44 



THE INDIA RUBBER WORLD 



[October 1, 1911. 



NEW INCORPORATIONS. 



Endurance Iire and Rubber Co.mi'anv, September 12, 1911, 

 under the laws of New York; authorized capital, $10,000. 

 Incorporators: W. G. H. Randolph, No. 460 Riverside Drive; 

 Edward W. Tabor, No. 134 West Eighty-fifth street, and 

 James E. Bennet, No. 150 Nassau street— all of New York. 

 Location of principal office, New York. To manufacture 

 tires, rubber goods, etc. 



Goblet-Dolan Manufacturing Company, September 9, 1911, un- 

 der the laws of New Jersey ; authorized capital, $60,000. In- 

 corporators: George Staats, No. 252 Lorimer street, Brook- 

 lyn, New York; William Goblet, Rosebank, Staten Island, 

 New York, and David J. Dolan, Elizabeth, New Jersey. To 

 manufacture, purchase or otherwise acquire, deal in, sell, 

 hire, lease, etc., machines and articles made wholly or in 

 part of wood, metal, rubber, etc. 



Higrade Auto Tire Sales Co., September 21, 1911, under the 

 laws of New York, Authorized capital, $50,000. Incorporators: 

 A. For.shay, No. 13 Park Place, New York; Helen Neubardt, 

 No. 220 Roebling street, Brooklyn, New York, and Russell 

 Goldman, No 13 Park Place, New York. Location of principal 

 office, Manhattan. To manufacture auto tires. 



Household Rublier Company, August 3. 1911, under the laws 

 of Ohio; authorized capital, $10,000. Incorporators: D. G. 

 Armstrong, Harry Svensgaard and E. A. Armstrong. The 

 company has been incorporated to deal at wholesale and retail 

 in rubber goods, bicycles, motorcycles, etc. Location of 

 principal office. Youhgstown, Ohio. 



International Tire and Tube Company, September 7, 1911, un- 

 der the laws of New York; authorized capital, $3,000. In- 

 corporators: Robert J. Dunlap, No. 119 Avenue D, Bay- 

 onne. New Jersey; Robert F. Randall and Theodore M. 

 Crisp— both of No. 80 Broadway, New York. Location of 

 principal office. New York. To manufacture tires, etc. 



Interstate Tire Works, September 2, 1911, under the laws 

 of New York; authorized capital $5,000. Incorporators: Ed- 

 ward D. Newman, No. 160 Broadway; Stanley Newman and 

 Samuel C. Newman, both of No. 247 West One Hundred and 

 Twenty-seventh street — all of New York. Location of prin- 

 cipal office. New York. To manufacture tires and rubber 

 goods. 



Lindsay Bros. Company, August 30, 1911, under the laws of 

 New York; authorized capital, $18,000. Incorporators: Ed- 

 ward A. Quiri, James and John Lindsay — all of Amsterdam, 

 New York. To manufacture leather and rubber goods, shoes, 

 rubbers, etc. Location of principal office, Schenectady, New 

 York. 



Metropolitan Rain Coat Company, September 14, 1911, 

 under the laws of New York; authorized capital, $2,100. In- 

 corporators: Wm. Miller, No. 138 Graham avenue; Alex- 

 ander Samilow, No. 24 Belvidere W, and Solomon Teitel- 

 baum. No. 929^ Lafayette avenue — all of Brooklyn, New 

 York. Location of principal office, Brooklyn. To manu- 

 facture rubber clothing, etc. 



Mojn Rubber Plantations and Development Company, July 

 10, 1911, under the laws of West Virginia; authorized capital, 

 $250,000. Incorporators: James H. Hoyt, Gustav von den 

 Steinen and G. W. Cottrell — all of Cleveland, Ohio. The 

 company has been incorporated to harvest rubber, cocoa, 

 vanilla, timber, etc. Colgate Hoyt is president of the com- 

 pany and W. T. C. Carpenter is secretary. 



O. & W. Company, August 30, 1911, under the laws of New 

 York; authorized capital, $100,000. Incorporators; Max C. 

 Overman, Edward Nelson, both of No. 250 West Fifty-fourth 

 street, New York, and Douglas B. Wesson, Long Meadows, 

 Massachusetts. To manufacture tires, rims, etc. Location 

 of principal office, Manhattan. 



The Rubber Waste Company, September 8, 1911, under 

 the laws of New York; authorized capital, $2,000. Incorpo- 

 rators: Gabriel Muehlstein, Julius Muehlstein, both of No. 

 422 West One Hundred and Twenty-second street, New 

 York, and Alfred Alexander, Rocky Beach. Location of 

 principal office. New York. 



Summit Rubber Company, August 11, 1911. under tlie laws 

 of Ohio; authorized capital, $50,000. Incorporators: O. C. 

 Dickerhorf, L. J. Johnson, Walter Seiberling and S. D. 

 Brown. To manufacture rubber goods and products and 

 dealing in same. Location of principal i:ifficc. Barberton, 

 Ohio. 



E. A. Wick Rubber Company, .\ugust 12, 1911, under the 

 laws of Ohio; authorized capital, $3,000. Incorporators: El- 

 bridge Ayer Wick, Dudley R. Kennedy and Curtis A. Man- 

 chester. The company has been incorporated for the pur- 

 pose of conducting a store or agency for the buying and 

 selling and dealing in automobile tires and rubber goods and 

 accessories of all kinds. Location of principal office, Yovings- 

 town, Ohio. 



TRADE NEWS NOTES. 



Parker L. Marean, formerly factory superintendent of the 

 Beebe and Richards Rubber Co., North Brnokficld, Massachu- 

 setts, becomes associated, on October 1, with the Boston \\'oven 

 Hose and Rubber Co., of Boston, as assistant superintendent of 

 their factory in Cambridge. 



Tlie Hope Rubber Co. [Providence, Rhode lsl;uul], has leased 

 the premises at No. 241 Thames street, Newport, Rhode Island, 

 for a branch store, to be opened early in October, where a com- 

 plete line of all kinds of manufactured rubber goods, including 

 automobile tires will be carried. This new Newport store will 

 be in charge of P. W. Saunders, formerly president and manager 

 of the Granite State Rubber Co., Manchester, New Hampshire. 



The night shift at the Btacon Falls Rubber Shoe Co., factory, 

 Beacon Falls, Connecticut, recently went out on a strike because 

 their request for certain changes in working conditions was not 

 complied with. 



The Republic Rubber Co., Youngstown, Ohio, has established 

 a branch store in San Francisco, at Golden Gate avenue and 

 Hyde street. Other branches are to follow in Los Angeles, Port- 

 land and Seattle. 



Mr. Charles C. Beebe has withdrawn as treasurer of the 

 B. & R. (Beebe and Richards ) Rubber Company, of North 

 Brookfield, Massachusetts, to become manager of the H. H. 

 Brown shoe factory. Mr. Thomas J. Richards, president of the 

 B. & R. company, will have the sole management of the busi- 

 ness, taking charge both of the sales and of the manufacturing 

 departments. 



A "special" sent to one of the metropolitan dailies states that 

 $250,000 has been subscribed for a plant in western Texas for 

 extracting from the Candelilla plant, a substance which, it is 

 claimed, is a good substitute for gutta-percha. Inquiry of the 

 Ignited States Department of Agriculture, however, fails to verify 

 this new industry. 



The Howe-Baumann Balloon Co., with office and factory at 187- 

 189 Murray street, Newark, New Jersey, has been formed by a 

 combination of stockholders in the Howe Rubber Co., and the 

 Baumann Rubber Co. Balloons will be one of the company's 

 specialties, and Mr. Walter Leatherow, who has had many years' 

 experience in this line, is in charge of this department, which is 

 equipped with all the most improved machinery. The office man- 

 agement will be in charge of Mr. Tenney and Mr. Dodge, of the 

 Howe Rubber Co., and Mr. Lautenbach, of the Baumann Rubber 

 Co., will have the supervision of the selling department. 



