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8th March 1921
8th March 1921
Page 1
Page 1, 8th March 1921
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Page 1

If the Ministry Should Co.

W ISEACRES, long ago, had decided that the Ministry of Transport was doomed to a short life, probably because it was, or...

Page 3

.ONE HEARS

Of the unspeakable" scot." Of spring periodicity out of time. Of Hereford and there a Fordson. Of the return of the coaching...

HERE'S ONE.

With a horrid thump in its engine, the lorry was lumbering along for the nearest garage at, say, Exton. The driver had had...

Page 4

WHEELS OF INDUSTRY.

The wheel of wealth will be slowed by all difficulties of transport at whatever paints arising, as a carriage is by the...

Page 8

ECONOMIZING PETROL ON FORDS.

T HE various devices which have been produced for the laudable purpose of reducing the amount of petrol consumed by the...

Page 9

THE COMMERCIAL VEHICLE IN SOUTH AFRICA.

Mr. Reginald F. Clayton, on His Return, Gives His Impressions of Road Transport Prospects in the Colony I T WAS a pleasant...

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TAXED AT £24 ONLY.

How the Motor Coach Carrying Not More Than 14 Passengers Scores Over Its Larger Prototype Under the New Scheme. • T HERE...

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DISPLAYING INTEREST IN COMMERCIAL CARS.

it is Not Enough for a Garage Proprietor to be Willing to Sell and Repair Commercial Vehicles : He Must Make Owners Believe...

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AN IDEAL TYPE 01 IR COACH STATION.

Why Stations May Be Required : Where 1 ,! Situated : How They Should Be Designed. L AST YEAR there was a considerable increase...

Page 15

A PAGE FROM TYRE HISTORY.

• An Account of an Interview With a Director of the Company. Manufacturing the Modern Collier. Tyre. A N. ARTICLE by "The...

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COACHING AND REPAIRING AS A DUAL BUSINESS.

• A Prominent Bristol Automobile Engineering Concern Who Entered the Motor Coach Business in 1920, and have Done Much to...

Page 18

FORD VAN POINTERS.

By R. T. Nicholson (Author of 'file Book of the Ford ") I SAID in a recent Pointer that it is possible to turn a Ford van...

Page 19

MOTORBUS PROPAGANDA WANTED.

By "The Inspector." M ANY OF US .do not realize the extent to which the motorbus is gradually and steadily becoming an...

Page 20

PROGRESS IN PASSENGER TRAVEL.

The Latest Doings and Developments in the Bus and Coach World. A New One-man Hood. An Original Design which Possesses...

Page 22

LOOKING BACK FIFTEEN YEARS.

THE "AVANT TRAIN," Taxicabs a type which had had con Ancient siderable success in France and early in 1906, made its Modern,...

Page 23

TRANSPORT TIPS FOR TRADESMEN.

Particularly Addressed to Those Who are Replacing Horsed Vehicles by Motors, or Contemplating So Doing. Roadside Quays and...

Page 27

AGRICULTURAL SHOWS FOR 1921.

The Programme of the Season and the Value of Exhibiting to the Tractor Manufacturer. T HE AGRICULTURAL shows commence very...

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OPINIONS FROM OTHERS.

The Editor invites correspondence on all subjects connected with the use of commercial motors. Letters should be on one side of...

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For DRIVERS, MECHANICS, & FOREMEN.

TEN SHILLINGS is paid to the-sender of any letter which we vublislt on this page, and an =RA FIVE SITI,CLINGS to the sender of...

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AN INTERNAL-COMBUSTION TURBINE. .

A Résumé of Recently Published Patents Many people scent to think that when we have at length achieved satisfactory designs...