| Show A MONARCHS MISTAKE a verj wilmay is at all times a very strong bead and chereb cerebe the t reb those alj who assert assert that t jo be in B bow and then a man I 1 it t was J wrong aften it a the th litter latter condition Ord bably that he gaab ta the follow fh the hi tel 1 I attl master here heldi none 0 O 6 abfier r 0 ahall b corbae near near me J more of arrogance g belf e if and domi heering e aig otlea could scarcely no compressed into 80 0 o few words and t the worst part of it Is 18 that ills hla majesty makes a abream a reak break of that kadd hi rid every now and then and bis big sensible and sensitive bavo bave become so tired of bis big freaks that they occasionally give ex ot tiree sion to their displeasure in no un ertain words this is simply playing with firt fire be because caulle whatever else he may mav be I 1 the ta emperor has ha the power he waste ba ata of at and is not at all slow in the matter of putting it in force still there are a good many people who refuse to be cowed into abject submission to accidental and misplaced royalty an aa the they put ut it even though to give ive voice to td ards words of arit chan or dib or since I 1 is butto batto place their hande hand hancsin sin in the lions mouth the estat example in point was on the lt instant when the frankfurter a powerful and influential paper of strong liberal tendencies had the u unpleasant experience of seeing its publication office involved by minions of hi hiar majesty who proceeded without ceremony emony to conn confiscate the entire edition the cause of this high highhanded banded performance for mance was a moderate yet stinging criticism of williams brandenburg speech the paper having slyly insinuated wit that the ruler should first have written his bis remarks then submitted them confidentially to some capable friend A reference was also made to the emperors la affectation of general knowledge know lege while his training fitted him only for a military expert the culminating mina ting point of the article however was its reference to emperor nero the german ruler is in credited with being highly and diffusively educated yet there are apparently some very simple things in this life or of which he Is if entirely ignorant ono one of these is the fact that obtrudes itself upon every man in authority if he be be not utterly obtuse that there is an inherent power in the people more potent shunlong than thun long lines of soldiery more to be dreaded than myriads of bristling and that this power when thoroughly aroused sometimes dissipates royalty like a breath and tumble tum blies thrones into the gutter the press which represents them may be but a mouthpiece voicing the feelings behind it and it were better to heed and take profit of this than to resort to the despotic plano blanot applying the of majesty it is a safe venture that the contained nothing that a majority of its ate readers it if not a majority of the german people did not endorse and his bis boba havior toe vior toward that p paper r follow ing so eo soon upon the great brits note occurring actually beneath the windows of his palace will not we take it have a soothing effect upon the populace or any other feeling than that of exper ex asper tion |