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A GOOD MORNING TRAIN

(To the Editor.)

I Sir, —On taking my seat in a secondclass carriage of the 5.16 p.m. Upper Hutt i train this evening, I was amazed with ! pleasure at tho improved comfort provided, the splem'id lighting, the neat and serviceable upholstery, the roominess, aud the cheerfulness.of everybody. On looking up, I spied over the doorway the carriage i number, 1668. That mystic number, 1668, the birthplace and home of the "Good Morning" Club. Had the Railway Department at last awakened to a commun- [ ity effort to dispel the gloom-mongers, who said we must always travel iv those' bad old germ hives on this suburban, line? Who says the Railway Department's policy Jis infliction? Carriage IG6B shows they have some .inflexion. I hope the Railway Department will keep on with the good work, and give us a train of 1668 carriages for mornhig, noon, and night.—l am, etc.,

SMITHY OP SILVERSTREAM.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19300523.2.63.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 120, 23 May 1930, Page 8

Word Count
154

A GOOD MORNING TRAIN Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 120, 23 May 1930, Page 8

A GOOD MORNING TRAIN Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 120, 23 May 1930, Page 8