Sir, —Recently I had occasion to visit the Borough Council Chambers — my first visit there for some five or six years. With the passing of time, as everybody knows, dust accumulates, and I am prepared to wager that the Council Chambers have not had a proper spring-cleaning since I was in them last. They reek with mustiness, and it is only with difficulty that such features as pictures, charts, and ornaments can be distinguished beneath a thick coating of dust. We are now about to enter the season traditionally regarded as the time for., household cleaning, and may I suggest that our councillors either get to work themselves or put others to work cleaning the municipal chambers ? Otherwise I can see confusion arising, among visitors to our tovm am}, the respective whereabouts o/ the bpyoqgh chambers and the borough dump.—l am, etc-, CLEVER MARY.
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Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 65, Issue 5525, 16 September 1942, Page 5
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144Untitled Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 65, Issue 5525, 16 September 1942, Page 5
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