| Publication information | 
| Source: Daily Pantagraph Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Assassination News from a Ticker” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Bloomington, Illinois Date of publication: 10 September 1901 Volume number: 65 Issue number: 210 Pagination: 5 | 
| Citation | 
| “Assassination News from a Ticker.” Daily Pantagraph 10 Sept. 1901 v65n210: p. 5. | 
| Transcription | 
| full text | 
| Keywords | 
| Walter Armbruster; McKinley assassination (news coverage); McKinley assassination (use of telegraph). | 
| Named persons | 
| Walter Armbruster; William McKinley. | 
| Document | 
  Assassination News from a Ticker
     Mr. Walter Armbruster has a unique souvenir of 
  the tragedy which shocked the nation last Friday afternoon. Mr. Armbruster was 
  in Chicago at the time the news was flashed over the wire of the attempted assassination 
  of President McKinley. About 3 o’clock in the afternoon he was in the Great 
  Northern hotel watching the “ticker,” which is a telegraphic instrument that 
  transcribes messages as received over the wire, upon an endless paper ribbon. 
  These tickers are the same kind of instruments used on the board of trade. A 
  few men were standing by the instrument in the Great Northern listening to reports 
  of the ball games by innings in the eastern cities. Suddenly, in the midst of 
  the sporting news, the following words were ticked slowly on the tape: “President 
  McKinley shot twice in stomach by stranger, who was caught.”
       The operator at the instrument jumped from his 
  chair and shouted, “My God! Look at that!” All of the other men who had been 
  watching the ribbon were startled by the intelligence which it conveyed, and 
  in a few minutes an immense crowd had gathered in the corridor in the vicinity 
  of the ticker. It was not long afterward when the newspapers issued extras and 
  the details of the tragedy soon became known. Mr. Armbruster secured as a souvenir 
  the piece of paper ribbon on which these fateful words were recorded, and will 
  keep it as a memento of the day.