The Times. Published on Tuesday and Friday Afternoons.
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1921. STRAYING ANIMALS.
“We nothing extenuate, nor aught set down in malice.”
Pukekohe suffers from a scourge of the straying animal nuisance, which is particularly rabid at present. Complaints pour into this office from various quarters as to the growing prevalence of this annoying factor in our lives. Only this morning a resident of Seddon Street complained bitterly of the waste of ratepayers’ money which is permitted to go on through horses and cattle damaging the footpaths. The time has arrived to call a halt in this sort of thing if Pukekohe is to main tain its dignity as a Borough. Other towns sternly suppress the straying animal pest, and rightly so. Is Puke kohe to be known as lax in these matters. The question must l>e faced in a practical manner by our City Fathers. aniKthe footpaths and private gardens < f citizens protected from this most exasperating of all pet ty annoyances.
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Bibliographic details
Franklin Times, Volume 9, Issue 641, 14 June 1921, Page 6
Word Count
164The Times. Published on Tuesday and Friday Afternoons. TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1921. STRAYING ANIMALS. Franklin Times, Volume 9, Issue 641, 14 June 1921, Page 6
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