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4 revisions | MiaKayla Koerber at Apr 28, 2020 01:51 PM | |
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153Dangerous Amusement. Those present at Fulton Hall on Saturday evening will remember that part of the performance where Buffalo Bill shot a potato resting on the head of Miss Cody. Thursday night, a Mile. Volante, a trapeze performer, held an apple in her head and Jennie Folwer, known to the stage as Miss Franklin, shot at the apple. The shooter stood with her back to the mark, taking aim by the reflection in a mirror. The rifle was discharged and Mile. Volante fell to the stage, shot in the forehead. On Sunday night she died. Now, we have no doubt that "Buffalo Bill" is a far better marksman than Jennie Franklin--and in fact one of the very best shots in the county--but we agree with the Harrisburg "Independent" that this by no means gives immunity from accident, which might occur at the critical moment, in a hundred ways never thought of by the very best of marksman. The fact is, as the "Independent" says, that such exhibitions of rifle practice should be forbidden by law; and indeed we are inclined to believe that by a strict construction they are already prohibited by the statute passed a few years since prohibiting the pointing of firearms at people, whether loaded or not. If this is the case, the law should be enforced, and if there really is no legal restraints, then the practice should be abolished by the potent voice of public opinion. Lives are too precious to be sacrificed for the mere exhibition of a marksman's skill. | 153Dangerous Amusement. Those present at Fulton Hall on Saturday evening will remember that part of the performance where Buffalo Bill shot a potato resting on the head of Miss Cody. Thursday night, a Mile. Volante, a trapeze performer, held an apple in her head and Jennio Folwer, known to the stage as Miss Franklin, shot at the apple. The shooter stood with her back to the mark, taking aim by the reflection in a mirror. The rifle was discharged and Mile. Volante fell to the stage, shot in the forehead. On Sunday night she died. Now, we have no doubt that "Buffalo Bill" is a far better marksman than Jennie Franklin--and in fact one of the very best shots in the county--but we agree with the Harrisburg "Independent" that this by no means gives immunity from accident, which might occur at the critical moment, in a hundred ways never thought of by the very best of marksman. The fact is, as the "Independant" says, that such exhibitions of rifle practice should be forbidden by law; and indeed we are inclined to believe that by a strict construction they are already prohibited by the statute passed a few years since prohibiting the pointing of firearms at people, whether loaded or not. If this is the [?], the law should be enforced, and if there really is no legal restraint, then the practice should be abolished by the potent voice of public opinion. Lives are too precious to be sacrificed for the mere exhibition of a marksman's skill. |
