Reminder of M’Kinley
His Last Public Dinner Was in the New York State
Building, Where
Governor Odell Will Hold a Reception.
Over the main entrance to the great
hall in the New York State building is the picture of the late president,
heavily draped in black. The picture was placed there on the day
before the tragedy, and beneath it the president walked when he
entered the room where a luncheon was given in his honor by the
New York State Board of Pan-American Managers. After the president
died the picture was draped in black, and there it will remain until
after the Exposition is over and the New York building is turned
over to the Buffalo Historical Society.
Among the thousands who pass in and
out of the New York building each day nearly every visitor pauses
to look up at the noble, serious face shadowed by the folds of mournful
crape. As the visitors pass on into the main hall they are curious
to know the exact spot where the president sat, and the guards are
kept busy pointing it out to them. Governor and Mrs. Odell will
stand near this spot during the reception on the evening of New
York day.
As it turned out, the luncheon at
the New York State building was the last public feast that the president
ever sat down to. At that luncheon there were present all of the
members of the cabinet in Buffalo, many United States officials
and foreign diplomats and dignitaries. The president was in a most
cheerful mood all through the hour, and many of his pleasing remarks
at the time are treasured in the memories of those who sat near
him. The luncheon was given just after he had delivered his great
speech on the Exposition grounds, and it is not unlikely that Czolgosz,
the assassin, at the very time the president sat at the table was
lurking near the building waiting for an opportunity to fire the
fatal shot. But no chance was given him on that occasion, for a
strong guard was placed about the New York building while the president
was there, and no one was permitted to enter or approach the building
without a pass.
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