Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

BRITISH AND AMERICAN WORKERS

A COMPARISON. FAVORS THE AMERICAN. Press Assn—By telegraph—Copyright. (Recived March 14, 5.5 a.m.) NEW YORK, March 14. The Herald's London correspondent has interviewed Mr Henry Studnisza, the American Government's special agent, who is investigating British labor. The American worker is represented as being 100 per cent, better off in his conditions than the English worker. Mr Studnisza states that the homes and the children are pitiable, and the family must dress in rags and economise to the veriest limit to enable the wage earner to keep fit for toil. The unemployed jammed the Labor Exchanges, but the matter ended there, as work was not to be had.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BA19100315.2.22

Bibliographic details

Bush Advocate, Volume XXII, Issue 62, 15 March 1910, Page 5

Word Count
111

BRITISH AND AMERICAN WORKERS Bush Advocate, Volume XXII, Issue 62, 15 March 1910, Page 5

BRITISH AND AMERICAN WORKERS Bush Advocate, Volume XXII, Issue 62, 15 March 1910, Page 5