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24th November 1950
24th November 1950
Page 1
Page 1, 24th November 1950
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Page 31

A Moonlight Split

W HEN . the Transport Act, 1947, was fash ioned, its authors acknowledged t he personal nature of the services rendered to the...

Page 32

Pioneers, Not Robots, Needed!

M ANY people, whatever their politics, must, in their innermost consciousness, deplore the general tendency to refuse...

Passing C mments

"Impossible" Which Li NG 1NEERS responsible Did Not Take Long " for recovering public ser to Achieve . vice vehicles involved...

Page 33

One Hears

That hauliers must fight shoulder-to-shoulder or be shouldered out. That America produced over '7m. commercialvehicle tyres in...

Page 34

New Transport Bill for the Commons

Private Member Seeks to Amend Transport Act : Second Reading in House of Lords T HE Transport (Amendment) Bill has been...

R.H.A. and N.F.U. to Approach Minister

E FFORTS are being made jointly by the Road Haulage Assoceation ard the National Farmers' Union to prevent the abuse of C...

Page 35

Bus Wage Claims Being Heard

S TTTING in London to-day, an Arbitration Court -is • hearing thc application presented by the Transport and General Workers'...

Page 36

B.T.C. to Oppose Unmodified Renewals

R.H.A. Solicitor Gives the Latest News on Procedure of Acquisition THE British Transport Commission has issued instructions to...

Production and Exports Drop

T HE interruption in production caused by the holiday period had an influence on output figures for September, as it did for...

Page 37

Hauliers to Delay Notifying R.H.E.

ESOLUTIONS pledging hauliers whose permits are to • be revoked, not to disclose their intention to retain or offer their...

"Rate War" Probable: R.H.E.

Manager Complains of Staff THE likelihood of a "rate war" between the Road Haulage Executive and free-enterprise hauliers was...

Page 38

Hauliers Awarded £1,000 Damages

LODGMENT for £1,000 damages and J costs in favour of Mr. George Leonard Jopp and Mr. James Blacklock, trading as George Black...

B.R. Oppose Football Trips

O BJECTIONS by British Railways to 42 applications by independent operators to run football excursions to additional...

Permit Question in the House

O F 17.000 applications for permits, 12,000 were granted, but only 4,000 were in the terms sought. The number of permits,...

B.R.F. Attacks Lord Lucas

" n NE of the most astonishing state ments ever to emanate from a Government spokesman" is the description applied by the...

Page 39

Ministry Criticizes Bus Hand-brake Efficiency: Standards to be Set ?

IT is learned that the Ministry of Transport was responsible for arranging a series of hand-brake tests on double-deck buses,...

No R.H.A. Backing for Defiance

WHILST the Road Haulage AssociaW tion was sympathetic to the state of mind which prompted a defiant unconstitutional resolution...

Page 40

Sheriff Criticizes Wording of Licence

S TRONG remarks were made by Sheriff Miller in Stornoway Sheriff Court, last week, about the wording of a public service...

"Public Transport Must be Regulated by Government"

'IN an increasingly complicated econom;e order, it is essential for public transport to be more and more regulated by...

Page 41

C.1.E. Experiment in Freedom of Choice

F OR an experimental period of about six months from November 27, members of the public served by the Claremorris and...

Fares Changes the Only Way

A REDUCTION in• the frequency of riDundee's transport services, with consequent staff redundancy, may have to be considered if...

B.T.C.'s Duties Thrown Over WHEN the Transport Act was passed.

Vi r the British Transport Commission was supposed to be a body which would provide a responsible organization to consider all...

"Supercharging Oil Engines Pays " Sir Harry Ricardo WHILST the

supercharging of the V , spark-ignition engine was not worth while, except in aircraft and racing cars, it paid hands down in...

Page 43

N ORMALLY, after a hard day's test, I am not tired,

but at the end of the trial of the Electruk I was footsore and weary. The reason is that the vehicle is a pedestriancontrolled...

Page 44

NEW COST TABLES

A NEW edition of "The 1 - 1, Commerciat Motor" Tables of Operating Costs, corrected to take into account the recent increases...

Page 45

The Refugee Problem

Political Commentary By JAN US The Choices Before an Operator Faced With the Loss of an Original Permit Raise Problems Which...

Page 46

" NFORTUNATELY," said the traffic manager, " most of our

passengers these days seem to want to take two suitcases, a dog and one of those so-called folding push-chairs with them on our...

Page 49

Think Before You Sell

If Your Permit is to be Revoked or its Terms are to be Reduced, Take Professional Advice and— Says A. E. Sherlock-Mesher,...

Page 53

THE TRANSPORT GANG

in Parl iament R. Reader Harris, M.P. I N the course of a session, the House of Commons deals with a huge variety of...

Page 54

Service Technical Training Not Wasted

I HAVE read with considerable interest the editorial article " Maintaining Skill in Maintenance" in the issue of "The...

Page 57

Welding in Maintenance

With Many Spares Likely to Remain Scarce, Broken, Cracked, and Worn Parts Can Usually be Effectively Renovated by One or Other...

Page 58

Hire-purchase and Depreciation

In the Assessment of Rates, it is Impracticable to Include Any Expenditure Arising from Hire-purchase, Contends Our Costs...

Page 62

Men in the News

LIEUT.-COL. S. J. L. HARDIE, D.S.0.. LL.D., has resigned his appointment as part-time member of the British Transport...

Injection Equipment Simplified

IF when the oil-engined tractor was first I introduced, there had been stops and screws on the fuel-injection equipment which...