A PUBLIC NUISANCE.
(To the Editor.) Sir, —Kindly allow me, through the columns of your paper, to draw attention to an aggravating annoyance which the residents of both x King and Queen Streets have suffered for the last four or five weeks. This in the shape of a number of yelping and barking cattle dogs, which are chained up in an old shed not a hundred yards from the police station. The almost incessant clamour to be released—or perhaps, fed- is not only disturbing the people's rest at night, but is also nerve-racking during the day. How the inmates of a nearby . nursing home feel with this constant noise can easily be imagined. Surely something can be done to abate this public nuisance, which is becoming unbearable. Otherwise, I think one would be quite justified in releasing the animals. lam quite sure the above sentiments will be endorsed by the majority of the residents in this neighbourhood.—l am, etc., SUFFERER. King Street.
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Bibliographic details
King Country Chronicle, Volume XX, Issue 2066, 13 January 1925, Page 5
Word Count
162A PUBLIC NUISANCE. King Country Chronicle, Volume XX, Issue 2066, 13 January 1925, Page 5
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