CONDITIONS IN INGLEWOOD.
(To tte Editor.) Sir,—We hear a lot about humbugs now-a-days, but I think Inglewood takes a lot of beating. The streets are like hay-paddocks, with grass and weeds in full growth, yet a person is not allowed to hold a horse on the tether rope even in remote back streets where no traffic occurs; and anyone driving a cow along to the paddock is in danger of being molested by an officious ranger, unless he hustles the cow along and does not allow fcer to bite more than one mouthful of grass. Yet this precious council permits an odorous fowl-yard and ditch right against a main street without a shudder,—l ami, etc., COMMON SENSE. Inglewood, Nov. 26, 1921.
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Taranaki Daily News, 29 November 1921, Page 2
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121CONDITIONS IN INGLEWOOD. Taranaki Daily News, 29 November 1921, Page 2
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