#209117
Guinness himself acquainted him that ‘he was not getting his employees’ hats in Dublin, but from abroad.’
Guinness himself acquainted him that ‘he was not getting his employees’ hats in Dublin, but from abroad.’
At that time a vaccine for smallpox had been readily available for at least 40 years, but the trading companies didn’t require their employees to be vaccinated.
Scríobh rúnaí an Chonartha i Londain litir chuig gach comhlacht a raibh gnó á dhéanamh acu leo “that in future they will only deal with such firms as pay trade union rates of wages to their employees” (Ó Súilleabháin 1989, 117).
Under a Sinn Féin government, we could look forward to a Civil Service in which 20 per cent of workers are proficient in Irish, and to Irish-language classes for the employees of all local authorities.
Tá sé ar cheann de na fuadaigh atá luaite in alt le James Kelly, ‘The Abduction of Women of Fortune in 18th Century Ireland’, san iris Eighteenth Century Ireland 1994 (lgh 7 - 43), áit a deir an t-údar gurbh é a bhí mar thoradh ar an bhfuadach áirithe seo ná ‘to hasten the end of the permissive attitude among gentry to the abduction of women of fortune’; ní hé gur chuir a leithéid isteach ar an gcinseal ná ar na bochtáin: tharla an cineál eachtra seo i measc na n-aicmí idir eatarthu, go hiondúil ar an gcomhéadan idir ‘lowly gentry agus strong farmers, idir strong farmers agus snug farmers, agus idir businessmen agus their employees’.
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