Life, 1897-03-11 · page 13 of 20
Life — March 11, 1897 — page 13: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Life, 1897-03-11. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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REALISM. HE song of the tenor deep we list, Encoring loud and long. Were truth confessed, we've often missed The tenor of the song. Rey Farrell Greene. A MUCH -MALIGNED STATE. HERE is a strong disposition in some quarters to sneer, in true Pharisaical fashion, at Nevada since she has passed laws legalizing prize-fighting, and is considering the propriety of per- mitting lotteries. Other States have “been inclined to wax sarcastic at her expense, and to intimate that this is a desperate attempt to entice within her borders a sufficient number of people to let her, at least occasionally, feel the sensation of being a State in something besides the ability to send up two Senators. They also hint that the position said two Senators have taken on various public questions does not imply the exist- ence of a very keen moral or intellectual sense among the people they represent, and that, if such sense does exist, Nevada is so well aware that the jingling of the guinea helps the hurt that honor she is willing to furnish injured honor without stint so long as somebody else will supply the guineas, or rather, in deference to her prejudices, the sixteen to one dollars instead. ‘ * ‘ A" this is as unjust as it is narrow. Nevada is really an wostic of liberty, a kind of Roger Williams among States. Her own sense of moral fitness is high—so high that she has hitherto refrained from doing anything lest she might do something wrong. But she is no bigot; if other people wish to have prize fights, and (M1 Daremane CUPIDS OF ALL NATIONS.— RUSSIA, see no harm in them, Nevada will take care that no puritanical prejudic stand in the way of their gratification. Nor does the requirement of a thousand-dollar fee for the privilege indicate a mercenary spirit. It is merely an carnest of good faith on the part of the intending fighters, for it is one thing for a State to be willing to permit an encounter within its borders, and quite another to let itself become the theatre of the wordy wars in which pugilists are fond of indulging. It is too much to ask of the most liberal State, that she should allow the latter. * . * N OREOVER, there is profit both for herself and others in Bt Nevada's action. With prize - fighting as a recognized amusement, and lotteries as legalized institutions, it is absurd to suppose there would be any serious obstacles placed in the way of unlimited gambling, drinking, fighting, and similar entertainments. Asa natural consequence, from all parts of the country those who find themselves hindered in the pursuit of such pleasures by the AN HAVANA FILLER. >. so-called narrow bigotry of the so-called reputable classes will comicbooks.com