"AS OTHERS SEE US."
Glad indeed to see you have made a clean, strong, dignified start. E. A. Rout, Ex-Editor, "Maoriland Worker." Congratulations on improvements in appearance, etc., of "The Maoeilanb Worker." John Dowgray. Am delighted with March issue of "The Maoriland Worker." It looks something like a paper and that it means business. Sydney. Manda Lloyd. I think the March "Maoriland Worker." just splendid. If the standard set by this issue is sustained it will be a great power in uniting the forces of Labour throughout the Dominion. I congratulate the miners and shearers on the wisdom manifested in amalgamating their respective organisations. It should not .be long before the best of the other unions will see that the best place for them is in the ranks of the New Zealand Federation of Labour. H. E. Baucke. "The Maoriland Worker" received. Improvements first class. The paper ought to "go" now and be a good hustler for Industrial Unionism among the Workers of New Zealand. "World of Work" notes first class being both humorous and instructive. Sketch of Editor good, and hope to see similar sketches of men in the movement. It's up to union secretaries to send more reports along and push "The Maoriland Worker" among their members. J. Sweeney, Shearers' Union. Seddon. is it not something of a miracle that all these toiling, moiling thousands siiould not have unified their strength until—to-day V And it is equally wonderful that they are able to produce sucii a paper as "The Maoriland Worker." Here it is all Avarni and human, straight from the hearts of the Workers of New Zealand, equal in thought and power of expression to the papers of the leisured class all set and directed Avith skill. To "The Maoriland Worker/ comrades! Long may it Wave ! James Gray. Wellington. "The Maoriland Worker."—This organ of the coming social and industrial revolution appeared in March in. neAv guise. It is iioav an attractively got up, Avell-printed monthly of sixteen pages, modelled on the lines of "The Bulletin," and just about as outspoken on most things. . . . That it is going to be a very "live" exponent of the doctrine of "One Union for the World's Workers" there can be no doubt, and we Avelcome this new force in the reform movement, even though it may be the "Review's" duty to put on the brake a little, on the principle that it is possible to have too much of of a good thing. . . The "Worked" will do a great deal more good than ill. —"N.Z. Railway Review."
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MW19110420.2.68.10
Bibliographic details
Maoriland Worker, Volume I, Issue 8, 20 April 1911, Page 17
Word Count
426"AS OTHERS SEE US." Maoriland Worker, Volume I, Issue 8, 20 April 1911, Page 17
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