The Coin of the Yellow
FOR the first time in many a year the people of the
United States have fronted a great public calamity without having
their sorrow disturbed by the clamor of the Examiner seeking to
make money out of the universal grief. Before the grave of McKinley
the yellow journal stands abashed. In face of the wrath of the public
denouncing its vile cartoons and vicious editorials it slinks away
and does not venture to come forth passing the hat for nickels and
announcing an “Examiner monument fund,” with a long array of “commissioners”
selected to take charge of the “memorial which W. R. Hearst is to
raise as a tribute of the American people to the illustrious dead.”
There is no little gratification in
having for this once at least escaped from the affliction of the
intrusion of yellow journalism, with its self-advertising and self-enriching
schemes into public sorrow. Something more, however, is needed than
the abstention of the yellow anarchists from their usual faking
in matters of this kind. Popular sentiment demands that for no monument
or other memorial to be erected to President McKinley should there
be accepted any aid from the yellow journals, or any subscription
from them. Their coin should be refused as emphatically as their
hypocritical grief is condemned. Having derided, abused, vilified,
maligned and belied McKinley during his whole term of office as
President of the United States, they should not now be permitted
to insult his memory by contributing to erect a monument over his
grave.
There has never before been a President
whose death has been followed by so many earnest demands for a monument
to commemorate his services and the popular love of his fellow citizens.
There is hardly a State in the Union that has not some memorial
project under consideration. All classes of honest citizens have
united in these movements. In the Northern States the men who were
McKinley’s comrades in the war that saved the Union have been conspicuous
in promoting them, and in the South men who wore the gray and who
were his foes on the field of battle have taken the lead. No voice
has been more earnest, and hardly any more eloquent, in urging contributions
to a McKinley monument than has been that of General Gordon, commander
of the Confederate Veterans. It is right that it should be so. The
loyal people of the North will not grudge nor misconstrue the subscriptions
which McKinley’s former foemen of the Civil War may offer now to
commemorate his fame. All such contributions will be but another
evidence that the old divisions and animosities among the people
have passed away, and that the restored Union is a union of hearts
and of hands as well as of States.
So, too, with full graciousness and
appropriateness, thousands of Democrats who voted against McKinley
and opposed his policies in war and in peace may rightly contribute
to his memorial. Political differences there must always be among
us so long as we remain a free and an intelligent people, and political
controversy dishonors neither one side nor the other. When he entered
upon his high office McKinley ceased to be a Republican partisan
and became the representative of the whole people. Over his grave
there can be no partisan controversies or even differences. With
respect to his memory all true Americans are now nothing else than
Americans, and therefore all can with sincerity, with honesty and
with patriotism unite in raising a monument to him who so nobly
served the State and fell a martyr to anarchist hatred of its government.
From this universal right to take
part in every effort made to do honor to the dead there is excluded
but one thing that exists in America, and that is the yellow press
of W. R. Hearst. The public can neither forget nor forgive the wrongs
done to the dead by the three lying papers in which Hearst day after
day for years assailed the President and inculcated in the minds
of the vicious the hatred that led to the crime of Czolgosz. Hearst’s
coin must not be accepted. There is blood on it.
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