SUNDAY TEAINS.
♦ TO THE EDITOB OP THE EVENING POST. Sib — Would yon kindly advocate our caso by writing against the stoppage of the Sunday train to Upper Hntt. If it is the intention of the Government to stop all trains in the colony which do not pay working expenses, we are quite willing to have onra stopped also ; bat, if they do not do so, why make an exception of Upper Hntt? Or if the Government wish to make every district pay the deficiency on its own line, we are quite willing to pay the deficiency in ours. I am, &c, Uppbb Butt. [There is a great deal of reason in our correspondent's remarks. If unprofitable trains are still ran in any part of the colony, to suit the convenience of a particular district, we do not see why they should be stopped on the Wellington line. Let equal justice be dealt out to all. — Ed. E.P.J
A Kentucky editor says a neighbor of his is so lazy that when he works in the garden he moves about so alowly that the Bhade of his broad-brimmed hat kuls the plants.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume XIX, Issue 110, 13 May 1880, Page 2
Word Count
190SUNDAY TEAINS. Evening Post, Volume XIX, Issue 110, 13 May 1880, Page 2
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