Arkham Cab Co.
433 N Peabody Avenue
Depending on demand, up to four cabs are on the streets from 6 A.M. until 10 P.M., seven days a week. The company has asked to provide 24-hour service, but the selectmen hesitate, believing this might promote crime and loose behavior.
Two cab stands exist, one in front of the cab company and one by the newsstand at Garrison and Main. At the latter, a direct phone line links the stand with the cab office. Other phone lines exist at St. Mary's Hospital and Hotel Miskatonic.
Cab orders can be taken by phone in the grungy second floor office, and cabs sent directly from the stand outside. No cab has a radio; two-way radios are too large, expensive, and delicate until the era of the transistor.
Trips around town are flat-rate: 25 cents in-town as long as no bridge is crossed, 25 cents each time a bridge is crossed, 25 cents for each mile out of town, and 50 cents an hour to wait. A cab and driver can be hired for eight hours at a cost of $4 and the promise of a trip of more than a dollar. (Herber, Keith, et al. “H.P Lovecraft's Arkham.” Chaosium , Jan. 2003)
Two cab stands exist, one in front of the cab company and one by the newsstand at Garrison and Main. At the latter, a direct phone line links the stand with the cab office. Other phone lines exist at St. Mary's Hospital and Hotel Miskatonic.
Cab orders can be taken by phone in the grungy second floor office, and cabs sent directly from the stand outside. No cab has a radio; two-way radios are too large, expensive, and delicate until the era of the transistor.
Trips around town are flat-rate: 25 cents in-town as long as no bridge is crossed, 25 cents each time a bridge is crossed, 25 cents for each mile out of town, and 50 cents an hour to wait. A cab and driver can be hired for eight hours at a cost of $4 and the promise of a trip of more than a dollar. (Herber, Keith, et al. “H.P Lovecraft's Arkham.” Chaosium , Jan. 2003)
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