I1 - MICHIGAN DY NSIBILITY EX-EMPEROR AS MARTYR N INSTIGATOR STRIFE RATHER- OF A dream of world dominion obsess- ag the mind of Emperor William lunged the world into war. Upon im and the tremendous military eng- ie of destruction of which he was he embodiment, the exponent, and he leader, rests the responsibility of eliberately planning and bringing bout the greatest conflict the wold as ever seen. It did not matter to the world that he emperor's personal share in the wift events, immediately preceding *e war had been obscured. The orild convicted him of organizing, di- 3cting, and maintaining at the top otch of efficiency, the great German ilitary machine. It remembered that e signed the order for the German oblization. It remembered that .he ;ood sponsor for the terrorism and rigandage which, under the guise of arfare, ravished Belgium, laid waste me cities of France, depopulated and itraged Serbia and sent the Lusi- ,nia with her freight of women and ildren to a grave in the Atlantic. Many doubt whether William was itirely sane. He said repeatedly at he possessed a divinermandate rule, that the Almighty was his inconditional and avowed ally." It not entirely clear whether such ttgivings were the product of a dis- dered brai or were due to un- unded egotism and an effort to im- ess his subjects with the idea of yerent and unquestioning submis- n. His speeches to his armies in iich he asserted he and. they were nstrumients of divine judgment upon ermany's enemies" were regarded many outside of Germany as eces of rhetoric, intended only to ceive his own people. "Me und Gott" William's claim to close affinity th God was the burden of dozens his speeches long before, as well after, the beginning of the war. Of se, perhaps, none more clearly de- aed his claim than his notorious ivine right" speech delivered at andenburg in 1890, in which he said? regarded the German people as "a lpositility",conferred upon him God and that it was "my duty to grease this heritage for which one y I shall be called upon to give ac- unt. Those who try to interfere th my task I shall crush.' The German war party grew with ll11am as its head, and the scheme worlddominionawaited the hour begin ,its attainment. It came with e assassination of the Austrian .hduke, Francis Ferdinand, and his lfe at Sarajevo. Recalled from a yachting trip, Wil- m presided at a conference at Pots- im of representatives of the German d Austrian armies, navies and mnmercial interests. There, accord- ' to the best information obtain- le, the decision was reached to ke the assassination of the arch- ke a pretense for the world war for ich Germany had long prepared. Poses as Martyr n the diplomatic exchanges be- een Germany and Austria on one .e and Great Britain, France and seia on the other side William pos- as one wishing for peace but driv to war. He signed the order for mobilization of the German army I from that moment war was in- table. Thereafter he drove on his nies relentlessly in the mad cam- gns for victory, encouraging them ;h every device and sometimes ap- bring on the front to be proclaim- as personal commander in a great ensve. ublication of the "Willy-Nicky" respondence in 1917, placed the rman emperor in the light of an. scrupulous plotter. The telegrams closed that Emperor William had uced Emperor Nfcholas of Russia sign a secret agreement to which was to force the adherence of ince In the perfection of an offen- e and defensive alliance against gland. The treaty was discovered i repudiated by a Russian minister. 'alling in his attempt, the German peror set upon himself the task of wing England to his side against ,nce and Russia. How well he ught he had succeeded in this may gathered from a letter he wrote President Wilson in 1914 in which said King George' had prom ited ie Henry of Prussiaon July 29, 4, that England would remain neu- . in a war involving the Central rers with France and Russia. To Blame For War erhaps the most direct and au- ritive of the accusations against German emperor and the Pan- mans 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 Siles- 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 II at the death of his father, Frederick III, June 15, 1888. He came out of the Univer- sity 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. est workers in the empire. His rising hour was 6 o'clock sharp and a long day's hard work, which frequently extended well into the night, follow- ed. Professed Friendship Before the war Emperor William often professed friendliness for Am- erica. He encouraged the foundation of exchange professorships by which prominent German educators visited this country and lectured in the col- leges here while American college professors 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 in the 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. AMERICAN STEAMER SINKS; 19 MEN OF CREW MISSING Ocean City, Netherlands, Nov. 9.- The American steamer, Saetia, bound for a French port, struck a mine 25 miles off the Netherlands coast this morning and sank 20 minutes later. Nineteen members of the crew are missing, 47 having been landed here this afternoon and 18 more having been taken off. a raft tonight by a patrol boat. Destroyers and coast guide boats are searching the vicinity for traces of rafts which may be afloat with the rest of the crew, although it is fear-x ed that the men on duty in the en- gine room were killed by one of the explosions. Belgian Kiddies Xmas Fund Opens' America must not forget Belgium this Christmas. The nearness of peace must not cause her to slacken her efforts in brining hope and com- fort to the destitute Belgian children. According to Henry Clews, chair- man of the Belgian Children's Christ- mas Fund, -the need this time of the United States loosening its purse strings will be just as great as dur- ing the past years. PHONE 1701 DAILY 2:00 3:30 7:00 8:30 k ilestic PHONE 1701 DAILY 2:00 3:30 7:00 8:30 Thoroughly Renovated and Fumigated Today -Tomorrow ARsThe Hun thin~ Becomes Actual Leader At the death of his father, the im- perial throne devolved upon William II who was then but 29 years of age. Bismarck 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, 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 Bismarck died peace was made between them. With the passing of Bismarck the emperor's real reign began. As a mil- itary man he was a stickler for ef- ficiency, discipline, and the observ- ance of etiquette to. the last detail. And with the details of all these components of army life and train- I ing he was familiar to the smallest point. In everything he was described as thorough and, withal, one of the hard- FEATURING George Faweett-Dorothy Gish-George Siegman This is no picture of fancy-but a fact. The records of the United States Sc cret Service are filled with just such black and damnable scheme s as engineered by "The Hun Within" See for yourself the way the Hu n-sn akes work, see their cuns" ning, and then rejoice in that, swifter, alerter brain of Uncle Samn which checkmates them by night and by day A great picture. See it !t James' MontgomeryBURTON HOLMES Flagg Comedy "lick Manhattan" TRAVELOGUE U M ajestic Orchestra AN D , -- . Community inging Nightly, and All Shows Sundays Wednesday and Ch ars Thursday Ray In Camp and Home There is little room for. non-essentials in modern war. making. It is grim business. Everything not absolutely need- ed is pruned away. And yet in every army camp a song lead- er has been appointed. The army chiefs recognize music as a necessity. The A. B. Chase Piano is to the home what the song leader is to the camp, Its music gathers the domestic unit together as the singing solidifies the military unit. Nerves at loose ends are composed through music, and by that agency are flagging spirits revived. At home, these days, the stress of wartime speeding-up is being felt,.National strategy extends to the field of business as well as to the field of battle, and the resultant strain must be relieved if victory is to be won. Music is a necessity in the homes of a nation at war. UWniversit Aflutcibouse Mrs. M. Rout Zi~1titn b ttiuuarb xrrvI0 "A Nine O'clock Towns 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 pictuye!t Saturday and Sunday THOS. HINCE Presents ENID BENNETT -IN- " THE VA P' The Story of the ""Plain Girl" who captured her heart's desire by "Dolling up" "and