HOURS OF WORK.
STAND BY BRITISH RAILWAYMEN BY CABLE—PRESS ASSOCIATION—COPYRIGHT Received July 10, 12.5 p.m. fi LONDON, July 9. A conference of the National Union of Railwaymen, at York, passed a resolution demanding the exclusion of railwaymen from the Forty-eight Hour Week Bill, under the Washington Convention. Mr. Cramp said that if the Government persisted in passing the Bill unamended the railwaymen would close down the railways on Sundays, not merely in regard to traffic, but for repairs,—Reuter,
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Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 10 July 1924, Page 7
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78HOURS OF WORK. Hawera Star, Volume XLVIII, 10 July 1924, Page 7
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