96 



THE INDIA RUBBER WORLD 



[November 1, 1911. 



NEW INCOKPOHATIONS. 



Auto Sectional Leather Tire Co. October 19, 1911, under 

 the laws of New York; authorized capital, $50,000. Incorpora- 

 tors: Herman L. Beiner, No. 261 Broadway; Isidore Scherer, 

 No. 261 Broadway, and Moses Scherer, No. 264 Rivington street, 

 all of New York. Location of principal office, New York. To 

 manufacture leather and rubber tires, etc. 



Composit Hose Co., September 12, 1911, under the laws of 

 Maine; authorized capital, $25,000. Incorporators: Leonard 

 Atwood, Farmington, Maine; Charles C. Sole, Boston, Massa- 

 chusetts; LeRoy R. Folsom, Norridgewock, Maine. To manu- 

 facture hose, belting and weaving machinery of all kinds, etc. 



Eureka Double Resilient Tire Manufacturing Co., October 4, 

 1911, under the laws of New Jersey; authorized capital, $25,000. 

 Incorporators : Gideon S. Adams, Seaville, Harry Fox, and 

 John B. Fox, Camden, all of New Jersey. To manufacture 

 automobile tires. 



General Rubber Co. of Brazil, September 20, 1911, under the 

 laws of New Jersey; authorized capital, $300,000. Incorpora- 

 tors: James Deshler, Frank LeBar, and Henry F. Miller — all 

 of New Brunswick, New Jersey. The company has been in- 

 corporated for the purpose of buying, selling, and dealing in 

 crude rubber, etc. 



Kabus Rubber Co., October 9, 1911, under the laws of New 

 Jersey; authorized capital, $50,000. Incorporators: Ferdinand 

 Kabus, East Orange ; J. Oliver Thorp, Bloomfield, and Louis 

 Pohl, No. 239 North Eleventh street, Newark^all of New Jersey. 

 To manufacture, purchase and sell all goods of which rubber 

 is a component part. 



Kelly-Springfield Tire Co., October 11, 1911, under the laws 

 of New York ; authorized capital, $10,000. Incorporators : Isaac 

 L. Rice, No. 5 Nassau street; Van H. Cartmell, No. 117 West 

 Seventy-ninth street — both of New York, and Frederick A. 

 Seaman, Madison, New Jer.scy. Location of principal office. 

 New York. To manufacture rubber tires, etc. 



Kenilworth Rubber Works, September 27, 1911, under the 

 laws of New Jersey; authorized capital, $60,000. Incorporators: 

 George B. Bradshaw, Kenilworth, New Jersey ; Lester F. Ditten- 

 hoefer, No. 35 Nassau street, New York; Edward W. Lawler, 

 No. 44 East Forty-third street, Bayonne, New Jersey. To buy, 

 sell and deal in rubber goods of every description. 



Keystone Tire and Rubber Co., September 27, 1911, under the 

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

 Isaac Josephson, No. 5 Beekman street; L. Walter Lissberger, 

 No. 1780 Broadway, and Joel Jacobs, Wellington Hotel — all of 

 New York. Location of principal office, New York City. 



Mercer Rubber Co. of Pennsylvania, October 2, 1911, under 

 the laws of Pennsylvania ; authorized capital, $5,000. Incor- 

 porators : F. L. Allen, Sewickley; Harold E. Williams, Pitts- 

 burgh, and Moorhead B. Holland, Pittsburgh — all of Pennsyl- 

 vania. To buy, sell, trade and deal at wholesale in rubber mate- 

 rials, etc. 



Mexico Latex Co. of Delaware, September 13, 1911, under 

 the laws of Delaware; authorized capital, $150,000. Incorpora- 

 tors : H. O. Coughlan, Welcome W. Bender — both of New 

 York City, and James M. Slatterfield, Dover, Delaware. The 

 company has been incorporated to deal in rubber, gutta percha, 

 gum and all sorts of rubber goods. 



The Moore Architectural and Engineering Co., May 5, 1910, 

 under the laws of Ohio ; authorized capital, $50,000. Incorpora- 

 tors: D. F. Felmly, F. R. Moore, and Charles S. Heller. The 

 company has been incorporated for the purpose of engaging 

 in, conducting and prosecuting the science and practice and 

 business of architecture, etc. 



New Bedford Elastro Co., October 6, 1911, under the laws 

 of Massachusetts ; authorized capital, $25,000. Incorporators : 

 Otis S. Cook, Frederick H. Taber — both of New Bedford, and 



Morris R. Brownell, Fairhaven— all of Massachusetts. The 

 company has been incorporated to engage in the rubber business 

 and that of rubber substitutes. 



Photo-Type Rubber Stamp Co., September 28, 1911, under the 

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

 Thos. W. McKnight, No. 277 Broadway; Alfred J. Jorman, 

 No. 210 West Fourteenth street, and J. Frank Wickens, No. 

 441 Ninth street, Brooklyn — all of New York. To manufac- 

 ture rubber stamps, etc. Location of principal office. New York. 



Reliable Tire Repair Co., September 18, 1911, under the laws 

 of Illinois; authorized capital, $2,400. Incorporators: John V. 

 Leslie, George Haas, and Bert A. Fritz. The company has been 

 incorporated to deal in and repair automobiles and automobile 

 supplies. 



Rubber Fibre Co., September IS, 1911, under the laws 

 of Massachusetts ; authorized capital, $25,000. Incorporators : 

 Ralph S. Earle, Sharon, James G. McGuire, E. Milton, and 

 Howard P. Knox, E. Milton — all of Massachusetts. The com- 

 pany has been incorporated for the purpose of engaging in the 

 rubber business and that of rubber substitutes. 



Russell Rubber Co., October 4, 1911, under the laws of New 

 Jersey; authorized capital, $50,000. Incorporators: George G. 

 Russell, Highland Park; James W. Devine, and Agnes M. 

 Russell, Highland Park — all of* New Branswick, New Jersey. 

 The company has been incorporated for the purpose of en- 

 gaging and carrying on the general trade or business of mak- 

 ing, manufacturing, etc., rubber, etc. 



S. & K. Tire Co., September 13, 1911, under the laws of 

 Illinois; authorized capital, $4,000. Incorporators: David F. 

 Rosenthal, Edwin D. Lawlor, and Leo S. Kositchek. To manu- 

 facture and deal in tires and materials for same. 



The Sea Island Tire Co., September 20, 1911, under the laws 

 of Ohio; authorized capital, $15,000. Incorporators: J. C. 

 Brooks, A. L. Welch, and A. C. Miller. To manufacture, buy, 

 sell and deal in automobile tires and tire protectors, etc. 



Venezuela Trading Co., October 9, 1911, under the laws of 

 New York ; authorized capital, $10,000. Incorporators : Antonio 

 Parra, No. 570 West One Hundred and Sixty-first street, New 

 York; Julio A. Pocaterra, No. 230 West Fifty-second street, 

 New York, and Russell G. Howe, No. 3 Ninety-sixth street, 

 Brooklyn, New York, Location of principal office. New York. 

 To manufacture rubber goods. 



TKADE NEWS NOTES. 



The Federal Rubber Manufacturing Co., Milwaukee, Wiscon- 

 sin, is sending out, as an advertisement for its pneumatic and 

 solid tires, a very convenient paper weight, in the form of a horse- 

 shoe pad made of rubber, somewhat smaller than those used 

 in real life, lined on the bottom with a piece' of green felt. It 

 weighs about one-half pound, and makes a serviceable paper 

 weight. 



The Fairfield Rubber Co., Fairfield, Connecticut, is building 

 an addition to its present plant. 



The Mercantile Rubber Co., composed of Joseph J. Casin and 

 Dr. S. G. Hoffman, has opened a place of business at No. 201 

 Second street. New York City, for the purpose of dealing in 

 druggists' specialties and sundries. 



The largest taxpayer in the city of Melrose, Massachusetts, is 

 the Boston Rubber Shoe Co., which pays a tax amounting to 

 $11,135.32. 



Towner & Co., Inc., Memphis, Tennessee, have recently moved 

 into a fine new building on South Second street and Union 

 avenue, of that city. 



H. W. Barlow, of the Boston Woven Hose and Rubber Co., 

 Boston, Massachusetts, recently delivered an address on "The 

 Rubber Business," before the salesmen and employes of the 

 Standard Manufacturing Co., of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on 

 the occasion of their regular fall convention. 



