| McKinley       In William McKinley, 
              Twenty-fifth President of the United States, was crowned a fortunate 
              life by an immortal death; and the last moments of his earthly career 
              showed him to be one of those who live their best in order to die 
              worthily. Carried by a patriotic impulse at an early age into the 
              Union Army, his sterling qualities bore him forward by sheer force 
              of merit to a position that none could have foreseen in the quiet 
              and slender youth of 1861. Four years of strenuous army life brought 
              out and strengthened in him that native disposition to habits of 
              discipline, industry, dutifulness and comradeship which afterwards 
              helped him along so surely towards the highest of public stations. 
              Restored to home and a civil career by the return of peace he took 
              up the studies and training that might fit him for the practical 
              work of a lawyer. Aided by a steadiness of application, and by a 
              readiness and power of argument, he made a place for himself at 
              the bar not merely successful, but always so honorably filled that 
              his early translation to the field of politics was a recognized 
              loss to his chosen profession.McKinley had inherited and grown up 
              among those political principles that, by the time he came to manhood, 
              constituted the creed of the Republican party as founded in 1854. 
              Sincerely believing in them, it was natural to him to engage actively 
              in their advancement. Beginning in the ranks, and doing his duty 
              there, as before, without thought of else than duty, he became a 
              leader by the force of his own qualities and the confidence of those 
              by whom leaders are chosen.
 Space forbids other than mere mention 
              of a long career in the House of Representatives, during which he 
              constantly grew in intellectual adaptability to public affairs and 
              broadened in the experience necessary to deal with them successfully 
              on their practical side. In Congress, too, was preserved that amiability 
              which forever saved him from personal rancor on either side, and 
              won him friends on all sides. He knew his own motives and he believed 
              in the sincerity of those who differed from him. This unswerving 
              feeling of comradeship with his fellow-men, existing all his life 
              and under the strain of all circumstances, endowed his character 
              with a nobility for which mere brilliance would have been but a 
              poor exchange.
 The McKinley Tariff Act brought its 
              author first prominently before the Nation. The popular reception 
              of it retired him for the moment to private life in the general 
              but temporary downfall of his party.. His courageous answer to the 
              public verdict was that the tariff act was right and would speedily 
              vindicate itself. Speedily it did, and the vindication carried him 
              up to the great office of Governor of Ohio, with a large access 
              of National reputation. One term brought another, and in 1892, Governor 
              McKinley was a great figure in the Republican National Convention, 
              which showed a disposition then to take him up as its Presidential 
              candidate, only checked by his own protest against putting him into 
              a position where he could not honorably stand. Four years later 
              the nomination came to him honorably and with hardly the semblance 
              of a contest. [6233C][6233D]
 McKinley’s behavior and addresses 
              during the whirlwind campaign of 1896 left his eulogists nothing 
              to desire. He came to the Presidency in 1897, amid a popular conviction 
              that he would fill it with high conscience, ability and dignity, 
              and throughout the rest of his life, which he spent as President, 
              the conviction was signally realized. Accepting Congress as the 
              proper interpreter of the National feeling, he laboriously sought 
              to keep on the best terms with it and its individual members, so 
              that throughout his Presidency the legislative and executive departments 
              worked together in the public service as they had rarely done before. 
              With Congress he could not always do all that he would, but his 
              influence over Congress in matters of moment, exercised under the 
              quiet guises of patience and persuasion, was the greatest that any 
              President has yet possessed.
 As President, McKinley was distinguished 
              by his prompt success in restoring protectionism to the foundations 
              of the tariff system; by a triumphant but humane and generous conduct 
              of the Spanish War; by a just and enlightened participation in the 
              sentiment of the Chinese difficulties, winning the gratitude of 
              China, and the esteem of Europe, and by the careful, conscientious 
              and effective manner in which he met the trying problems that arose, 
              one after another, in relation to Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippines, 
              he would have passed into history as one of the most successful 
              of Presidents had he lacked claims to a higher distinction.
 On Thursday, September 5, 1901, at 
              the Buffalo Exposition, President McKinley made an address which 
              is worthy to stand as his final utterance on public affairs. With 
              deep solemnity it reminded the Nation of the responsibilities attending 
              its enlarged power and importance in the concerns of the earth; 
              it proclaimed good-will to all mankind, and spoke for friendly rivalry 
              and fraternal relations in the world-wide activities of commerce. 
              The next day, while holding a public reception at the Exposition 
              and looking compassionately upon a young man with a seemingly bandaged 
              and injured hand, a fatal pistol shot came from beneath the treacherous 
              cover, to number the good President among the blameless victims 
              of a perverted and bloody scheme of miscalled social regeneration. 
              After a brief promise of recovery, the Nation was called upon to 
              lay him away amid an unexampled outburst of grief and admiration 
              throughout the world. Thus the grave closed over one of our first 
              of public men who was one of the most lovable, whose private life 
              was a shining example of purity and devotion, and whose deathbed 
              has been fittingly described as that of “a noble and gallant Christian 
              gentleman.”
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