MAY 31, 1912 The Commoner. MRS. BRYAN'S RESPONSE " """ Below will bo found Mrs. Bryan's response to tho toast, "Dolly Madison," at the harmony breakfast, given by tho democratic women at Washington, D. C, May 20, 1912. After a brief introduction, Mrs. Bryan spoke as follows: "I wish, in tho beginning, to tell you how glad I am to be with you today. I feel that wo owe a large debt to the bright mind which first thought of promoting good feeling among demo cratic women by having them know each other. "Men have a great advantage over us in this particular, for a broad acquaintance and a con sequent tolerance come to a man naturally as a part of his daily work. With women tho reverse is true, and I am sure we appreciate thoroughly this opportunity to meet and to know each other. The toasts, as assigned, give me the pleasant task of speaking of the charac ter of Dolly Madison rather than of her social methods. We may 'ask, why Mrs. Madison? Why do we not speak today of Martha Washing ton, of Abagail Adams, or of our own Mrs. Cleve land, who was so universally beloved when she was our first lady? Here we bow to the wis dom of our committee, for the reasons for their choice aro quite sufficient. "Washington's work was to get the govern ment upon its feet; a work to which Adams con tributed. With Jefferson- began tho reign of real democracy, and Mrs. Madison was the first democratic woman to hold authority. Jeffer son had no wife. James Madison was then sec retary of state and his wife, by virtue of her position and of tho close friendship which existed between tho two .families, was, to all intents and purposes, the mistress of the White house during the two terms of Jefferson's ad ministration, save for the short periods during which Jefferson's daughters came to visit him. "Then followed eight years as the wife of a president, giving her, in fact, sixteen years of experience. Even if she had been dull which "she was not she must have learned much worthy of our consideration in that length of time. "Her work was tho more conspicuous because of social and political conditions. The revolu tion had brought tho colonies much closer to gether in spite of difficulties of travel and slow ness of mail. The people felt for the first time the binding force of the word "American," and attention was centered upon Washington. "All these favorable conditions would have gone for naught, however, had not the woman fitted the times. Her ancestry made her a power for unification, as in her veins flowed the composite blood of Great Britain. Her paternal grandfather was English, her paternal grand mother Scotch, and her mother Irish. Her father was a member of the Society of Friends, and in this restraining atmosphere she lived for Ntwenty-one years a school of repression and self control which was doubtless valuable in later life. "In personal appearance she was most attrac tive. A fine complexion, blue eyes, and black hair which curled, were her strong points. Whether she was really beautiful I had not been able to decide, but while sitting here with this charming portrait before me, I am convinced that sho was. "Dolly Madison had her limitations. She had not the advantages of travel; did not even know the life of her own narrow 'little country, as she was unfamiliar with the New England colo nies. Her education was gauged by tho meagre standards of a century ago. She did not caro for reading. Her letters show a kindly interest in people, rather than a vital interest in condi tions. It has been, said that her mind was slightly out of focus meaning, doubtless, that she lacked a sense of proportion. She some times saw small things large, and large things small. The lack which will appeal most to us is that we have no proof that she entered at all Into tho intellectual life of her husband; a privilege which we hold most dear. These de fects do not suggest any mental inferiority, but are rather a natural outgrowth of her educa tion and surroundings. "One trait whiph caused her to develop, into . the charming, easy social leader, which she was, was her adaptability. As a Quakeress, she was sober and demuro; in official life, tactful and courteous, dignified or gay as occasion de manded; In later life, faithful; in old ago serene. "Sho had excellent judgment, as is instanced when, in her early widowhood, two notablo suitors joined tho train of her admirers. Within tho slight body of Madison sho saw a manly soul, and preferred him to tho handsomo Aaron Burr. "Another largo factor in her success was her genuineness. What sho was, fully as much as what she did, makes her worthy of our imita tion. Her suavity and affability wero not tho polished veneer which ono too often finds in society, an attempt to conceal a selfish nature but which deceives no ono; It was rather a raro bit of real growth springing from the soil of kindly interest and nurtured by tho gentle dews of loving good will. The phrase, 'a wish to please and, what is more important, 'a will ingness to bo pleased,' has been applied to Dolly Madison with entire appropriateness. Sho was willing to inconvenience herself in order to give, others happiness, and received tho courtesies of friends with gracious appreciation. "In an ascending scale, it Booms to me, her strong sense of propriety ranks next a most important qualification, so important that it has been called the sixth sense. It is not necessary to enlarge upon this. Wo have occasion to note almost daily tho pitfalls that besot those who fail to see the eternal fitness of things, and wo reallzo how valuable an asset Mrs. Madison hero possessed. Few women, too, have been able to so successfully tread the narrow path which lies between tactfulness and insincerity. While on tho way to Washington my thought has been busy with this patron saint of ours. What, after all, is her dominant characteristic? -My judgment may bo faulty, but with me the scalo is turned when loyalty lies in tho balance. Sho was loyal first of all to her friends; she did not forget the friends of early days, oven though they wore in humble circumstances. I have no doubt wo shall hear more of this later when tho Dolly Madison snuff box is opened for our in spection by Mrs. Ralston. Second, she was loyal to her country. When tho British marched upon our capitol, she it was who bravely stayed alone, save for tho servants, in the White house, and with her own hands packed the official papers into trunks and sent them to a place of safety. And when the troops had almost reached the city, she it was who superintended in cutting from its frame tho portrait of General Washington. After the troops had gone, among the very first to return to the blackened ruins of the White house was tho faithful Dolly. "But last of all, sho was loyal to her husband. During the years of official life, his work was her first thought. Through all the bitterness and criticism, often unjust, such as comes to every man in public life, she used her tactful skill to conciliate the opponent and to disarm tho critic. But to mo tho most admirable part of this admirable life is not found in these years of stress and struggle, but in the later years at Montpelier. Giving up the social life which she so much enjoyed, we see her there caring for her husband's mother, who lived to be ninety eight, and who for years was an invalid. There, when tho frail little body of Madison grew weaker and weaker, though his mind was still bright; when with eyesight almost gone and with hands hopelessly crippled with rheumatism ho sat, a mere shadow of his younger self, there wo see the supreme loyalty of Dolly Madison. For seven years sho was ever at his side; she read to him; she wrote for him; sho made smooth tho path of his decline. What a privilege was hers! Truly a gentle presence is this which we have called from the haze of jel hundred years ago! "I know of no better sentiment with which to close this toast than that which was once ap plied to her by one raoro clever than I; a senti ment which is a paraphrase of Decatur's cele brated motto, and which I am sure will find an echo in every wifely heart before me: 'My husband, may he over bo right; but right or wrong, my husband.' " MRS. BRYAN'S TOAST Referring to tho "Dolly Madison Breakfast," given at Washington, tho Cincinnati Enquirer's correspondent said: "The first and tho prize toast of tho day was a eulogy of tho famous White house wit and beauty, 'Dolly Madison, popular, bravo, tolerant,' by Mrs. William Jennings Bryan who demonstrated that not all tho oratorical ability of tho Bryan family Is confined to the malo members. The women agreed that Mrs. Bryan's effort was a classic." GOOD FOR VIRGINIA Virginia's last legislature rofusod to ratify tho incomo tax amcndmont to the federal con stitution; bo mo of her legislators allowing technical objections to outwolgh tho substantial merits of the amondmont. But tho democrats of Virginia, speaking through tho stato convention, have put tho "Old Dominion" on tho side of tho amendment and tho noxt loglslaturo will add the stato to tho list of states ratifying It. Tho Virginia platform says: "Believing that tho principle of a graduated tax on Incomes Is sound, equitable and thor oughly democratic, and that tho proposed amendment to tho federal constitution, which has been submitted to tho several states of tho union for ratification, designed to mako clear the power of tho federal government to lay such a tax without apportionment among the several states according to population, should rccolvo the ratification of Virginia and of such other states as have not already ratified It, wo de clare it as the senso of this convention that said proposed amendment should bo ratified by the next general assembly of Virginia, and wo express the hope that a' democratic congress and president will carry this method of taxation Into effect at tho earliest opportunity, to tho end that wealth may bear Its just proportion of tho burdens of the government." MR. UNDERWOOD'S VOTE Tho Jacksonville, Florida Times-Union com plains that Tho Commoner Is not giving Mr. Oscar Underwood credit for having given his vote and Influential support to tho proposition to elect senators by popular vote. Tho Com moner hastens to mako amends and to say that Mr. Underwood Is entitled to respect for tho vote he cast In favor of that groat reform. It is all the more to his credit that he did this in the face of tho fact that there was strong oppo sition to it among his southern colleaguos. Tho Commoner has never Intended to withhold from Mr. Underwood or any other man tho credit belonging to him. On the contrary it would have been glad to have had tho opportunity of complimenting Mr. Underwood with respect to his conduct generally on public questions. A MIGHTY MESSAGE On another page will bo found the address delivered by Hon. J. A. MacDonald of Toronto, at New York, April 19, 1912. Mr. MacDonald is the Gladstone of Canada; he is a Christian statesman who submits public measures to ethical tests. His message was delivered under tho auspices of the men's religion and forward movement at tho conservation congress and it made a deep impression. It not only calls atten tion to matters of transcendant Interest, but It shows the dynamic force of a moral Issue In the hands of ono whose character enables him to stand for morality in politics. The poetic lines with which he concluded ought to bo com mitted to memory few lines contain so much Inspiration. OUT OF THE RACE The New York World, a newspaper that has been somewhat partial to Mr. Harmon, says: "Governor Harmon needed a more decisivo vindication than Mr. Taft, in view of the ag gressive campaign that Mr. Bryan had mado against him. He failed to gain this vindication. That thousands of Ohio democrats, In a com paratively small vote, should havo expressed their preference for tho governor of New Jer sey as against the governor of their own stato is a decision without precedent in tho history of democratic politics in that state. The Wilson vote is doubly significant, in view of tho fact that Governor Harmon was re-elected less than two years ago by a plurality of more than 100, 000. Governor Harmon's one chance at Balti more, in view of Mr. Bryan's bitter opposition to his nomination, was to demonstrate that ho had tho complete confidence of the Ohio demo crats and could sweep his state. This chanco is now blighted. It looks as if the ono unmis takable verdict of the Ohio primaries is that no Ohio candidate, democrat or republican, shall be president. Ohio repudiates Ohio." DEGRADATION From the Washington Star: "There's a good deal more refinement in athletics than thero used to be." "Yes," replied the sporting man; "but every now and then some pugilist breaks loose and talks about 'slugging over tho ropes' like a political candidate." .JmMuxV (; Aifi -v .& a i (ti