T1IE MICHIGAN DAILY ON EX-EMPEROR. ED AS THAN MARTYR INSTIgATOR STRIFE RATHER OF dream of world dominion obsess- the mind of Emperor William nged the world into war. Upon and the tremendous military eng- of destruction of which he was embodiment, the, exponent, and leader, rests the responsibility 'of berately planning and bringing ut the greatest conflict the world ever seen. did not matter to the world that emperor's personal share in the 't events immediately preceding war had been obscured. The Id convicted him of organizing, di- ing, and maintaining at the top terrori: sive and defensive alliance against England. The treaty was discovered and 'repudiated by a Russian minister. Failing in his attempt, the German emperor set upon himself the task of drawing England to his side against France and Russia. How well he thought he had succeeded in this may be gathered from a letter he wrote to President Wilson in 1914 in which he said King George had promised Prince Henry of Prussia, on July 29, 1914, that England would remain neu- tral in a war involving the Central Powers with France and Russia. To Blame For WYar Perhaps tlie most direct .nd au-' thoritive of the accusations against the German emperor and the Pan-. Germans are contained. in the pub- lished secret memorandum of Prince Charles Max Lichnowsky, .who was German ambassador at London at the outbreak of hostilities. The prince unequivocally placed the blame for the war on Germany, and for his frankness was imprisoned in a. Sites- ian chateau, permanently expelled from the Prussian house of lords, which action was sanctioned by the emperor, and, finally, was exiled to Switzerland. The emperor, despite his previous, expressions of good will for America, gave vent to his anger against the United States when it became evident, no official.action.would be taken to stop the shipment of munitions and supplies to the Entent Allies by de- claring to the American ambassador, James W. Gerard, "I shall. stand no nonsense from America after the war." Friedrich Wilhelm Victor Albert was born January 27, 1859, and be- came Emperor William I at the death of his father, Frederick III, June 15, 1~888. He came out of the Univer- city of Bonn fully prepared to enter the school of statecraft. Set to work In the government bureaus, he was early taught the routine of official business under the tutelage of the great Bismarck. Rpopies Actual U der At the death- of his father, the im- perial throne devolved upon William II who was then but g9 years. of age. Biamarck continued as chancellor but not for long. Though the great states- man had made every effort to instil his young pupil with his own ideas of government and diplomatic policies, B cities of France, depopulated and traged Serbia . and sent the Lusi- nia with her freight of women and ildren to a grave in the Atlantic. Many doubt whether William was tirely sane. He said repeatedly xt he possessed a divine mandate rule, .that the Almighty was his econditional and avowed ally." It not entirely clear whether such tgivings were theproduct of a, dic- lered brain or were due to un- unded egotism and an effort to im- ess his subjects with the idea of verent and unquestioning submis- ). His speeches to his armIes in ichli he asserted he and they were Lstruments of divine judgment upon rmany's enemies" were regarded many outside of Germany as ces of rhetoric, intended only to ceive his own people. "M* und Gott" William's claim to' close affiity th God was the burden of doens his speeches long before, as well after, the beginning of the war. Of ese, perhaps, none more clearly de- ed his claim than his notorious ivine.. right" speech delivered at andenburg in 1890, in which he said regarded the. German people. as "a sponsibility" conferred upon. hi God and that it was "my duty to crease this heritage for which one y I shall be called upon to give. ac- u~nt. 'Those who try to interfere th my task I, shall crush.' The German. ,war party grew with illiam as its head, and the scheme world dominion awaited the hour begin its attaipment. It came with S assrsination of the Austrian ch pke, Francis Ferdinand, and his TELLS BELGIAN STORIES RESIDENT OF BELGIUM GIVES INTERESTING TALK ON HUN OUTRAGES The first public gathering since the lifting of the influenza ban was the meeting held at Hill auditorium Fri- day night in the interests of the Unit- ed War Work campaign, at which the principal speaker 'was Mrs. Basil Clarke, of Brussels, Belgium. Mrs. Clarke lived for two years in Belgium under German domination and thus had first hand stories to tell of Ger- man brutality and outrage. One incident, especially, seemed to reflect the terrible conditions under which starving Belgium existed. Mrs. Clarke, being an American citizen, had more liberty to go about as she pleased, although that was saying very little. One day Mrs. Clarke en- tered a soup kitchen where a long line of hungry children were waiting to be fed. She noticed one little girl who kept saying, "O, hurry, hurry, I'm so hunrgy." Finally her turn came but before she was given her bowl of soup she was put upon the scales and weighed. Then the woman in charge put her down and shook her head saying, "No, I'm sorry but you can have nothing ti eat today because you have Wjst no weight since the last time." Ne dless to say, Mrs. Clarke took her to the kitchen and gave her her own share of food. This and many worse tales, Mrs. Clarke told and the reality of her stories made them so much moon im- pressive. Preceding Mrs. Clarke's talk, Mr. Carrol F. Sweet of Grand Rapids, a member of the United War Work campaign committee, exhorted the people of Ann Arbor and elsewhere not to stop being of service because rumors of peace were in the air. The seven organizations for which money is now being raised will have just as much, or even more, need for money after the war. Mr. Sweet said that the ten states that raised their quota and went over the top would have huts named for them in France. He finished by saying, "Let Michigan, the most patriotic of all states, he the first to do its duty and make it'0t that the Michigan boys will go to the Michigan hut in Ger- many, Unter den Linden." PHONE 1701 DAILY 2:00 3:30 7:00 8:30 I' a a F% a " ' Thoroughly Renovated and Fumigated I Today - Tomrorow - Tuesday a e DII Within" J PHONE 1701 DAILY 2:00 3:30 8:30 FEATURING George Fawcett-Dorothy Gish-George Siegman This is no picture of fancy-but-a fact. The records of the United States Secret Service are filled with just such black and damnable schemes as engineered by "The Hui Within"- See for yourself the way the Hun-snakes work, see their cun- ning, and then rejoice in that swifter, alerter brain of Uncle Sam which checkmates them by night and by day A great picture. See it!I James Montgomery BURTON HOLMES Flagg Comedy TRAVELOGUE the new emperor, soon found that. he disagreed with his. grandfather's former close adviser in many impor- tant respects. In 1890 the disagree- ment of the two men reached a crisis, a rupture came, and Bismarck went. The- relations between the two men remained strained for several years, but before.,fBismarck died peace was made between them.. With the passing of Bisrnardk the emperoK'szrealreignbegan. , As a mil-' itary man,,e ,as astickler for ef- ficiency,, dacipjipe, :ad ithe, Qbserv- ace of etiquette to "the last detail. And with the details of all these cgmponents of, army life,.and ,train- ing. he ,,"$familAr to ,the smallest point. Ineverything he was Oescribed as thorough and,rwithal, one of the hard- est .worker in ihe empire. .His. rising hour was 6 n o' ej pand a long day's hard work, which frequently extended -well into the night, folp.w- sd. * Majestic Orchestra AND ANNA CASE, TO OPEN SOPRANO CONCERT Community Singing from a eda a 'erence at Pots- of the German navies and There", accord- .,ation obtain- s . reached to n ,of, the arch- icn Germni ,aa,,Wng.prepare. Pofes gs Martyr n the diplomatic exchanges be- sen Germany and Austria on one e and Great Britain, France and ssia on the other side William pos-. as one wishing for peace but driv-. to war. We signed the order for+ 3Mobili~ation pf the qernlij 4 -rmy from that mement war was il- ttlgle. Thereafter he 4rove on his nies relentlessly in the mad cam- gas for victory, encouraging them ;h every device and sometimes ap- ,ring on the front to be proeclaim- as personal commander in a great ensive, Publication of the "Willy-Niclky" 'respondence in 1917, placed the rnax emperor in the .light of an gc upulous plotter. The telegrams closed that Emperor William had Luced Emperor Nicholas of RkiA sign a secret agreement to which was' to force the adherence'k of ince in the perfection of an offen- - Rfes,ed ieO4h1p Before the war Emperor William often professed friendliness for Am- erica. He encourage4 the foundation of eachange profesorships by which promninent 'erngn @eators visited thii country an lec ntrqd iA the col- leges here while American college profegsrs similarly filled chairs in German institutions of learning. He was a great reader-his private library in the imperial palace at Ber- lin before the war was becoming one of the most interesting collections of books litthe world. He posed as a dictator In music, painting, poetry, and acting, German mothers who wrote to the emperor of the deaths of their sons killed in battle elicited from him no word of sympathy. He regarded their deaths as "glorious." His own six sons were protected, however. Anna Case, soprano of the Metro- politan Opera company, will open this year's Pre-festival concert series Sat- urday evening, Nov. 16, in Hill audi- torium with a song recital. Mr. Charles Gilbert Spross, well-known composer, will act as accompanist. Miss Case is a beautiful American girl who has risen to the pinnacle of artistic fame as the leading prima- donna at the Metropolitan Opera company and has won an equally en- viable reputation as a singer of fav- orite songs. She has appeared in prac- tically all of the larger American ci- ties with ;narked success. The concert by Caruso with which the series was to have been opened, but which was prevented on account of the influenza epidemic will be giv- en later in the year. Other artists who will appear are Leopold Gowdowsky, December 14; Joseph Bonnet, January 18 ,and Tos- cha Sidel, February 8. There is still a limited number of course tickets available on all floors of the auditorium which will be dis- posed of in order of application at the University School of Music. pB UUGU 1. BEEBE RECEIVES PROMOTION TO MAJOR IN ARMY Dr. Hugh M. Beebe, '07M, formerly chief surgeon at the Homeopathic hospital, has recently been given the commission of major in the army. Major Beebe left his position at the hospital when the President's first call for volunteers went out. He went directly to Petersburg, W. Virginia, where he received his commission as captain. While there he was detailed to give instructions in gas warfare and resusication from suffocation by gas. From the camp he was sent -di- rectly to France, where he received his commission as major. Wednesday Vand Charles L2AII1 --in - "A Nine O'clock Thursday Ray Town" Nightly and All Shows Sundays He's a midnight devil in a nine o'clock town. He tried to "sell" his folks the ideas he formed in "the big town". He'll have you wishing him luck when he tried to resurrect the local "Emporium" He'll thrill you to the marrow when he wiggles out of the black- mailers frame-up, and he'll -have you rocking with joy when he puts over the "big wallop". Its some picturei I Saturday and Sunday THOS. HINCE Presents ON ENID BENNET U_ - IN- "THE ThtoyofteVPAinGwocpue e er' p9l Leave Copy at Qhuhr's and, Us Bbt LI dFI TIf3 N4 Lemv Copy at StaletSt'. Supply Store V LOST T-A heavy gold watch bearing me of owner. Report to bar- eks 44. Phone 120, Tr-Body of a gold cased foun- n pen, Waterman self filler. Call 47-R . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _n _ _ _r _ _ T-Zeta- Psi fraternity pin with me Richard HIovey Leonard en- LOST LOST-Hand carved silver watch. Name in back. Reward. Call 251. LOST-Black silk umbrella,name in- side, top of handle yellow. LOST-Gold watch: Plain case. In- itials on front, WM. Name in baek. BEG YOUR PARDON The mass meeting for the United War Work campaign was announc- ed in Saturday's Daily for that eve- ning. The meeting will be held in Hill auditorium this evening. You will always find satisfacton by The Story of the ""Plain Girl" who captured her heart's desire by "Dolling up" and. 57 on fob. Reward. Care of Daily.' advertising in the Daily.-Adv.