SN . ---- ALLEN TO-DAY "All's Faii- KINGSTON AN ALL-INDIA STRIKE PLANNED FOR THE 6TH by : PAROLE BILL IS RAPED ~ Strong Opposition to Foisti Probation Otficial Upon a (ity. Toronto, April 5.--After a long discussion, which culminated in H. H. Dewart, Southwest Toronto, mov- for a six-months' hoist to it, je w 5 Raney's bill providing |t°¢ Bas also recommended that the for the appointment of probation ot-| 18th day of every month should be ficers passed second reading in the | 0VS¢TVed as a day of sacrifice and Legislature yesterday "| prayer, the sacrifice taking the form The attorney-general explained {of contribution of a day's pay to the that at the last session of the do- |" 'aJya fund, minion parliament an amendment was made to the Criminal Code, di-| recting that a court might place of- fenders on prebation and these of- | fenders should report to an officer | the court should designate. The cer | uestion was provided for : | nt bill The bill ba Intended | °T1tY to say that there is no vestige to supplement Dominion legislation. [OF truth In the story Eppeaving fi] i ec states papers 0 ne effec For such an innocent-looking bill, ot Lady Potro I tay ne ee it met with considerable opposition. | 47504 a say ner ! T torney-general sald that _ it husband have for months been prac- Fhe HoT ge present to large | tically separated and living apart centres and that a probation officer would be appointed for Toronto. If! other larger places made application | the requests would be given con- | sideration, | Meetings Held in Bombay to Stir Up Interest in "Na- tional Week." Bombay, April 5.--Meetings are being held here almost daily to stir up interest in the observance of the so-called "national week" which planned to commemorate the inau- {guration of Mohandas K. Gandhi's "swarajya'" campaign in April, 1921. The week begins April 6th, and an all Indian hartal, a form of general | etrike, is planned at its conclusion. * | The All-Indian Congress commit- is DENIAL AUTHORIZED Ramsay and Husband Have | Not Separated. London, April The Canadian + Press is authorized by a high auth- Lady b. Motion Presenting British Coalition To Be Made | London, April 5.--A motion at SS {tacking the coalition, to be presented W. F. Nickle's View. | tonight by Sir William Joynson- W. F. Nickle thought the Hicks, Unionist. ie ne oop on ney-general was making a WIONg i )ikely to cause serious trouble for step in the right direction. It was | the government. It However, 3 unfortunate the expenses were not|gjear indication of the continuing to be borne entirely by the BoV-|hogtile attitude of a section, 5) 'ernment. If probation was to amount | conservatives toward the coalition. to anything, it should be taken as _-- | far as possible from the police force. 19 PPE REE P REE PR It was absolutely essential that at fg + the beginnipg~pf the criminal career [® the apprelfended person should be | taken absolutely away from the po-|% lice and placed under the Sontrol [% of someone who had sympathy for a person who had made a misstep, and | who had a desire to lead the stray- | ing one to a better life, Dr. Forbes Godfrey, West York, |% objected to a municipality being : | {wo attor- is, 95 YEARS OLD AND ATTENDING TO BUSINESS Ottawa, April 5.--Can- ada's veteran lumber king, John R. Booth, is today cel- ebrating the, ninety-fiftth an- niversary of his birthday. Tt was said by his family that he would attend to his business at the mill PPE EPP EPREPINPTIES saddled with the expense of an offi-| cial it did not want. There were enough officers now, especially for law enforcement, Premier Drury sald he agreed with the remarks of the member for Kingston that the dealing with persons on probation was not a mat- ter for the police. The government had no intention of forcing the thing on people who were unwilling to have it. edb db bbs rts Betrayer of Edith Cavell Is To Die. Mons, Belgium, April 5. -- Armand Jeannes, who was con- demned to death last night for treason and espionage against the allies during the war, boast- ed that he was instrumental in bringing about the arrest ana execution of Edith Cavell. But this charge was not mentioned in the indictment against him. A great crowd cheered the an- nouncement of the sentence, RESERVES THE RIGHT TO CALL FOR INTEREST The Insurance Bill, Vigorous and sustained protest by H. H. Dewart (Southwest Toronto) caused Hon. W. E. Raney, attorney- general, to abandon the stand he had taken and read a memorandum to the House on his bill to amend the Ontario Insurance Act, The amendments in this act are made necessary chiefly because of the other bills on insurance matters put through this session. The chief | provisions are that every fire insur- ance company in Ontario must keep | a record of its premiums and losses, | and that the rights of mortgagors | are protected as to selection of in- surers. On Allied War Debts to Brit- ain Bechuse Latter Has to Pay U. 8. | London, April 5.--The British gov- ernment has addressed a note to the | Allies declaring that, owing to the fact that Britain ha® to pay interest on her debt to the United States, General Motors, Ltd., is establish- |She reserves the right to call upon ing a new works at Hendon, an out- | the Allies in turn to pay the inter- er suburb of north-western Greater |©St on their war debts to Britain, London, in which they are to assem-| It is pointed out that Britain is To Build Canadian Autos. London, April 6.--~-Automobiles manufactured oy Canadian mater- fals and parts by Canadian labor, will soon be assembled here in Lon- don, | talking caucus meeting to-day and question | | of patronage is brought up. | mission | these * | spoils of victory | mong many Liberal members, how- | pessible that cent, organization, ble Canadian-made' Buicks, Chevro- now fully prepared to pay the meer lets, Oldsmobiles and Oaklands. est due to the United States. The French Reply. Paris, April 5.--The Echo de Paris says the French reply to the British note on payment of interest on war {loans by Britain is likely to be that S022 0000 04040 > DENIED THAT SMALL HAS BEEN FOUND Toronto, April 5.--Rum- ors 'were thick in Hamilton and Toronto today to the ef- fect that Ambrose Small, theatrical millionaire, mys- teriously missing for more than two years, had been found. There seemed to be no basis for them. |Allled debts, which must be treated as a whole. Prisoner Tried to Crown Judge With fnkwell New York, April 5.--Sentenced by County Judge Haskell to serve four years in Sing Sing, Willlam Maloney, twenty-four, powerful, six feet tall, seized an inkwell from the table and cried: "You dirty ~ Then a blow struck by the court clérk directly on the nose staggered and silenced him. Three court attendants pouneed on him, and Maloney was led to the cells. Closes Irish "Legation" In Buenos Aires Buenos Aires, April 5.--Laurence Ginnell, former British M.P., who came here last year as an envoy of + |de Valera seeking recognition of the Irish republic, has closed the "'legu- don" and. left for Ireland. He issued 2 message to "friends of Ireland in South America" characterizing the "fall of the republic" as the greatest Irish disaster since the death of Owen Roe O'Neill in 1649. Serr PPOs bar ba > Eb Erb bb ete 0000060000000 080010 Canon F. G. Scott, Quebec, is in hospital suffering from appendicitis. HUSBAND AND WIFE. DR aN IRN HIT . My husband waters our potted plants too voluminously and lets the water seep all over the carpet.-- Jennde J. / / i 1 tees ar neti An attack was made on Free State the question is bound up with {fiter- | BIG CLAMOR FOR PLUMS Seek Policy on Patronage-- Claim They Are Not Fair- ly Treated. nto Globe tawa, April 5.-- is expected at the Tor Ot Some more plain Liberal Other matters may be discussed, 'but most of the Liberal members want to go into the patronage problem Now | that the Liberals are in power, most {of the members are being bombard- | ed daily with requests from their con- | stituents. Some members openly charge that the recent administration 80 manipulated affairs that all the public officers in their ridings are held by Conservatives Briefly the "boys back home" now clamoring for what they claim their own The 'boys bak home" are not disposed in a great many cases to listen to the excuse is {that a Civil Service Commission has charge The party ir ters run of all appointments again in power, so the let- and surely the party is bigger than any Civil Service There is no denying the fact that some members are up against con- siderable pressure They want way out At the very least they want to talk in the cauctis and tell the members of the government exactly what is en their minds. Few of members have any real ex- pectation that the Government will revert to the old system, whereby the party supporters "got in.on" the There is a hope ever, that Some changes will made in the Civil Service whereby the recommendations the members will be taken for out- side appointments. The government stand is still in doubt, and it is just nothing will be done further than making a change in the personnel of the commission Another kick which will be heard at the caucus concerns the purchas- ing commigsion, which is a war- time bedy, started by Hon. - N. Rowell when he was a member of the Union Cabinet, This commission does not buy all the supplies for the government, but a considerable amount of money is still spent by it. One Liberal complaint is that, prices being even, Liberal teniderers have beea thrown down since this govern- ment came into power, Act of | SOME BLACK SHEEP IN FARMERS' PARTY 'Get Rid of Them as Fast as You Can," Says Miss Mc- Phalil at Peterboro. Peterboro, April 6+~--Miss Agnes McPhail, M.P,, discussed issues of the day here last night in an ad- dress to U.F.O, bodies and told her impressions of Ottawa. One of the things she emphasized to the Farm- ers was the importance of 100 per one sald a mem- ber in the House was always con- fined by precedent, She went so far as to characterize the transporta- tion, trading and banking interests as "having us by the throat." Miss McPhail admitted there werd black sheep in the Progressive par- ty. "There are some men sitting in the Progressive party who are the best Grits and Tories you ever saw. The socner you get rid of them the better," she said. WILL MEAN DELAY IN LEGISLATIVE ACTION LFreaty Needed Between Can- ada and the U. 8. Over Waterways Project. Washington, D.C., April 5.--An- nouncement from the White House that a treaty will be necessary in order to make arrangements between Canada and United States as to the St. Lawrence waterways project is looked upon here as meaning delay in gny legislative action by congress until next winter at the earliest, It Is freely predioted that no action will be taken until the new congress Opens on March 4th, 1923. Aggressive Steamship Rate War at Vancouver, B.C. ---- Washington, D. C., April 5.--The prospect of an "aggressive steamship rate war at Vancouver, B.C., affect- ing all commodities carried between Canada and the Orient, was reported to the department of commerce to- day by American Consul-General Ryder, at Vancouver.' 750 Non-Union Miners In Alberta To Strike Calgary, Alta, April' 5.iiSeven hundred and fitty miners, employed in the Blue Diamond mifies at Bruel, have decided to strike. It is the 'What does your husband do? soldiers at Dublin Tuesday. +. 5 ; Sl [rgest. non-union mine in district eighteen, N 8 are Cons a | Ww. | ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL'5, 1922, IN TOUCH WITH HOME | WHILE ON OCEAN 'A Long Distance Wireless Equipment on Trans-At- lantic Liners. London, April 5.--With the latest | developments in long distance wire- {less equipment on the ocean liners, i milionaires who are, | { | | {tically constant touch with their pat | specialists at home while crossing [the Atlantic and can receive "absent | treatment." This | given to-day by | nere. wireless experts to the Cape Cod wireless station when she was almost alongside the Liverpool docks. The Marconi Com- pany promises, in the near future, a perfect 24-hour-a-day-ship-to-shore (service for the whole trans-Atlantic rip. ! | | be | [ CHESTER D. MASSEY The dedication of whose magnificent | bells, given to the Metropolitan Metho- | dist church, Toronto, teok place on | Sunday on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the church opening, The new carillon of 23 bells Is a memorial to hig late wife, Margaret Phelps Mas- | sey, BIGAMIST SENTENCED | Spouse of Thirteen Wives Disfran- chised for Embeszlement, { Indianapolis, Ind., April 6.--Isaiah | Moore, self-confessed spouse of 13 | wives, was sentenced to serve from {two to 14 years In the state retorm- [a on a charge of embezzlement {and was fined $1,000 and costs and | disfranchisedl for five years. 3 Moore is said to have confessed to (having at least 13 wives also, was | sentenced to serve from two to five | years in the state prison on a charge | of bigamy. |to have obtained more than $2,700 from his wives. In each case after he had been wedded a week he dis- apppeared. | ¢ | 240 Descendants of This Quebec Woman Salem, Mass., April 5.--Mrs. Cle- ment Berube, of this city, is rich in relatives. In adition to thirteen chil- dren she has 109 grandchildren and 118 great-grandchildren, believed to be the local record. Mrs. Berube was born in Ste. Felicite, Que., March 27th, 1834, She has lived in Salem since 1888. ------------ THE CONSTABLES ACT or who fancy | | themselves ill can now keep in prac- | information was | According to the police, he is said CRAIG FLINGS A DEFIANCE Says He Will Never Lead Ulster Into Free State Parliament. Belfast, April 5. -- Sir James | Craig, Ulster Premier, flung defiance It was stated, for example to the Free State adherents in South- | (that on the last British bound trip crn Ireland yesterday in a dramatic | of the Baltic, she was able to "talk' |SPeech before the Northern Parha- | ment, | "I will never lead Ulster into a Free State parliament," Craig de claréd, answering statements by Ar- thur Griffith that the peace agree- {ment signed in London had brought | Irish unity nearer, Crown Forces Sweep Mountains, Belfast, April 5.----Despite the luil in sniping activities, however, loy- |aists have not been permitted to re- turn to their farms which are oc | euntea by southerners, of whom {about five hundred are moving about [this area. Owing to unsettled con- |ditions farm work has been greatiy f handicapped. | Excitement has been transferred {to the desolate Sperrin Mountains 11 {North Tyrone which are swept night- [1y by large forces of Crown troops, |who are sometimes fired upon by {Sinn Feiners Frequent encounters | have been reported in this area and [the Belfast Telegraph correspondent | has been told that 25 Sinn Feiners |have been killed and many more | wounded, although these figures cau- {not be definitely established, Immigration Move. London, April 5.--One of the first moves in the relations between the Irish Free State and the United States, according to reports received in London from Dublin, will be an| effort by the Provisional government ito establish an independent under the immigration law for the Free State. ' Up te the present Ireland has be2n lumped under the United Kingdom, | {and the restriction imposed by the {Sinn Fein authorities prevented any | men and most women from leaving [the country. Irish, who wish to visit {relatives In the United States, ana {other who wish to visit fellow Irigh- men in America, hope the strict em- bargo on immigration will soon be lifted. Two Children Die. Belfast, April 6.--Two children, wounded during the week-end, died ed¥ly today. A tram car depot on Falls road was raided today and $550 taken from the cashier. GLENGARRY CAIRN Commemorates Services 8ir John Colborne, Soldier and Statesman. 6.--The romantic Glengarry cairn on Monument Is- | land, situated in the St. Lawrence [river in the county of Glengarry and opposite thé town of Lancaster, On- tario, has been purchased by the De- {partment of the Interior from the Department of Indian Affairs and placed under the care of the Nation- al Parks Branch. The island, with its conspicuous memorial cairn, is to be included among the historic sites of Canada, for which special regard Ottawa, April quota | TO BE PRESERVED | BOYCOTT OF NORTHEAST ULSTER IS AGAIN ON According to"Dundalk Advices --Armed Men Are De- | stroying Goods. | { 5 ~The | n | | | Dundalk, Ireland, April Thoycott of Northeast Ulster with a vengeance. This economic re- | prisal, removed by the Dail after Sir {James Craig and Michael Collins | first agreement, was restored by (hel {army executive council. Armed m:n {are obeying the council orders anit {are destroying goods from the bana- {ed area wholesale. They have held up trains and raided wa nearly every railroad leading to the south and west. | Dundalk the point inside the southern border along the main line of the: Belfast- Dublin railway. Men from hero first began to enforce the unofficial boycott. by stopping trains, burning freight cars containing shipments from Belfast and carrying off tne mails. They were partially inspired by the continuation of disorder in the northeastern capital Seven dead and twelve wounded is the toll of the week-end to April 3rd and the Republicans say that as long as this keeps up they will mak» it impossible for Belfast merchants to do much business in the Provi- sional Government's area. Further more, they declare if life does not become safer for Catholics in Bei: fast, then night raiders may start 10 destroy something more precious than chattels The army council's work is rapidly bréaking up the business relations .80 recently renewed between the north and the south. Trade is ai- most impossible, there is little if any buying and orders have been can- celled. i is © 'houses of is first important FORMER PASTOR FINED, For Leaving Family and Going Away With Young Woman. Newark, N. J., April 4 Rev. Cor- nelius Densel, former pastor of the New Netherlands Reform church, | Passaic, was fined five hundred dol- lars to-day on pleading guilty to vio- | { lation of the Mann act. He left his { family in the fall of 1920 and went to Buffalo with a young woman mem- ber of his flock, returning a few months later. The parents of the | girl sued him, and he sold his home | [to settle the suit, | WOMAN DECLARES SHALL | 1S BODEN IN TORONTO 'Mrs. T. E. Sterling, Hamilton, | Interviewed by Missing | Magnate's Sisters. | Hamilton, Ont., April Sisters | {of A. J. Small interviewed Mrs. T. |B. Sterling here yesterday. She says | she has a clue that will lead to the {solution of the Small mystery, and thinks she will win the reward. "Do you think that Mr. Small is 5 of dead?" Mrs. Sterling was asked. | "Dead," she replied, "oh, no, he's not dead. He's hidden in Toronto, | | doped, and unable to reveal his | whereabouts. You know Toronto is a large place, and it would not be | difficult to hide anybody there. 1 have a clue all right, but it's got to | | be kept mum until the whole thing's | out, and then everybody will know. | [If I said anything now they would | | easily move him, and then we would | | not be able to find him at all." | | Mrs. Sterling charged that Small | had been betrayed by his supposed | friends. "It was no stranger that! {did the trick, but friends." ---- | | | was plainly in error. {out, however, that the present pro- ALLEN Starting Wednesday D. W. GRIFFITH'S "Way Down East" ---- LAST EDITION ONE MINISTER OF DEFENCE In Graham's Plan to Combine Militia, Air And Naval Services. Ottawa, April 5.--George P. Gras ham, minister of defense, moved the house into committee of the whole yesterday afternoon on his bill te consolidate under one ministerial head the department of militia, pos lice, naval service and air force. Mr Graham explained that the purpose of the bill was to effect econdmy. In who could be dispensed with a saving of from alo the amalgamation, could be brought about $700,000 to $1,000,000 Farther, it was. proposed that there should be a great saving effects ed by having but one purchasing branch instead of as at present, four. The minister assured the house that in respect of deputy or sub-deputy here, whose services would not be required under the ame algamation, 'no injustice would be . done," in so far as it was possible to avert injustice Hugh Guthrie, ex-minister of mill tia, approved of the bill and its pro= posals. The consolidation of the mis litla and naval services had been suggested years ago by Sir Freders ick Borden. Lord French had alse in 1910 and 1911 advocated 'the same consolidation, though neither had suggested that the mounted po~ lice should be included. Later Sir Arthur Currie had advised that the militia, naval and air forces should be amalgamated, Mr, Guthrie criticized the bill for being only in skeleton while all the details were to be carried out by order-in-council. It was strange af ter all the denunciation of "governs ment-by-order-in-council." under Retain Headquarters Staff, Mr. Guthrie lauded the military headquarters staff trained through- . out the war. He wanted them treat- ed generously if it were necessary to dispense with them. w "How would you do it?" asked Mr, Vieu. "l would retain their services ins stead of replacing them," replied Mr, Guthrie, the matter of temporary employees Premier King sald the opposition of his party to 'orders-in-council government by the last government had been based upon infringements of parliamentary authority. In the present instance only necessary ads ministrative powers were sought uns der orders-in-council. If parliament thought they were too broad they would be elimirated: Mr. Meighen 'defended the acts of the late government pointing out that no order-in-council could ex- ceed the authority vested in the governor-general in éouncil. He drew attention to the fact that dure ing the war, many unusual exigens, cies arose and further that the war measures act had passed parliament unanimously. It was under this act that orders to meet special and im- mediate situations were made. Mr. Melghen felt that several orders-in-~ council passed by Mr. King will have to be ratified by parliament, while at least one was even beyond the pows er of ratification by parliament, Mr, Meighen endorsed the' princi ple that a government had a perfect right to distribute departments among ministers as was thought proper, unless a change proposed He pointed is being paid by the Parks Branch, with a view to their preservation as ONE DRESS IN 30 YEARS | posal would not reduce the number 1 T0 BE AMENDED It Provides For Amalgamating Offices of Sheriff and High Constable. | Toronto, April 5.--Attorney-Gen- eral Raney introduced a bill in the legislature yesterday to amend the constables act, this being explained as a step in the direction of the am- algamation of the offices of sheriff and high constable. The bill pro- vides for the annual appointment of high constable by the county council and that in default of such appoint- ment the sheriff shall be high con- stable and the lieutenant-governor- in-council may direct payment the sheriff of $500 per annum. H. Hartley Dewart said he under- stood a number of members were to be supplied with memoranda with reference to legislation. He 'asked that the attorney-gemeral have the courtesy to put his name on the list, as well as those of Mr. Hay and Mr. Curry. On account of the position he occupied, he thought he. might have been included in that special list, The attorney-general said Mr. Dewart would be supplied with mem- oranda, Before the orders of the day were called, Thomas Marshall, Lincoln, suggested that the work of the legis lature might be speeded up by letting the attorney-general's bill for re- stricting appeals to the privy eoun- cll, gide over until after Easter ad- journment. Premier Drury concur business was piling up to such an extent Jhat i 1 night sessions would 0 necdmary, commenc- red in this suggestion, noting that|. centres of historic interest. | The cairn has been reared by tle | Highland militia of Glengarry, which [was concerned with the suppression | of the Canadian rebellion of 1837-1 {1838 to commemorate the services of the distinguished soldier, Sir Jhon | Colborne, who commanded Her Ma-| Jesty's forces in Canada at that criti- |ed with merit throughout the Penin-| sular War and elsewhere, and had! greatly distinguished himself | Waterloo. He was Lieutenant-Gov- | {ernor of Upper Canada from Novam- | {ber, 1828, to January, 1836, and] | Governor--General of Canada m | 1839. Afterwards he became Fiela- Marshal Lord Seaton, G.C.B. The cairn is of conical shape 52 feet high and 52 feet in diameter ur the base. It has a winding staircase comprising sixty-four steps, and at the apex has a canon inserted muz- zle upwards for the reception' of a flagstaff. There is a tradition that every man, woman and child in the district contributed some kind of ser- vice in the erection of the cairn.. in 1905 some patriotic citizens of Lancaster placed a tablet on the cairn, as well as protective railing along the staircase and around the summit of the memorial. During the summer it is expected that a flag will be hoisted and such attention and repairs given by the Parks Brancn as are necessary to preserve from de- cay this interesting and romantic memorial of a momentous period of Canadian history. ni It is authoritatively stated that the church of the Sacred Heart fire in Montreal was started by a fire bug. } ---------- i Tragic End of Strange Character in | English Town, London, March 25.-- (By mail.) -- | An old woman who had walked! about the streets of Romford in tha | same dress for 30 years was the sun- ject of a coroner's inquiry last even- | ing. Her name was given as Ameha | { | years. It was stated that she had | lived alone in a cottage near the | her last living relative. She was found dead in her house, She was notable in Romford by | the peculiarity of her costume, which | was of Victorian design, tight-fitting and very old. It was stated that her sister, when alive, wore a dress of the same style. In the cottage tne police found the sum of £21 in gola, and some eancelled bank-books showing that the woman had made | considerable deposits in past days. | To Ask Wider Powers. | Ottawa, April 5.-- The standing | committee on agriculture anf coloni- | zation yesterday decided to go back | to parliament, and ask for wider powers under the reference giving it power to deal with alternative plans of wheat marketing, rather than then being confined only to investigation of the compulsory peol system of wheat marketing under the reconsti- tuted Canada wheat board. G8 Meehan, a well-to-do retired farmer, residing in Almonte, ended | his life on Tuesday by taking car- |! bolic acid. Deceased had been in poor hoalth for some time. Gordon McGregor, formerly vice president of Ford Motor Company, left an estate of a million dollars. of- ministers at all, It was still & case of three ministers and six de- partments, He objected vigorously to the grouping of the mounted police with the defence department. To do se | would be to reduce public regard and the efficiency of the police. They are in no sense a defence force, but a {cal period. - He had previously sery-| 11048800, aged between 70 and 0 [civil unit and he believed this a more ordinarily unfavorable time He urged that the mine than for section. at | town since the death of her sister, |ister reconsider the provision of the | resolution taking in the mounted po Hee. The bill passed its second read ing. . SHOT COLONEL TO DEATH When He Found Him Trying to Eme brace His Wife. Oklahoma City, Okla., April §.-- Lieut.-Col. Paul Beck, aviation com mander, was shot to death early yes terday in the fashionable residence of Jean Day, a widely known ofl op erator. Following a card party Day drove a number of his guests 3 and on his return he found his struggling in the arms of Beck, is being held on a ¢harge of shooting Beck. i ---------- Pave With India Rauber, Copenhagen, April 3.--A street in the suburbs of Copenhagen may be paved with India rubber, which it 18 satd-will 16st tor fifty years. The ote fer has just been made to the municte pal authorites of Copenhagen by a rubber manufacturing company, The sample rubber street would be 220 yards long. The com : claims that the proposed road would. be far superior to ordinary ones. v 5