| [untitled]       President MK 
              died on the 14th inst. at Buffalo from the effects of a bullet wound 
              inflicted by an Anarchist on the 6th inst. at the Pan-American Exhibition. 
              William McKinley was born in the town of Niles, Trumbull county, 
              State of Ohio, on the 29th Jan. 1843. Like so many Americans whose 
              lives have made them illustrious (says the Times), he came 
              of a stock in no way distinguished by other than the virtues of 
              simplicity and good character. Again like the majority, the boy’s 
              education was the thing which seemed to his parents the foundation 
              of a career, and he was taught first in Poland Academy, then in 
              Allegheny College, an institution of learning which, like many other 
              so-called colleges, gave its new pupil perhaps fewer advantages 
              than its name might entitle him to expect. Of what opportunities 
              he had he made use. Leaving college, he became himself a teacher: 
              but other duties awaited him on the threshold of his career. The 
              great Civil War broke out just as he had entered his nineteenth 
              year. The President of the United States called for troops to maintain 
              the Union, the Government, and the existence of the Republic. McKinley 
              enlisted as a private in the 23rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry on the 
              11th June 1861, and remained in the military service of his country 
              till the close of the war. It was more than a year before he emerged 
              from the ranks, receiving his commission as second lieutenant on 
              the 23rd Sept. 1862. Next year he was first lieutenant, captain 
              the year following; and he served on the staffs of General Hayes 
              (himself afterwards President) and General Hancock. President Lincoln 
              gave him a brevet as major in March 1865 for gallantry in battle, 
              and it was with that rank that he was mustered out of the service. 
              To the time of his election as President, and after, he was known 
              as “The Major.” His military career was honourable, though his opportunities 
              for distinction were less than fell within the same period to other 
              men. A boy he entered the army, hardly more than a boy he left it, 
              and forthwith he began what he probably supposed to be his real 
              work in life. He read for the Bar and was admitted in 1867. Settling 
              at Canton, Ohio, which has been his home ever since, he was chosen 
              Prosecuting-Attorney of the county in 1869. In the law he made no 
              [469][470] great figure; the real work 
              of his life did, in fact, lie elsewhere, and his election to the 
              House of Representatives at Washington in 1876 marks the beginning 
              of the political career in which he was destined to win the highest 
              distinction to which an American citizen may attain. |