UNSOUND DOCTRINES.
TO THE EDITOR OF "THE PRESS." Sir, —Surely tho large audience on Saturday n.ght in Victoria square does not understand the aim, object, aud policy of the Federation of Labour, for if they did they should not have given any credence to the various speakers on that occasion. I have heard an orator in Cathedral square, belonging to this line, say to workers: "Your policy should be to do as little as ever you can for the most money, and give the other, fellow a chance, because the employer's aim is to get all the work he can out of you for the least money." Such agitators are the worst enemies of the bonafido working man. When the Labour Conference was held in Wellington, the most level-headed, discovering the nonsense of the ','Red Feds.," left them to their own sweot will, and now the result is manifest,' but the experience may bear fruit. — Yours, eto., OBSFRVER.
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Press, Volume XLIX, Issue 14838, 2 December 1913, Page 8
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158UNSOUND DOCTRINES. Press, Volume XLIX, Issue 14838, 2 December 1913, Page 8
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