THE BRITISH WORKMAN
DOLE SAPS CHARACTER.
LORD LEVERHULME'S VIEW.
Press Association—By Telegraph-Copyright
LONDON, April 18. Lord Leverhulmo in a caustic speed at the Hotel Cecil regarding the industrial future of the British Empire, said it grated on his nerves to see so many people anxious to go through life without hardships. The people who loaned on the Government had little else to lean on. The more doles they received the more they became enchained, and enchainment to the Government or to Cupxtslisni nxG&nt slavery. Lord Leverhulmo said that he was told that it was quite a common prao. lice for members of the staffs of Government offices to smoke during office hours. If so the sooner they cleared out the hotter. The enemy of the British workman to-day was not a brutal, callous employer, but a benevolent fctate.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 18254, 19 April 1923, Page 9
Word Count
138THE BRITISH WORKMAN Evening Star, Issue 18254, 19 April 1923, Page 9
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