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keeps up a good feeling between the higher and lower orders. C
n asked him why, if such were the case, the government did not, at least, endeavor to draw some advantage from it, after the manner of the Count de Revillagigedo—why, as the bank, by the nature of the game, has, besides a great capital, which swallows up all the smaller ones, an immense profit, amounting to twenty-five per cent., they do not make the bankers pay four or five per cent., and charge half a dollar or more to each individual who enters to gamble; with which money they might beautify the village, make a public Paseo, a good road, a canal to Mexico, &c.I thought that whatever the government might feel on this subject, neither the bankers nor the gamblers would relish the insinuation. I shall write in a few days by the Baron de
Minister from , who leaves Mexico in a fortnight.