Show I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 DECAYING 1 in the school books we find it writ ten that a crown is a hollow thing head soft hearit it is I 1 a ch 11 ds reader in A aich t lie ce I 1 appears but it material for thought for people of all ages a nd conditions A crown is a hollow thing s and tile wearing of it IIA s tendency to like the which it encircles I 1 hollow 60 far 89 J from the airet principles of natures school which all to cultivate cult ivae dmd hold I 1 can so anike them to I 1 be great as the world goes I 1 I 1 is to be forgetful in a 1 grea ter or less degree of the arile I 1 source and attributes nt threat 1 1 ness choso who hold within ti clutch the symbol of au hority I 1 pretty sure tu ulela it or later in the interest of ves slid those altac h ed to them forgetful of the fa t that are affected by the mani ner in which is exercised tha will of the late emperor IVA liam jut ju t in do ii a striking case in A dispatch states that it show 4 his total savings I 1 more than twelve million dollars and 1 that the I 1 arger portion of tile property iro perty Is left to increase the general fund of I 1 th crown ky ills father I 1 the remainder i 8 divided bet w een empress august a emperor frederick and the grand duchess of baden b Ba denburg castle and coblentz pal bequeathed to empress all gusta there are m inor legacies I 1 it would he interesting to kaw 1 I 1 what those anor legacies consist of anve feature the awer tion that all the poor people in his realm who were left some de I 1 I 1 cripple dby ills latest I 1 war for realization and royal I 1 I 1 I 1 aej as bell is personal revenge not one was recognize ll or of was for in the power and extending without limit the reign of ilia dynasty so much for tile imperial fand established by my father so much far iny s ve augusta and tile I 1 rem tinder chiefly to my two imperial Im I 1 children was the burde ll 11 of the old 4 mans thoughts when he drow or dic bated tile document bequeathing ills property to his survivors one think that any man great or small when so near the brink of the here I 1 after would beetow at least a thong lit 0 thin himself I 1 especially if they had ba en the means of making ilia position and maintaining it for him and if in the work of enabling him to live and be luxurious many of the homes 12 his realm werl mide dil and many deserving people were denying I 1 and their offspring all the luxuries and some of the necess I 1 ties of lile in order that the next might be made secure Only twelve millions Is 4 I 1 possible such a miserable pittance all an monarch I 1 scrape to e my in the course of a gen orahim then his income must been a worth having far ely ilia blood was no than that of tha mst obscure yet 1 tru at fall babore or survival sur vivel th 0 shock of the do sperate I 1 brou frou amens his mind was of taij ordnary his no bounder than many who wera not hermitte per mitte to him yat while they ea 1 count arild all the hardships hardi hips of the 1 1 strite in order that ha might bo glor 1 fled and after ivard lived if they I 1 livel at all As bast they could upha their scanty tile pathetic 1 fie thit lia could only save I 1 out of his royal income the mis I 1 erable modicum of twelve mil lion dillars and this he to those who are pledgar to the perpetuity of the system which he foun d ed and I 1 they are willing to main maln I 1 against the late emperor patriot ism tour mige and devotion to his ca so nothing can be said lie did 6 the bes t he could with his training 1 and instincts bat be ra I 1 presented was bad because it incel I 1 bated selfishness greed am I 1 and disregard for the welfare of the lowly some of the evidences that there Is a great equalizer equI lizer even in such caws are already visible one o in the fatal affliction of the present emperor with whom all the world I 1 sympathizes he Is thus in such I 1 a position that tile poorest peasant in his dominions who is in possess on of I 1 I 1 I 1 health and liberty would apt change dimand another is in I 1 the tempero appearance and chara tive emperor I 1 prince william ayoung man who I 1 1 I 1 as fit to rule as arid no more so than I 1 high in thoger I 1 man empire he has already shown how lightly be regards ills fathers life and how willing he ij to insult ills moth in public places and er gives pro inIse ot becoming an un I 1 bearably bea rAbla nuisance itu such thin gs that cause thinking and right mind ed I 1 people to be encouraged in the belief 4 that the day is now neat at land when arthe curse of monarchy and aristocracy will be swept I 1 from the earth hasten the day |