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Daily Mirror

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London, London, England

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Daily Mirror

No Slavery!

... No Slavery! I believe that children have a very definiteduty to provide for their fathers and mothers if they are old, or sick, or in need and unable to support themselves. But it is monstrous that parents should enslave their children; that they should ...

Published: Saturday 26 September 1936
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 180 | Page: 16 | Tags: none

IT'S SLAVERY!

... IT'S SLAVERY! An artist's life is not what people think: it is all hard work, said Dame Laura Knight, in a radio appeal last night for the Artists' General Benevolent Institution. You have to work like a black to get anywhere, she added. One year ...

Published: Monday 31 May 1937
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 63 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

Wage Slavery

... Wage Slavery 'YORK is all right if it's the sort you like. Most people's work is done under wage slavery and I fail to see why it should be healthy or tend to longevity. M. V. K. ...

Published: Thursday 08 July 1937
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 37 | Page: 13 | Tags: none

SLAVERY HUMBUG

... SLAVERY HUMBUG IF F. Martines Hulk be sincere in his suggestion that Abyssinia should never have been permitted to become a member of the League of Nations be'cause of the slave trade in Abyssinia, he should also contend that Italy is not qualified for ...

Published: Thursday 18 July 1935
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 64 | Page: 11 | Tags: none

RED SLAVERY

... RED SLAVERY THE truth about Russia is that it is to-day a eountry where slavery, torture and tyrannyexistin a worse state than ever before. Free 'thought and speechare impossible, and civilisation cannot countenance such conditions. Were I in Moscow I ...

Published: Monday 13 April 1931
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 50 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

MERE SLAVERY

... MERE SLAVERY SO Miss Bette Davis thinks that she is unfortunate in only earning £6OO per week. I wonder if Miss Davis would like to change places with us—working in a factory for ten hours a day and only getting 30s. per week; being grumbled and sworn ...

Published: Thursday 22 October 1936
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 92 | Page: 13 | Tags: none

EVACUATION NO SLAVERY

... EVACUATION NO SLAVERY CHILDREN were not evacuated to provide cheap labour for people who billeted them. this statement in the House of Commons last night in describing the attitude of people when asked to provide billeting accommodation. Those children ...

Published: Friday 15 September 1939
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 464 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

SLAVERY INQUIRY

... SLAVERY INQUIRY A mission of investigation into the question of slavery in Abyssinia is being carried out by Major Bentinck, who is attached to the British Legation in Abyssinia, Reuter is informed. The object of this mission—whose report is expected ...

Published: Thursday 16 February 1933
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 83 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

SLAVERY IN SOW

... SLAVERY IN SOW Fifteen Hours a Day in Frozen Forests—Thousands Die Appalling. details of slave labour conditions in the prison camps of Soviet Russia are revealed in sworn statements which Commander Carlyon Bellairs, M.P., has sent to the Premier. Nine ...

Published: Monday 09 February 1931
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 87 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

BACK TO SLAVERY ?

... BACK TO SLAVERY ? THE workers in this country are at last T beginning to realise that their enemy is not the capitalist. The gravest menace that has ever confronted free labour is Bolshevism, which is the logical outcome of Socialism. The extremists, ...

Published: Monday 03 August 1931
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 170 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

TOO MUCH SLAVERY

... TOO MUCH SLAVERY ATRS. Bentall asks why unemployed women cannot take domestic work. For the simple reason that they resent being at the beck and call of masters and mistresses from early morning till late at night. Women prefer to wait until they can ...

Published: Tuesday 28 November 1933
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 71 | Page: 13 | Tags: none

EIGHT-HOUR SLAVERY

... EIGHT-HOUR SLAVERY SOME time in the t uture, perhaps only a few years ahead, men will regard the present time as a slave age. They will look back in amazement at us spending the best part of every day shut away under roofs, tending the wheels of commerce ...

Published: Monday 13 August 1934
Newspaper: Daily Mirror
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 452 | Page: 10 | Tags: none