“WALSH NO WORRY.”
HAVELOCK WILSON’S VIEW
REDS FALL OUT.
LONDON, Oct. 27. “The present English Red leaders have proved ’a washout.’ They are falling out with each other,” said Mr Havelock Wilson to-day. “The firemen and seamen are not alarmed at the prospect of Australian Red leaders coming to England. Personally, 1 am not losing sleep at the prospect of Walsh coming, bix thousan dseamen have joined our union in the .past three months, whereas Shinwell’s organisations has difficulty in getting members. It is issuing free cards, telling members that they may subscribe sixpence or mnepencc. Australian unionists should realise that this directly encourages scrubbing. A man paying sixpence to join a union will make a splendid ‘in-and-outer easy to get in and much easier to get out.”
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Standard, Volume XLV, Issue 289, 10 November 1925, Page 3
Word Count
128“WALSH NO WORRY.” Manawatu Standard, Volume XLV, Issue 289, 10 November 1925, Page 3
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