One Hears
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Of many already bored with the Coal Board.
Fears that British rolling stock is rapidly becoming reeling stock. 0 That V-day joy has soon been transformed into peace-time depression.
Of big road haulage jobs in progress by the G.P.O. Telephone Department.
That pandering to Socialistic shibboleths has not panned out as many expected.
That some people are beginning to say that we might just as well have a war and a more reasonable degree of comfort.
That everyone seems tired—but this does not apply so fully to some vehicles.
Of some operators who still say that they will have no "truck" with nationalization.
To bring the proverb up to date—It's no use crying over driving over split milk bottles.
Of someone saying that the best memorial to the unknown haulier wotild be a tail light, to signify that he had 'Passed on. That the whole Nation is driven to flogging tired horse-power.
That paper will soon be too valuable to use for our fish and chips.
Of drivers in some districts menaced by a juvenile craze for archery. —0-- That the Lords and the Commons have not split much of their difference.
Of almost everything going up except houses and our hopes of getting many.
Of a new Russian-built 60-seater bus with oil engine and electrical transmission.
That the schoolboy's joke problem used to read: " If your B m t put ; if your 1.1 . putting :" That when winter comes Europe's problem will be: " Though your B m t putting ."—and it will be far from a joke, 0 — That The Commercial Motor," in publishing last week a complete summary of the Transport Act, beat H.M. Stationery Office 'that when this issue closed for press. the Act had still not been printed