Monopoly-the Outcast A LIAISON COMMITTEE member,
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Mr, Arthur Andrews, presented a convincing case for road operators when he addressed Swansea Chamber of Trade recently. At a previous rneetiug members had the railway viewpoint placed before them.
The remarkable development of road transport, during the past few years, had been largely created by revolt of industry generally, against monopoly, said Mr. Andrews. " Road transport," s56 he said, " demands freedom to increast its tonnage and its business, in accordance with the requests of its customers. It demands, in particular, continuity of its business, and the right to feel that it shall not be at the mercy either of a Traffic Court or objectors. It demands the ordinary right of a trader to buy business and sell business, and the remission of the unjust, throttling taxation with which it has been saddled since the 1933 Act."