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INDUSTRIAL TROUBLES

LONDON, April SO. Mr E. Shortt, K.C. (Home Secretary), speaking at a Royal Academy banquet replying to the toast of Ministers referred to industrial troubles in Britain. He said that never since the end of the eighteenth century in France had there been so muchactivity /aiming at revolution as to-day. The Government knew the people who were working for a revolfc tion and what they were doing. The British secret service N was never more efficient or' more necessary than to-day. Revolutionary elements throughout the world know that the British Empire was the one great obstacle to their aims.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HNS19220501.2.50.2

Bibliographic details

Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLII, Issue XLII, 1 May 1922, Page 6

Word Count
101

INDUSTRIAL TROUBLES Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLII, Issue XLII, 1 May 1922, Page 6

INDUSTRIAL TROUBLES Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLII, Issue XLII, 1 May 1922, Page 6

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