About This Book
The text offers a moral and practical critique of wagering, defining gambling as staking property on mere hazard and distinguishing it from honest skill and labor. It traces gambling's prevalence across social classes, professions, and locales, describes how casual play escalates into habitual vice, and portrays professional gamblers and their destructive influence on youth and communities. The author catalogs harms including financial ruin, deceit, and social degradation, and calls for parental vigilance, civic remonstrance, and moral reform to check a practice presented as corrosive to individual character and public welfare.
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