The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 1, No. 19, March 18, 1897 - A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls by Various
page 14 of 49 (28%)
page 14 of 49 (28%)
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court cannot see that it is anybody's business what name is signed to
them. The Duke of Anjou has no right to interfere with the Duke of Orleans' signature as a private individual, and therefore the court refuses to dictate to the Duke of Orleans how he shall sign his letters, whether with his first, his last, or with all of his names. The court therefore ordered the Duke of Anjou to pay all the costs of the trial, and dismissed the case. Does it not seem absurd for two grown men to quarrel about a title which neither of them has the slightest use for? * * * * * On the 1st of January, 1897, a new law went into force, forbidding the convicts in State's prisons to do any other work than hard labor for the benefit of the State. Up to the time of passing this law, when a prisoner went to jail, the warden found out the work for which he was best suited, and gave him employment of that nature. A convict who was a good accountant would be put to keeping the books. A shoemaker would be set to mending and working in the shoe-shop. A bricklayer would be put to building and repairing, and so on. The new law stops this system entirely. Hard labor means lifting stones, digging, building walls, and work of that kind. |
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