.; ' 17" TW' T ' if ' s The Commoner. WIIXIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR H MA. " Kl VOL. 7, No. 24. Lincoln, Nebraska, June 28, 1907. Whole Number 336., CONTENTS WHAT IS A DEMOCRAT? GOVERNOR HUiiHES VETO A WORD ON SPECULATION THE TARIFF ' - WHAT WELL IT STAND FOR? .THE JAPANESE QUESTION A STEP TOWARD SIMPLICITY "THE.AVERAGE THOUGHT OF THE AVER AGE MASS OF MEN" MR. BRYAN ON CAMPAIGN CONTRIBU TIONS WASHINGTON LETTER PARAGRAPHIC PUNCHES COMMENT ON CURRENT TOPICS- s HOME DEPARTMENT WHETHER COMMON OR NOT NEWS OF THE WEEK r. GOVERNOR HUGHES' VETO Governor Hughes has vetoed the two-cent, fare bill sent to him by the state legislature, and in doing so he has greatly pleased the newspapers which take their que;fromthe;cb'rr porations, but he has , disappointed the plain people who have expected, from, him 'more in-" dependpnce and moral courage. He defends his action on the ground that the legislature did not make a sufficient investigation before acting, but this excuse is hardly sufficient. He has simply given the benefit of the doubt to the railroads instead of giving it to the people, and that too, when the railroads had the right of appeal to the courts so that there was no possible chance for an Injustice to bo done, while the people have no appeal. In acting upon public questions men's sympathies play as im portant a part as their intelligence, and it is evident that the sympathies of Governor.Hughes are with the railroads. It is always easy to find an excuse for doing what one wants to do, al though ax.ii! this case, the excuses may be very nebulous. If Governor Hughes had been as anxious' to do justice to the people as he is to guard the railroads against injustice, he would have signed the bill and given the courts of New York a chance to suspend the law if it made an unreasonable reduction in the earnings of the roads. He confesses that he has made no in vestigation and that he does not know whether the law is just" or not, but the protest of the railroads has more weight with, him than the opinion of the representatives pi) the people in the New York legislature. He refers the question to his public utilities board which he is to appoint, but if, in the ap pointment of the members of this board, he is as sollcitious about the railroads as he is in his veto message, the peoplfc can not expect a great deal from the board. He seems to be afraid that the railroads might retaliate by introducing "economies in the Bervice" and readjusting rates, etc. He seems to overlook the fact that under any effi cieut regulation of railroads the governments, state and national, are able to cdmpel the rail roads to meet the demands of the public. From his language it seems that he takes a hopeless view of the subject and assumes that after giv ing to the railroads the right of eminent domain, the people must trust the railroads to deal kindly and considerately with the public. If the people are to rely upon regulation, they will have to have more courageous representatives in office than Governor Hughes has shown him self to be.' ''- n . - kvmi 1 1 " UmirjWM 'kiciijggg11 ggrbjvar: i Km ' villi I r " mm ilHBP2 B ml ' T .- ill ' Sf r v. J y MR. ROOSEVELT HUNTING WILD THINGS--AND- . JF MR. ROOSEVELT HUNTING THE OCTOPUS WHAT IS A DEMOCRAT? To the Editor of the New York World: Accepting your kind invitation to define a democrat, I beg to say that the subject may be considered from two standpoints: First, from a party standpoint, a democrat may be defined as one who is a member of the organiza tion known as the democratic party. A man's connection with a party is voluntary. He is at liberty to connect himself with any party or with no party, and he is known politically by the company, he -keeps. If ho allies, himself with the democratic party and votes the democratic ticket, he is entitled to be cailed 'a democrat; insofar as that term is used as a party designa tion, although he may not endorse all of th.e party platform -6r T)e democratic in his instincts. If, ' in addition to voting the democratic ticket, he endorses the platform adopted by- the party no one can dispute his title to the appellation democrat"" when the subject is viewed from the standpoint of party. A party organization has a right to choose its own name, io write its own platform, and to nominate its own candi dates; and employing the word democrat in a party sense, the party has a right to withhold the name democrat from anyone who refuses to ', accept the party's decision without questioning the right of a person to leave his party organiza- tion at the command of his conscience and hia, judgment. It is only fair to say that ho can; not take the party name with him if he dis sents from the opinions and acts of the majority of the party, for the rule of the majority is as much a part of party government as it is a part of our theory of government. Men upon the outside may claim to be more democratic than men on the nslde of the party and under a broader deflnitiori of the word democrat they may be and yet, frorna party standpoint their claim can not bo allowed without the oblitera tion of party distinctions. If, then, by your question, What is a demo crat? you mean to ask for a definition from a party standpoint, I would say that a democrat . is one who considers himself a member of the- democratic organization, who works with the democratic organization and who expects to vote ' the democratic ticket. I do not mean to say that by taking part in the organization he would bind himself morally or politically to endorse tai. iv, MMaa&LitAM. te. j. giftu'taiiJA. . tofKHiAfrJifa :, , hecjji vAAaLi AW.AdlJiA.rj'. - .rX&m.&Ji'ligO&&-i, .rML4kHtjj