| Publication information | 
| Source: Ave Maria Source type: magazine Document type: editorial column Document title: “Notes and Remarks” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: 21 September 1901 Volume number: 53 Issue number: 12 Pagination: 370-73 (excerpt below includes only page 370) | 
| Citation | 
| “Notes and Remarks.” Ave Maria 21 Sept. 1901 v53n12: pp. 370-73. | 
| Transcription | 
| excerpt | 
| Keywords | 
| McKinley assassination (religious response). | 
| Named persons | 
| William McKinley. | 
| Notes | 
| The item below is the first of two excerpts taken from this issue’s installment of “Notes and Remarks.” Click here to view the second excerpt. | 
| Document | 
  Notes and Remarks [excerpt]
     The announcement of President McKinley’s death 
  was a fresh shock to the country and the world. There were good reasons for 
  making the official reports of his condition as reassuring as possible; and 
  it was only natural to hope against hope that a life on which, humanly speaking, 
  so much depended might be preserved. It was prudent to prepare the public mind 
  as far as possible for what must have seemed inevitable to many whose office 
  entitled them to know all the facts of the case. The physician’s bulletins might 
  have been truthfully hopeful or gloomy: they were properly reassuring. The nation 
  hoped: now it mourns and the whole world sympathizes.
       The assassination of another President of the 
  United States, sad and sorrowful though it is, will not have been an unmixed 
  evil if the eyes of our citizens are opened to see that the relation is of cause 
  and effect between irreligion and anarchy, relaxed laws and increased criminality, 
  a debased press and a depraved generation. It is in the nature of things that 
  under a government like ours liberty should be more abused; but the deplorable 
  event in Buffalo emphasizes the necessity of prompt action against anarchists, 
  and of conserving more and more the forces which make for peace and righteousness.