M’Kinley Memorial Fund
The time has now come when the people
of Illinois have an opportunity to show that in affection for the
memory of the late President they yield to no other State in the
union. And yet it should be in no spirit of State pride that the
subscriptions are made. It would be much to the discredit of the
State if its contributions should fall below the sum which might
justly be expected from it, and it would be a matter for congratulation
if Illinois should be conspicuously generous, but the real motive
should rise above such considerations and find its source in reverent
admiration of the American citizen who lived according to the best
principles of American citizenship. The nation can never regret
the erecting of a monument to a man who was an embodiment of so
many of the nation’s ideals.
The process of securing the money
for this memorial, however, is through the channels of State organization,
and the Illinois State auxiliary of the McKinley National Memorial
association has now issued its call, backed by a proclamation from
Governor Yates. It is through this auxiliary that the citizens of
Illinois will be expected to contribute their share of the funds
necessary for the monument at Canton. There can be no doubt that
the call will meet with a quick and satisfactory response. To urge
the people of the State to contribute according to their means is
superfluous. But there is some danger that there might be a delay
in accomplishing what will, of course, be accomplished ultimately
but which ought to be accomplished at once. Let the subscriptions
be made immediately, let the money be collected as soon as possible,
and let the committee, after a careful discussion of plans, build
the memorial arch or other structure without the dilatoriness of
which such bodies are often guilty. It is only a mark of proper
respect to the dead that his grave should not remain long unhonored.
If the befitting monument is, as Milton
suggests, “the labor of an age in piled stones,” it is not necessary
that that age should be spent in raising the money to pay that labor.
The actual designing and erecting of the memorial should not be
done in haste, but the subscribing period should be as brief as
possible.
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