9 The Hohenzollern Family, Its History and Traits THE CO HUT Eft The visit of a member of the Hohen zollern family to the United States in the person of Prince Henry, brother of the Kaiser Wilhelm. Is certainly an even of social if not of political im portance. The Hohenzollerns uniloiihtcilly de serve to rank highest of all the kingly families of Europe, their name hav ing been written more conspicuously on its pages for the past thousand years than that of any other single family. I'rince Henry is a marked contrast in disposition to his imperious brother. He is an admiral in the German :.avy and possesses the medal for distin guished service, won by unusual brav- The prince or emperor who would live up to the highest Hohenzollern stand ard must be both great as a w-i.rior and great as a man. The greatest of all the Hohenzollerin was the grandfather of Prince Henry. Emperor William I. As a contradiction to an impression which lias become general, it is remarked by a prominent historian that the Ccriuuiiy of today might have been without a ISisinarck but could not have been without Km peror William. It was through this great mouarcli that the German dream of unity anil independence was realized. The once disintegrated kingdoms which consti tute it today were .iniuished and sor- the revolution, was one of continually rising progress. The father of Pmce Henry, the be loved Frederick, seems scarcely to have been a Hohenzollern of the conven tional type, having been tot) ideally ro mantic and cosmopolitan of sentiment for such distinction. Tin. present em peror Is a typical Hohenzollern, in dis position, if not in achievement. It is a long hark back to the first Hohcuzolleru of note. He was a cer tain Count Thassllo, who lived about the beginning of the ninth century. Tile count founded a castle near Hech ingen. on the Zollcrn Heights, whence his descendants derived their patronym ic In the eleventh century the fain- .rm AY ?y?f Ft' 'JJ3!mmm via -?W AFK7kB mr fdnni LT1 X WBJb ai r M ai v , 'mmmvmYr' jJmmmm &A luy 'j&ft smmmmm Am jwVyP"v . jbL ! X V Bl ffe 'l&k ' r-- "-L: A? i'mT k V J t BLr Jw" lVH M JiLW .SmmmLm9'm9mmw PB Jk j mt, LW S " AAr Wfflf mmmW WfJK LH. mmmmMLmmmmmmmmm mmmmWk K or "V f r ,) ; op fj , AA ,,a,i7J7- I V. ery and coolness in action. He com menced Ids nautical career at a very early age and has been for twenty years a sailor. "Unser Heinrich." as he is called, is about forty years old. and is much more of a favorite in Germany than is the kaiser. It has been said that he cannot leave Kiel, where his present position in the navy compels him to reside, without special consent of the emperor. Prince Henry was the favorite grandson of Queen Victoria, whom he delighted to visit, ami was also the best beloved child of the Emperor Frederick and his imperial consort. His valor and hardihood form the theme of many oft told stories among the men of his (ommand and the Prussians who love most to honor him. row ful at the time William I. ascended the throne of Prussia. They had been ground between the millstones of oth'-i powers for centuries. The war with France, which led to the coronation of William I. as emperor of United Ger many, in the palace of the French kings at Versailles, brought about the unifi cation of the empire which had been moulding for centuries. William I. was the descendant of a long line of great ancestois ami was endowed with a character, which, but for a few rather narrov traits, was formed to at-hlev e tiistim lion. This ruler reached the pinnacle of woiHIy fame gradually, it is true, and not without g'uve set-bat ks. but his ca reer, after his rttiirn to "mssi.i from exile, into width Ik w i drien by ily became split into two branches. Tlie repiesentative of the younger branih. who was the first burgrave of Nuremberg, purchased the margravate of Prandenburg from the impecunious Holy Homan Kmperor Sigismond. anil founded the family fortunes. From this occurrence on. the family of Hohenzollern supplies us with :i series of extraordinary instances of the transmission of certain mental and moral traits from generation to gene ration, which hae been a part of the boue and sinew of the rate for the last eight hundred y.ir The Hohenzollern-. are of Suabian origin ind that region his i well-established reputation for being .th home of cannine- mil thrift Thes tialts have been possessed o gener ally by rulers of the Hohfuzollcru Hue as tit make the exceptions almost more forcibly Illustrate the rule. It Is true that the first genius who appeared in the line of descent. Frederick the (real, was an exception, but even he. although possessetl of extravagant MUnlltics. used his Ingrained cauniucss to actUlre the title of king of Prussia from the Impecunious Kmperor Leo pold. Since that occurrence each suc ceeding Hohenzollern has addeil his mite toward upbuilding tin ..uer of Prussia, whilst other royal houses gained power by the help of the French against their own people. To understand correctly the osiiiou of tlie Hoheiizollerus today, one must study the past, ami not more particu larly in regard to what they tlid than to what they purposely refrained from doing. It may justly be asserted that weighed impartially by their virtues and their shortcomings, they were far superior to the occupants of other European thrones. Tht- court of the Hohcnzollerns was peculiarly clean and free from venal ity, or worse taint. Cut freedom from rascality was not tin- only conspicu ous trait of tlie Hoheiizollerus. They proved themselves true to the great est motto of them all that tin king is first servant of tlie state. It was tin- constant ambition of these sover eigns to work out the development and welfare of the nation. indeicnilcnt "f elass distinctions. This the people have always felt, from the humblest upwards. No better example of this fact could be given than tilt reply of the miller to Frederick the Great, when that monarch threatened to ex propriate him unjustly: "There are still Judges in Uerlin. your majesty." The Hoheirollcriis. at the com mencement of the last century, were intriMlueing compulsory education amid the derisive sneers of rival na tions and abolishing serfdom among the agricultural class by assisting peasant fanners to exist by means of government loans. At the beginning of the twentieth century we find them breaking fresh ground in new indus trial directions and economic measures for the welfare of the masses. As ever, the present representative f tlie house shows that lie under stands a nation does not consist of a small minority of privileged persons, but in a sovereign people who deserve the greatest solicitude of tlie one who has been placed in sovereign power over them. It is the response of Un people to the Hohenzollerns that en ables Germany to face her enemies in arms and inspires a Von ISuelow to as sert her constant readiness to do so. .- .- .- Uh.it d" you think. James." te iii. .iked .Mrs. Meekton. ".Mother want to be eiematetl." All right." replied Meekton. iiuickly tell her to get her things on and I v ill take her down now.'' JOHN S. CAIN Proprietor New Lincoln ""gnS"11' Bowling Alleys Kitrtthin: 'e and Strlctlj Flrt Cla Ladle Epciall Inviltd A Wise Landlord Get- tin- bc-.t talent that can 1-c secured in placing liU order for inaitle decoia-tinn- for hi- lioUMs. He desires the !e-t material twil.anl -tunetliiiig that will -taiiil the wear and tear id" Un tenant. My experience of twenty -eight years lia- taught me Iuw. when, and where to u-e economy. My price-, are rca-otialili-. Estimate- cheerfully furnUhtil. Carl Myrer, 2i2 O. Strut Phone ;2 32.