Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 September 1895 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
ALWAYS ra mm ■Viyull WcrtLil' “".''V| s> r u>2s\ >• l--4is££<r SattlysCaCulckij f ., t -,7 J :^.r0 .1 ■ Chicago • Lafayette : su,^^g? .ndjanapoSisk Cincinnati* iottisvlife--" 1 y^*agflssa PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS £LEGAST PARLOR CARS M.LTRAINS THROUGH SOLID Tickets So»cs and Baggage ,Checked to Destination. rsrtiet Maps and Time Tables if you to be Horn fully Inform ;d- -uii Ticket Agents at Coupon v\at ions bave them —or address
Jasper County Maps for Sale at Long's PROSPERITY. Resumption: Pottsvile, Pa, .rou works; Hazleton, Fa . coal mine*. 350 men; Baltimore, Mil , clothing workers, GSO hinds; Bridgeton, X J , glass fictories; Millville, X J, gloss factories J Tne Xew York Herald compiles a list of 400 mills and factories which have increased the wages of 420,000 employes. In 250 other mills, the number of whose employes *s not stated, wages have been increased.
The Bethlehem iron company received word from St Petersburg, Russia, that on Saturday a test of their plate was so successful that the Russian governm ;nt has deci 1ed to accept all that was ordered of the company. The average monthly wages earned and paid out in Cicero, Indiana, is oTer £14,000. It has doubled in population and houses since ’33— Population now 1,400. Compare the earning power of the people n your own town with this and visit Cicero.—W H Roney in a letter to Indianapolis Sentinel. Wages in the coal mines of Albania have been advanced 21 per cent since the Ist of .T une and the advance made to the iron men is about the same. Theßlaboung men"of the South as well as the North like the way they have been ruined by the Wilson tariff—loud du Lac Reporter.
Settlements have been effected in the glass trade disputes in South Jersey, and the coming blast promises to be th i brightest season for many vears. News of the same encouraging character comes from the "Wst, and the gas ousiness will probably boom within the next thi.ty days—Brads irpet During the first seven m rnths ot this year tne Pennsylvania raiK road increased its net earnings nearly $2,500,000 over those of ’94 This showing is remarkable even when it is considered that the com** parison is made with small earn*ings laßt year The prospect for future earnings is said to be ex i cellent In ail the departments the company’s business is heavy, and it is likely to continue to grow du-> ring the autumn months if the ac*u tivitv in iron and steel continues ■Philadelphia Press A Pittsburg dispatch savs the boom in structural iron is so great the manufacturers are unable to supply the demands. For Iwo months the Carnegie structural mills have been running to the limit The company put a lime limit onjthe delivery of contracts for all J'indsoi material for structural work. It was announced 2 weeks ago that no orders for material to be delivered with in sixty days wo’d be acoepted. This week the limit has been raised, and orders for de*« livery under three mo iths are refused.* The same conditions apply to other large structutal mills. It is estimated that the Carnegie company hascontncts on hand at preße t aggregating almost 1,000,000 tons of structural material . £he limit of production for the remainder of the year will not go mucn beyond 100,000 tons, and the contracts on hand will run well into 1896. Mancie, Sept 10— Today the llelson flint glass company resum-
