WORKERS ON SHIPS.
QUESTION OF THEIR RIGHTS. By Telegraph.—Press Assn.—Copyright. Received July 18, 5.5 p.m. London, July 17. At the trial trip of the Aberdeen liner Diogenes, Mr. Havelock Wilson recalled his sailoring experiences on the Australian coast when a young man. He regarded the prolonged periods of continuous service of the employees of the Aberdeen Line as evidence of amicable relations. He deprecated the extremists’ proposals to destroy the capitalist system.- He would prefer to see every worker become a capitalist. He ridiculed the suggested participation by employees in the management of Ships, and said he would gladly allow the owners to have full responsibilities in the anxieties of management. All he asked was that the employees should have a fair share in profits.—Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.
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Taranaki Daily News, 19 July 1922, Page 4
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127WORKERS ON SHIPS. Taranaki Daily News, 19 July 1922, Page 4
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