AT THE HEART OF THE ROAD TRANSPORT INDUSTRY.

Call our Sales Team on 0208 912 2120

One Hears-

16th September 1938
Page 27
Page 27, 16th September 1938 — One Hears-
Close
Noticed an error?
If you've noticed an error in this article please click here to report it so we can fix it.

Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

Of 'Guys in a new guise.

Of someone who had read of " fly-over" roads saying "Why not swat them ? "

That, undeterred by the crisis, a party of some 60 British road engineers and surveyors is now visiting Germany.

That "C" Men Urge Amalgamation But Resorbent Friends Always Remain Open.

That it it may be foolish to make mountains out of molehills but it is lunacy to ignore them until they trip one up.

That the railways are fly in their "fishing."

Queries as to what Lord Stamp thinks of the German roads.

" Thanks for the memory" of rates based on operating costs.

That most foreign vehicles are utilizing special anti-dazzle lamps with controlled beams. That there is nothing of gas (or hot air) in our Operating Cost Tables.

That a certain A.R.O. chairman "lost " the badge from his car during a Continental tour.

Speculation as to whose collection it now adorns.

That the modern commercial vehicle is far more elegant than the private cars our fathers drove with pride.

That many a poor child is happier with a piece of chalk on a concrete road than in the best-equipped playground any council can provide.

Weight plates fate rates structures to strictures.

That the railways Gestapo" is not "just a pose."

Of increasing bitterness between taxi and private-hire operators.

That reliability is sometimes preferable to speed, but nowadays the two are often combined.

Tags

Organisations: Gestapo

comments powered by Disqus