INSPECTOR OF NUISANCES.
[to the editob inangahpa times.] Si^—> With that disposition for doing things by halves, which is very often lisplayed by the Council, I notice that we have at length got a Public Pound. Before this we had an Inspector of Nuisances but no Pound, and now we have got a Pound, and no Inspector of Nuisances. Notwithstanding the Pound, straying ammals are just as numerous in the town as ever they were, and people seem to be under the belief that so long as they do not allow their live stock to go out of eyesight, they can allow them • o roam about the streets wi'h the most perfect freedom. The Pound can never be of any real service until an Inspector of Nuisances is appointed, and hoping that the Council will see fit to make i-ueh an appointment as soon as possible. —I am, &c, Eatepayeb. Reefton, sth May, 1880.
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Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 7 May 1880, Page 2
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154INSPECTOR OF NUISANCES. Inangahua Times, Volume II, Issue II, 7 May 1880, Page 2
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