EMIGRATION OF WOMEN.
NESD FOR ENCOURAGEMENT. j CARE OF YOUNG MIGRANTS. 1 (Received 10.30 a.tuA LONDON. October 10. I Colonel L. C. M. S. Amery, chairman j of the Overseas Committee, speaking at a conference on moral ideals, said one unfortunate consequence of undirected emigration was the excess of men going out over women. The excels o!" tho male population and the shortage of domestic help constituted one of the grave social problems in all parts of the Empire. It was important to encourage the emigration of women, which required more thought and care than the migration of men. Much might be done to encourage migration of the young , Ivy partius of Boy Scouts going out to learn farming under the care of a scoutJ master whom the parents could trust, acting as an intermediary between the ! employers and the boys' families.—(A. j and X.Z. Cable.)
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Auckland Star, Volume LIII, Issue 249, 20 October 1922, Page 5
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146EMIGRATION OF WOMEN. Auckland Star, Volume LIII, Issue 249, 20 October 1922, Page 5
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