The Assassin’s Shot
If there ever was a cowardly attack
made it was the attempted assassination of President William McKinley,
at the Pan-American Exposition in the Temple of Music, at the Buffalo
Exposition, on last Friday week. Little did the American people
think for a moment that the life of their beloved and honored President
was confronting the bullet of an assassin, who has no regard or
respect for our government and its people. President McKinley, who
has done everything a human being could for all classes of his fellow
citizens, irrespective of politics or religious creed, should be
so cowardly attacked by an anarchist whose nationality is foreign
to our people and who is permitted without molestation to enjoy
the freedom and privileges of our American institutions and government.
T B would
like to know where the secret service and detective force of New
York were to allow their President to be so cowardly attacked in
broad day light and who had been sent to the President to prevent
just what occured [sic]. Yes, these so called guardians of
the people were to blame for their stupidity and inactivity. President
McKinley little dreamed that he had an enemy. A man who has been
so good, fair and honorable to the people he has endeavored to serve
is to day prostrate, while the bleeding tears of a faithful and
invalid wife are falling thick and fast over a wounded husband.
Must a President now be compelled to remain in recluse from the
people who elected him, because a lawless element is permitted to
exist among us? If this must be the fate of a good man, what man
will be safe who may occupy the Executive Chair? It had been hoped
the President would live and this is the wish of many millions of
his faithful black allies who are always found true, honest and
faithful in the hour of peril. They were found faithful and true
at San Juan Hill, when Col. Roosevelt was making his famous charge,
and there was one faithful and true in the Temple of Music at Buffalo
when an assassin was about to fire a third shot into the body of
the President. The third shot might have proved instantly fatal
had not Parker, the brave Negro, stayed the assassin’s hand and
felled him to the ground. Could President McKinley but live, a glorious
and prosperous Country would be saved from a panic. Will the faithful
wife soon enjoy the company of a good husband and the Nation continue
to prosper? To day [sic] the Nation is unhappy. To day [sic]
the Nation’s honor will be weighed in the balances. The American
people continue to offer their prayers to God and beg that a protecting
arm may be thrown around their President and angels guard his sacred
chair. The Bee sympathizes with thefaithful [sic] household
of the President. The Bee is too full to express itself. We can
only look too [sic] that God who rules the destines [sic]
of Nations. Let the anarchists be exported.
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