One Hears
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That " waltzing" is not being confined to the baIlroonts.
Drivers expressing relief because a school gate on a steep hill-and irnmediately opposite a tuck shop has
been closed.
That the one now used gives the children time to notice what is on the road before crossing.
That Lord Nuffield hopes the fitting of television suppressors will be standardized throughout the motor industry.
That some R.H.E. group managers are beginning to realize that the Executive must co-operate on a friendly basis with free hauliers.
That drivers of many vehicles, frostand snowbound a few days before, failed to appreciate those snowy scenes on their Christmas cards.
Of hauliers being advised to apply for the canNIlation of permit revocation notices on the ground :Jut their customers. will otherwise. buy their own
That transport engineers began to hatethe thermometer.
That .fitter left under parked vehicles annoys cleansing inspectors.
That when the vehicles move on, • the refuse is seen and the cleansing superintendent may be blamed.
That private enterprise continues to be enterprising, whereas nationalization tends to bring sterilization.
A chorus of appreciation from our offices for hundreds of seasonal greetings by card, letter and telephone.
That the diaries and calendars, some most artistic, also received a cordial welcome.
From our tame statistician that, placed end to end, even the cards will almost reach to next Christmas, Of a haulier confessing that when, just a week. before Christmas, he met a flock of turkeys straying . on a lonely road, he half regretted having been " brought up honest."