Apprentices and servants are characters perfectly distinct: the one receives instruction, the other a stipulated price for his labour.


The King v. Inhabitants of St. Paul's, Bedford (1797), 6 T. R. 454.


Apprentices and servants are characters perfectly distinct: the one receives instruction, the other a stipulated price for his labour.

Apprentices and servants are characters perfectly distinct: the one receives instruction, the other a stipulated price for his labour.

Apprentices and servants are characters perfectly distinct: the one receives instruction, the other a stipulated price for his labour.

Apprentices and servants are characters perfectly distinct: the one receives instruction, the other a stipulated price for his labour.