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MOTOR MOBILITY VERSUS RAILWAY POINT-TO-POINT TRAVEL

... walls but when it cuts both ways, that is when it gets one below the belt. Motors During The only thin& which struck me the Tube strike as both psychological and en couraging about the whole thing was the free advertisement it gave just at this moment (when ...

Published: Wednesday 19 February 1919
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 899 | Page: 28 | Tags: Photographs 

MOTOR SPARKS: WEEK BY WEEK

... this is all the more important if the fresh tube has roadside and not properly- vulcanised patches. Before inserting the tube strike the cover on the top and each side somewhat violently with the lever. This will cause all the dust, grit, and friable matter ...

Published: Wednesday 05 July 1905
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 936 | Page: 34 | Tags: Photographs 

ROUND THE THEATRES NO RACING AT LINGFIELD SNOW CAUSES A RETURN TO TOWN

... intimate was required, with more of the suggestion of an impromptu theatre about it; and as it happened, the outbreak of the Tube strike thinned the audience and left the company playing to numbers which were quite substantial hut sadly scattered. Consequently ...

ROUND THE THEATRES

... intimate was required, with more of the suggestion of an impromptu theatre about it and as it happened, the outbreak of the Tube strike thinned the audience and left the company playing to numbers which were quite substantial but sadly scattered. Consequently ...

THE END OF A GREAT YEAR

... houses, furniture and other accessories which had been knocked flat during the war. To add to the joys of life, there was a Tube strike in London. The Germans continued to advance in Belgium, though their salient in Luxembourg was growing slimmer. By Boxing ...

Published: Saturday 22 December 1945
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1766 | Page: 26 | Tags: Photographs 

The Letters of Eve

... sat the day out on their luggage on the plat form waiting and hoping for a train to take them. And a 'bus strike, and a tube strike. And, in Dublin, a grave- diggers' strike, so that people had an awful bother to get buried, until they settled things in ...

Published: Wednesday 13 August 1919
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 3035 | Page: 4 | Tags: Photographs