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GIRLS AND WORK.

GREAT PROBLEM IN LONDON. SERVANTS’ JOBS DESPISED. The difficulty of securing domestic ser? vants in England, although 300,000 women are on the unemployment register, was dealt with in the Daily Telegraph recently from the point of view of the employment agencies and the London County Council training schools. Stopping two girls leaving a North .London labour exchange,. where they had been seeking work, the investigator asked it they. would like to become domestic servants. , “Huh! ” responded the elder of the c°A f, . ?. her nose: “ I’ve never thought of it, indicating that the subject was far beneath her attention. “I • wouldn't be a servant, not me,” quoth the other ■ girl. “ You can’t call your soul your own. I've a sister who was a servant, but she soon got sick of it, working all day and half the night for £65 a year; and had to think herself lucky 1: ‘ , B “® K°t two nights off a week. I can get 25s a week in a factory, and I know when I've finished." . "Maybe, but you are out of work now,” she was reminded. “Well, I get the dole,” was the quick response, and if I was a servant I couldn’t.” ‘‘ But if you were a servant you need not be out of work.” “No, but supposing I took on a job a , s a , servant, and didn’t like it, where should I be then? ‘ Oh, no,’ they would say at the exchange, ‘ there is no dole for servants! * Not me." The writer says: "This fatter point of view is one that probably occurs to many girls who have become accustomed to the spoon-fed age, when workers need not worry over-much if they lose their jobs or H re ., them, for they hare the resources of the State behind them.” Another explanation of the shortage came from an official of a big catering firm. . ,We have a large number of applications from girls who have been in service for positions as waitresses. They want definite hours of work, and perhaps they hke the waitresses’ neat uniforms. We give them a training, during which they receive some pay,’ and then we try to place them in restaurants , near their homes. / "Some of these girls say they object to having their time-off subjected to the whim, of the mistress, who will change their evenings off to suit her own convenience. They want to be free.” , Moreover, the type of' girl who does become a servant has changed greatly since the war. She demands higher wages, more _ off-duty time, and lighter' duties, and is far more independent, because places are so easy to get, with or without references. . 1 ** I kuo\V of a girl who smokes cigarettes all day long, expects to have the morning paper first, and a wireless for her evening relaxation when she remains in,” said one informant. “ But she is a capable servant, and her mistrest is prepared to accept her independent spirit to retain her . services.” - ’ There still remain certain; sources of supply of useful girls for domestic service, but that supply is far short of the present-day demands. For instance, the Metropolitan Association for the Care of Young Servants last year placed 1941 .girls in such situations, but that was 582 fewer than the number so placed in 1928. The Church Army Queen Mary’s Hostel at ■ Victoria finds situations ? in service for many girls and women.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19301129.2.161

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 21196, 29 November 1930, Page 27

Word Count
569

GIRLS AND WORK. Otago Daily Times, Issue 21196, 29 November 1930, Page 27

GIRLS AND WORK. Otago Daily Times, Issue 21196, 29 November 1930, Page 27