Fort Wayne Weekly Republican (Newspaper) - January 4, 1860, Fort Wayne, Indiana one Column one one one ' r jix 4i for 1.2,00 price and All of Printing done witli establishment is on the north batik of the Canal is a large substantial three building with Tlie manufactory originally built for an oil mill about year 1844, but shortly after its erection was converted into n Woollen since which time it luis been uninterruptedly for yarns and manufacturing It is run by water has 2 of machinery snd in addition two mammoth carding capable of warding 400 pound of wool each per which are used for mill usually employs from 20 to 25 of whom are it io. now in the hands of 11, under whose management it has been steadily During the year 1859 about 50,000 pounds of wool were worked up iur various The goods are linseys The raw material of course is from the surrounding and ihe for their manufactured goods is at advantages of sinch a to any i are very hands employed help to build iip it affords the farmers And others an opportunity to get their wool and their yarn spun by is a But probably greatest advantage of ail is tlie facility it affords for farmers and a. genuine article in all kinds of woollen The prevailing tendency of the age is to cheapen every article of by up inferior or In no branch has this Iwen carried to a greater in woollen have found to their cost low priced goods are not the that a great of the material is with just sufficient of to hold them Such a mill as the woollen enables the farmer within many to have his own Wool his own and thus to a genuine In fact such a is a returning to more primitive The mill takes the of the spinning jenny nnd the old hand carding but yet tha his sons and daughters have tht satisfaction of wearing their own without the toil and trial of patience formerly Then by having their wool manufactured on a plan adopted wool obtain from 7 to 12 cents more than merchants would pay in clothing are np kind of clothing almost cloth at this speak in the highest terwis of tlie expressed by their with sturh To such as have mill And are of the ' there we hivite them to and their take pleasure iii showing 8h.rtdcs could trith HaH wood thirty hoops per forty hands in jn the en from to tho might Ke to some good Immense of this lumber is annually shipped to there made into erery kind oi article arid again distributed Now iU that could bo iiv than in besides the coat Of two live cheaper than m or New consequently labor can bo cheaper here Then put iip and with machinery at much leas cost than in any large is an almost field for home tho reader ' reflect upon the infinite of articles iota hard lumber is and let hiin try and follow the different which that lumber the it calls into the number of hands it the skill and energy it brings and the trade it before those various articles their way to the hands of the First the lumber has to be felled in the This would employ a large number of men and then it has to be and some of it and grooved and which would greatly multiply our lumber and From the mills tlie lumber would pass into the different to the articles for which it would be think for a how multitudinous those articles Before you there may be a walnut before you is a bureau or a or a yon are surrounded with windows and In your kitchen are and an endless variety of There are staves and added to these arc carriages and follow that large and important class of a host ot other the principle material of which is and which will be suggested to every we think that with capital all or at a majority of could be profitably manufactured in or Fort We would call the attention of our home capitalists to the of this If wish to improve their if they would see a permanent and let them invest their capital in buildings and If tluT have large tracts of land adjoining the let liberally offer a portion to any manufacturer will erect improvements and I they will soon that I land even given for such purposes the best investment they can worth and draws it way into the eur and Shoe Dry a host of The of such all that id needed to make our city a thriving populous and wealthy the oj articles which would bo made is almost Indeed every made from hard would be at this point and sent all over the In most articles at least freights would be for the cost the raw to be at some distant place would be at least double the freight of the articles made that besides the freight of returning the when made at Fort Wayne for two years all hoops were made A Joseph Sawyer of invented a for splitting and dressing right of which for the western States was by The lapping or tapering the ends for had still to be done by Mr. has com machinery which will lap as well as the by which a great amount of labor win be and which will en able him to the trade at a Tower rate than ever The saving in freight is a great A Car will hold about 4000 poles which will make about 8000 but in a manufactured state a Car will hold 24,000 Besides hoops by machinery are exactly of the gauge the whole and will thus bind with at every of the an advantage hoops never could call into existence an extensive trade in growing and They are receiving from all points on the even from a distance of seventy and loaded with are driving to their are assured that such are their orders from every of the United if can obtain a supply of they would be able to and send off worth of this trade in if energetically would for Indiana Ohio supplies a cle of then all the States put And yet this is but a trilling thing compared to the many important articles into our dense could bo manufactured right in our if capital and energy were turned in that Binco last not than 1,500 to and other articles and by brought into our midst And a Candy of a candy store for a moment we at tho sight of soch a out of season There were and apples in endless and looking as as if dropping ' from Scarcely had to smack pur when delusion was and out we were about to how can such a perfect bo together with certain movings of the palate caused by thoughts of how sticks of candy used to taste in days of brought us to a We made a bee line into the in the name cf the that which has the impudence to go everywhere and pry into we requested permission of the proprietors to look through their factory and see mystery in- v hard than in direction has been can hold just at - as rough one half the freight would be The immense amount of our large western ply of Besides which in a manufactured stite staves could be sent to New and to sold than they can be It is a large and if capital enough bo staves making and alone would build up Cannot soma of our men in their or their beair this fact in There are energetic men seeking business Find them out and bring them Stone These - are situated On the south and worked by Mr. J. In this establishment both arc sawn and dressed % From ten to twelve are and been Their principly confined to the city j but Aoma 1 to other the dressed Stone for thr churches lately pow built in the works tho capacity cut tap stone to at tbe ' oC March 1855, a was incorporated under the general State law for the of supplying the city with In of the same held their first legal meeting and on tho loth Oct. the city for the finst time was lighted with that great and works arc larga and well and are on such a that they will be able to supply the city for many to rapidly it may At the present time of the value of property cither is or can be over one half in of There laid of main piping or about five The work's the banks the canal So that can be Since the of the the have been exceedingly m with ohe slight having never failed that to the It is that the of a purer and quality made in most other ' all our stores arc supplied with the works for have under the able of Robert Ei one of the holders and Directors of the There has lieon a large amount of capital invested in the 6f the works and buying of in consequence of the small number of with the capacity of iVe has been no much to ' of the safety private and lightf mg by gM of tie feel due - past year lias the of more manufacturing than perhaps any previous year in the ot Fort J. W. Robb with which firm Mr. was a were the first parties who confined their to tho grocery the of vinegar some time ago .Is a mere but did little towards building up an On the of July Mr. to the entire and being satisfied from first that by a genuine the business conld be made he fitted up and commenced the business an energy that a sure sign of speedy and permanent works by Mr. were of the best approved No was spared be of great versed in the adopted there in making the the head of and Mr. from the cost a genuine none but such would faint idea what that result has Qn the vast quantity of every ed it be time Before he prove superiority but to months such a that bis now constantly taxed to their e he is unable to tho extent of This fact is worthy of. a inot so on account of the individual indicated by but aS illustrating the ofa which in. is by will imv wake own way as as avoid Indeed few people all beautiful Through hogsheads of sugar bales of of boxes of and piles of boxes of unknown other they were w grocers as well as candy wo forced our way from story to story till we reached the topmost and at once found ourselves iu tho midst of barrels of sugar and a hive There were women and all as active and as as The impression stamped on our mind how beautifully clean was in the factory We have seen candy and that were .so besmeared with that even boys and ardent lovers of had they once seen would have sickened on candy Not so in There were marblo and tables white as snow and bright as a silver Even the floor like imto a polished Wc to an old with paper clean rolled up and elbow deep in Wo would like to see through your said bo glad to you if you will just wait until Christmas The bare mention to the was an open and soon wc were plunged in a sea of sugar and ' A factory is a only the molted is sugar of is the rolling the tho the and the But now to the There were barrels of refined white which goes into the and after just .so it some into the whence it comes in the of all of what is plums and in the form of toys of an infinite some of tho boiling having been drawn out in through the rolling from which it ont as winter lemon and perfect passing through other out under titles of pine Jenny Prince Albert or together with every variety of small fruit - as raspberry idso every kind of and that in candy clear and candy In what with big candy and little barley cundy and crimp and fancy candy and cough wo were never before so completely overwhelmed most interesting the leafing and stemming of This is done by young anil such is taste of that the fruit will sometimes come from their r ingenious as appearance as the fruit it ' to give any figures to show the hogsheads of sugar used up in America in the shape of but the amount 1 almost Some idea may be from the fact that W illiams and Of the though in the sending out for big children and little Over twenty thousand dollars per First This church was organized July 1st, 1831, by James ofthe Presbytery of with members and two ruling one of Smallwood still a member of the church Chute supplied tho his which took place 28th, 1835. Daniel Jones was tho next pastor of the from 18o6, to 1837. lie was succeeded by Rev. Alexander T. whose continued six Rev Dr. Anderson preached in this church during most of year S. from the fall of to tho spring of 18-1:7. Revs Lowman J. G. Riheldaffer and Johnathan officiated 1855. when Rev. John W. tho present took charge of the The church edifico is a large and substantial building which cost about fifteen thousand The church members number two hundred and There is a Sunday School with a and two hundred Amount of raised for congregational purposes in 1858 sixteen hundred and sixty and for benevolent purposes seven hundred and fifty six Mr. and tlie Mri who remained year 1845,. time Rev. AV. of tlw .In 1816 a new substantial of over two thousand in tho consisting of near three They a brick school capable of three hundred is divided into three one presided over by a Their number of in to about and addition to widows and the and the and sundry annual for foreign the congregation contributes sixteen hundred dollars per year fur the support of tho minister and school needed in Fort numerous articles which could be made in Fort Wayne is that of is not a paper within many miles of our yet we should there is in our and within a distance an abundance of of is now either wasted or leaving made we at the amount of lags in the and sent hundreds of miles made into that is extensively ties shipped ' is an opportunity man or a Straw common wrapping papers a 4argei Second Presbyterian Church was organized May 5th 134ihy Henry Ward Twelve composed the The first pastor was Rev. Charles who continued his till June 1850-whon removed to J. After Mr. the church employed the of various stated supplies for near four The ministers thus laboring with were Ray and A. Tho present Rev. his labors with tho congregation in Nov. 1854. The of worship now is a neat and It was completed and dedicated in Dec. 1-1G. Tho original cost ofthe building was about ten which amount has boon since increased near three by repairs and is a flourishing sabbath school connected the which an average attendance of about is with a well selected excellent The congregation contributed during the year about sixteen hundred dollars for church and two hundred to various causes of general body organized iu the year 1843. under pastoral care of Rev. C. who remained one At their first only fourteen Within a year a neat church with quent additions twelve hundred Their successive ministers Rev. E. Rev. Mr. Rev. J. Rev. Henry and Rev. J. who haon 1854. Tho present number of communicants is one hundred and There is a school house in connection with the in which from fifty to sixty children are educated during the and in which they aro religiously instructed on During 1859 tho congregation has contributed fourteen hundred dollars for and one hundred dollars for benevolent which is the average of their general in Fort visited St. Joseph's Mission on the western sido of Like at tho mouth of St. riven 1721. aUo Miami of and that is mentioned times in of a whom the French revolution to emigrate to this an I who was at ordained in tho visited the Mission of tho at South remained with Indians for some time and tha Of Fort and 1833. to Badin S. P. Simon at by and the only Priest in Indiana for some tlo visited Fort as early as 1835. oj same year tho of Fort Wayne was visited by by tho name of Felix Matthew the FalI of tho same year 1835, it visited again by Rev. J. 1836 visited agam by Father the Summer of 1836, Lowis Miller was stationed at Fort and Yery Rev. the present took charge tho Mission in the Spring of 1810. The frame church still was built in 1835 under tho All tho Catholics of Fort Way only one congregation until the of T the bu i 11 ' ch for themselves who remained pastor for 10 Hevi took then the in 2 fill church where the Germans ' now In 1857 Fort t- ' .i ' friends of popular education had to carry on protracted and severe struggle fore they could secure a thorough and efficient system of public for the whole After several years of and after through much their labors Were crowned with cheering and Fort Wayne Ls now abundantly supplied with means to impart a good education to every child Feb. 9,1857, and beautiful was on which occasion a number of citizens assembled mutually to rejoice over the accomplishment of so much of their the Mayor of tho of thanks to the Board of wero moved by Hon. seconded by David and Inaugural addresses were delivered by Peter P. and W. S. and an excellent speech delivered by Hon. Charles This building cost about much of which was advanced by citizens until it could bo repaid by the public the spring of the following 1858, the second city school was and again being aided by the the contributions of it was soon completed and roady for occupation by teachers and The building is larger then the and when Both buildings aro capable of accommodating 1,-400 well arranged and fitted up so as to secure the comfort of the The schools are under tho direction of a Board consisting of tho following gentlemen Charles E. E. and O. P. There are annually employed fourteen teachers under the direction of Professor A. In connection with the a High school where such classical instruction is imparted as tb the more advanced scholars for a college W Mr. foif a a best daily journals are constantly Drake ia of all pair much hitherto is of great trust welt Mt And early days like The of Sf the condition of Uff this stato Of things has for been and that Healthy placo can be found in the following is a list Of now in the city Charles Henry P. B. S. Si A. C. W. D. J S. B. W. C. S. V. B. P. M. John M. F. Brubach and M. H. P. M. W. Bo F. W. Physicians Drs. Brooks and M. List of John S. K. hii for pMt ] of and U A. D. Imps quito a ly at and Shoe proportion to tho size of tho this is an important branch Probably thero few places a largor proporti boots and aro of manufacture than Fort This is as it should We can. nearly all kinds of and skins can obtained to any extent in our Tan bark all and can be made as good here as st any other point and if people would on wearing boots or this of would bo immediately The number of men in and shoe making ia the is one hundred and fifty and the cash value of manufactured the present according to figures obtained from tho to one hundred and forty thousand Eastern made consisting chiefly of following are at engaged in tho boot and shoe trade in Fort Wayne H. Jacob A. Vordermark Peter M. J. Nili Peter Fry Wayne 3ashf Door GUind runs the following different kinds of machines and rabbeting also a ripping and a sawing and Todd aro tha and they manufacture all the articles usually made in such They employ from ten to twelve and use up a amount of per Factory is. situated on tho north west corner of Fulton and Pearl being on the banks of the machinery is nin by steam They sash and iit jail establishment usually sometimes They for many and built up an extensive in N vt Mr Of our will county number of than ordinary legal ahi Our will not in individuals who aro of favorable notice than The practising Attorneys aro Robert Hon. Charles Messrs Withers W. H. Coombs L. G. Isaac Jenkinson Joseph Judge of Common Pleas Hon. P: P. John Jr. H. Ninde Fay Smith Moses Jenkinson David H. W W. N. 0. and Homer Landr was -in tho and Their wis of small Marted with In two less tlian hundred Northern no house Planing niill Is run by steam and is fitted up with It has a capacity of turning out fifteen thousand feet of and generally keeps from eight ton men at work during tlw Mr. C. B. informs us that the mill has baon in operation two dur ring which has been not is his own but throughout the This branch of business ia carried on with spirit in Fort the large creates a good lor Soma of our besides supplying home have sent their for several years to Chicago and This is especially of thase manufacturing with capital and could to an almost unlimited The chief raw material is hard oak and Of this we have ofthe best possible could supply the whole western as no other point is able to make them or has facilities both by The following are T. N. iV Jacob v ' C the of W Wa as Trada and is are Co the publio and may by Ia ita reading tha wants not latest Il will tha of It will IIm t ion of tho public domain to ibr tho aot The whether northern or of ern shall the thU country in the Is to ba out at the ballot In ho a contest maa must take Tha party has gone over will fight the lican party will do for tha in that service this paper la Iii during it aro Willing to la to single ve copi ce Senk by IP mail to tho 20 ami orar lo to getter of tha a copy one For to copies or carriera fita Johns J. H. 7 p. m. than Mr. Ham A of p. Fautori p. m. 7 p. t y. p.m. ' Mr. of 19 7. p. m. 9 M. a. m. anii a p: m. t K. tr. m m. awl 9 1 rf -