COMBINED COMPANIES CORP
10SB12G, 1999-12-30
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                     U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                   FORM 10-SB

                   GENERAL FORM FOR REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES
                  OF SMALL BUSINESS ISSUERS UNDER SECTION 12(b)
                OR 12 (g) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934


                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION
                         ------------------------------
                 (Name of Small Business Issuer in Its Charter)

                DELAWARE                                    95-4737491
                --------                                    ----------
    (State or other jurisdiction of                      (I.R.S. Employer
     incorporation or organization)                     Identification No.)



     22147 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY, SUITE 4, MALIBU, CA              90265
     -------------------------------------------------------------------
         (Address of Principal Executive Offices)                (ZipCode)


                                 (310) 317-6939
                                Telephone Number

                 Securities to be registered under Section 12(b)
                              of the Exchange Act:
                                      None

                 Securities to be registered under Section 12(g)
                              of the Exchange Act:

                         COMMON STOCK, $0.001 PAR VALUE
                         ------------------------------
                                (Title of class)

<PAGE>



                                     PART I

                                                                            Page

Item 1.    Description of Business............................................1

Item 2.    Management's Discussion and Analysis or Plan of Operation..........5

Item 3.    Description of Property............................................5

Item 4.    Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management.....6

Item 5.    Executive Officers, Promoters and Control Persons..................7

Item 6.    Executive Compensation.............................................7

Item 7.    Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.....................8

Item 8.    Description of Securities..........................................8

                                    PART II

Item 1.    Market Price of and Dividends on the Registrants Common
                  Equity and Other Shareholder Matters........................9

Item 2.    Legal Proceedings................................................. 9

Item 3.    Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants......................9

Item 4.    Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities............................9

Item 5.    Indemnification of Directors and Officers..........................9

                                    PART F/S

Financial Statements.........................................................10

PART III

Item 1.    Index to Exhibits.................................................11

Item 2.    Description of Exhibits...........................................11

                                       i



<PAGE>


                                     PART I

Item 1.  Description of Business.

The Company
- -----------
     Combined Companies Corporation  ("Combined Companies" or the "Company") was
incorporated in Delaware April 27, 1998. It will be an online  retailer  focused
on baby products for expectant parents and their newborns.  It will offer a vast
assortment of over 1200 carefully  selected  products and an easy-to-use  online
shopping  environment.  It will provide expert buyer's guides,  in-depth product
descriptions and personalized product recommendations,  to help parents and gift
givers find quality  products  and make  informed  decisions  about their babies
needs and safety.

     The Company is creating and will  maintain an online  "store" for retailing
baby  products,  procuring  and  fulfilling  the  product  orders and  providing
customer  service for the new and  expecting  parent  community.  The  Company's
objective  is to offer a full line of quality baby  products and baby gifts,  to
provide friendly,  responsive customer service to an anticipated rapidly growing
customer base and to take advantage of the significant  opportunity  within this
market.

     As  part  of the  Company's  strategy  to  offer  a  complete  line of baby
products,  it is looking to enter into an agreement with an established  company
which would agree to merchandise the Company's anticipated website,  procure and
provide  inventory  to be offered for sale and fulfill all of its future  online
orders. This arrangement would provide an experienced  inventory and fulfillment
partner  with  strong  purchasing  and   merchandising   skills  and  tremendous
experience in the baby products industry.

     The Company  intends to launch its website with a fresh logo,  color scheme
and user interface.  The Company  believes that it will offer one of the easiest
and  most   user-friendly   shopping   experiences   available   in  the  online
baby-retailing  category.  It intends to  implement  a broad  array of  scalable
systems for website management, search, customer service, electronic transaction
management and data interchange, email, order processing, payment processing and
office administration services.

     The Company intends to sign a number of exclusive retailing agreements with
manufacturers and/or distributors who make unique and desirable products for the
baby market.

Online Retailing of Baby Products
- ---------------------------------
     The   Internet   is  an   increasingly   significant   global   medium  for
communication,  content  distribution  and online  commerce.  Growth in Internet
usage has been  fueled by a number of factors,  including  the large and growing
installed base of personal computers in the workplace and home,  advances in the
performance and speed of personal computers and modems,  improvements in network
infrastructure,  easier  and  cheaper  access  to  the  Internet  and  increased
awareness of the Internet among businesses and consumers.

                                       1
<PAGE>

     The  worldwide  baby product  industry is large,  growing  rapidly,  and is
highly fragmented.  The U.S. market for baby gear (apparel, infant care, nursery
and  furniture,  toys and food products) is estimated in excess of $18.0 billion
in annual  sales.  The baby gear market is large and stable  with  approximately
four million new babies born each year.  Product margins in the baby gear market
are  attractive - as new parents  typically  base purchase  decisions on safety,
quality and recommendations.  The average family spends over $7,000 in the first
year of a baby's life - and, with  increasingly busy lifestyles and over half of
all new mothers  working  prior to delivery,  online  sales of baby  products is
expected to continue to expand.

         Manufacturers sell baby products both directly to retailers and through
a network of distributors and buying groups. There are many thousands of smaller
independent  stores  selling baby  products in the U.S. that  typically  carry a
limited  selection of products in a small selling  space.  These  retailers have
recently come under intense competitive pressure from the larger stores.

         Physical  store-based  baby  product  retailers  must make  significant
investments  in inventory,  real estate and personnel for each retail  location.
This  capital and real estate  intensive  business  model,  among other  things,
limits the amount of inventory that can be economically carried in any location.

         The Company  believes  that the baby product  industry is  particularly
suited to online retailing for the following reasons:

SHELF SPACE - An online store has virtually  unlimited  online "shelf space" and
can offer customers a vast selection of products through an efficient search and
retrieval  interface.  Combined  Companies' website will be organized in a clear
and  logical  fashion  that will allow  browsers  to quickly and easily find the
product line for which they are searching.  This is particularly valuable in the
baby products market because the extraordinary  number of choices precludes even
the largest physical store from economically stocking more than a small minority
of available products.

COMPLEX PRODUCTS - As a result of the complex nature and  often-limited  initial
knowledge  of  consumers  with  respect to baby  products,  sales  personnel  in
traditional baby stores often need to spend excessive  amounts of time educating
the consumer.  This results in the need to hire  above-average  numbers of sales
people to properly service any given store's customers effectively.  In response
to this  circumstance,  the Company will develop and then continue to update its
"expert  suggestion"  and "how to" buying  guides  which will  provide  valuable
information for first-time buyers who need advice and guidance on which products
are the most appropriate for their needs. The use of the Internet will allow the
Company to provide  significantly  more information  with greater  accessibility
than traditional brick and mortar retailers including product reviews, editorial
comments and gift recommendations by product category and price.

LOCAL  VS.  GLOBAL  REACH  - By  serving  a  large  and  global  market  through
centralized  distribution  and  billing  operations,  online  stores can realize
significant  structural cost advantages as compared to traditional  stores.  The
Company  believes  that its future  design will be an online store that provides
consumers  with a convenient  and enjoyable  shopping  experience in a Web-based
retail environment. Key elements of the shopping solution will include:

                                       2
<PAGE>

     SHOPPING  CONVENIENCE  - The  Company's  online  store will be available 24
hours a day, 7 days a week from the convenience of the shopper's home or office.

     EXTENSIVE PRODUCT SELECTION AND NOVEL MERCHANDISING - The site will offer a
complete  array of baby  products  from both  traditional  brands and  specialty
manufacturers.

     HELPFUL SHOPPING SERVICES - To assist its shoppers,  the website will offer
product   reviews   from   experts  and   consumers,   descriptions,   pictures,
recommendations,   gift  suggestions  and  sophisticated   browsing  and  search
technology.

     INDUSTRY  LEADING  CUSTOMER SERVICE - The Company is committed to providing
the highest level of customer service  available on the Internet.  It will offer
pre- and post-sales support via telephone, email and fax.

Marketing/Branding Strategy
- ---------------------------
     The Company  recognizes the value of integrating the three C's of eTailing,
namely,  community,  content and  commerce  into one Website.  As a result,  the
Company  intends  to  develop  what it  believes  to be a unique  strategy  that
Management  believes  will  effectively   differentiate  the  Company  from  its
competition.  Furthermore,  it is believed  that this  strategy  will enable the
Company to build and  continue  to grow the  traffic  to its  future  site while
increasing  the  "stickiness"  of the site and thus  providing  the Company with
multiple opportunities to sell product to the established user base.

     Due to the unique  attributes of the  pregnancy/baby  market  segment as it
relates to the  Internet,  the  Company  believes  that  providing  content  and
community itself is not a desirable  business model. While the Company's primary
competitors   have  focused  on  providing   community,   content  and  commerce
themselves,    Combined    Companies   will   attempt   to   successfully   form
marketing/commerce    partnerships    with   a    number    of   high    profile
community/content-only  pregnancy - related Web sites. The Company believes that
targeting  the  baby/pregnancy  community/content  sites  and  signing  them  to
exclusive advertising/content partnerships will be the most effective use of its
marketing  resources.  Furthermore,  by partnering with these  community/content
sites as opposed to offering its own content,  the Company believes that it will
be seen as a value-added partner to many of the Internet's  baby/pregnancy sites
as opposed to a direct competitor. The Company believes that this business model
will enable it to form additional  partnerships in the future with  content-only
sites that otherwise would not be willing to become affiliated with the Company.

Advertising
- -----------
     The Company's marketing and promotion strategy will be designed to:

          Build  brand  recognition;
          Attract  consumer  traffic to its Web site;
          Attract customers;
          Build strong customer loyalty;
          Maximize repeat purchases; and
          Develop additional ways to increase its sales.

                                       3
<PAGE>

     Once the  Company  begins  the  launch of its  website,  a highly  targeted
marketing  program,  currently in development,  will be unveiled.  This campaign
will include banner  advertisements on certain targeted search engines,  keyword
purchases of the words "baby", "baby products", "strollers", "cribs", "carseats"
and "baby gifts",  email  advertisements to the potential customers generated by
the sweepstakes databases, certain print advertisements and direct mail drops to
targeted  geographic  areas.  Additionally,   the  Company  will  have  a  broad
representation  on all of its  community/content  Partner's  sites with banners,
buttons and other links to its site.

Customer Service
- ----------------
     The Company  intends to deliver  superior  customer  service by focusing on
providing  consumers  with  selection,  convenience  and content  through a vast
assortment of products at competitive prices. It will deliver these key benefits
in a convenient  shopping experience via a user-friendly  website interface.  In
contrast  to the  majority  of  e-commerce  companies,  Combined  Companies  has
consciously decided to create its customer service functions in-house instead of
outsourcing  these  services.  The Company  firmly  believes  that  friendly and
responsive  customer  service is an avenue for building  brand  recognition  and
customer  loyalty  within the baby  space and that  operating  its own  customer
service department is crucial in that endeavor.

     The Company  intends to allocate  significant  resources to the development
and expansion of the customer  service  function.  It believes that, in general,
attentive,  proactive customer service is an absolutely  essential  component of
any  e-commerce  business  model and,  in  particular,  the baby  product  space
requires  superior  customer  service.  Additionally,  the Company's feels that,
almost without  exception,  browsers that will use customer  service will become
its  customers.  Accordingly,  as  previously  discussed,  due to the  perceived
importance  of the  customer  service  experience  in the  baby  product  buying
experience,  it is the Company's intention to actively develop and then maintain
the operations of the Customer Service Department within the Company.

New Business Initiatives
- ------------------------
     The Company is presently  analyzing  and  identifying  potential  strategic
Internet  partners that could be a source of established  "captive"  traffic and
customers.  The Company intends to pursue a strategy of partnering with existing
content/community  sites and hopes to consummate additional similar arrangements
in the near  future.  It is the  Company's  belief  that,  upon  execution  of a
strategic  "partnership" as previously discussed, it will take approximately two
to three months to be fully integrated and incorporated  with the "partner" site
and to begin reaping the benefits of the arrangement.

Canada
- ------
     The  Company  believes  that  the  Canadian  marketplace  for baby and baby
related  merchandise is very similar to that of the United  States.  The Company
has recognized that the Canadian market does present a few specific challenges.

                                       4
<PAGE>

     Research  indicates  that the  Canadian  consumer is anxious and willing to
purchase  merchandise  over the  Internet  however,  he/she  desires to purchase
"Canadian".  Due to  currency  adjustments  and  product  safety  standards  and
certification,  the Canadian  consumer is desirous of purchasing from a Canadian
source.  Accordingly,  the  Company  has  initiated  a  search  for  a  Canadian
merchandising partner.

Spanish/Latin Market
- --------------------
     The  Company  believes  that the  Spanish/Latin  market in the US and South
America is a large and rapidly growing market segment that currently has limited
options  in  terms  of   pregnancy   information   and   e-commerce   offerings.
Spanish-speaking  Internet  users were forecast to reach more than 40 million in
Latin  America,  the United States and Spain by the end of 2000  according to an
International  Data Corp.  study.  Internet  users in Latin  America  alone were
expected to rise more than 50 percent in 1999 to 8.5 million.

     The Company intends to launch a Spanish language version of its anticipated
website in order to gain the "first mover  advantage" in this  under-served  yet
expanding e-commerce space.


Item 2.  Management's Discussion and Analysis or Plan of Operation.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

     The following  discussion  and analysis below should be read in conjunction
with the financial statements,  including the notes thereto, appearing elsewhere
in this Registration Statement. For the period since operations commenced (April
7, 1999) through August 31, 1999,  during the Company's  development  stage, the
Company has a cash balance of $35.00, and has generated a net loss of ($1,061).

FINANCIAL CONDITION AND LIQUIDITY

     The Company has limited  liquidity  and has an ongoing  need to finance its
activities. To date, the Company currently has funded these cash requirements by
offering and selling its Common Stock,  and has issued  412,500 shares of Common
Stock for net proceeds of $1,001.00.

Item 3.  Description of Property.

     The  Company's  executive and  administrative  offices are located at 22147
Pacific Coast Highway,  Suite 4, Malibu,  CA 90265. The Company pays no rent for
use of the office  and does not  believe  that it will  require  any  additional
office  space in the  foreseeable  future  in  order  to  carry  out its plan of
operations described herein.


                                       5
<PAGE>

Item 4.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management.

     The  following  table sets forth as of August 31, 1999 certain  information
relating to the ownership of the common stock.

Name and Address of                    Amount and Nature of         Percent of
Beneficial Owner (1)                 Beneficial Ownership (2)        Class (2)
- --------------------                 ------------------------       ----------

Appletree Investment Company, Ltd            412,500(3)               100.00%

PageOne Business Productions, LLC             75,000                   10.00%

George Todt                                   75,000(4)                10.00%

Besty Rowbottom                               75,000(4)                10.00%

James Walters                                 75,000(4)                10.00%

All officers and directors as a group         75,000(4)                10.00%
(3 persons)


- ------------------------

(1)  Unless otherwise indicated,  the address of each beneficial owner is in the
     care of Combined Companies Corporation,  22147 Pacific Coast Highway, Suite
     4, Malibu, CA 90265.

(2)  Unless otherwise  indicated,  Combined  Companies believes that all persons
     named in the table have sole voting and  investment  power with  respect to
     all shares of common stock  beneficially  owned by them. A person is deemed
     to be the  beneficial  owner of  securities  which may be  acquired by such
     person within 60 days from the date of this registration statement upon the
     exercise of options,  warrants or convertible  securities.  Each beneficial
     owner's  percentage  of  ownership is  determined  by assuming all options,
     warrants or  convertible  securities  that are held by such person (but not
     held by any other person) and which are  exercisable or convertible  within
     60 days of this  registration  statement  have been exercised or converted.
     Percent of Class (third column above)  assumes a base of 412,500  shares of
     common stock outstanding as of August 31, 1999.

(3)  Consists of 337,500 shares held of record by Appletree  Investment Company,
     Ltd.,  an Isle of Man  corporation,  and  75,000  shares  held of record by
     PageOne Business Productions, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, of
     which Appletree is a managing member.

(4)  Consists  solely of 75,000 shares of common stock held by PageOne  Business
     Productions, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, of which Mr. George
     Todt,  Mr.  Walters and  Appletree  Investment  Company,  Ltd. are managing
     members and Ms. Rowbottom is Vice President.

                                       6
<PAGE>

Item 5.  Directors, Executive Officers, Promoters and Control persons.

     The  following  table sets forth  certain  information  with respect to the
directors and executive officers of 1 Solution.

Name                                   Age(1)       Position
- ----                                   ---          --------
George Todt........................    45           Director
Mary Elizabeth Rowbottom...........    28           President and Secretary
Jim Walters........................    45           Treasurer


(1)  The ages of Messrs.  Todt and  Walters and Ms.  Rowbottom  are listed as of
     August 31, 1999.

     Our director and executive  officers  devote such time and attention to the
affairs of Combined  Companies as they believe  reasonable  and  necessary.  Set
forth below is a  description  of the  background  of our director and executive
officers.

     George A. Todt was the President from inception  until October 1999. He has
been the sole director  since the inception of Combined  Companies.  Since 1996,
Mr.  Todt has been a managing  member of PageOne  Business  Productions,  LLC, a
Delaware limited  liability  company.  From 1990 to 1995, Mr. Todt was the chief
executive  officer  of  REPCO,   Inc.,  a  worldwide  designer  and  builder  of
environmental facilities.

     James Walters has been the Treasurer of Combined Companies since July 1999.
For more than 20 years,  Mr.  Walters  has been  engaged as a  certified  public
accountant with the Los Angeles, California-based firm of Kellogg & Andelson.

     Mary Elizabeth  Rowbottom  became  Secretary of Combined  Companies in July
1999 and President in October 1999.  She has been employed by PageOne since 1997
and has served as its Vice  President  since March 1999.  From 1994 to 1997, Ms.
Rowbottom served as a talent agent at HSI Productions, a Chicago, Illinois-based
video production company.

     Our board of directors currently consists of one member, who serves in such
capacity  for a  one-year  term or until  his  successor  has been  elected  and
qualified,  subject to  earlier  resignation,  removal  or death.  The number of
directors constituting the board of directors may be increased or decreased (but
not below the minimum  number  required by applicable  law) from time to time by
resolution of the board of directors.  Our officers  serve at the  discretion of
the board of directors, subject to any effective contractual arrangements.

Item 6.  Executive Compensation.

     Consistent  with our present  policy,  no director or executive  officer of
Combined Companies  receives  compensation for services rendered to the company.
However,  these persons are entitled to be reimbursed  for expenses  incurred by
them in pursuit of our business objectives.

                                       7
<PAGE>

Item 7.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.

     Not Applicable.

Item 8.  Description of Securities.

Common Stock
- ------------
     Combined  Companies is  authorized  to issue  100,000,000  shares of common
stock,  par value $0.001 per share.  Holders of common stock are entitled to one
vote for each share held of record on all matters on which the holders of common
stock are entitled to vote.  There are no redemption or sinking fund  provisions
applicable to the common stock. The outstanding  shares of common stock are, and
the common  stock  issuable  pursuant to this  prospectus  will be, when issued,
fully paid and nonassessable.

Preferred Stock
- ---------------
     Combined Companies is authorized to issue 8,000,000 shares of "blank check"
preferred  stock, par value $0.001 per share, in one or more series from time to
time with such  designations,  rights and  preferences as may be determined from
time to time by the Board of  Directors,  including,  but not limited to (i) the
designation  of  such  series;  (ii)  the  dividend  rate of  such  series,  the
conditions  and dates upon which such dividends  shall be payable,  the relation
which such dividends  shall bear to the dividends  payable on any other class or
classes or series of 1 Solution's capital stock and whether such dividends shall
be cumulative or  non-cumulative;  (iii) whether the shares of such series shall
be subject to redemption for cash, property or rights,  including  securities of
any  other  corporation,  by  Combined  Companies  or upon  the  happening  of a
specified  event  and,  if made  subject  to any such  redemption,  the times or
events,  prices,  rates,  adjustments  and other  terms and  conditions  of such
redemptions;  (iv) the terms and amount of any  sinking  fund  provided  for the
purchase  or  redemption  of the shares of such  series  (v)  whether or not the
shares of such series shall be  convertible  into, or  exchangeable  for, at the
option of either the holder or Combined  Companies  or upon the  happening  of a
specified event,  shares of any other class or classes or of any other series of
the same class of Combined  Companies's  capital stock and, if provision be made
for the conversion or exchange, the times or events, prices, rates,  adjustments
and other  terms and  conditions  of such  conversions  or  exchanges;  (vi) the
restrictions, if any, on the issue or reissue of any additional preferred stock;
(vii) the rights of the holders of the shares of such series upon the  voluntary
or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding up of Combined Companies; and
(viii) the  provisions as to voting,  optional  and/or other special  rights and
preferences,  if any, including,  without limitation,  the right to elect one or
more  directors.  Accordingly,  the Board of  Directors  is  empowered,  without
stockholder  approval,  to issue  preferred  stock with  dividend,  liquidation,
conversion,  voting or other rights which  adversely  affect the voting power or
other rights of the holders of the common stock.  In the event of issuance,  the
preferred  stock could be utilized,  under  certain  circumstances,  as a way of
discouraging,  delaying or  preventing  an  acquisition  or change in control of
Combined  Companies.  Combined  Companies does not currently intend to issue any
shares of its preferred stock.


                                       8
<PAGE>

                                     PART II

Item 1.  Market Price of and Dividends on the Registrant's Common Equity and
         Other Shareholder Matters.

     There is currently no market for Combined Companies's securities.  Combined
Companies has never paid cash  dividends on its common stock.  Payment of future
dividends  will be  within  the  discretion  of  Combined  Companies's  Board of
Directors and will depend on, among other factors,  retained  earnings,  capital
requirements and the operating and financial condition of Combined Companies.

Item 2.  Legal Proceedings.

     Combined   Companies  is  not  currently  a  party  to  any  pending  legal
proceedings.

Item 3.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants.

     Not Applicable.

Item 4.  Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities.

     At the time of  incorporation,  Combined  Companies  issued  100  shares of
common stock to PageOne in exchange for consulting  services valued at $1.00. In
March 1999,  Combined  Companies  issued 900 shares of common stock to Appletree
and 100 shares of common stock to Page One. The purchase  price for these shares
was $1.00 per share.  The  purchases  were made  pursuant  to a Rule 504 Private
Placement Offering.  There was no underwriter or placement agent involved in the
offer or sale of these  securities  and  there  was no  public  solicitation  or
advertisement  by Combined  Companies  in  connection  with the offer or sale of
these  securities.  The  foregoing  issuances  of common  stock were exempt from
registration  under of the  Securities  Act of 1933,  as  amended,  pursuant  to
Section 4(2) thereof.

Item 5.  Indemnification of Directors and Officers.

     Combined  Companies'  Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  limits  the
liability  of its  directors  to  Combined  Companies  or  Combined  Companies's
stockholders  for monetary damages arising from a breach of fiduciary duty owned
to Combined Companies or Combined Companies's stockholders to the fullest extent
permitted by the Delaware General Corporation Law.

     Combined  Companies'  Restated  Certificate of Incorporation and its Bylaws
provide for the  indemnification by Combined Companies of each person (including
the heirs, executors,  administrators, or estate of such person) who is or was a
director or officer of Combined  Companies  to the fullest  extent  permitted or
authorized  by law,  including  attorneys'  fees.  Section  145 of the  Delaware
General  Corporation  Law  provides  in  relevant  part that a  corporation  may
indemnify  any person who was or is a party or is  threatened to be made a party
to any  threatened,  pending or completed  action,  suit or proceeding,  whether
civil, criminal,  administrative or investigative (other than an action by or in
the right of the corporation) by reason of the fact that such person is or was a
director, officer, employee or agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at
the  request of the  corporation  as a director,  officer,  employee or agent of

                                       9
<PAGE>

another  corporation,  partnership,  joint venture,  trust or other  enterprise,
against expenses (including attorneys' fees), judgments,  fines and amounts paid
in settlement actually and reasonably incurred by such person in connection with
such  action,  suit or  proceeding  if such person  acted in good faith and in a
manner  such  person  reasonably  believed  to be in or not  opposed to the best
interests  of the  corporation,  and,  with  respect to any  criminal  action or
proceeding,  had no  reasonable  cause to  believe  such  person's  conduct  was
unlawful.

     In addition,  Section 145 provides  that a  corporation  may  indemnify any
person  who  was or is a  party  or is  threatened  to be  made a  party  to any
threatened,  pending  or  completed  action  or suit by or in the  right  of the
corporation  to procure a judgment  in its favor by reason of the fact that such
person is or was a director,  officer, employee or agent of the corporation,  or
is or was serving at the  request of the  corporation  as a  director,  officer,
employee or agent of another corporation,  partnership,  joint venture, trust or
other  enterprise  against  expenses  (including  attorneys'  fees) actually and
reasonably  incurred by such person in connection with the defense or settlement
of such action or suit if such  person  acted in good faith and in a manner such
person reasonably  believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the
corporation and except that no  indemnification  shall be made in respect of any
claim,  issue or matter as to which such person  shall have been  adjudged to be
liable to the corporation  unless and only to the extent that the Delaware Court
of  Chancery  or the  court in which  such  action  or suit  was  brought  shall
determine upon  application  that,  despite the adjudication of liability but in
view of all the  circumstances of the case, such person is fairly and reasonably
entitled to indemnity for such expenses  which the Delaware Court of Chancery or
such other court shall deem proper.  Delaware law further  provides that nothing
in the above-described  provisions shall be deemed exclusive of any other rights
to  indemnification  or  advancement  of  expenses  to which any  person  may be
entitled  under any bylaw,  agreement,  vote of  stockholders  or  disinterested
directors or otherwise.

     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
may be permitted to directors,  officers,  and  controlling  persons of Combined
Companies  pursuant to the above  statutory  provisions or  otherwise,  Combined
Companies  has been advised that in the opinion of the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission  such  indemnification  is against  public policy as expressed in the
Securities Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.

                                    PART F/S

     Combined  Companies'  balance  sheet as of August 31,  1999 and the related
statements of operations, changes in stockholders' deficiency and cash flows for
the period  from April 7, 1999 (date  operations  commenced)  to August 31, 1999
have been  examined  to the extent  indicated  in their  reports  by  Weinberg &
Company, independent certified accountants, and have been prepared in accordance
with generally accepted accounting  principles and pursuant to Regulation S-B as
promulgated by the Securities and Exchange  Commission and are included  herein,
as Exhibit A, in response to Part F/S of this Form 10-SB.

                                       10
<PAGE>


                                    PART III

Item 1.  Index to Exhibits

     The following exhibits are filed with this Registration Statement:

Exhibit No.          Exhibit Name
- ----------           ------------
3.1                  Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant.
3.2                  By-Laws of the Registrant.
27                   Financial Data Schedule


Item 2.  Description of Exhibits

     See Item 1 above.









                                       11
<PAGE>

                                   SIGNATURES

         In accordance  with Section 12 of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
the registrant caused this registration  statement to be signed on its behalf by
the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

                                     Combined Companies Corporation
                                            (Registrant)


                                          /s/ Mary Elizabeth Rowbottom
Date:  December 29, 1999             By: _____________________________
                                         Mary Elizabeth Rowbottom
                                         President














                                       12

<PAGE>

                                   EXHIBIT A

                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                              AS OF AUGUST 31, 1999

                                    CONTENTS
       -----------------------------------------------------------------
       PAGE      1 - INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

       PAGE      2 - BALANCE SHEET AS OF AUGUST 31, 1999

       PAGE     3 -  STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS FOR THE PERIOD
                     FROM APRIL 7, 1999 (DATE OPERATIONS
                     COMMENCED) TO AUGUST 31, 1999

       PAGE      4 - STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS'
                     DEFICIENCY FOR THE PERIOD FROM APRIL 7,
                     1999, (DATE OPERATIONS COMMENCED) TO
                     AUGUST 31, 1999

       PAGE     5 -  STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS FOR THE PERIOD
                     FROM APRIL 7, 1999 (DATE OPERATIONS
                     COMMENCED)TO AUGUST 31, 1999

       PAGES 6 - 7 - NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AS OF
                     AUGUST 31, 1999




<PAGE>




                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT



To the Board of Directors of:
 Combined Companies Corporation
 (A Development Stage Company)

We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of Combined Companies Corporation
(a development  stage company) as of August 31, 1999 and the related  statements
of operations, changes in stockholders' deficiency and cash flows for the period
from  April 7, 1999  (date  operations  commenced)  to August  31,  1999.  These
financial  statements are the  responsibility of the Company's  management.  Our
responsibility  is to express an opinion on these financial  statements based on
our audit.

We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards  require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance   about  whether  the  financial   statements  are  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly in all
material respects,  the financial position of Combined Companies  Corporation (a
development  stage  company)  as of August  31,  1999,  and the  results  of its
operations and its cash flows for the period from April 7, 1999 (date operations
commenced) to August 31, 1999, in conformity with generally accepted  accounting
principles.





                                WEINBERG & COMPANY, P.A.



Boca Raton, Florida
November 29, 1999



                                      A-1
<PAGE>


                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
                                  BALANCE SHEET
                              AS OF AUGUST 31, 1999



                                     ASSETS



         Cash                                            $        35
                                                         -----------

         TOTAL ASSETS                                    $        35
         ------------                                    ===========



                    LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY



         LIABILITIES
          Loan payable - related party                   $        95
                                                         -----------

          Total liabilities                                       95
                                                         -----------

         STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY

          Preferred Stock. $.001 par value,
           8,000,000 shares authorized, zero
           issues and outstanding                                  -
          Common Stock, $.001 par value, 100,000,000
           shares authorized, 412,500 issued and
           outstanding                                           412
          Capital in excess of par                               589
          Accumulated deficit during development stage        (1,061)
                                                         -----------

          Total Stockholders' Deficiency                         (60)
                                                         -----------
         TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY    $      35
         ----------------------------------------------   ==========



                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.
                                        A-2


<PAGE>


                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
                             STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                        FOR THE PERIOD FROM APRIL 7, 1999
                 (DATE OPERATIONS COMMENCED) TO AUGUST 31, 1999



          Income                                   $            -

          Expenses

          Accounting fees                                     500
          Bank service charges                                 60
          Consulting fees                                       1
          Legal fees                                          500
                                                   --------------

          NET LOSS                                 $       (1,061)
          --------                                 ==============


























                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.
                                       A-3


<PAGE>


                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
                STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY
                        FOR THE PERIOD FROM APRIL 7, 1999
                 (DATE OPERATIONS COMMENCED) TO AUGUST 31, 1999




                                                     Deficit
                                     Additional    Accumulated
                          Common      Paid-In      During Devel-
                          Stock       Capital      opment Stage       Total
                         --------    ----------    -------------    --------

     Common stock
     issuance            $    412    $      589    $        -       $  1,001

     Net loss for the
      period ended
      August
      31, 1999                  -             -        (1,061)        (1,061)
                         --------    ----------    ----------       --------

     BALANCE AT AUGUST
     -----------------
      31, 1999          $  412       $      589    $   (1,061)      $    (60)
     ---------          ======       ==========    ==========       ========




















                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.
                                       A-4


<PAGE>


                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
                             STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                     FOR THE PERIOD FROM APRIL 7, 1999 (DATE
                    OPERATIONS COMMENCED) TO AUGUST 31, 1999


     CASH FLOWS FROM
      OPERATING ACTIVITIES:

      Net loss                                     $   (1,061)
      Adjustments to
       reconcile net loss
       to net cash used
       by operating activities:
       Consulting services performed for
        issuance of stock                                   1
                                                   ----------
      Net cash used in
       operating activities                            (1,060)
                                                   ----------
      CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING
      ACTIVITIES                                            -
                                                   ----------
     CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING
      ACTIVITIES:

      Loan payable - related party                         95
      Proceeds from issuance
       of common stock                                  1,000
                                                   ----------
      Net cash provided by
       financing activities                             1,095
                                                   ----------
     INCREASE IN CASH AND
      CASH EQUIVALENTS                                     35
                                                   ----------
     CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS -
      BEGINNING OF PERIOD                                   -
                                                   ----------
     CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS -
      END OF PERIOD                                $       35
      -------------                                ==========





                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.
                                       A-5


<PAGE>

                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                              AS OF AUGUST 31, 1999

NOTE  1 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

         (A)  Organization and Business Operations

         Combined  Companies  Corporation  (a  development  stage company) ("the
         Company") was  incorporated in Delaware on April 27, 1998 to serve as a
         vehicle  to  effect  a  merger,   exchange  of  capital  stock,   asset
         acquisition  or other business  combination  with a domestic or foreign
         private business. At August 31, 1999, the Company had not yet commenced
         any formal business operations, and all activity to date relates to the
         Company's formation and proposed fund raising.

         The Company's  ability to commence  operations  is contingent  upon its
         ability to identify a prospective target business and raise the capital
         it will  require  through  the  issuance  of  equity  securities,  debt
         securities, bank borrowings or a combination thereof.

         (B)  Use of Estimates

         The  preparation  of  the  financial   statements  in  conformity  with
         generally accepted  accounting  principles  requires management to make
         estimates and  assumptions  that affect the reported  amounts of assets
         and liabilities and disclosure of contingent  assets and liabilities at
         the  date of the  financial  statements  and the  reported  amounts  of
         revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could
         differ from those estimates.

         (C)  Cash and Cash Equivalents

         For purposes of the statement of cash flows, the Company  considers all
         highly liquid investments  purchased with an original maturity of three
         months or less to be cash equivalents.

         (D)  Income Taxes

         The Company  accounts for income taxes under the  Financial  Accounting
         Standards  Board Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards No. 109,
         "Accounting for Income Taxes"  ("Statement  109"). Under Statement 109,
         deferred tax assets and  liabilities  are recognized for the future tax
         consequences   attributable   to  differences   between  the  financial
         statement carrying amounts of existing assets and liabilities and their
         respective tax basis.  Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured
         using  enacted  tax rates  expected  to apply to taxable  income in the
         years in which those temporary differences are expected to be recovered
         or settled.  Under Statement 109, the effect on deferred tax assets and
         liabilities  of a change  in tax rates is  recognized  in income in the
         period  that  includes  the  enactment  date.  There were no current or
         deferred  income tax expense or benefits  due to the Company not having
         any material operations for the period ending August 31, 1999.

                                       A-6

<PAGE>


                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)
                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                              AS OF AUGUST 31, 1999

NOTE  2 - STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIECNY

         The Company was  originally  authorized to issue 2,000 shares of common
         stock at $.01 par value.

         Management filed a restated certificate of incorporation with the State
         of Delaware in June of 1999 which  increased  the number of  authorized
         common  shares to  100,000,000,  effected a 375 to 1 split of the 1,100
         previously  issued  common  shares,  and created  8,000,000  authorized
         shares of preferred  stock.  In  addition,  the par value of the common
         stock  was  changed  to $.001 per  shares  and the par value of the new
         preferred stock was set at $.001 per share.

         The  Company  issued  337,500  and 75,000  common  shares to  AppleTree
         Investment  Company,  Ltd.  and  PageOne  Business  Productions,   LLC,
         respectively.  No  preferred  shares  have been issued as of August 31,
         1999.

         The  financial  statement  at August 31, 1999 give effect to common and
         preferred  stock  amounts  and par values  enumerated  in the  restated
         certificate of incorporation.

NOTE 3 - LOAN PAYABLE - RELATED PARTY

         The loan payable - related party is a non-interest bearing loan payable
         to PageOne Business Productions, LLC arising from funds advanced to the
         Company.















                                       A-7






                                                                    EXHIBIT 3.1

                      RESTATED CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION

                                       OF

                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION

                            UNDER SECTIONS 242 & 245

                                     OF THE

                GENERAL CORPORATION LAW OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

                  We,  George Todt,  President,  and Mary  Elizabeth  Rowbottom,
Secretary,  of COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION,  do hereby certify under the seal
of said corporation as follows:

                  1.   That the name of  the  corporation is COMBINED COMPANIES
CORPORATION.

                  2.   That   the  Certificate  of   Incorporation   of  the
corporation  was filed by the  Secretary  of State of the State of  Delaware  in
Milford, Delaware, on the 27th day of April, 1998.

                  3.   That  the amendment  to  the Certificate of Incorporation
effected by this Certificate, among others, is as follows:

                  To amend Article  FOURTH  thereof by increasing  the number of
                  authorized   shares  of  capital  stock  of  the  corporation,
                  effecting a 375:1 stock split, and creating preferred stock.

                  4. That the amendment and the  restatement of the  Certificate
of  Incorporation  have been duly adopted in accordance with the requirements of
Sections 242 and 245 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware.

                  5. That the text of the Certificate of  Incorporation  of said
COMBINED  COMPANIES  CORPORATION,   is  hereby  amended  and  restated  by  this
Certificate, to read in full, as follows:





<PAGE>


                          CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION

                                       OF

                         COMBINED COMPANIES CORPORATION


                  FIRST:   The name  of the  corporation  is COMBINED  COMPANIES
CORPORATION  (hereinafter  referred to as the "Corporation").

                  SECOND:   The  address  of  the   registered   office  of  the
Corporation in the State of Delaware is 686 North Dupont Boulevard, #302, in the
City of  Milford,  County  of  Kent.  The  name of the  registered  agent of the
Corporation at that address is Corporate Creations Enterprises, Inc.

                  THIRD:  The  purpose  of the  Corporation  is to engage in any
lawful act or activity for which corporations may be organized under the General
Corporation  Law of the State of Delaware  (the  "Delaware  General  Corporation
Law").

                  FOURTH:  (a)  General.  The number of shares of capital  stock
that the  Corporation is authorized to have at any one time is one hundred eight
million   (108,000,000)   shares,   consisting  of:  (i)  one  hundred   million
(100,000,000)  shares of Common  Stock,  par value $0.001 per share (the "Common
Stock") and (ii) eight million  (8,000,000) shares of Preferred Stock, par value
$0.001 per share (the "Preferred Stock").

                  (b) Upon the  amendment  of this article to read as herein set
forth,  each issued share of Common Stock of the  Corporation  shall be split up
and converted into three hundred  seventy-five (375) shares of Common Stock. The
stock split and conversion  shall  automatically  occur on the effective date of
this  provision.  The relative  rights and  preferences  of the issued shares of
Common Stock shall remain unchanged;  only the number of issued shares of Common
Stock shall increase.  Outstanding  certificates  representing  shares of Common
Stock shall,  upon the effective date of this provision,  be deemed to represent
375 times the  number of shares of  Common  Stock  stated  thereon.  Holders  of
certificates of shares of Common Stock may tender such  certificates in exchange
for new certificates  stating the correct number of shares the previously issued
certificates  are deemed to represent upon the effective date of this provision,
but failure to tender will not affect the stock  split and  conversion  provided
herein.  The resulting shares shall be deemed fully paid and  non-assessable and
the holders of such shares shall be entitled to exercise voting rights,  receive
dividends and  participate in the  Corporation to the extent allowed and subject
to  the  limitations   provided  under  applicable  law  and  the  Corporation's
certificate of incorporation.

                  (c) Preferred  Stock.  Authority is hereby expressly vested in
the Board of Directors of the  Corporation,  subject to the  provisions  of this
ARTICLE  FOURTH and to the  limitations  prescribed  by law,  to  authorize  the
issuance  from  time to  time of one or more  series  of  Preferred  Stock.  The
authority of the Board of Directors  with respect to each series shall  include,
but  not be  limited  to,  the  determination  or  fixing  of the  following  by
resolution or resolutions  adopted by the affirmative  vote of a majority of the
total number of the Directors then in office:

                                       1
<PAGE>

                           (i)      The designation of such series;

                           (ii) The dividend rate of such series, the conditions
and dates upon which such dividends
shall be payable,  the relation which such dividends shall bear to the dividends
payable on any other  class or classes  or series of the  Corporation's  capital
stock and whether such dividends shall be cumulative or non-cumulative;

                           (iii)  Whether  the  shares of such  series  shall be
subject to redemption for cash, property or
rights,  including  securities of any other  corporation,  by the Corporation or
upon the  happening  of a  specified  event  and,  if made  subject  to any such
redemption,  the times or events, prices, rates, adjustments and other terms and
conditions of such redemptions;

                           (iv)  The  terms  and  amount  of  any  sinking  fund
provided for the purchase or redemption of the
shares of such series;

                           (v) Whether or not the shares of such series shall be
convertible into, or exchangeable for,
at the option of either the holder or the Corporation or upon the happening of a
specified event,  shares of any other class or classes or of any other series of
the same class of the Corporation's  capital stock and, if provision be made for
conversion or exchange,  the times or events,  prices,  rates,  adjustments  and
other terms and conditions of such conversions or exchanges;

                           (vi)  The  restrictions,  if  any,  on the  issue  or
reissue of any additional Preferred Stock;

                           (vii) The rights of the holders of the shares of such
series upon the voluntary or involuntary
liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Corporation; and

                           (viii) The provisions as to voting,  optional  and/or
other special rights and preferences, if
any, including, without limitation, the right to elect one or more Directors.

                  (d) Common Stock. Except as otherwise provided by the Delaware
General   Corporation   Law  or   this   Certificate   of   Incorporation   (the
"Certificate"), the holders of Common Stock (i) subject to the rights of holders
of any series of Preferred Stock,  shall share ratably in all dividends  payable
in cash,  stock or  otherwise  and other  distributions,  whether  in respect of
liquidation or dissolution  (voluntary or involuntary) or otherwise and (ii) are
subject to all the powers, rights, privileges, preferences and priorities of any
series of Preferred Stock as provided herein or in any resolution or resolutions
adopted by the Board of Directors  pursuant to authority  expressly vested in it
by the provisions of Section (c) of this ARTICLE FOURTH.

                           (i)      The  Common  Stock  shall not be convertible
into, or exchangeable  for, shares of any other class or classes or of any other
series of the same class of the Corporation's capital stock.

                                       2
<PAGE>

                           (ii)  No  holder  of  Common  Stock  shall  have  any
preemptive, subscription, redemption, conversion
or sinking fund rights with respect to the Common Stock,  or to any  obligations
convertible  (directly or indirectly) into stock of the Corporation  whether now
or hereafter authorized.

                           (iii)  Except as  otherwise  provided by the Delaware
General  Corporation  Law or this  Certificate,  and  subject  to the  rights of
holders  of any  series  of  Preferred  Stock,  all of the  voting  power of the
stockholders  of the  Corporation  shall be vested in the  holders of the Common
Stock,  and each holder of Common  Stock shall have one vote for each share held
by such holder on all matters voted upon by the stockholders of the Corporation.

                  FIFTH:   The Corporation is to have perpetual existence.

                  SIXTH:  In  furtherance  and not in  limitation  of the powers
conferred by the Delaware General Corporation Law, the Board of Directors of the
Corporation is expressly  authorized to make, alter,  amend,  change,  add to or
repeal the By-laws of the Corporation by the  affirmative  vote of a majority of
the total number of Directors  then in office.  Any  alteration or repeal of the
By-laws of the Corporation by the stockholders of the Corporation  shall require
the  affirmative  vote of at least a majority  of the  voting  power of the then
outstanding shares of capital stock of the Corporation  entitled to vote on such
alteration or repeal,  subject to ARTICLE NINTH hereof and applicable provisions
of the Corporation's By-laws.

                  SEVENTH:  (a) Stockholder  Action.  Election of Directors need
not be by written  ballot  unless the  By-laws of the  Corporation  so  provide.
Subject to any rights of holders  of any  series of  Preferred  Stock,  from and
after  the date on which  the  Common  Stock of the  Corporation  is  registered
pursuant to the Exchange  Act, (i) any action  required or permitted to be taken
by the  stockholders of the Corporation must be effected at an annual or special
meeting of  stockholders  of the  Corporation  and may not be  effected  in lieu
thereof by any consent in writing by such stockholders, (ii) special meetings of
stockholders  of the  Corporation  may be  called  only by  either  the Board of
Directors  pursuant  to a  resolution  adopted  by the  affirmative  vote of the
majority  of the  total  number  of  Directors  then in  office  or by the chief
executive  officer of the  Corporation,  and (iii) advance notice of stockholder
nominations of persons for election to the Board of Directors of the Corporation
and of business to be brought before any annual meeting of the  stockholders  by
the stockholders of the Corporation shall be given in the manner provided in the
By-laws of the Corporation.

                  (b) Number of  Directors  and Term of  Office.  Subject to any
rights of holders of any series of Preferred Stock to elect additional Directors
under specified  circumstances,  the number of Directors which shall  constitute
the Board of  Directors of the  Corporation  shall be fixed from time to time in
the manner set forth in the By-laws of the Corporation.

                                       3
<PAGE>

                  (c) Removal and  Resignation.  No Director may be removed from
office  without  cause and  without  the  affirmative  vote of the  holders of a
majority of the voting power of the then outstanding  shares of capital stock of
the Corporation  entitled to vote generally in the election of Directors  voting
together as a single class; provided,  however, that if the holders of any class
or series of capital stock are entitled by the  provisions  of this  Certificate
(it being understood that any references to this  Certificate  shall include any
duly authorized certificate of designation) to elect one or more Directors, such
Director or Directors so elected may be removed  without  cause only by the vote
of the holders of a majority of the  outstanding  shares of that class or series
entitled to vote. Any Director may resign at any time upon written notice to the
Corporation.

                  (d) Vacancies and Newly Created Directorships.  Subject to any
rights of holders of any series of  Preferred  Stock to fill such newly  created
Directorships or vacancies,  any newly created Directorships  resulting from any
increase in the authorized number of Directors and any vacancies in the Board of
Directors  resulting from death,  resignation,  disqualification or removal from
office  for cause  shall,  unless  otherwise  provided  by law or by  resolution
approved by the affirmative  vote of a majority of the total number of Directors
then in office, be filled only by resolution approved by the affirmative vote of
a majority of the total  number of  Directors  then in office.  Any  Director so
chosen  shall hold  office  until the next  election of the class for which such
Director  shall have been chosen,  and until his successor  shall have been duly
elected and qualified,  unless he shall resign,  die, become  disqualified or be
removed for cause.

                  EIGHTH:  (a)  Dividends.  The Board of  Directors  shall  have
authority  from time to time to set apart out of any  assets of the  Corporation
otherwise  available for  dividends a reserve or reserves as working  capital or
for any other purpose or purposes,  and to abolish or add to any such reserve or
reserves  from time to time as said Board may deem to be in the  interest of the
Corporation;  and said  Board  shall  likewise  have power to  determine  in its
discretion,  except as herein otherwise provided, what part of the assets of the
Corporation  available for dividends in excess of such reserve or reserves shall
be declared in dividends and paid to the stockholders of the Corporation.

                  (b)  Issuance of Stock.  The shares of all classes of stock of
the  Corporation  may be  issued by the  Corporation  from time to time for such
consideration as from time to time may be fixed by the Board of Directors of the
Corporation,  provided  that  shares of stock  having a par  value  shall not be
issued for a consideration less than such par value, as determined by the Board.
At any time, or from time to time, the  Corporation  may grant rights or options
to purchase from the Corporation any shares of its stock of any class or classes
to run for such  period of time,  for such  consideration,  upon such  terms and
conditions,  and in such form as the Board of Directors may determine. The Board
of Directors shall have authority,  as provided by law, to determine that only a
part of the  consideration  which shall be received by the  Corporation  for the
shares of its stock  which it shall  issue from time to time,  shall be capital;
provided,  however,  that, if all the shares issued shall be shares having a par
value, the amount of the part of such  consideration so determined to be capital
shall be equal to the aggregate par value of such shares. The excess, if any, at
any  time,  of the  total  net  assets  of the  Corporation  over the  amount so
determined to be capital, as aforesaid,  shall be surplus.  All classes of stock
of the Corporation shall be and remain at all times nonassessable.

                                       4
<PAGE>

                  The Board of Directors is hereby expressly authorized,  in its
discretion,  in connection  with the issuance of any obligations or stock of the
Corporation (but without intending hereby to limit its general power so to do in
other cases), to grant rights or options to purchase stock of the Corporation of
any class upon such terms and during such period as the Board of Directors shall
determine,  and to cause such rights to be evidenced  by such  warrants or other
instruments as it may deem advisable.

                  (c)  Inspection  of Books and Records.  The Board of Directors
shall have power from time to time to determine to what extent and at what times
and places and under what  conditions and  regulations the accounts and books of
the  Corporation,  or any of  them,  shall  be  open  to the  inspection  of the
stockholders;  and no stockholder shall have any right to inspect any account or
book or  document of the  Corporation,  except as  conferred  by the laws of the
State of Delaware,  unless and until  authorized  so to do by  resolution of the
Board of Directors or of the stockholders of the Corporation.

                  (d)  Location  of  Meetings,  Books  and  Records.  Except  as
otherwise  provided in the By-laws,  the stockholders of the Corporation and the
Board of Directors may hold their meetings and have an office or offices outside
of the State of  Delaware  and,  subject to the  provisions  of the laws of said
State,  may keep the  books of the  Corporation  outside  of said  State at such
places as may, from time to time, be designated by the Board of Directors.

                  NINTH:  The  Corporation  reserves the right to amend,  alter,
change or repeal any provision  contained in this  Certificate in the manner now
or hereinafter  prescribed herein and by the laws of the State of Delaware,  and
all  rights  conferred  upon  stockholders  herein are  granted  subject to this
reservation.  Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in this  Certificate  to the
contrary,  Sections (a), (c) and (d) of ARTICLE FOURTH,  ARTICLE TENTH,  ARTICLE
SEVENTH,  and this  ARTICLE  NINTH of this  Certificate  shall  not be  altered,
amended or repealed and no  provision  inconsistent  therewith  shall be adopted
without the affirmative vote of the holders of at least a majority of the voting
power  of the then  outstanding  shares  of  capital  stock  of the  Corporation
entitled to vote on such alteration,  amendment or repeal,  voting together as a
single class.

                  TENTH:   (a)      Limitation of Liability.

                           (i)      To  the  fullest  extent  permitted  by  the
Delaware  General  Corporation  Law as it now exists or may hereafter be amended
(but, in the case of any such amendment,  only to the extent that such amendment
permits the Corporation to provide broader indemnification rights than permitted
prior thereto),  and except as otherwise provided in the Corporation's  By-laws,
no  Director  of the  Corporation  shall be  liable  to the  Corporation  or its
stockholders  for monetary  damages arising from a breach of fiduciary duty owed
to the Corporation or its stockholders.

                                       5
<PAGE>

                           (ii)     Any    repeal   or   modification   of   the
foregoing  paragraph by the stockholders of the Corporation  shall not adversely
affect any right or protection of a Director of the Corporation  existing at the
time of such repeal or modification.

                  (b) Right to Indemnification. Each person who was or is made a
party or is threatened to be made a party to or is otherwise involved (including
involvement  as a witness) in any action,  suit or  proceeding,  whether  civil,
criminal,  administrative  or investigative (a  "proceeding"),  by reason of the
fact that he or she is or was a Director or officer of the Corporation or, while
a Director  or officer of the  Corporation,  is or was serving at the request of
the Corporation as a Director, officer, employee or agent of another corporation
or of a partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise, including service
with respect to an employee benefit plan (an "indemnitee"), whether the basis of
such  proceeding  is alleged  action in an  official  capacity  as a Director or
officer or in any other capacity  while serving as a Director or officer,  shall
be  indemnified  and held  harmless by the  Corporation  to the  fullest  extent
authorized by the Delaware  General  Corporation  Law, as the same exists or may
hereafter be amended (but, in the case of any such amendment, only to the extent
that such amendment  permits the Corporation to provide broader  indemnification
rights than permitted  prior thereto),  against all expense,  liability and loss
(including  attorneys'  fees,  judgments,  fines,  excise taxes or penalties and
amounts paid in settlement)  reasonably  incurred or suffered by such indemnitee
in  connection  therewith  and  such  indemnification  shall  continue  as to an
indemnitee who has ceased to be a Director, officer, employee or agent and shall
inure to the benefit of the indemnitee's  heirs,  executors and  administrators;
provided, however, that, except as provided in Section (c) of this ARTICLE TENTH
with  respect  to  proceedings  to  enforce  rights  to   indemnification,   the
Corporation  shall indemnify any such indemnitee in connection with a proceeding
(or part thereof)  initiated by such indemnitee only if such proceeding (or part
thereof) was authorized by the Board of Directors of the Corporation.  The right
to indemnification  conferred in this Section (b) of this ARTICLE TENTH shall be
a contract right and shall include the obligation of the  Corporation to pay the
expenses  incurred  in  defending  any such  proceeding  in advance of its final
disposition (an "advance of expenses");  provided,  however, that, if and to the
extent  that the  Delaware  General  Corporation  Law  requires,  an  advance of
expenses  incurred  by an  indemnitee  in his or her  capacity  as a Director or
officer  (and not in any other  capacity in which  service was or is rendered by
such indemnitee,  including, without limitation,  service to an employee benefit
plan) shall be made only upon delivery to the  Corporation of an undertaking (an
"undertaking"),  by or on behalf of such  indemnitee,  to repay all  amounts  so
advanced if it shall  ultimately be determined by final  judicial  decision from
which  there is no further  right to appeal (a "final  adjudication")  that such
indemnitee  is not  entitled  to be  indemnified  for such  expenses  under this
Section  (b) or  otherwise.  The  Corporation  may,  by  action  of its Board of
Directors,  provide  indemnification  to employees and agents of the Corporation
with the same or lesser  scope and effect as the  foregoing  indemnification  of
Directors and officers.

                                       6
<PAGE>

                  (c) Procedure for  Indemnification.  Any  indemnification of a
Director or officer of the  Corporation or advance of expenses under Section (b)
of this ARTICLE TENTH shall be made promptly, and in any event within forty-five
(45) days (or, in the case of an advance of  expenses,  twenty (20) days),  upon
the  written  request of the  Director  or officer.  If a  determination  by the
Corporation that the Director or officer is entitled to indemnification pursuant
to this ARTICLE TENTH is required,  and the Corporation  fails to respond within
sixty (60) days to a written  request for indemnity,  the  Corporation  shall be
deemed to have approved the request. If the Corporation denies a written request
for  indemnification or advance of expenses,  in whole or in part, or if payment
in full pursuant to such request is not made within forty-five (45) days (or, in
the  case  of  an  advance  of  expenses,   twenty  (20)  days),  the  right  to
indemnification   or  advances  as  granted  by  this  ARTICLE  TENTH  shall  be
enforceable  by the Director or officer in any court of competent  jurisdiction.
Such  person's  costs and  expenses  incurred in  connection  with  successfully
establishing  his or her right to  indemnification,  in whole or in part, in any
such action shall also be indemnified by the Corporation.  It shall be a defense
to any such  action  (other  than an action  brought  to enforce a claim for the
advance of expenses where the  undertaking  required  pursuant to Section (b) of
this ARTICLE  TENTH,  if any,  has been  tendered to the  Corporation)  that the
claimant has not met the  standards of conduct which make it  permissible  under
the Delaware  General  Corporation  Law for the  Corporation  to  indemnify  the
claimant for the amount claimed,  but the burden of such defense shall be on the
Corporation.  Neither the  failure of the  Corporation  (including  its Board of
Directors,  independent  legal  counsel  or its  stockholders)  to  have  made a
determination  prior to the commencement of such action that  indemnification of
the  claimant  is  proper  in the  circumstances  because  he or she has met the
applicable  standard of conduct set forth in the  Delaware  General  Corporation
Law, nor an actual  determination  by the  Corporation  (including  its Board of
Directors,  independent legal counsel or its stockholders) that the claimant has
not met such applicable standard of conduct, shall be a defense to the action or
create a presumption  that the claimant has not met the  applicable  standard of
conduct.  The procedure for  indemnification  of other  employees and agents for
whom  indemnification  is provided pursuant to Section (b) of this ARTICLE TENTH
shall be the same  procedure  set forth in this  Section  (c) for  Directors  or
officers,  unless  otherwise  set forth in the action of the Board of  Directors
providing indemnification for such employee or agent.

                  (d)  Insurance.  The  Corporation  may  purchase  and maintain
insurance  on its  own  behalf  and on  behalf  of  any  person  who is or was a
Director,  officer,  employee or agent of the  Corporation or was serving at the
request of the Corporation as a Director,  officer, employee or agent of another
corporation,  partnership,  joint venture, trust or other enterprise against any
expense,  liability or loss  asserted  against him or her and incurred by him or
her in any such capacity, whether or not the Corporation would have the power to
indemnify such person against such expense, liability or loss under the Delaware
General Corporation Law.

                                       7
<PAGE>

                  (e)  Service  for  Subsidiaries.   Any  person  serving  as  a
Director,  officer,  employee  or agent  of  another  corporation,  partnership,
limited liability  company,  joint venture or other enterprise,  at least 50% of
whose equity  interests are owned by the  Corporation (a  "subsidiary"  for this
ARTICLE TENTH) shall be conclusively  presumed to be serving in such capacity at
the request of the Corporation.

                  (f)  Reliance.  Persons who after the date of the  adoption of
this provision become or remain Directors or officers of the Corporation or who,
while a Director  or officer of the  Corporation,  become or remain a  Director,
officer,  employee or agent of a subsidiary,  shall be conclusively  presumed to
have relied on the rights to  indemnity,  advance of expenses  and other  rights
contained in this ARTICLE TENTH in entering into or continuing such service. The
rights to  indemnification  and to the  advance of  expenses  conferred  in this
ARTICLE  TENTH shall apply to claims made against an  indemnitee  arising out of
acts or  omissions  which  occurred  or occur both prior and  subsequent  to the
adoption hereof.

                  (g)  Non-Exclusivity  of Rights. The rights to indemnification
and to the  advance of expenses  conferred  in this  ARTICLE  TENTH shall not be
exclusive  of any other  right  which any person may have or  hereafter  acquire
under  this  Certificate  or  under  any  statute,  by-law,  agreement,  vote of
stockholders or disinterested Directors or otherwise.

                  (h) Merger or  Consolidation.  For  purposes  of this  ARTICLE
TENTH,  references  to the  "Corporation"  shall  include,  in  addition  to the
resulting Corporation, any constituent Corporation (including any constituent of
a  constituent)  absorbed in a  consolidation  or merger which,  if its separate
existence  had  continued,  would have had power and  authority to indemnify its
Directors,  officers and employees or agents, so that any person who is or was a
Director,  officer, employee or agent of such constituent Corporation,  or is or
was  serving  at the  request of such  constituent  Corporation  as a  Director,
officer, employee or agent of another Corporation,  partnership,  joint venture,
trust or other  enterprise,  shall stand in the same position under this ARTICLE
TENTH with respect to the resulting or surviving  Corporation as he or she would
have with respect to such constituent  Corporation if its separate existence had
continued.

                  ELEVENTH:         The   Corporation  expressly  elects  not to
be governed by Section 203 of the Delaware General  Corporation Law with respect
to business combinations with interested stockholders.

                  IN WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the  undersigned  hereby  executed  this
instrument and affirms,  under penalty of perjury,  that this  instrument is the
act and deed of the  undersigned  and that the facts stated herein are true, and
accordingly have hereunto set my hand as of .


/s/ George Todt
- ---------------
George Todt, President


/s/ Mary Elizabeth Rowbottom
- ----------------------------
Mary Elizabeth Rowbottom, Secretary
                                       8


                                                                    EXHIBIT 3.2

                                     Bylaws
                                       of
                         Combined Companies Corporation

                              ARTICLE I. DIRECTORS

Section 1.  Function.  All  corporate  powers shall be exercised by or under the
authority of the Board of Directors. The business and affairs of the Corporation
shall be managed under the direction of the Board of Directors.  Directors  must
be  natural  persons  who  are at  least  18  years  of  age,  but  need  not be
shareholders of the Corporation. Residents of any state may be directors.

Section  2.  Compensation.  The  shareholders  shall have  authority  to fix the
compensation of directors. Unless specifically authorized by a resolution of the
shareholders, the directors shall serve in such capacity without compensation.

Section 3.  Presumption of Assent. A director who is present at a meeting of the
Board of  Directors  or a committee of the Board of Directors at which action on
any corporate matter is taken,  shall be presumed to have assented to the action
taken,  unless he objects at the  beginning  of the  meeting (or  promptly  upon
arriving) to the holding of the meeting or transacting the specified business at
the meeting,  or if the director votes against the action taken or abstains from
voting because of an asserted conflict of interest.

Section 4. Number.  The  Corporation  shall have at least the minimum  number of
directors required by law. The number of directors may be increased or decreased
from time to time by the Board of Directors.

Section 5.  Election  and Term.  At each  annual  meeting of  shareholders,  the
shareholders  shall elect directors to hold office until the next annual meeting
or until their  earlier  resignation,  removal  from office or death.  Directors
shall be elected by a plurality of the votes cast by the shares entitled to vote
in the election at a meeting at which a quorum is present.

Section 6. Vacancies. Any vacancy occurring in the Board of Directors, including
a vacancy  created by an increase in the number of  directors,  may be filled by
the  shareholders  or by the  affirmative  vote of a majority  of the  remaining
directors  through  less  than a quorum of the Board of  Directors.  A  director
elected to fill a vacancy  shall hold  office  only until the next  election  of
directors by the shareholders.  If there are no remaining directors, the vacancy
shall be filled by the shareholders.

Section 7. Removal of Directors.  At a meeting of shareholders,  any director or
the entire Board of Directors may be removed,  with or without  cause,  provided
the notice of the meeting  states that one of the purposes of the meeting is the
removal of the  director.  A director may be removed only if the number of votes
cast to remove him exceeds the number of votes cast against removal.

Section 8. Ouorum and Voting.  A majority  of the number of  directors  fixed by
these Bylaws shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.  The act
of a  majority  of  directors  present at a meeting at which a quorum is present
shall be the act of the Board of Directors.

<PAGE>

Section 9. Executive and Other Committees. The Board of Directors, by resolution
adopted by a majority of the full Board of Directors,  may designate  from among
its  members,  one or more  committees,  each of which  must  have at least  two
members.  Each  committee  shall have the authority set forth in the  resolution
designating the committee.

Section  10.  Place of Meeting.  Regular  and  special  meetings of the Board of
Directors shall be held at the principal place of business of the Corporation or
at another place  designated by the person or persons giving notice or otherwise
calling the meeting.

Section 11. Time, Notice and Call of Meetings.  Regular meetings of the Board of
Directors shall be held without notice at the time and on the date designated by
resolution of the Board of Directors. Written notice of the time, date and place
of special meetings of the Board of Directors shall be given to each director by
mail delivery at least two days before the meeting.

                  Notice of a  meeting  of the  Board of  Directors  need not be
given to a  director  who signs a waiver of  notice  either  before or after the
meeting.  Attendance of a director at a meeting,  and the manner in which it has
been  called or  convened,  unless a  director  objects  to the  transaction  of
business  (promptly  upon  arrival at the  meeting)  because  the meeting is not
lawfully called or convened.  Neither the business to be transaction at, nor the
purpose of, any  regular or special  meeting of the Board of  Directors  must be
specified in the notice or waiver of notice of the meeting.

                  A majority of the directors  present,  whether or not a quorum
exists,  may adjourn and meeting of the Board of  Directors  to another time and
place.  Notice of an adjourned  meeting shall be given to the directors who were
not present at the time of the adjournment and, unless the time and place of the
adjourned  meeting are  announced at the time of the  adjournment,  to the other
directors.  meetings of the Board of Directors may be called by the President or
the Chairman of the Board of  Directors.  Members of the Board of Directors  and
any committee of the Board may participate in a meeting by telephone  conference
or similar communications  equipment if all persons participating in the meeting
can hear each other at the same time.  participation by these means  constitutes
presence in person at a meeting.

Section 12. Action By Written  Consent.  Any action  required or permitted to be
taken at a meeting of directors  may be taken  without a meeting if a consent in
writing  setting forth the action to be taken and signed by all of the directors
is filed in the minutes of the proceedings of the Board.  The action taken shall
be deemed effective when the last director signs the consent, unless the consent
specifies otherwise.

                      ARTICLE II. MEETINGS OF SHAREHOLDERS

Section 1.  Annual  Meetings.  The annual  meeting  of the  shareholders  of the
corporation  for the  election  of officers  and for such other  business as may
properly  come  before  the  meeting  shall be held at such  time  and  place as
designated by the Board of Directors.

<PAGE>

Section 2. Special Meeting.  Special meetings of the shareholders  shall be held
when  directed by the  President or when  requested  in writing by  shareholders
holding at least 10% of the Corporation's stock having the right and entitled to
vote at such meeting. A meeting requested by shareholders shall be called by the
President for a date not less than 10 nor more than 60 days after the request is
made. Only business  within the purposes  described in the meeting notice may be
conducted at a special shareholders I meeting.

Section 3. Place.  Meetings of the  shareholders  will be held at the  principal
place of business of the  Corporation or at such other place as is designated by
the Board of Directors.

Section 4. Notice.  A written  notice of each meeting of  shareholders  shall be
mailed to each shareholder  having the right and entitled to vote at the meeting
at the  address as it appears on the  records of the  Corporation.  The  meeting
notice  shall be mailed  not less than 10 nor more than 60 days  before the date
set for the meeting.  The record date for determining  shareholders  entitled to
vote at the  meeting  will be the close of business on the day before the notice
is sent.  The notice shall state the time and place the meeting is to be held. A
notice of a special  meeting  shall also state the  purposes of the  meeting.  A
notice of meeting shall be sufficient  for that meeting and any  adjournment  of
it. If a shareholder transfers any shares after the notice is sent, it shall not
be necessary to notify the transferee.  All  shareholders  may waive notice of a
meeting at any time.

Section 5.  Shareholder  Quorum.  A majority  of the  shares  entitled  to vote,
represented  in person or by proxy,  shall  constitute  a quorum at a meeting of
shareholders.  Any  number of  shareholders,  even if less  than a  quorum,  may
adjourn the meeting without further notice until a quorum is obtained.

Section 6. Shareholder Voting. If a quorum is present, the affirmative vote of a
majority of the shares  represented  at the meeting and  entitled to vote on the
subject  matter shall be the act of the  shareholders.  Each  outstanding  share
shall be entitled to one vote on each matter submitted to a vote at a meeting of
shareholders.  An  alphabetical  list of all  shareholders  who are  entitled to
notice of a  shareholders,  meeting along with their addresses and the number of
shares  held by each,  shall be  produced at a  shareholders,  meeting  upon the
request of any shareholder.

Section  7.  Proxies.  A  shareholder   entitled  to  vote  at  any  meeting  of
shareholders or any adjournment thereof, may vote in person or by proxy executed
in  writing  and  signed  by  the  shareholder  or  his  attorney-in-fact.   The
appointment  of proxy  will be  effective  when  received  by the  Corporation's
officer or agent authorized to tabulate votes. No proxy shall be valid more than
11 months  after the date of its  execution  unless a longer  term is  expressly
stated in the proxy.

Section 8.  Validation.  If shareholders who hold a majority of the voting stock
entitled  to vote at a meeting are  present at the  meeting,  and sign a written
consent to the  meeting on the record,  the acts of the meeting  shall be valid,
even if the meeting was not legally called and noticed.

<PAGE>

Section  9.  Conduct  of  Business  By  Written  Consent.   Any  action  of  the
shareholders may be taken without a meeting, if written consents,  setting forth
the action taken,  are signed by at least a majority of shares  entitled to vote
and are delivered to the officer or agent of the  Corporation  having custody of
the  Corporation's  records  within 60 days  after  the date  that the  earliest
written consent was delivered.  Within 10 days after obtaining an  authorization
of an action by written consent, notice shall be given to those shareholders who
have not consented in writing or who are not entitled to vote on the action. The
notice shall fairly summarize the material features of the authorized action. If
the  action  creates  dissenters'  rights,  the  notice  shall  contain  a clear
statement of the rights of dissenting  shareholders to be paid the fair value of
their shares upon compliance with and as provided for by the state law governing
corporations.

                              ARTICLE III. OFFICERS

Section 1. Officers;  Election;  Resignation;  Vacancies.  The Corporation shall
have the officers and  assistant  officers  that the Board of Directors  appoint
from time to time. Except as otherwise provided in an employment agreement which
the Corporation has with an officer,  each officer shall serve until a successor
is chosen by the  directors at a regular or special  meeting of the directors or
until  removed.  Officers and agents shall be chosen,  serve for the terms,  and
have the  duties  determined  by the  directors.  A person  may hold two or more
offices.

                  Any officer may resign at any time upon written  notice to the
Corporation.  The resignation shall be effective upon receipt, unless the notice
specifies a later date. If the  resignation is effective at a later date and the
Corporation  accepts the future  effective date, the Board of Directors may fill
the pending  vacancy before the effective date,  provided the successor  officer
does not take office until the future  effective date. Any vacancy  occurring in
any office of the Corporation by death, resignation, removal or otherwise may be
filled for the  unexpired  portion of the term by the Board of  Directors at any
regular or special meeting.

Section 2. Powers and Duties of Officers.  The officers of the Corporation shall
have such  powers  and duties in the  management  of the  Corporation  as may be
prescribed  by the Board of  Directors  and, to the extent not so  provided,  as
generally  pertain to their  respective  offices,  subject to the control of the
Board of Directors.

Section 3.  Removal of  Officers.  Any officer or agent or member of a committee
elected or appointed by the Board of Directors  may be removed by the Board with
or  without  cause  whenever,  in  its  judgment,  the  best  interests  of  the
Corporation will be served thereby,  but such removal shall be without prejudice
to the  contract  rights,  if  any,  of  the  person  so  removed.  Election  or
appointment  of an officer,  agent or member of a committee  shall not of itself
create contract rights.  Any officer,  if appointed by another  officer,  may be
removed by that officer.

<PAGE>

Section 4. Salaries.  The Board of Directors may cause the  Corporation to enter
into employment agreements with any officer of the Corporation.  Unless provided
for in an  employment  agreement  between the  Corporation  and an officer,  all
officers of the Corporation serve in their capacities without compensation.

Section S. Bank  Accounts.  The  Corporation  shall have accounts with financial
institutions as determined by the Board of Directors.

                            ARTICLE IV. DISTRIBUTIONS

                  The  Board  of  Directors  may,  from  time to  time,  declare
distributions to its shareholders in cash, property,  or its own shares,  unless
the  distribution  would cause (i) the Corporation to be unable to pay its debts
as they become due in the usual  course of business,  or (ii) the  Corporation's
assets  to be less  than its  liabilities  plus  the  amount  necessary,  if the
Corporation  were  dissolved  at the time of the  distribution,  to satisfy  the
preferential rights of shareholders whose rights are superior to those receiving
the  distribution.  The  shareholders  and the  Corporation  may  enter  into an
agreement  requiring  the  distribution  of  corporate  profits,  subject to the
provisions of law.

                          ARTICLE V. CORPORATE RECORDS

Section 1.  Corporate  Records.  The  Corporation  shall maintain its records in
written form or in another form capable of conversion into written form within a
reasonable time. The Corporation  shall keep as permanent records minutes of all
meetings of its  shareholders  and Board of  Directors,  a record of all actions
taken by the shareholders or Board of Directors without a meeting,  and a record
of all actions  taken by a committee  of the Board of Directors on behalf of the
Corporation.  The Corporation shall maintain accurate  accounting  records and a
record of its  shareholders in a form that permits  preparation of a list of the
names and addresses of all shareholders in alphabetical order by class of shares
showing the number and series of shares held by each.

          The Corporation shall keep a copy of its articles or restated articles
          of incorporation and all amendments to them currently in effect; these
          Bylaws or  restated  Bylaws and all  amendments  currently  in effect;
          resolutions  adopted by the Board of  Directors  creating  one or more
          classes  or  series  of  shares  and  fixing  their  relative  rights,
          preferences,  and  limitations,  if shares  issued  pursuant  to those
          resolutions are outstanding; the minutes of all shareholders, meetings
          and records of all actions taken by shareholders without a meeting for
          the past  three  years;  written  communications  to all  shareholders
          generally  or all  shareholders  of a class or series  within the past
          three years, including the financial statements furnished for the last
          three  years;  a list of names and  business  street  addresses of its
          current  directors  and  officers;  and its most recent  annual report
          delivered to the Department of State.

<PAGE>

Section 2. Shareholders' Inspection Rights. A shareholder is entitled to inspect
and copy,  during regular business hours at a reasonable  location  specified by
the Corporation,  any books and records of the Corporation. The shareholder must
give the  Corporation  written notice of this demand at least five business days
before the date on which he wishes to inspect and copy the record(s). The demand
must be made in good  faith  and for a  proper  purpose.  The  shareholder  must
describe with reasonable particularity the purpose and the records he desires to
inspect,  and the records must be directly  connected  with this  purpose.  This
Section  does not affect  the right of a  shareholder  to  inspect  and copy the
shareholders,  list  described  in  this  Article,  if  the  shareholder  is  in
litigation with the Corporation.  In such a case, the shareholder shall have the
same rights as any other litigant to compel the production of corporate  records
for examination.

                  The  Corporation  may deny any  demand for  inspection  if the
demand was made for an improper  purpose,  or if the demanding  shareholder  has
within the two years preceding his demand,  sold or offered for sale any list of
shareholders  of the  Corporation  or of any  other  corporation,  has  aided or
abetted any person in procuring any list of  shareholders  for that purpose,  or
has improperly used any information secured through any prior examination of the
records of this Corporation or any other corporation.

Section 3. Financial Statements for Shareholders.  Unless modified by resolution
of the  shareholders  within 120 days after the close of each fiscal  year,  the
Corporation  shall furnish its  shareholders  with annual  financial  statements
which may be consolidated  or combined  statements of the Corporation and one or
more of its subsidiaries, as appropriate, that include a balance sheet as of the
end of the fiscal year, an income  statement  for that year,  and a statement or
cash  flows  for  that  year.  if  financial  statements  are  prepared  for the
Corporation on the basis of generally accepted accounting principles, the annual
financial statements must also be prepared on that basis.

                  If the annual  financial  statements  are  reported  upon by a
public accountant,  h is report must accompany them. If not, the statements must
be accompanies by a statement of the President or the person responsible for the
Corporation's  accounting  records  stating his  reasonable  belief  whether the
statements  were  prepared  on  the  basis  of  generally  accepted   accounting
principles  and, if not,  describing the basis of preparation and describing any
respects in which the  statements  were not  prepared  on a basis of  accounting
consistent with the statements  prepared for the preceding year. The Corporation
shall mail the annual financial  statements to each shareholder  within 120 days
after the close of each fiscal year, or within such  additional  time thereafter
as is reasonably  necessary to enable the  Corporation  to prepare its financial
statements. Thereafter, on written request from a shareholder who was not mailed
the  statements,  the  Corporation  shall mail him the latest  annual  financial
statements.

<PAGE>

Section 4. Other Reports to  Shareholders.  If the  Corporation  indemnifies  or
advances expenses to any director,  officer, employee or agent otherwise than by
court order or action by the shareholders or by an insurance carrier pursuant to
insurance  maintained  by the  Corporation,  the  Corporation  shall  report the
indemnification  or advance in  writing to the  shareholders  with or before the
notice of the next annual shareholders,  meeting, or prior to the meeting if the
indemnification or advance occurs prior after the giving of the notice but prior
to the time the annual  meeting is held.  This report shall  include a statement
specifying  the persons paid, the amounts paid, and the nature and status at the
time of such payment of the litigation or threatened litigation.

                  If the Corporation issued or authorizes the issuance of shares
for promises to render services in the future,  the Corporation  shall report in
writing to the shareholders the number of shares  authorized or issued,  and the
consideration received by the Corporation, with or before the notice of the next
shareholders, meeting.

                         ARTICLE VI. STOCK CERTIFICATES

Section 1.  Issuance.  The Board of Directors may authorize the issuance of some
or  all  of  the  shares  of any  or  all  of  its  classes  or  series  without
certificates.  each certificate  issued shall be signed by the President and the
Secretary (or the Treasurer) . The rights and  obligations of  shareholders  are
identical whether or not their shares are represented by certificates.

Section 2. Registered Shareholders. No certificate shall be issued for any share
until the share is fully paid.  The  Corporation  shall be entitled to treat the
holder  of record of shares  as the  holder  in fact,  and  except as  otherwise
provided by law, shall not be bound to recognize any equitable or other claim to
or interest in the shares.

Section 3. Transfer of Shares. Shares of the Corporation shall be transferred on
its books only after the surrender to the Corporation of the share  certificates
duly endorsed by the holder of record or attorney- in- fact. If the  surrendered
certificates  are  canceled,  new  certificates  shall be issued  to the  person
entitled to them, and the transaction recorded on the books of the Corporation.

Section 4. Lost,  Stole or Destroyed  Certificates.  If a shareholder  claims to
have lost or destroyed a certificate of shares issued by the Corporation,  a new
certificate shall be issued upon the delivery to the Corporation of an affidavit
of that fact by the person claiming the certificate of stock to be lost,  stolen
or destroyed, and at the discretion of the Board of Directors,  upon the deposit
of a bond or other indemnity as the Board reasonably requires.


<PAGE>

                          ARTICLE VII. INDEMNIFICATION

Section 1. Right to  Indemnification.  The Corporation  hereby  indemnifies each
person  (including  the  heirs,  executors,  administrators,  or  estate of such
person)  who is or was a director of officer of the  Corporation  to the fullest
extent  permitted or authorized by current or future  legislation or judicial or
administrative  decision  against all fines,  liabilities,  costs and  expenses,
including  attorneys'  fees,  arising  out of his or her  status as a  director,
officer,   agent,   employee  or   representative.   The   foregoing   right  of
indemnification shall not be exclusive of other rights to which those seeking an
indemnification may be entitled. The Corporation may maintain insurance,  at its
expense,  to protect  itself  and all  officers  and  directors  against  fines,
liabilities,  costs and expenses,  whether or not the Corporation would have the
legal power to indemnify them directly against such liability.

Section 2. Advances.  If this Article or any portion of it is invalidated on any
ground  by a court  of  competent  jurisdiction,  the  Corporation  nevertheless
indemnifies  each person  described  in Section 1 of this Article to the fullest
extent  permitted by all portions of this Article that have not been invalidated
and to the fullest extent permitted by law.

                             ARTICLE VIII. AMENDMENT

                  These  Bylaws may be  altered,  amended or  repealed,  and new
Bylaws  adopted,  by a  majority  vote  of the  directors  or by a  vote  of the
shareholders holding a majority of the shares.

                  I certify  that these are the  Bylaws  adopted by the Board of
Directors of the Corporation.


                                      Secretary

                                      Date:




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