Ok, can see the page now, tried another browser...
Yes, 100m is the suggested limit for Cat5e, and you will of course still get some attenuation of the signal when running through this length. Although Cat5e is supposed to conform to certain standards, I believe that some "low quality" cables can if fact attenuate signals far more than others.
Whilst joining all the "solids" and the "stripes" to form a single pair might reduce the overall resistance end to end, doing this alters the characteristics of the cable in terms of inductance, capacitance, etc. These characteristics are carefully chosen to give best overall performance taking into account signal loss and electrical noise.
There is only a relatively small difference between the twists on the four pairs of wires - that difference being so small it can generally be ignored. So choosing a different pair ought to make no difference.
I'd say you would probably partially, if not fully destroy the balance of the cable by joining the individual wires together as you have indicated. (The twists also help to eliminate crosstalk, not that you're likely to suffer any from the way you're using this cable). I'd stick to a single pair, and make sure the connections at both ends are good, solid electrical joints.
ROGER - G0AOZ.