Click image to open full size in new tab
Article Text
and the company will be reorganized. Providence. Feb. 3.-N. Curtis Fletcher & Co., bankers and brokers, suspended payment to-day. No statement was available, but it is understood that the firm, which has financied a number of small electric and gaslight concerns in Maine and elsewhere, could not meet attachments filed against it. A deed of trust was executed to Frank L. Hinckley, a local attorney. Boston, Feb. 3.-A reorganization of the Knox Automobile Company, of Springfield, Mass., which assigned July 22, was announced here to-day. Alfred M. Mayor, Charles L. Goodhue, Charles H. Beckwith and Peter Murray. all of Springfield; Charles E. Whitney, of Hartford, Conn.: William E. Wright. of Springfield: W. H. Chase, of Leominster: M. J. Greenwood, of Gardner, and H. W. Cutler, of North Wilbraham, have been elected directors, and Charles L. Goodhue has been chosen president and treasurer. The creditors, whose claims aggregated $957,600, have accepted preferred stock in settlement. Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 3.-A license was granted the Western Union Telegraph Company to-day by the Secretary of State to do business in Missouri. The company made application for a license several days ago, when the Attorney General agreed to dismiss proceedings instituted in the Circuit Court to compel the company to comply with the state law in this respect. San Francisco. Feb. 3.-Frank Symmes, president of the Merchants' Association, was appointed receiver of the Citizens' State Bank to-day, with bonds of $50,000. Lexington, Ky., Feb. 3.-The Transylvania Printing Company, one of the oldest publishing companies in the West, assigned to-day to J. R. Bush, given. of this city. Assets about $50,000; liabilities not St. Paul, Feb. 8.-Vice-President Gallivan of the International Union of Boiler Makers announced to-day that the strike of boiler makers against the several railroads in Minnesota is declared off. Gallivan said that the roads have not needed the equipment that they ordinarily require. The men have been on strike since September. Chicago, Feb. 3.-The Pullman Palace Car Company to-day distributed $174,850 among 3,770 employes for its car service department. The bonus amounts to one month's salary for every conductor and porter who continued on the payroll of the company throughout 1907 and escaped demerits. It is the intention of the company to grant the bonus of one month's pay each year hereafter to such conductors and porters as make a clean record throughout the year. Chicago, Feb. 3.-Judge Landis overruled to-day the demurrer of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company to the federal indictment. charging the company with granting rebates to the United States Sugar and Land Company. The railroad company has two weeks in which to plead to the indictment. Wilmington, Del., Feb. 3.-In the United States District Court to-day the Peyton Chemical Company, of California. and the Equitable Powder Manufacturing Company, of New Jersey, two of thee powder concerns made subjects of litigation by the government alleging violation of federal laws, filed answers to the bill filed by the government. The answers contain a general denial of the allegations made by the government, being similar to the answers filed by other defendants a month ago. The next step in the powder litigation will be the filing of replications by the government, which it is required to do by the first Monday in March. Buffalo, Feb. 3.-As the result of a petition in a suit in equity brought by Emma Coleman, of Somerset, Va., Judge Hazel to-day appointed George P. Keating and Edward R. O'Malley, receivers of the National Battery Company, of Buffalo. The liabilities of the company amount to about $120,000. principally in promissory notes, most of which are due. The assets are said to be about $425,000, but on account of the financial stringency it is impossible to pay even the most pressing claims. Chelsea, Mass, Feb. 3.-The Magee Furnace Company reopened Its plant to-day after a shutdown of two weeks, giving work to five hundred skilled mechanics. Millbury, Mass., Feb. 3.-The Cordis mills, manufacturing ticking, began a working schedule of four days a week to-day. The plant employs 135 hands.