If you switch the tubes side-to-side, that voltage will follow the tube itself. It's not really anything to be remedied, just part of electronics in general. If the voltage didn't follow the tube, then that would be something to look into.
Another indicator would be pin 6 on each tube, which is the cathode of the driver stage. Since we have a constant current load, those voltages should be very close to identical.
The actual voltage variation can take on several forms. If you had one tube that was 75V, and one tube that was 110V, we might speculate that the 110V tube was worn or needed some time to cook and emit properly. The high plate voltage indicates low emission, which is not a good thing.
The 75V value might be what we see on the tube curves themselves, which are drawn from a "bogey" tube. There is some production variation in tube manufacturing, and it's not that unusual to see some variation from that bogey set of curves. Your tube that's providing a lower plate voltage is just emitting a bit more than usual on the small triode.
-PB