AT THE HEART OF THE ROAD TRANSPORT INDUSTRY.

Call our Sales Team on 0208 912 2120

One

26th September 1947
Page 29
Page 29, 26th September 1947 — One
Close
Noticed an error?
If you've noticed an error in this article please click here to report it so we can fix it.

Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

Hears—

Of overhead roads—but only in the air at present. slow-moving road Of progress in the restriction of traffic in busy centres.

That it is hard lines to be almost out being out of the wood. out of wood with That the best-laid schemes worst-laid schemes gang daft. gang agley " and That Canada supplied over 70 per cent, of the virgin aluminium ingot used in Britain • during the recent war.

Of the official appointment of an expert in herbaceous borders to improve the appearance of British trunk roads.

That one of his tasks will be to plant hedges and flowers which will blend with the countryside.

That a trolleybus maintenance school is being started at the Metropolitan-Vickers works in Manchester for the' benefit Of the technical staffs of trolleybus undertakings.

That a driver's log should not be a work of fiction.

That moths never sit on their eggs, but bus passengers sometimes do.

Of many fleet-owners already making preparations for another severe winter.

That the Wembley tread is not a new dance, but the latest design of Tyresoles, Ltd.

Of wheels tearing up strips of recently laid tarred macadam that suffered from sunstroke.

That to avoid its being "all up" with Britain, we must all get down to bed-rock, brass tacks and other such fundamentals.

Of a windscreen wiper being returned to TricoFolberth, Ltd., for minor repairs after having given 19 years' continuous trouble-free service.

That the representative of New York's Transport Board who recently visited London to study L.P.T.B. methods has reported that our bus garages and maintenance depots are models worth copying.