100 



THE INDIA RUBBER WORLD 



[December 1, 1910. 



NEW IMCOaPOHATIOMS. 



GooD\-EAR Tire and Rubber Co. o£ Texas, October 17, 1910, 

 under the laws of Texas ; capital $10,000. Incorporators : C. H. 

 Gray, H. C. VV'aite — both of Dallas, Texas — and G. \V. Rogers, 

 Akron, Ohio. 



Fudge Brothers Manufacturing Co., July 20, 1910, under the 

 laws of Indiana ; capital $25,000. Incorporators : John \V. Fudge, 

 Marion ; Leroy M. Fudge, Muncie ; and Lewis M. Fudge, Dun- 

 kirk — all of Indiana. The purpose of the company is to put on 

 the market the Fudge "Emergency Tire," which is described as 

 being of solid rubber, with a wire running through it circum- 

 ferentially, with a special method of fastening. It is to be ap- 

 plied over a damaged pneumatic tire, in case of emergency, with- 

 out the removal of the pneumatic. The rubber part of the Fudge 

 tire, covered by patents, is now made by the Indiana Rubber and 

 Insulated Wire Co. (Jonesboro, Ind.), and the whole is assem- 

 bled at the factory of the Fudge company at Marion, Ind. 



J. \V. Buckley Rubber Co., October 7, 1910, under the laws of 

 New York; capital $40,000. Incorporators: John W. Buckley, 

 John H. Buckley and Edwin W. Deane — all of Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 John W. Buckley, in 1872, began the sale of mechanical rubber 

 goods and fire apparatus at No. 156 South street, New York. 

 Seven years later he disposed of the fire apparatus business, 

 after which his retail rubber goods trade reached important pro- 

 portions. In 1899 the business was removed to No. 69 Warren 

 street, in a district which had become better adapted to the trade. 

 The same location has been maintained to the present, and for 

 a number of years the business has been conducted as the J. W. 

 Buckley Rubber Co., which now has become a corporation. 



Myhtib Rubber Tire Preserver Co., November 5, 1910, under 

 the laws of Connecticut ; authorized capital $400,000. Incorpora- 

 tors : C. H. Chaffee, East Orange, New Jersey; Daniel H. 

 Hanckel, No. 19 Seventeenth avenue, Brooklyn, New York ; and 

 Thomas G. Prioleau, No. 213 West Eighty-first street, New York 

 city. Location of principal place of business : Hartford, Conn. 



The location of this company's factory is No. 173 Asylum 

 street, Hartford, Connecticut. Its product, called "Mhytib," is 

 a compound applied to tires to render them oilproof, waterproof 

 and airproof, and to reduce friction. It is described as being 

 useful not only when the car is in use, but in preventing oxida- 

 tion when cars are stored. 



Inner Tire and Manufacturing Co., October 21, 1910, under the 

 laws of Indiana; authorized capital $10,000. Incorporators: 

 Abraham L. Spangle, Joseph C. DeWees, John E. Palethorpe, 

 and Martin W. Eikenbcrry. 



The officers of this company are A. L. Spangle, president ; 

 J. E. Palethorpe, vice president; and M. W. Eikenberry, secretary 

 and treasurer. The object of the company is the sale of auto- 

 mobile tires, in which a cover of the ordinary type is lined with 

 what they call an "inner tire," composed of plies of rubberized 

 duck. This "liner" is coated with a self vulcanized material 

 which causes it to adhere to the inside of the casing. Their 

 location is Kokomo, Indiana. 



Empire Rubber Co., October 21, 1910, under the laws of Ohio; 

 capital $250,000. Incorporators: Frank R. Howells, John F. 

 Christian, Carl W. Parker, Fred J. Ackerman, and Charles F. 

 Haas. Located at Cleveland, Oliio. 



Courtney Tire and Rubber Co., November 3, 1910, under the 

 laws of Delaware; authorized capital $1,000,000. Incorporators: 

 Warren N. Akers, William J. Maloney, and Millard C. Taylor- 

 all of Wilmington, Del. 



American Belting and Fabric Co., September 30, 1910, under 

 the laws of California; capital $100,000. Directors: G. T. Ma- 

 hony, F. L. McGillan, F. J. White, Marion Oliver, C. F. Gerhen- 

 meycr, J. J. Sheridan and Frank M. Cerini— all of Oakland, Cal. 



Annawan Mills (Incorporated), October 24, 1910, under the 

 laws of Massachusetts; authorized capital $50,000. Incorpora- 

 tors: George H. Hills, James E. Osborn, and Richard P. Borden 

 —all of Fall River, Mass. 



MEW IKCOBPOBATIOMS. 



The Diamond Rubber Co. of New York, incorporated in New 

 York January 9, 1905, to conduct the business in the East, of The 

 Diamond Rubber Co. (.•\kron, Ohio), was granted a permit to 

 do business in Texas as a foreign corporation on September 24, 

 1910, according to a certificate filed in the office of the secretary 

 of state at Austin. 



Remington Tire and Rubber Co., November 9, 1910, under the 

 laws of New Jersey; authorized capital $100,000. Incorporators: 

 Harold G. Remington, Dclbert J. Reynolds, Charles S. Cairns, 

 George Anderson, and William W. Clark — all of Minneapolis, 

 Minnesota. 



Prince Tire Co., November 12, 1910, under the laws of New 

 Jersey ; authorized capital $25,000. Incorporators : Paul M. 

 Pelletream, No. 3 Broad street. New York; Walter C. Shoup, 

 Hoboken, New Jersey; and John D. Prince, No. 34 East Thirty- 

 second street. New York. 



UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY'S ISSUES. 



Tr.\xs.\ctions on the New York Stock Exchange for four 

 weeks, ending November 19: 



Common Stock, $25,000,000. 



[The treasury of a subsidiary company holds $1,344,000.] 

 Last Dividend, .^pril 30, 1900—1%. 



Week October 29 Sales 2,400 shares High 38 Low 35^ 



Week November 5 Sales 1,900 shares High 37^ Low 35^ 



Week November 12 Sales 1,800 shares High 363^ Low 34i4 



Week November 19 Sales 1,300 shares High 36 Low 35 



For the year— High, SZ'/i, Jan. 3; Low, 27, July 26. 



Last year— High, S7H; Low, 27. 



First Preferred Stock, $39,824,400. 

 Last Dividend, October 31, 1910—2%. 

 Week October 29 Sales 700 shares High UVA Low 111 

 Week November 5 Sales 1,421 shares High 112 Low 1105^ 

 Week November 12 Sales 1,078 shares High lllj^ Low IWA 

 Week November 19 Sales 400 shares High llOjg Low' 110J4 

 For the vear— High, n6K, Jan. 10; Low, 99, July 26. 

 Last year — High, 123H; Low, 98. 



Seconh Preferred Stock, $9,965,000. 



Last Dividend, October 31, 1910-1!^%. 



Week October 29 Sales 300 shares High 74;4 Low 74 



Week November 5 Sales 300 shares High 73 Low 72 



Week November 12 Sales 300 shares High 73 Low 72 



Week November 19 Sales .... shares High . . Low . . 



For the year— High, 84, Jan. 3; Low, 59J^, Tulv 27. 

 Last year— High, 8954; Low, 67 yi. 



Six Per Cent. Trust Gold Bonds, $19,500,000. 



Week October 29 Sales 23 bonds High 1027-^ Low 102^ 



Week November 5 Sales 59 bonds High 103 Low 102^ 



Week November 12 Sales 37 bonds High 103 Low 102^ 



Week November 19 Sales 39 bonds High 103 Low 102?4 



For the vear— High. iOA]/,. Tan. 15; Low, 101^, July 30. 



Last yeai— High, 106; Low, lOi'i. 



TRADE NEWS NOTES. 



E. H. Stroud & Co., of Chicago, have removed to larger quar- 

 ters, at No. 55 West Kinzie street. They are makers of crush- 

 ing and disintegrating machinery, suitable, among other purposes, 

 for various uses in connection with rubber. 



M. J. Wolpert, waste-rubber merchant, of Odessa, Russia, has 

 established a branch in New York, at No. 233 Water street, in 

 charge of his American representative, Mr. M. Ch. Jacobsohn. 



Mr. Charles Baron, representing Meyer Cohn, waste-rubber 

 merchant, of New York, who has been in Europe of late on a 

 business trip, is expected to return early in this month. 



H. A. Huslander (Trenton, New Jersey), manufacturer of 

 rubber stamps and other goods in this line, and engraver of tire 

 molds and the like, has removed his store and offices to No. 8 

 North Stockton street, reserving the former location — across the 

 street — for manufacturing purposes. 



The regular quarterly dividend of 1^ per cent, on the preferred 

 shares of the Manufactured Rubber Co. (Philadelphia) was pay- 

 able on December 1. 



