Where Motor Wagons are Needed.
Page 5
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These illustrations will, we are cer.ain, be of considerable interest to every reader. They depict scenes in the colony of South Australia, and prove the immense field for mechanical traction which exists at the moment in all parts of he Commonwealth. Mules, horses, camels, and oxen have in turn to be used in the different districts, and the colonists are compelled to bring to their aid numbcrs of animals for a comparatively small load. We are indebted to the Agen 1. General for South Australia for the illustrations.
Such striking testimony to the pressing need for more
modern methods or haulage it would be difficult to portray. It is only one of numberless places where the energetic manufacturer needs to give a little study to local requireinents to secure immediate orders. Colonists are proverbially progressive, and as soon as they have ocular proof of regularity in working there will be no hesitation on their parts to at once discard the present cumbrous animal haulage. In some thousands of copies of the next issue of " THE COMMERCIAL MOTOR " a special Indian and Colonial supplement will be included