INDUSTRIAL MATTERS.
CLYDE WORKERS' DEMANDS,
(By Cable.—Press Association.—Copyright.) (Australian and N.a. Cable Association.) LOtNIDON, January 17. The Clyde workers are demanding a 30-hour week and a minimum wage of £1 daily. STRIKE FOR WAR BONUS. (Renter's Telegrams.) (Received January 216t, 11.20 p.m.) BOMBAY, January 19. Serious disturbances have occurred. Ono hundred thousand coalminers have struck, demanding a war bonus. EMPLOYMENT AT DOCKYARDS. (Australian and Gable Association.) (Received January 21st, 8.45 p.m.) LONDON, January 18. Mr R. S. Home, Minister of Labour, assured the Portsmouth Employment Committee that if the establishment of a League of Nations meant a curtailment of the Estimates, there would still be no slackening of work at the Portsmouth dockyards for eighteen ! months. All repairs to and construction of warships would be done in naval dockyards instead of private shipyards.
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Press, Volume LV, Issue 16427, 22 January 1919, Page 8
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133INDUSTRIAL MATTERS. Press, Volume LV, Issue 16427, 22 January 1919, Page 8
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