BOTANICAL GARDENS TRAM SHELTER
(To the Editor.) Sir,—lt is the purpose of this letter to make a long-delayed protest against the inexplicable action of those who are responsible for closing to the public at an early hour the tram shelter at the entrance to the Botanical Gardens. On a recent evening I had the unpleasant experience of waiting for approximately fifteen minutes, in most unpleasant weather conditions, for a Karori-bound car, for which there also waited no less than ten other persons. Some of these took shelter in a telephone box, while the remainder were obliged more or less to brave the elements until the arrival of the car. It is not the first time that such an unwarranted state of affairs has existed, and some explanation is indeed due to those citizens who have, on many occasions, been so inconvenienced.—l am, etc, CARPE DIEM. May 8.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXIX, Issue 109, 10 May 1935, Page 6
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147BOTANICAL GARDENS TRAM SHELTER Evening Post, Volume CXIX, Issue 109, 10 May 1935, Page 6
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