The Education Of Princes
iic custom in the i'russian royai iarany ;hat every prince shall be apprenticed to a trado, in order that he migbt be :ible to earn his living in case of a revalution. Tho present Crown Prinee was taught watch-making; but whether he coiüd obtain the wages of a skilled journeyrnan, if his father's crown failed him is another question. During the first French Revolution the Duke of Orleans, who aftervvards became "Kingof the French," by the title of Louis Philippe, had for a time to earn his living as a schoolmaster in Svvitzerland. Doubtless most Germán Princes in these times would be able to do the same, for they are capital lingüista and arithmeticians, besides being uncommonly expert in horsemanship, fencing and
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Ann Arbor Courier
Old News