THE E.P.S. TRIAL
Sir, —May I, through the medium of your columns, point out what seemed to me a blunder of the first magnitude which occurred during the E.P.S. trial on Tuesday last ? As I disembarked from the five o’clock train from Frankton I was confronted by an official of the E.P.S. who told me that I must either take cover or proceed from the vicinity of the railway station via Frontier Road. To make my way from the railway station by Frontier Road would entail a walk through the station yards, which would be a certain target for hostile raiders in a real emergency. Therefore it would seem that the wisest step to take would be to remove oneself from the station area as quickly as possible—that is, by the shortest route, Alexandra Street—and take cover in a less dangerous area. Hoping that my suggestion will receive some consideration,—l am, etc., CACTUS.
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Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 64, Issue 4536, 13 February 1942, Page 5
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153THE E.P.S. TRIAL Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 64, Issue 4536, 13 February 1942, Page 5
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