. The industries of Louisville, Kentucky, and of New Albany, Indiana. ceived his business training in aLouisville notion house, and opened for himself, in 1855, in a modest and unpretentiousway. Year by year his trade has grown, until now his establishment is the most extensiveof the kind in the South. Mr. Sues store fronts 25 feet on Fourth avenue, runs back 85 feet, and is five stories inheight, and is stocked from ground floor to carret with an endless line of goods pertain-ing to the toy trade—baby carriages, childrens furniture, toy wagons, velocipedes, bicy-cles, sleds, games, hobby-hors


. The industries of Louisville, Kentucky, and of New Albany, Indiana. ceived his business training in aLouisville notion house, and opened for himself, in 1855, in a modest and unpretentiousway. Year by year his trade has grown, until now his establishment is the most extensiveof the kind in the South. Mr. Sues store fronts 25 feet on Fourth avenue, runs back 85 feet, and is five stories inheight, and is stocked from ground floor to carret with an endless line of goods pertain-ing to the toy trade—baby carriages, childrens furniture, toy wagons, velocipedes, bicy-cles, sleds, games, hobby-horses, dolls, fancy goods, and novelties of every kind. Parents,guardians, friends of the rising generation and the trade will find here everything desirablein these goods, at moderate prices, with prompt and polite attention and perfect lacilitiesfor selection. 88 THE INDUSTRIES OF COUNTY DSTILLERY COMPANY. B. F. Mattingly, President; Ben D. Elder, Secretary; Distillers of Pure Fire-copper Kentucky Whiskies, Thirty* first Street and Rudd The distilling interests of Louisville have an excellent representative in the ahove-named conipiiny, which was organized in 1879, Mr. B. F. Alattinglj^ its president, having■withdrawn, at that lime, from the firm of J. G. Mattingly & Bro., of which firm he wasone of the original members. Mr. Mattin>ily has had forty years experience in the dii-tilling business, and built andcperati-d the first registered distillery in Louisville. Mr. Hen D. Elder, the secretary, isa well-known and popular business man. The Marion di-tiilery and warehouses are advantageously located on Thirty-first streetand Rudd avenue, the main track of the Kentucky and Indiana railroad bridge connec-tion passing directly through the premises. The distillery yards, cattle pens, etc., coverfour acres of ground, and. while the distillery has the capacity for making 30,000 barrelsof whisky annually, it has b<en run under such conservative man


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectindustries, bookyear1