'" FffRV P T " ?'"' "ypwwp f'T'Wwrr VOLUME 11,. NUMBER 2 i I li 6 The McCabe Memorial Bolow will bo found an address, delivered by Mr. Bryan at Williamsport, Ind., May 7, 1911, at the momorial exercises hold In honor of tho late Judgo James McCabe: Mr. Chairman, Ladios and Gentlemen: Engagements which I could not break with out great injustice to others, prevented my being horo at tho time when Judgo McCabe's body was laid In tho grave. I am very glad that this day has boon sot apart for momorial exorcises and that it is possible for mo to join with you in paying this tribute of respect. For some fifteen years I knew Judge McCabo as a political associate and as a personal friend. Tho acquaintance was so intimate that his homo was ono of tho homos which I visited without tho formality of an invitation or rather it was ono of tho homos to which I had a standing invita tion, and whenovor circumstances permitted I would notify him that at a certain time it would bo my pleasuro to visit him, and theso visits aro delightful memories. I am glad to add my tribute to those that havo boon paid to him. I was not here to watch his progress in his profession. I could not know him as thoso havo known him who met him every day and associated with him as ho performed tho duties of his profession and of citizenship. But I learned to know some thing of tho great principles upon which his life was built, and this afternoon I can do no better than to emphasize the fundamental things that manifest themselves in the career of this exemplary husband and father, this distin guished lawyer, this faithful friend and con scientious citizen. I shall begin by giving you four words that might be called the four corner-stones upon which his life rested. They were God, home, society and government. He recognized his responsibility to a Creator; he recognized that he was a part of the Divine plan. Had he not done bo, he could never have understood why ho was here or formed an intelligent conception of life. One who does not recognize that there Is & higher power, one who does not feel that there is' a Creator, one who does not know (hat in the very depths of his heart there is an eye that never sleeps, that there is a conscious presence always about him, and who does not feel a sense of responsibility, for every thought, and word and deed, cannot have the strength that man needs in the temptations and struggles of this lifo. When I find a man who does not believe in a God, I do not know how to reason with him. I think, therefore, that the first thing that I might present as an explanation of that life of rectitude, that life of honor, that life of usefulness, that life of friendship, that life of love, is that back of it was the sense of responsibility to a Creator. You cannot put enough policemen around a man to keep him in the path of rectitude, if he has not within him that monitor that is better as a guardian of the law than any outside office. The man who feela that he must maintain his own self-respect is quite sure to have the respect of thoBe about him. The man who re fuses to sin, not from fear that others may find it out, but because ho will know it himself, is the man who la strongest to resist temptation, and there is nothing that can take the place of this inner strength. We all need it. We are weak enough in the presence of temptation when we have it; we are helpless if we have it not. The second word that he knew was the word home, and his home life, is evidence of God's wisdom when he planned for man and for man's caTeer. The home 1b the fittest earthly type of heaven. No one, can when he knowB a real home doubt that God was all-loving and all wise, as well as all powerful. The evidences of design in this world are so abundant that a man must shut his eyes to the most obvious facts, not to believe that back of the design there was a designer, that back of the plan of this great universe there was an architect, and one of the best proofs of the wisdom of love of God, is the . home in which two hearts are brought together, the home in which two lives are welded into one. The partnership that is entered into, not with the idea on either side of securing tho advan tage of tho other, but when tho contract is one of of mutual forebearance it 1b a priceless partner ship. The home is the center from which the good influences flow out. It is the home that man finds his strength for work outside. If you would destroy a man, strike him first in his home and he will not have much strength left to meet you outside. But while a man is strong' in his home, while thore The Commoner. is ono thoro to whom he can go and open his heart, to whom he can tell all his trial and from whom ho can gainer bu-buisui, encouragement and Inspiration give him that and you cannot over-estimate the strength of a human being. Judge McCabe enjoyed tho strength of a home. Ho enjoyed tho strength that comes from entwining one's lifo with the life of another. Ho began married lifo when he was young, and for nearly fifty-eight years that married life con tinued, and in that home thore was not only tho inspiration that comes from the companion, sympathetic, congenial, and helpful, but he found in his home the strength that comes from responsibility. Our children educate us while we educate them; while helping them, they give us an interest in our fellowmen, that wo cannot, without that, so quickly feel. They teach us sense of responsibility to society. The man who has about him the hostage that he has given to the future is a sane man for society, when he appreciates the responsibility of his position. Judge McCabe had an ideal home; a home in which there was a wife who was a help mate, a homo in which there were children who stimulated him to the utmost limit of his strength, that he might provide for them; chil dren who inspired him with a desire to lead an exemplary life, that he might be an example unto them. He was thus fortified in his home relations and mado strong to meet the world outside. Aiid his was a successful life. Let no one think that because his name is not upon tho list of those who died leaving their millions, his lifo was a failure. His life was eminently successful. The husband and wife, who can give children to society not only to take the place of themselves, but more, are doing some thing for the world; and not only that, but they are perpetuating their influence. It has been said here this afternoon that he had built a monument more lasting than the monument that loving hands will rear. It is true. The most lasting monument that one can build is the influence that his heart exerts upon the hearts of others, and he who has made an indelible impression upon the hearts of those who grow to manhood and womanhood abbut his fireside, in addition to the impression that he has made as a friend, neighbor, and citizen, has left an influence that will not die. Man Is related to the generation that went before him. He is influenced now by those generations which passed away before man's thoughts were spread upon the written or the printed page. The tra ditions that were handed down orally from parent to child have molded generations from tho very beginning of human history, and these impressions, these personal impressions, are lasting impressions, and wo are not able to esti mate in words or describe in value the influence of the example of. Judge McCabe in his home, on his children, and upon those about him. But Judge McCabe knew also the meaning of the word society. He understood that he was a part of society. He recognized that there is another tie besides the one that binds one to those of his own flesh and blood. He recognized that he owed a duty to society, that there must be a relation between him and society, and I believe that one of the secrets of his influence one of the reasons for the universal respect felt toward him; one of tho things that explains the widespread sorrow at his taking off was that he had fixed between himself and society a rela tion that was Just and equitable. He under stood that every one is Indebted to society and that unless he would repudiate that obligation he must make payment to society. He has been described as one who in his youth lacked the advantage that some obtain from the schools. Isuppose he might be called, and the language would not be regarded as extravagant in the sense in which it is used, a self-made man. And yet Judge McCabe was too wise a man to give himself too large a share of the credit for what he was and what he did. He was too just a man to forget that he was Indebted, and largely in debted, to society for all that ho was or could hope to be. The debt we owe to society is one that is quito difficult for us to calculate accurately. What are we except that which we borrow from those who havo gone before and from those about us. Take the triple blessings included in American citizenship, namely, universal edu cation, popular government and our conception of religion; for I regard these as the three greatest blessings that come to us by inheri tance when wo aro born into this land of ours. From what source do they come? They come to us without money and without price. Tho educational system -that is a part of our lives camo down to us because of the intelligence of former generations; because those wJio lived before us understood the Importance of the school-house; because thoso who lived before us put a high value upon mental training, we have the educational opportunities that we have. Our government, in which we are so proud to participate, is the result of sacrifices made by millions. All the civil rights that we enjoy and we sometimes think of them as if they were trifling, have caused the blood of patriots to flow. Millions and tens of millions have died that our government might be what it is. Civil liberty is a growth and every one in all the ages past who has stood up and sacrificed that people might be free, has put us under obligations to him. ' If you visit Grand Canyon in Arizona, you will find a great gap in the earth through which a river runs. It is some eight miles -wide at the point where you look upon it and it is more than half a mile deep. When you go down, by a tedious journey till you reach the stream below you are amazed at the work that the water has done in ages past; every drop of water that in all these years has passed that way has left its impress on the bank on either side, an impress that is not perceptible, an influence that you cannot calculate or weigh, and yet each drop has done its work. And so when you go back through history, we find that every drop of blood that man has shed for man has had its part in the making of this world that we now enjoy. Whon we come to the benefits of our religion and the enjoyment of religious liberty and put a valuo on the conception of life, we feel that our indebtedness runs back through the ages, and wo cannot calculate it. American citizenship is a priceless thing and those who have given it to us have passed be yond our power to reward them. Judge Mc Cabe understood this. He understood that he came into this world a debtor, and it was his ambition that he should retire from it with a surplus in his favor from society, that he might not feel that at his death he was a' bankrupt. Back of his ceaseless industry, back of his tire less interest in everything that was good, was this consciousness that he was indebted to all the generations past and that he must pay that debt to the generations living now, and to all the generations that are to come after him. He recognized that there must be a measure of value, that a man must be prepared to apply it to his life and that he must so live that he can apply that measure without being ashamed. And what is that measure? It is one that we cannot afford to overlook. It is one that we dare not ignore; that is, that a man has no right to draw from society except in proportion as he contributes to the welfare of society. Judge McCabe spent his long and illustrious life trying to give to society a dollar's worth of service for every dollar that he drew from it, and if this were the purpose of every life, if this were the animating motive of every career, how soon injustice would disappear, for the world's Injustice today largely measures the amount that some secure from society without giving to society a value in return, and it is offset by what others give to society for which they re ceive no adequate compensation. Judge McCabe, I repeat, understood the word society. He understood his obligation to it and he tried to perform his duty to society. Ho also understood the word government. Ho recognized that wo have to have organized government. He understood that people have to co-operate in the doing of those things neces sary for the protection of human rights, for the advancement of human welfare, and he under stood that there are only two theories of govern ment that had been promulgated among men. One is that tho government is a sort of a not that is thrown over people as a net is thrown over a bird, that a government is a thin outside and apart from the people, used to enslave and oppress those who do not participate in its management, a government resting upon force and administered for the bqnefit of those who administer it, However conscientiously people have tried to administer the kind of government that rests upon force, and many have tried con scientiously to administer wisely and benefi clently that kind of government, back of it all is, the sense of self-interest in the administrator, and history is red with the record of tho blood that has been shed by those who havo conscien tiously attempted to administer a government by force, and felt justified in killing those who am noi line tne way it was administered. Now that is one form of government. The other form t. iMtPinr'H v$AjUi4iw