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Suffragettes' sentences, 1910
Sixteen suffragettes have been sentenced to one or two months of imprisonment for their involvement in breaking the windows of government buildings
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Conviction of two suffragettes, 1909
Two suffragettes sentenced to three and four months of imprisonment for pouring ink and toxic chemicals into a ballot box in London
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Releasing suffragettes, 1910
Churchill ordered the release of one hundred and seventy suffragettes who had been arrested
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Encounter between suffragettes and police in London, 1910
Mr. Asquith's promise of supporting the suffragettes' initiative; suffragettes attacking Mr. Asquith's automobile and breaking the windows, an encounter with the police and the arrest of about one hundred women; suffragettes attacking the premises of Churchill and Kerry and breaking the windows, and the arrest of one hundred and fifty-eight women; Churchill's comments about the arrest of the women
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Suffragette's encounter with Churchill, 1909
Suffragette's arrest after attacking Churchill with a whip at a rail station in London
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Arrest of English suffragettes, 1909
Report of women's rights activists disrupting a speech by Mr. Asquith, the Prime Minister of England, in Birmingham, their encounter with the police, and the resulting arrests
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Article about English suffragettes, 1911
Article by an English woman about a women's protest at Westminster and the arrest of women by the police; one of the representatives has questioned the Minister of Interior, Churchill, about police actions. Part of the article criticizes government actions and advocates for the participation of women in politics because of their tax contributions and their role in the economy, and emphasizes the need for law reforms.