■22 



HARDWOOD RECORD 



MILL AND LOi; VAIU>, K. & r, LUMBIOK COMl'ANY. 



ALLEY IN WALNl'T YARD. K. 



P. LUMBER COJirANY. 



lumber concerns of Cincinnati is L. W. Ea- 

 dina & Co. The yards, located at Clark and 

 Dalton streets, are 360x120 feet in dimen- 

 sions, and are constantly supplied with well 

 assorted stocks of hardwoods. The company 

 is composed of L. W. Radina and his broth- 

 er P. E. Eadina, who organized the concern 

 in December, 1898. Both are energetic and 

 persevering men, and have succeeded in in- 

 creasing the business since that time until 

 at present an average of 10,000,000 feet of 

 hardwoods . is handli'il by the company 

 yearly. 



Cincinnati Hardwood Lumber Company. 



Feriliuand Hiisken, with two score years' 

 experience in the lumber business, and Jo- 

 seph Bosken, his brother, hardly less elK- 

 ciently equipped in that direction, com- 

 bined working forces some four years ago 

 and organized the Cincinnati Hardwood 

 Lumber Compauy. Tliey started in a small 

 way, as business increased enlarging their 

 capacity and adding to their capital, until 

 today the concern has one of tlio most profit- 

 able businesses in Cincinnati. The company 

 operates a veneer plant with a capacity of 

 50,000 feet daily. Four buildings, with new 

 and modern equipment, comprise this plant. 

 The company's large yards on a C, H. & D. 



siding on Summer street, just north of Gest, 

 carry a stock of about 1,000,000 feet of 

 hardwoods at all times. The com[)any ships 



T. B. STilNi;. ruKSIIlKNT T. It. 

 I'O.MI'AXY. 



■<r(lNE LUMBER 



approximately thirty cars of lumber a month, 

 besides supplying a large local trade. 



The E. E. Beck Lumber Company. 



The K. K. Beck Lumber Company is not 

 an old concern, but it is one which has forged 

 its way to prominence during the first year of 

 its existence. E. E. Beck, president, is still 

 ri young man. He received his training with 

 C. Crane & Co. Secretary W. .1. Pugh is a 

 thoroughly experienced lumberman, as is also 

 Vice President Charles B. Stevenson. The 

 E. E. Beck Lumber Company maintains Cin- 

 cinnati y.'irds. l)ut operates principally direct 

 from the mills, handling all kinds of hard- 

 woiiils, milking specialties iif poplar, oak and 

 rliestiiuf. 



The K. & P. Lumber Company. 



The K. & P. Luinber Company derives its 

 name from its two moving spirits. Max 

 Kosse, president, and .J. N. Penrod. vice 

 ])resident and treasurer. Its other officers 

 are S. Y. Prouty, secretary, and P. D. Shoe, 

 assistant secretary. The company started in 

 business Nov. 1, 1899, at first handling only 

 walnut logs for export, with an occasional 

 carload of walnut lumber. Business gradually 

 increased, and in the summer of 1901 the 

 company opened a yard in St. Bernard, a 

 -suburb of Cincinnati, and early in 1902 in- 

 stalled a sawmill on the premises. This was 

 a circular mill, and in the summer of 1902 



«" ' •^,> 



•KDUHLMEien BROS. 



MAHDMNY.POPLAR 8 HARDWOOD LUHBEIf 



OFFICE AND COR.NLR iil lAKlLS. 1>1 HL.M Kl I.I. 



PRrXCIP.\LS (JF IJUIILMEIKU UROTHKUS 1 .N TUIIR GENERAL OFFICE. 



