DOLES NOT ALWAYS A BLESSING
ENGLAND’S UNEMPLOYED Mr. C. L. Dearsley, who passed through Wellington .yesterday on ms wav to Christchurch, after spending ten months’ abroad, told a representative of The Dominion that the unemployment “doles” in England were, in numerous instances, a greater curse than a blessing. One particular case ho remembered of a man wlio refused emnlovment because he was doing better out of his “dole” and numerous other little charitable considerations extended to a- nian “out of work. There were a pood number of such persons who under the circumstances, did not want work. Mr. Dearsley mentioned the effect that this sort of thing would have on tho voung folk, especially the children of such men. For the German. it had to be paid that he did iook for work, and did his West to keep his employment.
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Dominion, Volume 18, Issue 57, 1 December 1923, Page 6
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141DOLES NOT ALWAYS A BLESSING Dominion, Volume 18, Issue 57, 1 December 1923, Page 6
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