HARDWOOD RECORD 



RD OF THE WOOD-MOSAIC FLOORING & LUMBER COilPANY, 



AeroFS -the river is located the big and 

 modern, electrically-driven panel and table- 

 top factory of the New Albany Veneering 

 Company. E. V. Knight is president and 

 manager of this institution, and W. A. Mc- 

 Lean is vice-president. This is said to be 

 the largest panel plant in the United States, 

 and it produces strictly high-class stock. 



Another important veneer and panel plant 

 located at New Albany is that of the Indiana 

 Panel & Veneer Company. 



A Business Club. 



Louisville has many social, literary and pro- 

 fessional clubs, but the one that is doing 

 things for the city is the Commercial Club — 

 a strong, active organization of business men 

 who are using every endeavor to thoroughly 

 advertise the commercial prosperity and busi- 

 ness possibilities of that city to the world at 

 large. Of this organization R. S. Brown is 

 president. The latest thing done by the Com- 

 mercial Club was to inaugurate a Bureau of 

 Industries. Any Kentuekian or Louisvilliau 

 will say ' ' Grand old state, " or " Fine old 

 city ' ' — and, for that matter, everybody says 

 that and has said it since the county of Jef- 



^LBANY, IND. 



ferson and the county of Lincoln and the 

 county of Fayette became the state of Ken- 

 tucky. 



But the Bureau of Industries of the Com- 

 mercial Club insists that Kentucky and Louis- 

 ville are more than that — that they are prac; 

 tical, steam-heated, fire-proof, modern in- 

 stances of old traditions in modern practice. 

 They insist that courtesy, hospitality and 

 trade success go hand in hand. The associa- 

 tion preaches that Kentucky is a livable, lov- 

 able American commonwealth, and a man 

 cull Kr:\r ,'1 G. A. E. or C. S. A. button and not 

 lncMiii liiin from being a thriving business 

 mail ami ]Hiblic-spirited citizen. The modern 

 Kentuekian does not rest on deeds of a glori-' 

 ous past. The association prides itself on the 

 spirit that makes traditions possible. It 

 prides itself on Louisville's clergy, bench, 

 bar and markets. Louisville wants more good 

 citizens. It wants more capital. It wants 

 more workers with brain and muscle, and al- 

 leges that any man can get good returns from 

 any form of investment if he can deliver the 

 goods. Although Louisville is already a great 

 nianiifai-turing center it wants more factories, 

 miirr industrial institutions of every kind, 



BIRDSEYE VIEW XEW PANEL FACTORY OF THE NEW ALBANY VKNEEhlM. ' (iM!'\N\ NFW ALBANY, IND. 



