The International 
RUBBER 
- AND - 
Allied Trades 
EXHIBITION 
Royal Agricultural Hall, London, 
12th to 28th JUNE, 1911 (15 days). 
It is with pleasure the directors announce the exact date and location 
of the next Exhibition. It will be held in that fully equipped building, 
with its spacious club, lecture and dining rooms, viz. The Royal 
Agriculture Hall, Islington, situated almost on the borders of the City 
of London and one of the most get-at-able buildings, served as it is with 
a constant stream of electric cars from all parts of London, also tubes 
from the City and West End, and is close to the leading railways. The 
building has every possible convenience for exhibitors, is lit by electric 
light and has a plentiful supply of electric power, gas, &c., for machinery. 
At the InternationaJ Banquet of Manufacturers and Producers, held 
at the close of the last Rubber Exhibition, Mr. Louis Hoff (Director 
Harburg and Vienna Rubber Co., Harburg on Elbe) said 
\ 
“ I hope that there may again be occasion, before many years have 
passed, for holding a second or similar Exhibition. Such a future 
Exhibition will, I believe, arouse even greater attention than the present 
one, in consequence of the undoubtedly great success of this Exhibition.” 
At the same banquet, Mr. Henry C. Pearson, Editor of the India- 
Rubber World, New York, spoke as follows 
>• I want to say a word about the value of this Exhibition. From a 
crude rubber standpoint its extreme value needs no comment; it is every¬ 
where apparent. But from a Rubber manufacturer’s standpoint there are 
varying opinions. We are accustomed to say carelessly that there are no 
secrets in the rubber business, while the truth is, the business is full of 
them. It is not generally appreciated, but the manufacture of Rubber 
instead of being one industry, is a series of widely differing trades. Such 
