The North Platte tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1890-1894, July 20, 1892, Image 1

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NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1892.
NO. 28.
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THE MODEL.
Are Determined to Unload.
We want to sell our enormous stock of
FINEST TAILOR MADE SUITS
and sell ii quickly. We are about
to make the
DEEPEST GDT INTO PRICES
that you have ever known. It will
be one continuous picnic 'for cloth
ing buyers- from now until
AUG-UST FIBST.
During this time we reserve noth
ing. Everything goes. Clothing,
Gents1 Furnishing Goods, Boots,
Shoes , Hats, Caps, and Valises.
Everything to be slaughtered RE
GARDLESS OF COST.
THE MODEL CLOTHING HOUSE,
M. EINSTEIN.
'I
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4
5
GREAT
DURING THE NEXT THIRTY
. DAYS I WILL OFFER
FOR SALE
hi n )i;kd
Choice h
In the City of North Platte at
Prices ranging: from
$50 to $150
PER LOT.
TERMS: One-tenth cash and bal
ance in monthly installments of from
' $5.00 to $10.00 each.
The prices on these, lots, are not to
exceed one-half their real value. Call
at iiiy.ipffice and see plats and prices.
No trouble to show lots.
Tho,s. C. Patterson.
T
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Opportunity Has Arrived. j y
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o
LUMBERS COAL.
LUMBER,
i . SASH,
BLINDS, V -
DOORS, Etc.
Slime anq $?EiEfiT.
iRock Springs Nut,
Rock Springs Lump.
Pennsylvania Anthracite,
Colorado Anthracite
AND
Colorado Soft ? . " "
COAL.
A PEACTIGAL TAEIFF
SOUD FACTS VERSUS DEMOCRATIC
FREE TRADE 'GENERALITIES.
The AdmIslon of General "Walker, i
Free Trader, Once tlie Census Snperlo
tenclent That the Tariff Creates anc
Maintains High Kates of Wages.
It is noticeable that the editorial pages
of Democratic and free trade newspapers
seldom give faqts and figures to back np
what they say about the workings of
the tariff. They, blaze away with reck
less dogmatic assertions like this: "The
price of living has gone up, but the prico
of labor has either remained stationary
or been painfully depressed. If yon
want a rich class and a poor class: if you
want a moneyed aristocracy at one end
and a horde of stolid laborers at the
other end, yon will support the Repub
lican ticket. These are the words of
the New York Herald. They occur in
and represent a drift of a leading edi
torial occupying the most conspicuous
column of the page which that journal
uses when it thinks it is thinking.
There is not a solitary figure about
prices or wages, past or present, from
the beginning of tluj article "to the end.
But it is twice asserted that "the labor
ers throughout the country pay more
for the necessaries of life and get
less for their work." Jsoi the laborers
here and there, bnt the laborers tlirough
out the country. Not that they pay
more for one or two necessaries of life
(wo have seen no proof anywhere that
even that is true), but for the necessaries
of life in general. Not that wages have
been cut down here and there, but where
a business was in a peculiar condition,
but "laborers throughout the country
get less for their work." We
appeal to the experience of every
lal)orer who reads this article on that
point.
The Press published on Sunday, Oct.
i, 1891, the results of a canvass mado by
its own reporters among the dealers in
cutlery, earthenware, tin plates, rope,
women's dress goods, serges and flan
uels, carpets, linen table cloths, towels,
shawls, woolens, hats, blankets, men's
garments, shoes and tobacco, which
showed that in the j-ear following the
enactment of the McKinley bill the
prices of these articles had either gone
down or remained virtually unchanged.
The Ame.4-an Economist, at the same
time, published a table of seventy-two
leading articles of daily use, including,
in addition to the above, such imple
ments of labor as axes, crowbars, files,
handsaws, mowing machines, nails,
plows, rakes, reapers, binders, shovels,
spades, washboilers, washtubs and
wheelbarrows, with tho prices as modi
fied in tho j-ear that had just passed.
There were 08' increases in duties, 59
decreases in prices, 12 articles marked
"no change" in prices, and 1 increase,
'namely, in the price of pearl battons,
which .had increased from 11 to Vd
cents a dozen. There are bone buttons
and wooden buttons and brass buttons
and cloth buttons and china buttons
and rubber buttons, but this two cents
increase in tlie price of pearl bnttons
has been figuring as a sore oppression of
the laboring man ever since. It is a
.highly favored fact, in that it is ad
mitted into free trado editorials where
no other specific fact is allowed to come,
certainly not the fact that tho number
of pearl button factories increased from
17 to 77.
Tlie advertising, columns of The Press
and oxuer uany papers, tue marlret re
ports of the trade papers and the busi
ness news of the country in general
sIiqw that the campaign bluster of the
free trade and Democratic journals is
tho merest demagogy and reckless disre
gard of truth. Only yesterday it was
announced that eight of ths largest
wholesale dry goods firms in this city
and thirteen of the leading dry goods
jobbing houses in Philadelphia, who
virtually control the trade of these two
cities, had signed an agreemeut not to
give such large discounts for cash as
heretofore. This was the reason given:
"Competition had gradually forced
discounts up so high (that is, cash prices
so low) that it finally became a question
of combhling or quitting."
Competition in selling dry goods is
the result of large and widespread home
production,-and protective dnties have
caused this large home production.
Just as soon as anybodj' exacts exor
bitant prices for tin article, of protected
manufacture, somebody else goes into
that branch of manufacture and cuts
under the high prices.
That is 'the way protection works in
variably, outside of the vague and hazy
generalities which free trade, orators
and Democratic scribblers evolve out of.
their "inner consciousness," without
taking the trouble to investigate the
facts. It is the tariff that opens factory
doors and tnms factory wheels when
ever it is high enough, and as for its
effect on wages, General Francis A.
Walker, a free trader, who was superin
tendent of .census in 1880, thus contra
dicts the campaign demagogues in his
latest work on political economy (ad
vanced course, section 263):
"It is perfectly true, as the protection
ist asserts, tliat a tariff of customs duties
upon foreign goods imported into new
countries tends to create and maintain
high rates of wages in tho factory in
dustries." And if in the factor industries, it
must affect wages in other industries fa
vorably from the very fact that it reduces
the general supply of unemployed labor.
President Harrison well said that the
free trade jioliticians studied maxims,
not markets. They seem to know noth
ing about the markets for either goods
or labor. General Walker, as a census
superintendent and statistician, studied
facts and markets. That was why ho
had to admit that protection tended to
rajse wages anil to keep them up. New
York Press. "
MAINE'S NEXT GOVERNOR.
The Republican 'standard Bearer la th
Old Tine Tree State.
Henry Bradstreet Cleaves, who has
been nominated for governor by the Re
publicans of Alaine, and who will coa
6equently bs the next chief executive of
the Pine Treo State, is fifty-two years
old, a lawyer and a man of wide a
varied experience.
"
n. B. CLEAVES.
Mr. Cleaves was educated atLewiston
Falls academy, and served in the war as
a private, rising through gallantry to the
rank of lieutentant in Company E, Thir
teenth Maine infantry. He. studied law
after the war, and became a member of
the firm of Howland & Cleaves, Port
land. In 1876-7 he was a member of the
legislature, later city solicitor for Port
land, and then attorney general for five
years, llis election as governor is as
sured by a very large majority, for he is
an extremely popular man and Maine
is a reliably-Republican state.
A Convenient Title.
In theso days when the real soldiers of
tho "war are growing few and fewer
there is a marked increase of generals,
The ready acceptance of militarj- titles
by men who never wore the blue is a
trifle surprising. So readily are they
put on that any general manager, gen
eral superintendent or genen
ger agent becomes endowed
glittering prize.
A gentleman who was a first assistant
postmaster general a few years ago, and
who is now tho Democratic candidate
for vice piesideut of the United States,
is found enjojmg the title anil is
promptly supplied with a heroic Avar
record "by his adinirincr fellow Demo
crats. Neither war record nor title is
his, however. Chicago News.
1 passeu
with the
2ajrhe He Isn't Any More,
Now is the proper time for Senator
Hill to issue a second edition of his cele
brated dictum, "I am a .Democrat."
Chicago Mail.
The Exploded Tin IMate Lie.
It is, wq may surmise, partly on ac
count of the San Jacinto and the Harney
Peak tin that the attack upon the tin
plate schedule in tho hunso of represen
tatives has languished and dragged
along so. Tlie tin plate lie was exploded
so very promptl) that it would not
afford an excuse for altering the provi
sions of the McKinley bill, and when
there came the added fact of the discov
ery of American tin and tho certainty of
its production in prreat quantities the
Democrats iu congress lost interest in
the tin plate schedule. San Francisco
Chronicle.
A 3Ii.stako Somewhere.
W e trust the charge against Senator
Brice, of Oyork, to the effect that he
turned over a private expense bill of
$700" for the local Democratic committee
to settle is untrue. The senator while
in Chicago did not squander a cent in
haircuttinsr or whisker trimunner and
spent no time running down rainbows.
It will bo remembered there were no
rainbows in sight. There is a mistake
somewhere. Exchange.
He rnlls Strong ivilli Tammany.
It is pretty well settled, that hereafter
when the Democracy have any little
Echemes they would like to cany
through they would do well to consult
a fellow by tho name of Whitney. It
appears that when he puts his thinker
into active operation things come his
way just as if they were greased.-rSt.
Paul Pioneer Press.
The Buzzard's Bay Si;n.
Because Mr. Carnegie's Homestead
steel mill is surrounded by a high board
fencQ, the Democratic papers call him a
feudal baron. What do they think of
Grover Cleveland's action in posting a
notice on his Buzzard's Baj' grounds,
"Trespassing or shooting on these prem
ises is positively not permitted?' Buf
falo Express.
Tito L.ettcr That Never Came.
Postmaster Wanamaker should be in
vestigated. Henry Watterson's experi
ence in his one sided correspondence
with Senator Hill was bad enough, and
now here is poor General Stevenson,
who is unable to get a letter from, hia
chief through-the mails. Chicago Mail.
Democratic Platform Amendment.
tiiev s.vin: "
But it is not yet too Into
To pnt the tiling fctraislit;
So wo show you our hand
As those of a band
Whose history's mado
All up of free trade.
Philadelphia .North American.
It Was Too Tough for Them.
It appears that there arc sixteen Dem
ocrats in the United States senate who
have not read and digested the Chicago
platform. A marked copy of that docu
ment should be forwarded to them with
out delay. Boston Herald.
It aieans Vree Trade.
To reduce the tariff to tho standard of
revenue only means to wipe it out en
tirely. A revenue tariff means greatly
increased importations and sure free
trade. Philadelphia North American.
l'por Old Stevenson!
In every northern state a rebel would
run better than a copperhead for any
pffice. Poor old Stevenson! St. Louis
Globe-Democrat,
A Sort of Bitter Sweet.
Dr. Dana's editorial utterances now
adays somehow suggest the snsjar coat-
I ing of quinine pills. Chicago Mail.
Who Is Ktereasoa?
To thenjistion "Who is Stevenson?"
we reply, Mr. Stevenson is one of the
remnants of the old Greenback party;
He was nominated to catch the riffraff
of tlie old fiat money craze, but it is
rather doubtful if he can even gather np
tljat scattered-wreck of very attenuated
matter. We should say that the bid for
the Greenback vote would profit the old
barn storming party very little. We
suppose that the eighth section of the
platform was intended as a standing
place for Mr. Stevenson. It is a propo
sition to return to wildcat banking pure
and simple, and if allowed would com
pel a traveler to change his money every
time he should cross a state line.
The Democrats would do nothing by
halves, not even in revising tho tariff.
They propose to lift the defenses against
wildcat money, or rather to .substitute
depreciated paper for the full par value
we now have, and which is good any
where in the United States. Tlie object
of this is to create a kind of currency
that will not pass outside of tho state of
issue. This, it is argued, will make
money plenty for use within state
bounds. This may not be the view of
Mr. Stevenson, who believes that the
government presses should print as
much money as the people may want.
We presume that if the states do the
same thing for their citizens it will dc
just as well. Philadelphia North American.
YARD ON K. R. TRACK WEST OF DEPQT,
So She Won't Elect Him
And in addition to this, Tammany
knows that if she falls through Cleve
land's election,
She falls like Lucifer,
.Never to rise again.
Her. power in the Democratic party
will be gone, and with that all power
will have departed. Even the despised
Mugwump will be - preferred iu Demo
cratic councils to all of Tammany's
sachems, and the Mugwump will feast
End fatten himself "on spoils; while the
jjne'e prond and haughty "tiger" dies
with hunger. Ohio State Journal. '
Who la Stevenson?
Of the vice presidential candidate on
the Democratic ticket one may quote
Mark Twain's lines: "Ferguson, what
did yon say the gentleman's name was?'
Philadelphia-Press.
Waiting for November.
It ww young Davjd Bennett Hill
Who stroked his smooth, bald head.
All in the evening calm and still,
And not a word he said;
Hut he fing red the.blade of a rusty knife.
And smiled a grewsome smile.
And thought to himself, "Yon let your lifo
Just waltalittlo while!" "
Nev" York Recorder.
'Whew! "Political Blackguards!"
The New York Times (Dein.-Mug.) has
taken charge of so much of the Cleve
land campaign1 in New York as Tho
Evening Post turns over to it. Its first
general order is that William F. Shee-
han, the. Democratic lieutenant gov
ernor, shall be bounced from the national
committee, and that Chairman Murphy,
of the state committee, 6hall be fired
out of the party, and pronounces both of
them "political blackguards." As to
Flowef , it does not dignify him by un
dertaking to read him out, but sajs con
temptuously,. "It doesn't matter about
Flower; he doesn't kuow any better."
But why 'doesn't Tho Times go for
higher game? Why doesn't it demand
that Hill shall be fired out of the party?
Why decapitate only his lieutenants?
Chicago Tribune.
What It Prohibits.
The McKinley law is described d its
enemies as a "prohibitive" tariff. It is
prohibitive on some things. It prohibits
the importation of offensive or immoral
pictures, books or statuary. It pro
hibits the importation of foreign goods
bearing counterfeited American trade
marks and compels foreign merchandise
in this country to show its true colors.
It prohibits the importation of foreign
products made by foreign convict labor.
To this extent, aud this only, is the Mc
Kinley tariff prohibitive. Would any
sane person have one tf these prohibi
tions repealed? Boston Journal.
It Will Win Again.
Kansas Republicans havo nominated
;ufarmer for governor and put a negro,
a son of Blanche K. Bruce, on the stato
ticket. Tho people who expected to see
the Republican party killed by a single
defeat have worked themselves up to a
6ad disappointment. The party in Kan
sas appears to have emerged from its
wholesome chastisement stronger and
more vigorous than ever. It had been
winning, so easily beforo the rise of the
Alliance that it had grown careless.
Now it will win by hard work. Buffalo
Express. -
Which Shall It Itc?
The November election will decido
whether G3,000,000 people shall be sad
dled with the curse of free trade and
low wages or whether Whitelaw Reid,
who had a dispute with his printers
which is now ended, shall bo elected
vice president. In other words shall tho
interests of the nation be sacrificed m
order that one man may be punished for
private business matter which has
since been adjusted to the satisfaction
of all the parties interested? Butte City
luter-Monntam.
The Truth In Doggerel.
The man who called the Democratic
ticket the ticket of the "two Steves,"
referred-to the time when Grover Cleve
land was known as Stephen Grover
Cleveland. This has also led a poet to
invent the following lines:
Steven, Steven,
Steven's so decebin'
Do debbel can't h'lievo 'im.
Iowa State Register.
Not a Good Prophet.
Ex-Governor Campbell, of Ohio, is
sure that Mr. Cleveland will bo elected
president. Eight months ago Mr. Camp
bell was equally sure that ho himself
would be elected governor of Ohio, Yet
somehow-a fellow named McKinley now
lolds fnat office. Mr. Campbell's repu-
atiou as a prophet is not good. Boston
Journal.
Were They Bought?
There can be but little doubt that
Whitney wanted the presidential nomi
nation for himself, but we would rather
not believe the Democratic charge that
tho votes of the territories were bought
for Cleveland. Buffalo Express.
Cleveland, and Slupsky.
Joe Jefferson says Grover Cleveland
is tho greatest man this conn try has ever
known. Has Mr. Jefferson ever "met
Colonel Abe Slupsky, of St. Louis?
Chicago Tribune.
And Then He'll I.angh.
Hill has not yet said a word about tho
nomination of Cleveland. Contrary to
his usual practice, he will do his talking
after the election. St. Louis Globe-
Democrat.
Stevenson's Address Furnished.
Mr, Cleveland, the namo of your run
ning mate is Adlal E. Stevenson, and
his postoffice address is Bloomington,
Ills., U. S. A. Cliicago Mail.
Consistent Records.
Stevenson's copperhead record is en
tirely consistent with Cleveland's record
js a pension vetoer. bt. Louis (ilobe-
L'emocrat.
Grover's Transatlantic Boodle.
The 0,000 which was subscribed by
the foreign steamship ring in New York
city to promote Cleveland's re-election
in 1888 has whetted tho. Democratic
appetite for more of the same kind
from transatlantic monopolists. Boston
.Journal.
The Great Gobbler.
Senator Hill is a young man' yet, and
ho has done pretty well for a man of his
ago, iiere'U be several chances to gob
ble up the earth between uow and the
day set for its dissolution. Washing
ton Pnar.
Tw Typtaal Bemocratie Prececal
. Recently two processions started from
Jersey City headed in different direc
turns. One traveled toward the state
prison and 'the other toward the state
penitentiary. The first procession was
made np of fourteen ballot box" stnffers
wno were on tneir way to serve out a
sentence of eighteen months, and the
second procession consisted of seven
other ballot box stnffers who havo a
sentence of nine months to serve out.
iVery man in tne two processions is a
Democrat. The crime they committed
was done for the benefit of the Demo
cratic party and that party is now en
joying the benefit of it. They are Dem
ocratic processions. If it were not for
the countenance the Democratic party
gives these crimes they would never
have been committed. Philadelphia
Press.
Hill la Right for Once.
Senator David B. Hill has suffered another
relapse a serious one. He has not only left
his official duties, but has resolutely refused to
express any political opinions since he did so.
Before he left, however, David delivered him
self of anepigraui which contains a big nugget
6rtruth.'"ThlsTs wfiaYhesjifil:"
"The tariff plank of the platform adopted at
Chicago has made every workshop and factory
in the United States a Repablican campaign
headquarters." Washington Dispatch.
Whether it has done so or not it ought
to, for it is the workmen in the factories,
mills and shops who are hit by the
Democratic free trade plank. The leisure
and capitalistic classes escape pretty
well, but the toilers catch it between
the eyes. How do they relish it? What
do they now think of tlie Democratic
demagogues' love for the "poor man?"
Chicago Tribune.
"Simply tying."
Tlie Albany Times-Union thinks the
state bank plank was put in the Demo
cratic platform "as n sort of tub to be
thrown to the Farmers' Alliance whale,
and tho convention of course gave it no
deliberate consideration." That is evi
dently intended to give tho impression
that tho Democratic party does not pur
pose to repeal the state bank tax. but
only said it does to catch Farmers' Alli
ance votes. It i simply lying. Per
haps this is the easiest way to get out of
a disagrecablo position, but what a
stultifying claim it is! Buffalo Express.
Free Trade Amendment Bid It.
Democratic politicians who have taken
pains to sound tho Democratic business
men of New York city are said to bo in
a panic over the sitnation. Mr. Fred
eric P. Olcott, president of the Central
Trust company, is one of the men who
have bolted their party ticket and pro
pose to support Harrison and Reid. Mr.
Olcott says that fifty business friends of
his, all Democrats, will follow the same
course. That free trado declaration did
it. Henry Watterson has tied a very
weight millstone about his party's neck.
Boston Journal.
Frco Trado Means Hard Times.
We aro asked the question whether
protection always insures good times?
If protection does not always insure
good times, free trade at least insures
perpetual bad times. If a combination
jot circumstances bring about uncertain
and slow business it is infinitely bet
ter to bo master of a poor business than
the slave of bad times. Protection
makes the American workingman mas
ter of te situation, whatever that situa
tion happens to be. Pliiladelphia North
American.
An Kx-Grcenhacker.
It is discovered that Adlai E. Steven
son, the Democratic candidate for the
vice presidency, ran for congress on the
Greenback ticket in 1878. A man who-
finds it necessary to deny that he was a
member of the Knights of the Golden
Circle, and who cannot deny that he
was a leader in the Greenback heresy,
is incapable of adding much luster to
even tho ticket of the mildewed old
Democratic party. Evening Wisconsin.
Look Out for the Slump.
Tlie only occasions when Grover
Cleveland met with success at the
polls were when Republican disaffection
cansed a slump in that party's vote. It
looks now as if a slump in the New
York Democratic vote will put an end
to a political career the luckiest in the
history of American politics. Terre
Haute Express.
lUiyme and Reason.
Ben Jn mln and Whitelaw
Kilit law.
Bright law;
The combination's rich.
But Grover C. and Adlail
Uadlv.
Sadly
Do-they seem to hitch.
New York Recorder.
Wants to Save Ills Reputation.
Mr. Whitnej wisely declines to act an
chairman of tho Democratic national
committee. He doesn't propose to for
feit the reputation that he won at Chi
cago by taking charge of a campaign
that is certain to end in disaster. St
Louis Globe-Democrat.
Tho Tiger Will Howl.
It is real nice in Grover and Aillai t
both march to New York and receive
notice of their nominations direct from
the Tammany bosses. Tlie tiger will
howl with satisfaction. Snob KnWr.
viency was never beforo witnessed.
n - T . i
vuicago inter ucean.
Hardly!
Tammany succeeded in getting Grover
Cleveland and David B. Hill on the
same platform in behalf of Governor
Flower, but it will hardly sncceed in
doing so in behalf of Grover Cleveland.
Buffalo Express.
His Name Will Be "Aildley."
It is sincerelv to be honed that th
Australian ballot system will permit of
the publication of diacritical marks over
Mr. Stevenson's remarkable first name.
Chicago News.
He' Only a Party Hypnotist.
But it remains to be seen whether Mr.
Whitney can extend hw famous hypnotic
treatment 1eyoud strict party lines.
Chicago Mail
Dana's Delicate SarcSUui.
The bisrsrest man in a nroce.sion dnps
not necessarily march first. The head
of the national ticket does not exhaust
all the cheers. Thera mar 1
more for his colleague and associate,
whose name is in smaller letters on the
campaign banners. Remember that
Thomas Jefferson, tho founder of De
mocracy, was vice president before he
became president. In him Stevenson
has an illustrious exemplar. Tho po
litical warrior of Bloomington but fol
lows in the footstens of the saw of
Monticello. Tlie vice presidency is a
public trust! New York Sun.
YOU MAY NEED
Additional Lawn Hose before the Sum
mer is over, and we desire to call your at-,
tention to the fact that our stock embraces
several grades, and the prices on the same
are away down.
This ho.t weather naturally suggests
something cool ice cream, for instance.
Why ' not make your own? "We have a
nice line of freezers which we are offering
low. They range in size from half gallon up.
The flies are getting very numerous, and
if your screens are worn out these pestifer
ous insects are sure to get into your house
and annoy you. We handle a good.quaiity
of wire cloth and sell it at such figures that
you cannot afford to use your old" screens
for the sake of saving the small cost of new
ones.
If yoir oi your daughter is an artist you
certainly have pictures which should be
framed: they don't look well standing
around frameless. We have the best and
most varied line of mouldings in the city
and can make frames to order.
II. S. KEITH.
N. A. DAVIS CO.,
DEALERS IN
DID
sola
WAGONS, BUGGIES,
Windmills, Harness, Etc.
IN THE
EQUITABLE OF NEW Y0BK.
H. B. HYDE, Pres. J. W. ALEXANDER, Yice-Pres.
ASSETS,
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f:. surplus"
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The Largest ! The Strongest!
The Most Profitable in the World !
: INCOME.
: 39,054,914 5
4
I NEW BUSINESS Written in 1891 233,118,331
ASSURANCE IN FORCE.
S01,894,557
Our 20 year policies return jrour premiums with inter
est at the end of 20 year period if you DON'T die.
Safest and Cheapest Life Assurance on Earth.
JAMES HALE, General A.geiifc,
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THE CASINO BILLIAED HALL,
DALY & GRACE, Proprietors.
SUPERIOR BILLIARD and POOL TABLES.
Bar Stocked with the Finest of Liquors.
A QUIET AND ORDERLY RESORT
Where gentlemen will receive courteous treatment at all times and
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be accommodated at all times.