| Westlawn Cemetery, Canton, O.      The universally lamented death of 
              our late beloved President, William McKinley, and the imposing ceremonies 
              attending his funeral have imparted to the cemetery in which his 
              remains were finally deposited a national importance. More than 
              this, his beautiful and consistent life, emphasized almost beyond 
              the bounds of human appreciation on a death-bed, shall we say, divinely 
              appointed, will undoubtedly make Westlawn Cemetery, Canton, O[.], 
              a sacred spot in our broad country, toward which a national pilgrimage 
              will be constantly setting.Our readers will remember that our 
              late President’s home for very many years was in Canton, O., and 
              his family burial lot was situated in the above named cemetery, 
              and in this lot his fondest and saddest memories were centered. 
              In accordance with the usual custom of our country, and for the 
              lack, in a certain sense, of a national valhalla, the public receiving 
              vault of the cemetery, for the time being, has become the temporary 
              resting place of the mortal body of William McKinley. Our illustration 
              shows the tomb after the funeral, but gives only a partial idea 
              of the wealth of floral tributes, expressive of the international 
              grief, deposited about the tomb and on the lawn.
 The vault was a gift to the association 
              some years ago by Mrs. Frank Mason Werts in memory of her deceased 
              husband. It is of Romanesque design, constructed of rock-faced and 
              dressed Massillon sandstone, and built into the hillside, at a cost 
              of some $5,000[.]
 Westlawn Cemetery is a beautiful tract 
              of rolling country, comprising some sixty-five acres of well diversified 
              ground. Its hills and valleys are accentuated by a fine stream, 
              spanned by rustic stone bridges, and a picturesque waterfall adds 
              to its general attractions. The character of its topography lends 
              itself to diversity of landscape views on every hand. Generally 
              the land is covered with native oak forest, which has been improved 
              by other planting, but artificiality has been avoided as far as 
              possible. The cemetery is fifty years old, so that the lawn plan 
              is a matter of progression, and is enforced as far as practicable.
 It was the wish of the President that 
              he should be buried in the cemetery wherein lay his children and 
              parents, and it is significant that no implied or expressed desire 
              of his life in respect to the disposition of his body when life 
              had departed has been questioned by the people. The grandly poised 
              character, illumined by an abiding love for his fellow man, culminating 
              in a death which set forth and emphasized the possibility of divinity 
              in man, developed such universal regard that all the ceremonies 
              attending his funeral were performed with a loving service unexcelled 
              in the annals associated with great public men. And Westlawn Cemetery 
              has been given an heritage to be held in perpetual reverence and 
              care.
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