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nee BERMAN EMPEROR ‘NERF PAE (Delegation Headed by Andrew ‘Camegie Presents Him With Congratulatory Address, EBRATION TO-DAY. Rulers of Twenty-Five States That Make Up German Em- pire Visit the Kaiser. BORIIN, June ~The fudiiee cele Qration marking the twenty-Afth ennt- versary of the accession of Emperor ‘Wilhelm II. to the throne and the fulfll- ment of his ambition to rule a quarter century without war reached its height to-day when the rulers of the other twenty-five states that with Prussia: go te make up the German Empire, came tm Berlin personally to congratulate the Katser. ‘Tee Kaiser and Kaiserin motored tn ‘arty from Potedam, and after passing through the Thiergarten and Unter den Ldeden, where again they @ cheered te the echo, went to the now patace ‘There they received the Kings of Wur- fembers and Saxony, Prince Regent Lud- wig of Bavaria and al other dukes and ertaces reigning over the Gtates, duchies and principalities, CARNEGIE PRESENTS THE AD| 1Q0(). DREG6 OF AMERICANS. One of the first delegations received @y Wmperor William to-day was that headed by Andrew Carnegie, who pre- @entet him the following signed by ‘arge number of representative Ameri- ' Most endless. The delegates represented organizations of every kind, and all brought with them illuminated addresses, cans: while some of them conveyed handsome “To His Imperial Majesty the German | gitts to the Emperor, despite his dec- Weperor: laration that he did riot wish money to be apent in this way, but rather devoted to philanthropy. MORE THAN $6,000,000 RAISED FOR CHARITY AND 8CHOOL8. The most imposing testimonials were the endowment of $6,250,000 raised by the German municipalities for charitable and educational establishments and the na- tional subscription of $90,000 devoted to German Christian missions, in which Catholics and Protestants participated, the Catholics raising 995,000 and the Protestants $325,000, my presented His Ma, marshal's staff and the reat allver eagle. The Emperor spoke to each deputation & word or two of thanks, ‘The weather carried out the Hohensol- lern tradition, being sunny and warm, end spectators stood throughout the day In thousands around the castle and along the principal thoroughfares, To a delegation from the British Church in Berlin, received by His Maj- esty this afternoon, the Emperor said: “I can assure you I shall continue to do my best to preserve peace and pro- mote the friendly relationships existing | between our two countries.” “On behalf of organizations and s0- eleties which represent the effort of American citizens of every section, @reed and race to advance the cause of divilization, we venture to express to your Imperial Majesty our congratula-" tions upon a reign notable in countless sways, in none more so in the maintenance of twenty-five years of un- broken peace between Germany and the other nations of the world. {The memorable words of Your Maijes- ty ehortly after ascending the ¢hrone, peace of my country {s sacred to came both from the head and from the heart. Sacred indeed the pence, the order, and the prorperity of the German people have been. More than once durin, paat twenty-five years it has been the high privilege of Your Majesty not only to exercise ful forbearance, but to inspire it im others. “We beg to tender our thanks to Your Imperial Majesty for what you have to prevent war and to advance coming of the day when there shall be peace upon earth to men of good wilt, GONDITIONS OF THE GERMANS CONSTANTLY IMPROVES, ‘In addition to the preservation of {mternational peace, we know well that ON A MONARCHY. Peror William's attitude toward a con- he ae Com NEARLY TWO BILLIONS PAID OUT IN WAGES BY U. §. STEEL TRUST Corporation Employs 221,025 Persons, at Annual Wage of $189,351,602. William J. Filbert, Counptrotier of the United States Steel Corporation, took the witness stand for the defense in the Government dissolution sult against the corporation when the hearing was re- sumed this morning, Mr. Filbert sald jthat at the beginning the corporation and the shouts of the spect: STORY OF KAISER'S ATTITUDE) called its auditing heads together ani, Put out in a launch with three of the | decided upon standard classifications of club employees. A remarkable story showing the Em- | Cost accounting looking to economies in| Proximate spot where the struggling the industry, At present the corpora- atitutional monarchy was related to- lay. Prof, Otto Hintze, professor of constitutional and administrative his- tory, declared that the Emperor him- | self had told him years ago how he| had first disregarded and then destroyed | the standing appeal | William IV. of Prussia to his succes sors to abolish the Prussian constitu: tion. The Emperor said the first document found in his desk after his acces- on was an envelope containing the Political testament of Frederick Will- fam TV, which was to be delivered to each of his successors on his accession. Tt urged and implored in the strongest terms the revocation of the Pru: constitution before the taking of the coronation oath by the new monarch. Frederick William TV., who had Granted the constitution to Prussia dur- ing the stormy days of the middle of the nineteenth century, alwaye re- in promoting aa tar| #tetted his act, but did not find elther the brotherhood of | the opportunity or the courage to re- fm expressing to Your|Voke !t, Emperor William, like his ‘Majesty our sense of obligation for the | father and grandfather, had no inclina- ot tion to follow the advice of Frederick Sears Tete Pelee 96 SuantyGire yonre) i, Lv. but he went farther and destroyed the dooument from fear of the influence it might have on some young and Inexperienced successor. The Benperor auld; “I felt ae Mf I had a powder cask in the house, and tt worried me go that I finally burned the testament.” pat ls CIRCULAR COURT HOUSE OPPOSED BY JUSTICES. They Will, It Is Reported, Be Against Plans of Architect Lowell, Fast upon the heels of the informa, tion that'the Justices of the Suprem Court will meet late this afternoon for the purpose of passing their final judg. ment upon the plans for the new court house there were apparently well-defined rumors:that thelr report will be against the plans as drawn by Architect Lowell, For some time it has been known that indivual Justices have to the acceptance of these pl German people has steadily im- Thelr education is now better ‘end more practically helpful than ever YrJore The laws for the protection of the public health, for the compensation and care of the aged, the injured, and the incapable, are all due in large meas- ure to Your Majesty's support and ap- “The incressing population and the @Pewing wealth of Germany under im- proving conditions of life and of labor impressive tribute to Your owt. “Swe congratulate Your Majesty upon the notable advance made by Germany fm every field of human effort during Your peaceful, prosperous and civilising Feign. Long may it continue unbroken!" MILITARY BANDS MA6SED IN THE CASTLE COURTYARD. ‘The day began with a “general re- veille.” The massed military bands from the division of the Guards sum- moned the Emperor to his window With deafening music played in the tuner courtyard of the castle The Bandemen then paraded from the cas- fle to the Brandenburg Gate, at the @@her end of Unter den Linden, and ‘back again, playing popular melodies ané military marches. Im the meantime 7,000 school ohildren had replaced the bandsmen in the castle they sang several jent pleasure of the eourtyerd, whi gongs, to the evid eld The reception of deputations and the Bresentation of loyal addresses began @ o'clock, but was interrupted from U o'clock til! 2 o'clock by His Majesty'a FRception of representatives of the Goyernment offices, the army and navy, ) by coma and various municipall- Was understood to-day that the Justices will sap edn Mer dy . The mae om againet the plans, Ce @ circular papery Md that Wrvoula Phe dastices are sald form of mctanguisr gtrectusa tion is getting out fifty monthly coat statements. In connection with blast furnaces alone 8,000 items appear on the monthly cost sheet. Mra. Filbert went into a lengthy ex- elu ES Frederiox | Pianation of the methods employed to accur:te figures, t was from the exhibit in question that both President James H. Farrell and Judge Elbert H. Gary, Chairman of the Finance mittee, gave much of their evidence, showing, as they swore, that prices of Steel products had tended downward since the formation of the corporation. The witness swore that in 192 the cor- | poration employed 158, 26 persons and! the annual payroll was $112,820,198, In 1912 there were 221,0% employees and the Payroll was $189,261,0%2, an increase of 61.8 per cent. in ten years. Since the} formation of the corporation it has pald/ out in Government, State and municipal | taxes $66,575,789, Interest on bonds and mortgages, §37, 100,448.00 Dividends on corpuoration 495,1 0.00 1,876,761,06 | For sanitation and welfare work. Foor accident prevent and safety TWO BOYS DROWNED AS LAUNCH RACES TO RESCUE. Hero Who Tried to Save Com- panion Dragged Down by Death- Grip—Bodies Washed” Ashore. With a launch speeding to the rescue from the Bergen Beach Yacht Club two Jads, one apparently desperately fight- ing to save the other, were drowned to-day a few hundred feet off shore in full sight of a hundred of more snecta- tors, When the bodies floated into the beach cards were found in the dead youtha' pockets reading "Edward Adal and “Raymond Piret." Positive identification of the drowned boys was made by the police. Adams lived at No, 449 Bleecker street and Piret at No. 279 Van Cortlandt avenue, both In Brooklyn. They had gone with two other boys to Canarste, where they hired a boat and rowed to Bergen Beach for a swim. Commodore Hildebrand of the yacht orice, 1911 vss ceeeeee vases 147,460.28 For accident cwevent and, safety 1912 , ets 614,207.29 ‘Total wages from 1,650,044,022.00 | Weonlon fund cost to date 2,401,740.00 | Voluntary accident reliet Harployees’ stock subscription cost 6,906/321,00 8,637.00 have subscribed to $23,000,000 worth of stock. | Mr. Filbert declared approximately $18,- | 000,000 worth additional was to-day held by employees of the company, not be- ing sted in the original group of pur- cha: _— NEATLY NABS BURGLAR, An open rear window in the residence of Jonn Stevens, a broker, liv.ng at No, 68 Beech street, Richmond Hill, early to-day aroused the suspicions of Policeman Hoffman, who waited at the window like @ cat at @ mousehole Presently @ man jumped out. Hoffman seized him and there was a! brief struggle. ‘The policeman bri be worth 6500. The Stevens family was absent from home over Sunday. At the Richmond Hill police station the prisoner said he was Benjamin Hyte of No, 140 Norfolk street, Man- hattgp. He had a» “pal,” he said, who fa was nos found, yee club heard the cries from the water ator and They reached the ap- swimmers disappeared but could not find the bodies. Spectators agreed that one of the lads, who appeared to be about i7, began to sink and shout for help an that his companion, apparently about 19 years old, went to his ald and was a death grip he could not a SAVES DROWNING MAN. Policeman in Swimming Dives tor Tallor in P im Bay. Salvatore Colucci, a tallor, of No. 550 East Ono Hundred and Eighty-seventh i atreet, got a cramp while he was swim- ming in Pelham Bay off Pelham Bay Park to-day and sank about twenty-five feet from the dock. Policeman Louls Moses of the Morrisania station, who was on his vacation and had gone swimming in the same place, made for the spot where Colucci had sunk, dived for him and brought him unconscious to the dock. After two surgeons from Fordham Hospital had supplemented the work of reauyeltation the policeman himuelt be- gan Colucct was able to go to his home. Venry Clewa In Sued, (Special to The Evening World.) ROME, N. ¥,, June 16.—Joseph_D. Hall of this city, negro laborer, hus brought action against Hi: Clews, millionaire financier of New York, claiming damages of 310,90 for sander of Hall's title of real estate and of his name and character, Trouble started when Mr, Clews, through his attorney, Milo J. White, served notive on Hall to vacate his little home here, It was claimed that title was held by Mr. Clews and Hall was & squatter, In a counter action Hall got judgment and his title but the costs fell on him, New York is always changing; but its tea doesn’t. FLose CEYLON TEA MRS. PANKHURST FREED FROM PRISON FOR THE THIRD TIME other Hunger Strike When She Was Re-Arrested Saturday. LONDON, fragettes, wax this afternoon again re- leased from Holloway Jall because of her weakened and enfesdled condition, She started a hunger strike when she was rearrested on turday, and by to-day she could not stand. It was the third time that the leader began a three-year sentence for the | Lioyd Gorge bomb outrage. The first time she served nine days, and on her second trip she was in prison thre: {days, She left a nursing home Satur- day to attend the funeral of Mise Emily Davison, the suffragette of Derby tame, and was promptly returned to jail, Militant Leader Started An- June 16.—Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, leader of the militant suf- has beon released from Jail gince she "FEE ‘¥vewrve we RLD, MONDAY, JUNE 16, 191800 AME RICANS PRAISE |Seven Photographs of the German Emperor Taken Since His Coronation 25 Years Ago SOFAR SX WOMEN | CLAN ROSSELE | ASTHER HUSBAND senseniennee More to Be Heard From, It Is Thought, but Dapper Big- amist Just Smiles. Tn Charles Rosselle, otherwise Oscar Roderick, now in the Tombs awaiting Indictment by the Grand Jury, Assistant District-Attorney Joseph Du Vivier 19 confident that the law has in its tolls |@n arch bigamiat. Six women, so far, lay claim to Rosselle as their husband, and, according to the information on hand, Mr. Du Vivier is of the opinion that there are at least six more who have not as yet been heard from. Tt this should meet the eye of any woman, young of olf, who at some Period in her life has stood at the altar with Rosaeile let her communicate with not #0 much for his own Information, but for the records of the law to know how Many women Rosselle really did marry. Rossel Tombs on the com- plaint of his latest bride, who was a Mra, Mary Barry, with five young Barrys, cf | No. 1842 St, Anthony avenue, the Bronx. Mra Barry was married to Ronselle, who was !'nown to her \nder the name of Roderick, on May Two days later Mre. Ida Boyle Rosselie of No. 1986 Webster avenue, appeared at the former widow's home and claimed the bridegroom as her husband, She sald that Rosselle, or Roderick, had married her Feb, 18, 1903. As the result the two women went before Magistrate Corrigan 4 got a warrant for their husband's Test. When the police executed the warrart Rosselle tried to escape, clad only In pajamas, through a eccond-story window. The pajamas wi ymphony in pink, embroidered and trimmed with point lace and ribbons, Gince Rosselle hi een in the Tomb the police and the District-Attorney’ office have been active in looking up his record. Not since the days of Arthur Witsoff, the barber who married thirty- two women in this country and then fled to England, where he married almost as many more before being captured, has so reckless a bigamist been caught. The records so far examined disclose that on Feb. 11, 1888, Roselle, a deco- rator by profession, married Loul: Mols of No, 38 Broome atreet. He lived with her July 90, 19%, he married Mary MaN; mara of No, 100 Park avenue, Some time later he took as hie wife Sadie Maxman of No. @ East One Hundred and Sixt Picious turn over what money she had to him, with the result that on Dec. caused his arrest for bigamy and he was went to State prison for three years. After his release Rosselie continued have not yet been heard In the Tombs Rosselle simply smiles when questioned concerning his love affairs. He is @ dapper-looking indi- re old and DELLA FX, FAVORITE IN MUSICAL COMEDY OF YEARS DEAD the Bennett Gfoulton and light opera organisation befere Joined De Wolf Mopper. “Panjandrum,” ‘The Little “Fleurde-Lis*” “The Wedding and “The Little Host” were which added to her fame asd larity. A sovere {Iineas in 1960 bept from the stage except at short vale until 1906, when ehe ret way of the vaudeville theatres, undertook @ role in the me! production Charles “Hearts Ae Trumps,” and wae ful, Her last appearance here wae fn 1) the revival of Lyric Theatre. jo Mr. Levy in 1900, ——aeepamaennias FALLS OUT OF COASTER T Ameother on Track Belew Bite | Laren, Whe Is Mortality fi While riding Gy in a roller Glass of Cold Milk Brings on Indigestion and Kills Actress. ¥ the upper curve, sixty feet ground. McLarea land’ on the track, directly im front of which knocked him to one ployees of the concern lowered conscious, to the ground with was taken to St, Michael's Newark, where It was found he has! fractured skull and internal tajustes 4 will probably die. Delia Fox, who was the pet of musl- cal comody audiences twenty. years ago, died to-day at Miss M. EB. O'Brien's Private hospital at No. 18 West One Hundred and Soventy-sixth street. she Was attacked by acute indigestion after drinking @ glass of cold milk Saturday 4 Great June Coat Sale; Striking Long-Coat Styles, $6: 75 Stylish Draped Modes, Smart English Cutaways, $10, $12 & $15 Values, Inimitably effective coat creations wili be in to-mar- . row’s sale in Coidhen tatiana beep cell that is choicest and best for Summer auto wear. There is every choice ae ag vel beautiful ’ Novelty Mixtures Whipcords Fancy Stripes New Checks | Diagonals Modish Serges . . These materials are of a once stamps the. ior grade that coats as unusually stylish. No praised in A) = 4 begin thing to even remotely compare Any coloring that you may prefer will be found here in the most attractive new models, In offering these coats at 20 | mark of fost wll not soon be emmalloh Ik indook soc pots ean be duplicated at a figure so remarkably moderate. Remember—Alterations FREE—Continued uae Cuts and burns need prompt care — BECAUSE neglect may bring trouble from infection. HYDROX is a quick help and thousand and one ways it is necessary to the health of the household. NECESSARY besmante it haics inep dep houne and the peonte ins --and to be germ-proof is to eacape most of the sickness that life. | It keeps the teeth and mouth healthy — gives prompt aid to throat troubles. For cuts, burns, stings, boils or ulcers it is an ever-ready safeguard, For blemishes on the face—as a complexion beautifier—it is wash after shaving it soothes the skin, and its bleaching action when the beard growth is dark. HYDROX IS PURE—and it keeps its etrength after the bottle is opened, Booklet telling of many uses with every bottle, At all draggistsa—get a bettle teday for YOUR home. 10, 18 and 25¢e ‘Sizes. NEW YORK, cHicAcO HYDROX CHEMICAL CO. Ina germ-proof efficient and refreshing. Asa makes it particularly dosirable SAN FRANCISCO, TORONTO ‘ aieaiee ne