| Publication information | 
| Source: Ave Maria Source type: magazine Document type: editorial column Document title: “Notes and Remarks” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: 14 September 1901 Volume number: 53 Issue number: 11 Pagination: 340-43 (excerpt below includes only page 340) | 
| Citation | 
| “Notes and Remarks.” Ave Maria 14 Sept. 1901 v53n11: pp. 340-43. | 
| Transcription | 
| excerpt | 
| Keywords | 
| McKinley assassination (religious response). | 
| Named persons | 
| William McKinley. | 
| Document | 
  Notes and Remarks [excerpt]
     The attempted assassination of President McKinley 
  on Friday of last week, at Buffalo, N. Y., is for many reasons a most deplorable 
  event. Occurring at a time when the country is agitated by serious ruptures 
  between capitalists and laborers, and when the political situation both at home 
  and in our foreign possessions is anything but settled or satisfactory, there 
  is no telling what evils may result from an incident in itself calamitous. That 
  it should be deemed necessary for the President of our country to be provided 
  with a body-guard in times of peace is a significant circumstance; and that 
  in broad daylight, in the presence of a multitude of people, an attempt should 
  be made on his life is evidence of what is to be feared, even in the United 
  States, from the spirit of anarchy. The anarchist is abroad, and his disregard 
  for law and order is shared by many who have no preference for his name. Everyone 
  knows how contagious crime may become. Hereafter our chief executives will have 
  fresh cause for anxiety, and the crowned heads of Europe will be more uneasy 
  than ever. An inevitable effect of war is to lessen the value of human life, 
  and to render deeds of violence more tolerable to those who abhor them, and 
  less inexcusable to those who do not. The killing of so many innocent people 
  in China, Africa and the Philippines has prepared the world for an epidemic 
  of savagery of which there are symptoms everywhere.
       The sympathy of the whole world will go out to 
  our stricken President and his invalid wife. Throughout the United States sincere 
  grief is manifested in every community, irrespective of religious beliefs or 
  political affiliations; for Mr. McKinley is everywhere regarded as a man of 
  moral worth and high intelligence, as a true patriot and an exemplar of honorable 
  citizenship. He has endeared himself to the people of this country by manifestations 
  of goodwill toward all classes of citizens, and it is to be hoped there are 
  few who do not feel deep detestation for the dastardly crime of which he has 
  become the victim.