WORK AND THE NURSERY
rested in an article cony nurs eries which was woot 'T'u in your newspaper last f There are always appeals for workers for essential indusmif « a n d —well, I'm just breaking neck to work but there's my little two-year-old son to be cared — e so many other girls I 1 mj jrried when my husband was reaay to go overseas and am still living with my parents, so I have plenty of spare time on my hands. I would have begun work some months a f.°' ®ut my parents refused to look after the child—they said thev could not manage it. What a good thing it would be if factories, etc., provided nurseries for their employees' children A weekly fee I for one would gladly pay, and the money I earned would be kept for the home we'll nee d after the war. Such a scheme a ? this nursery business would provide a loophole for those who, like myself, are WILLING BUT UNABLE.
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Auckland Star, Volume LXXIII, Issue 174, 25 July 1942, Page 4
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168WORK AND THE NURSERY Auckland Star, Volume LXXIII, Issue 174, 25 July 1942, Page 4
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