One Hears
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That at least one long-distance vehicle has a hammock slung in the cab at night. , Of that driver getting into his cabin-net.
That it rests with our workers whether other countries buy British or give British goods the go-by.
From a report on the stopping of television interference, that police vehicles throughout the country are now "suppressed."
That this might be interpreted wrongly as good news for those people with criminal propensities.
These words of wisdom from a well-known lawyer: "The use of a trailer of the Queen Mary type would be most unusual for the carriage of bricks." That not all adhesives retain their " sticktion " properties for a sufficiently long period.
That others will hold so firmly as to pull the surface off glass during attempted removal Of freshly tarred roads so lavishly dressed with fine flint grit that traffic raises clouds of it.
That this is, however, much better than flinging the tar about as the result of ineffectual covering.
Dwellers in rural districts assuring us that India is not the only place where buses have been blessed.
That it is untrue that operators are ordering Blue Peter retreads just because they want the Cellophane wrapping.
Of a new-type-horn referred to as a Deaf-Aid.
That the R.H.E. may find itself in the role of " the biter bit."
That black exhaust can be a great danger to other road users.
That those who force up the cost of living should not be helped to pay the increase. ---0 That apparently • the only British thing that is persisting in its independence is the weather.
That the least suggestion of a forecast sends it off at a tangent.
Of a Russian machine which is claimed to load three tons of sugar beet in three minutes.