THE EX-KAISER.
NOT CONCERNED ABOUT HIS FALLEN FORTUNES. A CORRESPONDENT'S IMPRESSIONS Received June 18, 1.10 a.m. New York, June 12. The New York Times correspondent visiting Amerongen reports: "For two hours I watched the former Emperor and Empress sitting in a summer house in the garden at Count Bentinck's castle. I could see them clearly. The ex-Kaiser looked at me, but we (fid not speak. The and moat separated us. He was wearing a dark blue suit and yachting cap. The ex-Empress, dressed in white, was reading to the ex-Kaiser from a Rome newspaper. The ex-Kaiser does not seem to suffer from what happened to Germany. The ex-Empress grieves, over the fallen fortunes of her country. "The Bentinck family seem to think that the Royal couple will return to Germany soon." A Dutch professor, who visited the exKaiser recently, was surprised at the alertness of his mind. Hp was familiar with what was happening in the scientific world, —Aus. and N.Z. Cable Assoc.
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Taranaki Daily News, 18 June 1919, Page 5
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163THE EX-KAISER. Taranaki Daily News, 18 June 1919, Page 5
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