| The Commercial Effect THE effect of the death of President McKinley upon the commerce 
              of the country will not justify the apprehensions expressed by those 
              who are either pessimistic by nature, or are unfamiliar with conditions. 
              It is reassuring to note that the views of men of large business 
              interests in all parts of the United States are in almost unanimous 
              accord that the unexampled prosperity of the country will not sustain 
              any serious set-back because of the Buffalo tragedy. The same sentiment 
              prevails in all sections of the United States. Our most eminent 
              and astute commercial minds have been interviewed by the newspapers 
              of their respective localities, and there is no real division of 
              sentiment in the matter. It is only here and there that some ill-informed 
              calamity-seeker rises up to express his forebodings of evil. There 
              is no cause for agitation upon this score, lamentable as is the 
              affliction that has come upon the nation, for the simple reason 
              that the general conditions of trade and industry are sound and 
              wholesome, that the business of the country is finding its outlet 
              through purely normal channels, and that the question of its health 
              and permanence therefore rises beyond the reach of such woful [sic] 
              accidents as have befallen. |