Publication information |
Source: New York Press Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Journal’s Cartoon Pictured Murder” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: New York, New York Date of publication: 19 September 1901 Volume number: 14 Issue number: 5041 Pagination: 5 |
Citation |
“Journal’s Cartoon Pictured Murder.” New York Press 19 Sept. 1901 v14n5041: p. 5. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
New York Journal; William McKinley (presidential policies: criticism); yellow journalism (role in the assassination). |
Named persons |
William McKinley. |
Document |
Journal’s Cartoon Pictured Murder
Showed Crowned Heads in Fear of Death and Made the President
Appear
Next in Line for Assassination.
IN ONE of the thousands of letters condemning the New York Journal
as the instigator of the assassination at Buffalo a reader has sent to The Press
a cartoon cut from the New York Evening Journal of April 1, 1901, entitled “An
Object Lesson.”
The cartoon perhaps was the worst (if degrees
may be calculated for such infamy) of the malignant series to which attention
has been called. Its reproduction would be impossible at any time. It exhaled
the breath of assassination.
It warned William McKinley to have a care lest
he have to protect himself with armor. It held before his gaze imbecile pictures
of foreign monarchs who lived in fear of bombs and dynamite. And in printed
words the New York Journal told William McKinley to “Beware!”
A clownish Uncle Sam was pictured sitting in a
rocking chair, smoking a cigar. Standing near the chair there was a caricature
of William McKinley of the kind that the Yellow Journal readers have had put
before their eyes day after day and month after month—a caricature of the President
of the United States so gross and so vile that The Press must forbear even a
description of it at this time.
In one hand Uncle Sam was pictured holding the
full page of a newspaper to view—a newspaper appropriately labeled “Morning
Journal.” Across the top of the sheet was the caption:
“UNEASY LIES THE HEAD THAT WEARS A CROWN.”
Directly under this caption were four pictures
representing four rulers of Europe, their faces given the likeness of the idiot
or half-wit. Puppet crowns sat on their heads. The idiotic expression of the
faces was combined with the expression of fear. Under the first of the monarchs’
caricatures were these words in the guise of newspaper headlines:
“The Czar living in terror in armor-plated rooms.”
Under the second were these words:
“The Kaiser fears a plot against him.”
Under the third was this inscription:
“The King of Italy found dynamite under his palace.”
Under the fourth was the following:
“The Sultan in great fear of assassination.”
And under the whole cartoon were these words,
put in the mouth of Uncle Sam:
“BEWARE OF IMPERIALISM, WILLIAM! LOOK AT THESE
FOUR HORRIBLE EXAMPLES!”
There in that picture was to be seen the essence
of all that of which the public now declares the New York Journal guilty—the
ridicule of the President of the United States, the exploitation of the New
York Journal as the suggesting force to Anarchy, the conveying of the spirit
of regicide to the people of a republic—and, above all, the WARNING of the editor
of the paper:
“Beware of Imperialism! Look at these Horrible
Examples!”