Mav 1, 1912.] 



THE INDIA RUBBER WORLD 



407 



NEW INCORPORATIONS. 



Alpha Rim Co., March 23, 1912; under the laws of Xew York; 

 authorized capital 5100,000. Incorporators : Clarence M. O'Don- 

 nell, 301 St. Nicholas avenue, New York; George H. Tice, 480 

 Sixteenth street, Brooklyn, New York, and Max P. Bau, 197 

 Norman avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Location of principal 

 .office, Brooklyn, New York. To manufacture auto rims, tires, 

 auto supplies, etc. 



Bomadeli Mercantile Co., March 19, 1912; under the laws of 

 New Jersey; authorized capital $125,000. Incorporators: George 

 A. P. Boulden, 525 River street, Hoboken, New Jersey; George 

 J. Saulpaugh, 843 Park place, Brooklyn, New York, and Arthur 

 J. W'estmermayr, 90 Nassau street. New York. The company 

 has been incorporated to own, operate, sell and otherwise deal 

 in rubber plantations in South Africa or other places. 



The Borden Rubber Co., April 20, 1912; under the laws of 

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

 Perlish and Samuel Lund — both of 46 Cortland street — and 

 Clarence E. Thronall, 50 Church street — all of New York. Loca- 

 tion of principal office. New York. 



Century Rubber Works, March 16, 1912; under the laws of 



■Illinois; authorized capital $30,000. Incorporators: Charles J. 



Monahan, J. A. Netzel and Frank M. Netzel. To manufacture 



and deal in rubber and gutta-percha and all goods in which same 



are component parts. 



Chemical Rubber Co., March 15, 1912; under the laws of 

 Wisconsin; authorized capital $150,000. Incorporators: J. J. 

 Lamkey, Frank P. Hatter and J. C. Evans. To manufacture, 

 sell and deal in chemical rubber, etc. 



East New York Raincoat Co., Inc., April 19. 1912 ; under the 

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

 Morris Hyams, 130 Thatford avenue; Michael Kohen, 1571 

 Eastern Parkway, and Rosa Hyams, 130 Thatford avenue — all 

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

 New York. To manufacture rubberized clothing, etc. 



Eureka Non-Skid Manufacturing Co., March 28, 1912 ; under 

 the laws of New York; authorized capital $2,500. Incorporators: 

 Henry E. Bradford, East Williston, Long Island ; James Col- 

 bourne, London, England, and Brown Bolston, Plainfield, New 

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

 manufacture auto accessories, etc. 



Footwear Manufacturing Co., April 1, 1912; under the laws 

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

 F. Denike, 188 Weirfield street, Brooklyn, New York ; Henry S. 

 Myers, 1010 Hoe avenue, Bronx, New York, and Morris Lef- 

 kowitz, 1076 DeKalb avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Location 

 of principal offices, Brooklyn, New York. To manufacture and 

 deal in shoes, rubbers, etc. 



The Goodrich Raincoat Co., March 29, 1912 ; under the laws 

 of Illinois ; authorized capital $2,500. Incorporators : John A. 

 Bussian, Arthur Rosenthal and Ella Stier. The company has 

 been incorporated for the purpose of buying, selling, manufac- 

 tnrii'g and vending of raincoats, etc. 



Keystone Leathergoods Co., April 15, 1912 ; under the laws of 

 New York; authorized capital, $3,500. Incorporators: E. 

 Brower, 288 Seventh street, Maurice Liften. 229 West 130th 

 street — both of New York, and Henry Chaskin, 131 Debevoise 

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

 York. To manufacture and deal in leather and rubber goods, 

 etc. 



Lancaster Engineering Corporation, August 1, 1911; under the 

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

 William A. Keddie, 3 Maiden Lane, New York; Edward J. 

 Newell and Edward J. Hogerty — both of 42 Broadway. New- 

 York. Location of principal office. New York. To manufac- 

 ture machinery, etc. 



National Tire Co.. April 8, 1912; under the laws of New York; 

 authorized capital, $50,000. Incorporators: Harry Davies, 246 



West Forty-sixth street; Thomas H. Hopkirk, 30 Church street 

 — both of New York — and Ivan V. Weisbrod, St. George, Staten 

 Island. Location of principal office. New York. 



The Ohio Tire Co., April 13, 1912; under the laws of New 

 York; authorized capital, $500. Incorporators: Samuel Kessel, 

 1405 Forty-second street, Brooklyn, New York; Fanny Karpo- 

 witz and Max Karpowitz — both of 166 South Second street, 

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

 To manufacture tires and other auto accessories. 



Rubber-Aer Co., .A.pril 15, 1912; under the laws of New York; 

 authorized capital $25,000. Incorporators: Daniel B. Crane, Jr., 

 4164 Bran-der street, Woodhaven, Long Island; Ernest Lavoie, 

 113 Seventh avenue. New York, and Hugh M. Smith, 222 Clark 

 street, W estfield. New Jersey. Location of principal office. New 

 York. To manufacture rubber goods, auto accessories, etc. 



Sponge Rubber Inner Heel Co., .\pril 10, 1912; under the laws 

 of New York ; authorized capital $25,000. Incorporators : Alex- 

 ander M. Patch, Lebanon, Pa.; Lowen E. Ginn and W. Beebe 

 Price — both of 115 Broadway, New York. Location of prin- 

 cipal office. New York. 



Standard Shoe Co., March 29. 1912;. under the laws of Maine; 

 authorized capital $35,000. Incorporators : G. J. Lamontagne, 

 William E. Kinney — both of Claremont, New- Hampshire — and 

 Horace Mitchell, Kittery, Maine. The company has been in- 

 corporated to deal in — wholesale and retail — boots, shoes, etc., 

 and to bu}- and sell real estate that maj- be useful in said 

 business. 



Surinam Rubber Estates, Inc., March 30, 1912; under the laws 

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

 Joseph F. Curtin, H. O. Coughlan — both of New York — and 

 James M. Slatterfield, Dover, Delaware. The company has been 

 incorporated for the purpose of acquiring lands and estates for 

 the cultivation of rubber. 



Tire Core Company of .America, .\pril 19. 1912; under the 

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

 Russell V. Stuart, 244 West Seventy-second street, Patrick J. 

 O'Connell, 48 Leonard street, and Houston P. Reader, Lafayette 

 and Walker streets — all of New York. Location of principal of- 

 fice. New York. To manufacture tire cores, tires, rubber goods, 

 etc. 



The Charles H. Tucker Co.. March 29, 1912; under the laws 

 of New York; authorized capital $100,000. Incorporators: Chas. 

 H. Tucker, Edward R. Wood and Henry W. Solomons — all of 

 1974 Broadway, New York. 



Western Rain Coat Co., Inc., April 8, 1912 ; under the laws of 

 New York; authorized capital $3,000. Incorporators: Harris 

 Lapin, 1705 Bathgate avenue; Rose Isaacson, 1477 Washington 

 avenue, and Philip Braslausky, 3777 Third avenue — all of New 

 York. Location of principal office. New York. 



HAS MR. FLINT BOUGHT THE TOLSTOY ESTATE? 



The New York "Times" in a recent issue contained the fol- 

 lowing paragraph sent by its Vienna correspondent: "According 

 to information from a trustworthy source, Charles R. Flint of 

 New York has acquired the late Count Tolstoy's estate at Yas- 

 naya Polyana, Russia. It is said that Mr. Flint intends to estab- 

 lish an agricultural school and museum on the estate." 



The paragraph goes on further to state that Mr. Flint had in- 

 terested with himself five of the leading manufacturers of ag- 

 ricultural implements in the United States, and w-ith their as- 

 sistance proposed to erect on the Tolstoy estate a permanent 

 exhibition of American agricultural machinery, and to use this 

 machinery in cultivating the surrounding land as an object lesson 

 to the Russian farmers in modern methods of agriculture. It is 

 believed that with their fertile land, with proper machinery, they 

 could get twice the crops with much less labor and expense. 



Inquiry at I\Ir. Flint's office regarding the accuracy of the 

 above paragraph failed to elicit either confirmation or denial. 



