HER WORK TAKEN FROM HER.
AND HOW IT HAPPENED. An interesting statement was made by a solicitor in the Magistrate's Court yesterday morning, when a femalo defendant pleaded guilty to a chargo of entering licensed premises during the currency of a prohibition .order. Mr. H. 1. O'Lcary, who appdarw] for the woman, stated that his client fiad to go out and seek work to earn her living. The proprietress of the Thistle Inn had offered her employment to do cleaning work. His client had accepted the offer, and had been earning money there for three weeks when "home kind friends" acquainted the police of (ho fact*, and so the woman had one means of livelihood taken from her. His Worship, in imposing a fine, said that the defendant had no right to accept employment in a hotel while she was the subject of a prohibition order. By doing so she was qualifying for Pakatoa. ■ i <
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Dominion, Volume 4, Issue 1122, 9 May 1911, Page 4
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155HER WORK TAKEN FROM HER. Dominion, Volume 4, Issue 1122, 9 May 1911, Page 4
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