THE PROBLEM OF THE WORKER
“ The problem of the worker is not solved alone‘by the limitation of hours which lie has demanded and secured. Greater leisure, it is true, may give him opportunities for the fuller selfrealisation denied him by the nature of jhis occupation. That is one of his needs. But in the industry itself in which lit* is engaged he still needs the sense of“u purpose and the’ 1 pride of a purpose’ in his daily work, for, whatever incompatibilities there may be between the worker and his task, a man’s work should not be divorced from his life, nor need it be. All the- difference may be made to him by the consciousness that lie is one of many workers united in one body by bonds of fellowship strengthened in the common interests of leisure.”—“lnternational London Journal.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 24 August 1926, Page 1
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140THE PROBLEM OF THE WORKER Hokitika Guardian, 24 August 1926, Page 1
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