shingle-yard district is not yet conipleted, but three tracks, each" a third of a mile long, will run thru the yard. Use of this yard for storage will release hundreds of freight cars fori immediate use upon arrival, instead of compelling them to stand on sidetracks as o old. occasionally for weeks at a time. In the wheeled rig line over a hun dred styles of baby carriages are made and sold. This includes willow and fB^^&^^^^^^M Saturddy^Evehing, THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL* WAITE INttRBSmVNmiE One of the men most prominently identified with the progress of estab lishing industries in the Midway dis trict is George H. Watson of 420'Guar- anty Loan building. Mr. Watson' is acting as an agent for several holders of property and his enthusiasm and diligence in showing the advantage to locate in this new district, is largelj' responsible for its wonderful develop ment. Mr. Watson has located many of the industries now operating there, and expects several others to be in stalled soon. Carey Cement Hoofing growa better with age. See W. S. Nott Co., Tel. 376. Lewis and Clark Exposition, Yellow stone National Park. During the coming summer tourist season the Northern Pacific will pre sent some of the most attractive com bination trips ever offered, both west ern via the Yellowstone park to the Pacific coast, Alaska and the Orient and East via the Great Lakes. Now is the time to arrange plans for your party. See Mr. G. F. McNeill, City Ticket Agent, No. 19 Nicollet House-Block. rattan work of the finest construction and from the cheapest to the most ex pensive patterns. There is also a full line of boys' express wagons, coasters and propellers, wire doll carriages and various wheel toys turned out large quantities with ready market.._ In this department there is competition, but with the freight rate favoring the con sumption of the Minneapolis product. In the other two departments compe tition is practically a minimum. The wire feature of the business comprises novelties and special goods such as woven doormats, hammocks, spark guards or fire screens, finely woven- iron-house, oxo teet a tablemats for hot dishes, coat'and hat same dimensions power plant with racks and a variety of other articles building lOOJeet,squarej^anda^fireproof for domestic- use. The doormat is ~~l unique in that a name, street number or attractive device may be woven into it without adding materially to the cost, a feature controlled by the patents of Mr. Lloydt who is widely known as a successful inventor. The thir^d or machine manufacturing department is without competition, the machine made there being the only one in the world which will automatically weave wire such as used in wire mat tresses. This is put out on yearly rentals and less than 20 per cent of the possible users of this machine have been sup plied. With this machine one operator can weave from 500 to 800 pounds of wire a day against from 250 to 300 pounds in the old wa.y, and with less attention and better work. The Lloyd plant is on Northern Pa cific trackage at Gentral and Eigh teenth avenue NE. Buildings and land are assets of the company. The build ings are two-story brick and are neaijly new. The capacity of the plant was doubled about ^a year ago, and is still only half large enough with plenty of yard room for expansion. One build ing is a warehouse and the other the factory with storage room above. I would require about a quarter of a mil lion dollars to retain the business in tact for the city. The business is capable of division into its three de partments, thus allowing for three dif ferent and well-defined industries in stead of one. If you want a hurry-up job of roofing done, telephone W. S. Nott Co., 376. Transfer Lumbef MANUFACTURERS AND SHIPPERS OF WHOLESALE ASSEMBLERS White Pine, Washington Fir and Red Cedar Lumber Shipments from Minnesota Transfer in Straight or Mixed Cars 2080 Wabash Av., Merriam Park ST. PAUL. MINN. RE CEDA SHINGLES^ Minneapolis, Minn/ 1 HILLS Clea Lake Ballard, Getchell Granit Falls and Parker's Spur Wash We have the largest stock of long fir timber and fir joists 50 feet and -under in the Northwest. Our sheds will contain a complete assortment of California Redwood, Washington Red Cedar Spruce and Fir Finish Siding and Pattern Lumber,'enabling us to make immediate deliveries in straight or mi^ed car. XM S*'* iss^ Defective Page TRACKAGE FACILITIES ATTRACT INDUSTRIES Continued from Eighteenth, Page. paint, varnishing and upholstering" shop, 300x125 feet a mill, 150x100 feet a motor repair shop, 250x90 feet a ma chine shop, 250x60 feet a truck, frog and blacksmith's shop, 150x100 feet an coal-house, oi storage building, 40x30 feet, The present plans also call for a transfer table, 605 by 90 feet, extend ing thru the center or the shop layout, so cars may be conveniently handled. The buildings, non-inclusive of the car house, will cover 4.3 acres. Just ad joining the new car shops site, is the twenty-acre tract occupied by the Bohn Refrigerator Manufacturing company, with its big white buildings and large, well-kept lawn in the front. CAR-LINE EXTENSIONS The shops are not the only improve ments being made in the Midway dis trict by the Twin City Rapid Transit company. Already work has com menced building the long-talked-of cross line, commencing at the fair grounds, on Snelling avenue, and to extend across to the Grand avenue line. This cross line will necessarily con nect with the Hamline line, the inter urban system on University avenue, the Rondo line on Rondo street, and the Selby and Merriam Park cars on Sel by avenue, ending finally with the Grand avenue line. The cross-town line will do much toward building up the cross-town district thru which it runs. Snelling avenue is a broad, handsome street, but has not been much built up because of so little of it being con venient to the car lines. The Merriam Park people especially are looking forward to the approach ing day when their special line along Marshall avenue will be extended to Minneapolis, thus making a thru service and making Merriam Park still more popular as a place of residence for Minneapolitans. Further plans of the street railroad people include extend ing the terminal of the Hamline line so that, it will come out at University and Prior, where the Merriam Park line connects with the interurban. This, too, will be an advantage for Minne apolis people whp desire- to reside in the Midway district, for it will make Hamline and all adjacent territory much more accessible than it is at present. The 5 cent fare, recently put into effect from Snelling avenue on the in terurbans to Minneapolis will also be beneficial. It permits residents of Ham line and the St. Paul end of Meriam Park to ride to Minneapolis for 5 cents, where before they used to pay 10. Ham line, Merriam Park,. St. Anthony Park, and the less thickly settled districts between these suburban residence parks are now accessible to either St. Paul or Minneapolis for one fare. The car service is also most- excellent, large, roomy cars being operated on all these lines," the cars being but a few minutes apart. This frequent car service lasts at night till 1 o'clock, after which hour "owlcars" speed along every hour till 5 o'clock, when a more frequent ser vice begins. Pacific Coast.Lumberj*v FIR SPRUCE i CEDAR The building of the car shops at Uni versity and Snelling is bound to have its effect on surrounding real estate. The shops will employ upwards of 1,500 men. They will wish to reside in/the vicinity of their work. Many of them, doubtless, will purchase property in the neighborhood. A new Midway village, bordering on Merriam Park on the west, and Hamline on the north, is bound to spring up. Property in this district is already looked on as a good investment for speculation, and many deeds for lots have of late changed hands, with a still greater number pending. Barrett, & Zimmerman, the well known Midway horse dealers, are show ing their faith in this district by hav ing purchased considerable land at the corner of Snelling and University on which they will erect a brick block 140 feet deep, with 225 feet front on Uni versity. GREAT TERMINAL PLANT Minnesota Transfer Is an Enormous Traffic Institution. There is one company in the Midway which employs more men probably than all the other Midway industries put to gether. It is the Minnesota Transfer -Railway company. As in Italy, "all roads lead to Borne," so from thruout the northwest all roads lead into the Minnesota Trans fer yards. There ten railroads center. There the freight of these ten big lines is sorted and reloaded where necessarv, and all ears coming in from different parts of the country sorted out accord ing to the respective bills of lading and made up to be taken out on what- ''A MAIN OFFICE April 29, 1905 Suite 104 Lumber Exchange, Minneapolis, Minn. Fir 1 Flooring, Drop Siding, Ceiling, Deep Joists, long Timbers. STORAGE-HOUSES OF THE MIDWAY WAREHOUSE COMPANY. ever line of railroad is the shortest route to their various destinations. The extent of the yards of the Trans fer company may be best appreciated by viewing them from the long Univer sity avenue bridge which crosses the tracks. And yet, even then their real magnitude is not appreciated. The total trackage of the yards aggregates a little over forty-two miles of rails. From the bridge, one end of an iron clad building in the central part of the yards may be seen. This building is 200 feet in length by 50 in width and is the office building of the Transfer company. "Within this 140 clerks are busy from morning till night. Along side is a platform shed 800 feet in length, used for the loading and un loading of cars. Three hundred and fifty freight handlers are continually busy here. Thruout the yard, sixty switchmen are kept busy seeing to proper guidance of the hundreds of cars each day handled by eleven yard loco motives. In all, the Transfer company em ploys continually between 600 and tOO men. Its operating expense is about $500,000 a year. About 450,000 cars are handled by the company every year and fifty trains are disposed of in the yards every twenty-four hours. The Minnesota Transfer company is owned by the ten roads whose freight it -handles, the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, Chicago Great Western, Chi cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, Chi cago, Eock Island & Pacific Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha, Great Northern, Minneapolis & St. Louis, Min neapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie, Northern Pacific, and Wisconsin Cen tral. The board of directors of the Direct Track Connections With Every Railway Entering the Twin Cities. MlNNESOTATTRANSFEBPlftY^Cb^ CM-acSTRRVCXO. MENZ, Pres. Q. W. DULANY, Jr., Vice-Pres. and JOHN MCDONNELL, secy. THE MENZ LUMBER Washington Fir, Re Cedar and Spruce Lumber Washington Re Cedar Shingles Direct Shipments from Pacific Coast or Prompt Loading- of any Mixed Car from Our Warehouse. Our Transfer Sheds contain full stocks of Redwood Siding,, Finish and S^^^^yLC"ili ^&8te^^JSi^^^J&^i&iMfe&"4* Bevel SMinf, Mouldings, Shingles. led Cedar Basswood Siding and Ceiling. Turned Columns and Turning Squares, 1 Hardwood Flooring,Yellow:, Pine Floor ing and Ceiling, Building Paper. CompleteTransit Line of Rid Cedar Shindes We are Wholesalers and Ca Loa Ship- pers, and sell to dealers only. fe^*? igfaS^U Minnesota Transfer company is com^ posed of one representative from each of these ten roads. The officers of the Transfer company are prominent offi* 1 cers of the associated railroads, namely, |S| President, A. D. Sewall vice president, '*l G. P. Lyman secretary, L. A. Robin- 3 son superintendent, M. J. Dooley, (the -fy active head of the transfer company), and the agent, G. Marshall. ~j Every year the Minnesota Transfer company finds it necessary to enlarge' its yard trackage. Recently spur tracks ,-*J have been built all thru that adjacent section where so many industrial plants, storage houses and lumber yards are being located. The expense of maintaining the Transfer company is met by assessing each, railroad of the ten proprietary f* lines according to the amount of busi* i ness for each, respective lino handled by the Transfer company. $57.90 Ronnd Trip to California. Tickets on sale commencing May I via the Minneapolis & St. Louis R. R.: Final return limit, ninety days. Stop- r:# overs allowed in both directions and 1 tickets good going one route and return ing another. \& 1 For particulars call on J. Cr. Btekel, City Ticket Agent, 424 Nicollet Ave. u^ "Omaha and Des Moines Limited" Trains leave St. Paul daily at 8:85 p.m. via the Minneapolis & St. Louis, arriving r* Omaha the following morning at 8:05] a.m., Des Moines 7:45 a.m. Through Pullman Sleepers and Buffet Library Car service. Direct connections iaf Union Depots for points south and.^ west. ~r Call on J. G. Rickel, City Ticket!,* Agent, 424 Nicollet Ave. STORAGE YARD Cor. Hampden and Wabash Ave., Merriam Park, Minn. Spruce 1 'f^t 1 \4 i -2% i. I -'SI- v\ %-Jt Ff -i i* -J Beve Sidlni, Finish, N Batteis,r \\m Wago tn^i it i Shingles,J 9