Clipping:The benefit of charging admission
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Date | Sunday, September 23, 1866 |
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Text | For the credit of the Keystone Club we hope to see them secure a ground of their own, and charge such a price for admission as will exclude the presence of the juvenile rabble who disgraced the good name of the city on this occasion. New York Sunday Mercury September 23, 1866 Fitzgerald loses his custom house position The Fitzitem D.B. has been dismissed [from] the Custom House, and the Treasury of the United States is just one hundred dollars per month richer. This righteous act was consummated on Friday last, and was the cause of arousing the D.B’s virtuous(?) Ire. His “phrenzy” knew no bounds; but there were none to console with him–no, not one. Seriously, this fellow should have been removed long since, as he has rendered no equivalent for the money he monthly received. A well fed pauper, and impudent at that. Philadelphia Sunday Mercury September 23, 1866 |
Source | New York Sunday Mercury |
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Submitted by | Richard Hershberger |
Origin | Initial Hershberger Clippings |
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