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£5 FOR EACH PULL

STOPPING RAILWAY TRAIN'S LONDON. November 27. Every year on the British rail wav.s about 200 people stop trains by pulling the communication cord. In the majority of cases the cord is pulled as a result of genuine distress, such as sudden illness or accident. In the other cases the commonest offenders are people who have boarded the wrong train or those who have been carried past the station at which they think the train should stop. An L.M.S. official recalled the case of an elderly woman who was leaning out of a compartment window calling good-bye to her friends on the platform. As the train moved off she leaned out further and further, calling "Good-bye!’’ She was shouting her loudest and last good-bye when her false teeth dropped out. and she immediately pulled the communication cord in order to retrieve them. Instances have occurred where foreign passengers pulled the cord thinking they were ringing for the attendant. It was not generally known what happened when the communication cord 'or chain) was pulled, added the official. As soon as the cord was pulled it opened a valve causing a partial application of the brakes. This slowing up of a train was shown upon a gauge in the driver’s cab, thus warning him to bring the train to a standstill. Once the cord had been pulled a red disc told the guard what had happened, and the cord itself, which hung slack, showed the compartment

Bride Choking One of the most unusual of the genuine cases was then recalled by an official of the G.W.R., in which a bride and bridegroom were setting off on their honeymoon. The train had gone only a short distance when the bridegroom pulled the communication cord "because the bride was choking with confetti.” It appeared that such quantities of confetti had been showered upon the couple by their friends at the station that it was actually choking the bride. Other cases include a Welshman who pulled the cord three times to protest against the lighting of the compartment; a man who stopped a train is a protest against a young man who insisted on smoking in a non-smoking compartment; a man who pulled the cord for a £lO bet; he won his bet, paid the £5 fine, and cleared 25 profit; and a woman travelling in the Peak district who thought the train was going too fast.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THD19380104.2.132

Bibliographic details

Timaru Herald, Volume CXLIII, Issue 20926, 4 January 1938, Page 14

Word Count
405

£5 FOR EACH PULL Timaru Herald, Volume CXLIII, Issue 20926, 4 January 1938, Page 14

£5 FOR EACH PULL Timaru Herald, Volume CXLIII, Issue 20926, 4 January 1938, Page 14