ISHBEL AT WORK
EXPERIENCE AT INN. Miss Ishbel MacDonald, daughter of Mr Ramsay MacDonald, and licensee of the Plough Inn, Speen, Bucks, discussed some of the problems of barkeeping with youlng men who, under a scheme devised by the Restaurant Houses’ Association, have been brought from the Special Areas to be trained and placed as barmen in London (states a London 'exchange). The occasion was the annual reunion of the Association at the Windsor Castle Hotel, Victoria, S.W. Miss MacDonald, as president of the training branch, presided. “Very hard, very interesting, very enjoyable,” was her description of work in a public, house. “Now that I have been -working in an inn,” she said, “I realise tvhat a responsibility your work is. You are in touch with all kinds of people, and you can ‘set the tone’ of all th'e houses in which you are -working. “There are some public houses which are an insult to the working men who frequent them. You can make them all fit for any person to go into —they should be places in which people can spend their time in happy companionship.” Mr W. S. Douglas, representing the Ministry of Labour, which collaborates with the Association in its work, said that since 1932, when the scheme was started, 600 boys had been helped to positions. Last year 200 boys had been placed in satisfactory and permanent employment. It was announced during the meeting that the scheme was to be 'extended to Scotland this year. A secondary course of training, -which would fit men to become public-house managers, was also to be organised. Mrs Neville Chamberlain, who attended as a guest, said that she had been touched by the surprise of a working man who had called on her and found that she really knew something about the plight of the Special Areas.
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Greymouth Evening Star, 16 March 1937, Page 12
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307ISHBEL AT WORK Greymouth Evening Star, 16 March 1937, Page 12
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