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Man's Duty To Man - A Study Of Social Conditions, Their Causes, And How They May Be Improved (1919) (Paperback)
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Man's Duty To Man - A Study Of Social Conditions, Their Causes, And How They May Be Improved (1919) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
CHAPTER II THE WAGE-EARNER It is not within either the scope or the
purpose of this work to enter upon any discussion of the vexatious
and seemingly unending conflict between Capital and Labor, except
as it affects the social status of the laboring people. The working
class is by a sort of common consent set apart as a class to
themselves, but they occupy among themselves very different
stations in life, and the problem here under discussion affects
them quite differently. There is a wide difference between the
highly-educated and well-paid skilled workman and the ignorant and
unskilled laborer, who is in many instances a foreigner not even
speaking our language. The former occupies a high and enviable
position in business and in society, while the latter may be found
in the slums and unsanitary buildings that make for disease and
immorality and crime. These two classes of working people, while
belonging to one designated class, have practically nothing in
common. The high- class workman, well-to-do and independent, finds
no place in this work; but the ignorant and poorly-paid laborer
falls within the evils and temptations that all good people should
be striving to mitigate, at least, if not destroy. Most of the
lower class of laborers find their habitat in the densely populated
portions of the large cities where want and immorality and crime
have full sway. They may, although poorly paid, keep themselves
from want; but they are often steeped in immorality and crime. To
such as these environment and association mean much. They breathe
the pestilential air of the slums and of the overcrowded shacks and
tenement houses that abound in such places. They are not dependent
on charity, because they work by day, or maybe by night, and are
able to make their way, such as it is....
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