[111] Rev. Stat. of Mass. (1835), 482; Pub. Stat. of Mass. (1882), 810; Rev. Laws of Mass. (1902), II, 1347; Rev. Stat. of Maine (1884), 523.
[112] Rev. Stat. of Maine (1847), 367; ibid. (1883), 529; Rev. Stat. of N. H. (1843), 293; Vermont Stat. (1894), 505; Rev. Laws of Mass. (1902), II, 1346.
[113] As in Rhode Island: Gen. Laws (1896), 840; and Vermont: Stat. (1894), 273; Maine: Acts and Resolves (1899), 89. Cf. Pub. Stat. of N. H. (1891), 622.
[114] As in Maine: Acts and Resolves (1899), 89; Rev. Stat. (1884), 521; ibid. (1847), 368.
[115] Vermont Stat. (1894), 512; Gen. Laws of R. I. (1896), 636; Gen. Stat. of Conn. (1887), 613; Pub. Stat. of Mass. (1882), 815. In Maine the court may change the wife's name "at her request": Acts and Resolves (1901), 167.
[116] Vermont Stat. (1894), 512.
[117] By the Vermont act of Nov. 22, 1898: Acts and Resolves, 38, 39, when a married woman files a libel for divorce and prays for alimony, the husband is enjoined from conveying or removing from the state, during pendency of the libel, such portion of his estate as the judge may think necessary to secure alimony, and from concealing or interfering with the property or clothing of the wife and minor children, or such portion of his personal property as may be at the time in her possession.
[118] Pub. Stat. of Mass. (1882), 814; Laws of Mass. (1821), 508, 509; Rev. Stat. of Mass. (1835), 482; Vermont Stat. (1894), 509; Rev. Stat. of Maine (1884), 521; Rev. Stat. of N. H. (1843), 294.
[119] Vermont Stat. (1894), 510, 511.
[120] Pub. Stat. of Mass. (1882), 814-16; Rev. Laws (1902), II, 1355.