THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. PORTLAND, AUGUST 5, 1J)17. WAR IS VITAL TO U. S. KAISER'S SUPPRESSED CABLE MESSAGE OF AUG. 10, 1914 Former Ambassador Gerard Paints Vivid Picture. ti s ' ft t ' ' GERMANS WILL NOT STARVE 7.1 Tirst Chapter of Book Deals With l-'irst Days ot Great Conflict.' Political and Diplomatic Inter course Revealed In Message. ofif,r: (TplVnrnnliir firs Ulrntfrfini flrirfK " f' Gerrat Cflrgrapljtc Its Ufutfdjcn Hfidjs. K -jf. .Ut R mltt.laCtfl. 14 I 7.7 toJ----.. 191 fontinul F-om Tirpt Fase.) less indemnities are obtained from other countries, the weight of the great war debt will fall upon the peo ple, perhaps makes them readier to risk all in a final attempt to win the war and impose indemnities upon not only the nations of Europe, but upon the United States of America. "We are engaged in a war against the greatest military power the world ever has seen; against a people whose coun try was for so many centuries a theater of such devastating wars that fear is bred in the very marrow of their souls, making them ready to submit their lives and fortunes , to an autocracy which for. centuries has ground their faces, but which has promised them, as a result of the war, not only secur ity, but riches untold, and the domin ion of the world; a people which, as from a high mountain, have looked upon the cities of the world and the plories of them, and have been promised these cities and these glories by the devils of autocracy and of war. .We are. warring against a nation whose poets and professors, whose pedagogues and whose priests have united In-stirring its people to a white pitch of hatred, first against Russia, then against England, and now against America. I'-Boat Peril Real. The V-boat peril is a very real one for Kngland. Russia either may break up Into civil wars or become so inef fective that the millions of Herman troops engaged on the Russian front may be withdrawn and hurled against the western lines. We stand in great peril, and only the exercise of ruthless realism can win this war for us. If Germany wins this war it means the triumph of the autocratic system. It means the triumph of those who believe not only in var as a. National industry, not only in war for itself, but in war as a high and noble occu pation. Unless Germany is beaten every nation will be compelled to turn Itself into an .rmed camp until the German autocracy- either brings the whole world under Its dominion, or for- ( ever is wiped out as a form of govern ment We are In this war because we were forced into it, because Germany not only murdered our citizens on the high seas, but filled our country'wlth spies, and sought to incite our people to civil war. We were given no opportunity to discuss or negotiate. The 4& hours' ul timatum sent by Austria to Serbia was not, as Bernard Shaw said, "a decent time in which to ask a man to pay his hotel bill." What of the six-hour ulti matum given to me in Berllri on the evening of January 31, 1917,- when I was notified at 6 that ruthless warfare would commence at 12? Why, the German government, which up to that moment had professed amity and a de ire to stand by the Sussex pledges, knew that it took almost two days to send a cable to America! I believe that we are not only Justly in this war, but prudently in this war. If we had stayed out and the war had been drawn or won by Germany, we would have been attacked and that while Europe stood grinning by not directly at first, but through an attack on some Central or South American state, to which it would be at least as difficult for us to send troops as for Germany. And what If this powerful nation, vowed to war, once were firmly established in South or Central America? What of our boasted isolation then? It is only because I believe that our people should be informed that 1 have consented to write this book. I'rom ovr on We JVeed Dorm. There are too many thinkers, writers and speakers in the United States; from now on we need the doers, the organ izers and the realists, who alone can win this contest for us, for democracy an-1 for permanent peace! Writing of events so new, I am, of course, compelled to exercise a great discretion, to keep silent on many things of which I would speak, to sus pend many judgments, and to hold for future disclosure many things, the re lation of which now perhaps would only serve to increase bitterness or to cause Internal dissension In our own land. The American who travels through Germany in Summer time, or who spends a month having his liver tickled at Homburg or Carlsbad, who has his digestion restored by Doctor Dapper, at Kissingen, or who relearns the lost art of eating meat at Doctor Dengler's, In Baden, learns little of the real Ger many and its rulers, and in these ar ticles I tell something of the real Ger many, not only that my readers may understand the events of the last three years, but that they may judge of what is likely to happen In our future with that country. I First Days of the Great War; Political and Diplomatic At the commencement of the great war, I, for some days, was cut off from communication with the United States, but we soon established a chain of com munication, at first through Italy and later by way of Denmark. At all times cables from Washington to Berlin, or vice versa, took on the average two days in transmission. After the fall of Liege. Von Jagow sent for me and asked me whether I would transmit through the American Legation a proposition offering Bel gium peace and indemnity if no fur ther opposition were made to the pass age of German troops through Belgium. As the proposition was a proposition for peace, I took the responsibility of forwarding it, and sent the note of the Herman government to our Minister at The Hague for transmission to our minister in Belgium. Doctor Van Dyke, our Minister at The Hague, refused to have anything to do with the transmission of this proposi tion, and turned the German note over to the Holland Minister for Foreign Affairs, and. through this channel, the proposition reached the Belgian govern ment. The State Department cabled me a message from the President to the Em peror, which stated that the United States stood ready at any time to medi ate between the warring powers, and directed me to present this proposition direct to the Emperor. Audience With Kalaer Held. T therefore asked for an audience with the Emperor, and received word from the chief court marshal that the Emperor would receive me at the pal ace In Berlin on the morning of Au gust 10. I drove In a motor into the tluatuomme burd: Rr. mil SB. 191 ten voir U&r on fcurd) . . ir.lttj ffieleeramm , I J If 1 , ,msi vrv'llVf S fi.Y ,r :v n rrrri vy..v-..Tr. ...-.-....s ... - - . ' "jj le'gramm Jlrf ..4h'yy... .5fe....iC...vvay . -J&c --..K. .-iv:!, Mi A.m.... t .. r,... ..-tt y .... ..x.-. . r ..... T . m I iw II ww - Us WL&fa$ nnh g$n$$.' AwWVlt Affix l-lS. Wr3&Ahlh . U 'foZtltJs WnvMv' " Ju ,"vV tare: tS. 191 tat 4 torn Orf3rbrl tra 191 Uft .5?, nltt hi Ct. cm feanfr Mitt Gclcoramm in. fbh&f -te Maif nnb I tL.lthh tisJl-- Jwavt 1A'4 1 JT r. A . . J.' 7 ATVI 1.7f. - 1 U jL, JU Y rf &-r- fVtVf fW .... ..fe e I 6 1 t, i 2 S A .if ; . .. 7..MvJLJ. -Jr. &J far, ft.,' faJfa-d. dtfvu- ..rwurj ft&hwjf iwhs ,1 plwjM m.. ..... Ji . A A. I f r) MM. I I ilf 1 V Mil T9 JV I f -I ' v - ' . CL. " V If - yf Facsimile of Important Document Written in Palace Garden at Berlin. Students of handwriting and orthography-will note in this imperial autographic rescript, which is penciled by the Emperor in the English language, that the great Hohenzollern is not a "born speller." For ex ample, Emperor William has twice misspelled "received"; he has not mastered the spelling of "decisions"; in perturbation of mind, perhaps, he wrote "fullfulled," and, at one point, the spelling of "Czar" appears "Zar." "Allready" 6hows the influence of German orthography, and other misspellings readily may be detected. The care with which the Emperor crossed out, interlined and underscored his phrases indicates the importance which he attached to the document. In the printed text of the letter, correction has been made of the Emperor's mistake in number ing the paragraphs. No doubt other peculiarities will be discovered by the readers of the autographed letter, which is a personal explanation, now published for the first time, by the head of the German autocracy to the head of the greatest republic as to how the world war began. As such it will be subject of historical criticism for all time. The text of the Kaiser's message is included In Mr. Gerard's article printed today. tConciuded oa Pas I&, Column 1.)