448 



THE INDIA RUBBER WORLD 



[May 1, 1915. 



NEW INCORPORATIONS. 



A I V Tire Co., -March 19. 1915; under the laws of Dela- 

 ware; aul Capital, $500,(XX). Incorporators: Charles B. 

 Bishop, Clarence J. Jacobs and Harry \Y. Davis — all of Wil- 

 mington, Delaware. To purcha ell and deal in and with all 

 kinds of supplies, tools, acc< ' , etc., in use or incidental to 

 automobiles, motor trucks, etc 



Adams & Co., Inc., Louis R., Vpril 20, 1915; under the laws of 



New York; authorized capital. $5,000. Incorporators; Louis R. 



ns and Marj B \d.mis — both of Rowayton, Connecticut, and 



Harry W. Soul, 143 ["ibbetl road, Yonkers, New York. To 



manufacture tires, rims, etc. 



Anthonj Rubber Manufacturing Co., April 1, 1915; under the 

 laws of R1i.m1i Island; authorized capital. $100,000, of which 

 $90,000 is to be common and $10,000 preferred Incorporators: 

 John Anthony, Attleboro, Massachusetts; Frank Hcaley and 

 George T. Marsh— both of Providence, Rhode Island. To buy, 

 sell and deal in crude rubber and rubber goods and for the 

 manufacture of rubber goods, tires, rubber belting, etc. 



Armour Tread Co., March 17. 1915; under the laws of Con- 

 necticut: authorized capital. $25,000. Incorporators: John A. 

 Thomas, Ubany, and Charles 11. Situs, Corinth — both in New 

 York— and Monroe J. Brewer, East Hartford, Connecticut. To 

 manufacture automobile treads and tires. 



Baker Co., diaries, March 9. 1915; under the laws of Massa- 

 chusetts; authorized capital. $50,000. Incorporators: Charles 

 Baker, 29 Pinckney road; Walter Hartstone, 15 Orkney road, 

 and David A. Marshall. 6 Hartwell street — all in Boston. To 

 deal in rubber, etc., and to manufacture clothing, garments and 

 wearing apparel from said article. 



Brown Tube Distributing Co., Inc., March 30, 1915; under the 

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

 Floyd L. Smith and Loyal F. Smith— both of 63 Broad street, 

 Plattsburg, New York — and Charles S. Averill, Hotel Ban- 

 croft, Worcester, Massachusetts. To market the "Brown Per- 

 fection Tube," etc. 



C. C. C. Fire Hose Co., The. March 25, 1915; under the laws 

 of Maine ; authorized capital, $50,000. Incorporators : Ernest _ 

 E. Noble (president), E. V. Mann (treasurer), and Frederick 

 Hale (clerk) — all of Portland, Maine. To manufacture, sell, 

 buy. import and deal in fire hose and other rubber goods. 



Chic-Mint Gum Co., March 25, 1915; under the laws of Dela- 

 ware; authorized capital, $100,000. Incorporators: F. D. Buck, 

 George W. Dillman and M. L. Horty— all of Wilmington, Dela- 

 ware. To manufacture chewing gum. 



Elyria Tire S Rubber Co., The, March 6, 1915: under the laws 

 of Ohio; authorized capital, $250,000. Incorporators: Alexander 

 G. Snow, Edward P. Parshall, Gust. G. Gilbert. Carl W. Neu- 

 brand and James L. Lind. To manufacture rubber goods, etc. 



Famous Tire & Rubber Co., Inc., April 12. 1915; under the 

 laws of New Y..rk: authorized capital. $15,000. Incorporators: 

 1 manuel Newman, William R. Jackson and William A. Ihne— 

 all of 391 Fulton street, Brooklyn, New York. Tire business. 



Franklin Auto Shoe Co., March 25, 1915; under the laws of 

 Indiana; authorized capital, $10,000. Incorporators: William 

 Feathcrngill, S. W. Featherngill, and Thomas M. Hardy. To 

 manufacture a patent auto shoe. 



Guelph Tire & Rubber Co., Limited, March 31, 1915; under the 

 laws of Canada: authorized capital, $350,000—4,000 common 

 shares of $25 each. 5,000 preferred shares of $50 each. Incor- 

 porators : Alexander Henry Davidson, Southampton ; Thomas 

 Nairn Dunn. Strathroy; Archibald Orr, Gideon Grant, John 

 Henry Legge Patterson, Frank Dyche Law — all of Toronto — 

 and Christian Roth Miller, Berlin— both in Ontario, Canada. To 

 manufacture rubber goods. 



Keene Shock Absorber Co., The, March 29, 1915; under the 

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

 George A. Keene, Peter E. Wurfflein and A. Dayton Oliphant— 



all of Trenton, New Jersey. Principal office, Room 805, Ameri- 

 can Mechanic Building, 137 East State street, Trenton, New 

 Jersey. To purchase or acquire the letters patent of the United 

 States of America grained to George Olsen, covering the manu- 

 facture of shock absorbers for heels and arches. 



Kurtz-Pincus Co., Inc., March 25, 1915; under the laws of 

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

 I'incus, 180 Ashland avenue; Nathan Kurt:: and Ella P. Kurtz — 

 both of 115 Claremont avenue — all in Buffalo, New York. To 

 deal in waste, scrap rubber, etc. 



Niles & Goodell, Inc., April 6, 1915; under the laws of New 

 York; authorized capital, $10,000. Incorporators: Charles W. 

 Niles, Jr., 53 Pineapple street; Frank R. Goodell, 170 Woodruff 

 avenue— both in Brooklyn, New York — and Howard M. Alex- 

 ander. Newark, New Jersey. To manufacture footwear, rubbers 

 and rubber goods. 



Paramount Rubber Products Co. of New York, Inc., April 

 13, 1915; under the laws of New York; authorized capital, $1,000. 

 Incorporators: Blanche V. Bacon, William F. Bacon and Emma 

 B. Becker — all of Waterloo, New York. To manufacture rub- 

 lier goods of all kinds. 



Royal Tire & Rubber Co., The, March 27. 1915; under the laws 

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

 Wallace D. Fuerth, 7 Howard street; Bernard C. Cohn, 66 

 Elliott street, and David Fuerth, 7 Howard street — all in New- 

 ark, New Jersey. To manufacture and sell at wholesale and 

 retail automobile tires, inner tubes, and all other automobile 

 supplies and accessories. 



Rubber Regenerating Co., Limited, The, March 22, 1915; under 

 the laws of Canada ; authorized capital, $2O0,0XX) — 2.000 shares 

 of $100 each. Incorporators : Charles Macpherson Hold, Errol 

 Malcolm McDougall, Gilbert Sutherland Stairs, Pierre Francois 

 Casgrain and John Buchanan Henderson — all of Montreal, 

 Quebec. To manufacture rubber goods of various kinds. 



Self Sealing Inner Tube Co., April 10. 1915, under the laws of 

 Delaware; authorized capital, $125,000. Incorporators: Carl 

 Van der Yoort, L. C. Rowland, F. M. Casey— all of Pittsburgh, 

 Pennsylvania. To manufacture and sell automobile tire tubes, 

 tires, automobile accessories and rubber goods of all kinds. 



Ullman & Solomon, Inc., April 5, 1915; under the laws of 

 New York; authorized capital, $25,000. Incorporators: David 

 Solomon, 839 West End avenue; Stuart M. Kohn, 440 Riverside 

 Drive— both in New York City— and Herman V. Ullman, 6037 

 St. Lawrence avenue, Chicago. To manufacture raincoats and 

 other apparel. 



Walsh Tire & Rubber Co., April 14, 1915; under the laws of 

 Delaware; authorized capital, $100,000. Incorporators: F. R. 

 Hansell. Philadelphia, and George H. B. Martin and S. C. Sey- 

 mour, of Camden, New Jersey. To manufacture, buy, sell and 

 deal in tires, automobiles, etc. 



Washington Rubber Bag Co., Inc., April 12. 1915; under the 

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

 Israel Scolnik and Joseph Scolnik— both of 1359 Clay avenue, and 

 Sigmund Spielberger, 43 Second avenue— all in New York City. 

 To manufacture bathing bags, etc. 



White Manufacturing Co., The, March 31. 1915; under the 

 laws of Ohio; authorized capital, $10,000, divided into 100 

 share- of $100 each. Incorporators: I. J. Cooper, W. L. 

 Busch. Wilson C. Latta, A. H. Apking and F. W. Cooper. To 

 manufacture rubber goods. 



The Columbia Tire & Rubber Co., formation of which was 

 mentioned on page 397 of our April issue, has elected its officers 

 and directors. Charles Hoffman has been elected president; W. 

 G. Henne, vice-president and general manager ; Jesse E. LaDow, 

 secretary, and Walter F. Henne, treasurer. The board of di- 

 rectors is composed of these officers, together with J. C. Henne, 

 William Islay and J. E. Schauer. 



