TIIE SUNDAY OREGONTAN, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 17, 1920 Fr oiia -fche Diaries of Jolm J.Lear$,Jt: fa Copjrrlrtit, 1920, John X Uur.) CLASHES WITH THE KAISEIt. IT Is not generally known that on at least three -occasions twice before the grreat war and once since Colonel Roosevelt and the kaiser clashed. The Venezuela Inci dent is more or less widely known, largely through Mr. Thayer's excel lent book. But the clash or wills at the time of Colonel Roosevelt's visit to Berlin, and his refusal to take the kaiser's part in 1914, are not at all well known. The colonel told of the clash in Ber lin en route for Boston one Sunday In 1916. "It is," . said hev "not generally known that I had a little friction with the kaiser when I visited Ger many. "When I reached Berlin I found an Invitation for 'Mr. Roosevelt" to be the kaiser's guest at Potsdam. Mrs. Roosevelt was traveling with me. 1 asked at the embassy what the Invi tation meant if it Included her. .When I found it did not, I declined, and said I was stopping at the em bassy. "The Invitation was repeated. My answer was that Mrs. Roosevelt and X were to be the guests of the em bassy. I was traveling as any Ameri can gentleman might travel with his wife and I did not propose to go any place where she would not be wel comed or could not go. The next day Colonel and Mrs. Roosevelt' were in vited. By maintaining my point I had made it. "While I was his guest. Wilhelm, a delightful host, was very frank in telling what he thought of other Americans who had visited him An . drew Carnegie and others. Later he sent me photographs he had taken of some of them with bits of his opin ions of them written on the backs. They were not opinions calculated to please .the subjects of the pictures. "I suppose he was advised that he should not have done this, for the re turn of the photographs was request ed. I said, 'Oh, no, his majesty the kaiser gave the photographs to me and I propose to retain them." I sup pose I was the one man in the empire at the time who could refuse to obey his wishes. "Anyway, I kept the photographs. They have been mounted on glass so one can read the inscriptions. "I clashed again with the .kaiser directly the war broke out," the colo nel went on. "Then I was called upon by a young member of the German embassy staff in Washington a count I cannot re call his name now. " '1 am instructed by his majesty the kaiser,' taid he, 'to present his compliments to Colonel Roosevelt, to say to him that he has very pleasant recollections of his visit to Berlin and Potsdam and to say that he hopes Colonel Roosevelt will appreciate Germany's position and can be relied upon to see the Justice of it.' " 'You will please present my com pliments to his majesty the kaiser,' I answered; "say to him that I, too, have very pleasant recollections of "my stay in Berlin and Potsdam, and his many courtesies to me, his guest, but that 1 also have a very lively recollection of courtesies extended to me by his majesty the king of Bel gium, whose guest I also was." "He clicked his heels together, saluted and left. I have not heard from him or the kaiser since. "I imagine the kaiser also had recol lections of the Venezuela matter. He was convinced that I was bluffing when he was told I would maintain the Monroe Doctrine. Von Holleben, then ambassador, told him so; so re ported to the foreign office. I in sisted on our rights, and finally told the ambassador that Admiral Dewey and his ships would be ordered to sail for Venezuelan waters within 24 hours if in the meantime I did not receive definite assurances that Ger many had abandoned its intentions. Dewey was then In West Indian waters. "Von Holleben then conclud ed that I was not bluffing and his cable reversing himself caused a panic in the German Xoreign office. Soon after this he was recalled in disgrace. He was In bo bad only one German official was at the ship to see him off. On his re turn to Germany he dropped out of aight completely. "The one man who sized me right and who put Berlin on the right track was Carl Buenz, then consul-general in New Tork. He lived out Long Island way and had visited me Saeamora Hill. He was shrewd enough to size up the situation ac curately. He told the embassy it was In error and warned it to beware, that I was not bluffing. "Lately, you will recall, Buenz has been Indicted for plotting to put bombs on English ships some of those German war plots. "Dewey at that time had lnstruc tlons to be ready to move on a mo ment's notice." Subsequent to this conversation Henry A. Wise-Wood, noting that the accuracy of some of Colonel Roose velt's published utterances on the Venezula matter had been challenged. wrote to Admiral Dewey. Dewey's reply, published at the time, corrobo rated fully all that the Colonel had eaid about holding his ships in readi ness for action. "That, gentlemen," said the Colo Bel. calling attention to the Dewey letters, "is another of those instances where proof of things you know to be so comes to you when you need It from unexpected quarters. It i nassing strange how, somehow or other, truth will out." Once, later. Colonel Roosevelt men tioned Carl Buenz. Buenz. who was out on bail on the plot charges, was old and. as it proved, hopelessly ill He wished permission to return to Germany' in the hope that he might there get relief, or, failing that, die in his old home. To get this per mission he asked the Colonel's assist ance. "I surely ehall do all that I can for him," he said, "but I fear that all won't be much. He is entitled to con sideration, not because he plotted, as I assume he did. but for the really valuable service he did this country as well as his own in the Venezula natter. Whatever else he may have aone, this should not.be forgotten. I hope he gets what he asks, hut I am afraid he won't." The Colonel's fears proved' true, and Buenz, later convicted, died in the federal penitentiary at Atlanta- THAT GAR 1 -DINNER, IT IS not known to many that, in 1915, Colonel Roosevelt threatened, in the event that certain contingen cies became facts, to support Presi dent Wilson for re-election against the republican nominee. The threat was made at a luncheon given at the Harvard club in De cember of that year by the late Rob ert J. Collier. Later, in explaining the famous Gary dinner to me. Colo nel Roosevelt repeated the threat. The Gary dinner may well be de scribed as the mystery of the 1916 campaign. Exactly what it meant few knew then, and publicly it has never been authoritatively explained. The facts are that it was but an Incident in the Colonel's campaign for preparedness he attended it that he might explain so that "big busi ness men, who have not been my friends, but who now know that I ar-i right, might see the situation ex actly as it is. and be in a position to help." There is," said he immediately after dinner, "no politics In this. We have come to a situation where all Americans must stand together big business men and little business men, farmer and banker, artisan and long shoreman. I have not cone tn the big business men they have come to me." That the Gary dinner threw the politicians into a flutter and sent such "old guardsmen" as Boies Pen rose and Murray Crane flying to New Tork to find out what it was all about, was entirely due to the fict that Mrs. Harold Vivian, wife ofi a political writer on the New Tcirk World, had an engagement to attend a concert on the night of the dinrer. The next morning Vivian, in the course of breakfast small talk, asied how she enjoyed the entertainment. "I did not go," said she. "You see " (naming the young woman with whom she was to have gone) "had to sing at the big dinner Judge Gary gave Colonel Roosevelt last night." Vivian lost interest in the grape fruit then and there. He kntw of the Colonel's rule about attending private dinners except In his own home or in the homes of his Imme diate friends, as well as the Colonel's horror of large private dinners any where. It appealed to him as l story, and the next day the fact that there had been such a dinner, together with the names of the guests, was made I public. What happened, whit was i said at the dinner, was not. In con sequence, political editors and . the public jumped at the conclusion that Colonel Roosevelt wis pre paring to run for the presidency again. For some days th-re was considerable speculation as to what It really meant, until Robert E. Mac Alarney. then city editor of the New York Tribune, suggested I lee Colo nel Roosevelt and end the mystery. My reception by the Col.nel was characteristic "I certainly will not give any In terview on that dinner," he "Neither will I authorize a ment. I will, however, tell what it means and what declared. y state- K-ou just lappened there, and then, if you wish you can on your explain in your own way an own responsibility. "It is absolutely nonsensical to as sume, as some have assus ed. that this dinner had anything t do with my being a candidate for president. I am not thinking of anythiag of that sort now. . ) "All that was discussed at that dinner was what you night, for want of a better term, call "be great er Americanism.' If that .ii politics, then we talked politics. "Now, let us sit down atd discuss this thing, When I a.ui. Uroufb. you can tell me what you think you want to do. You can have all the facts; you need all the facts to write of the thing . Intelligently. But whatever you write, it must be understood that I must not be quoted and it must not be' made to appear that I am the source of Information." "How was it," I asked, "that Judge" Gary, whom I know to be interested in, and an advocate of, preparedness, happened to ask you to meet the peo ple who were at that dinner?" "It Is not my practice," said he, "to cross-examine those who invite me to dine as 'to their motives for eo doing. But if I were to guess, I would cay that one actuating motive was a feeling of "I told you so. "Gary, as you probably know, has always been friendly to me. I do not know that he voted for me in 1912. but I would not be surprised to learn that he did. All but two or three of his guests that night were antl Roosevelt men 18 months ago. They were very much opposed to my work for preparedness. The few that were not anti-Roosevelt men were of the opinion that I was committing po litical hara-kiri. The others said I was rocking the boat. "Now they say that in preaching preparedness, I was right and am right. And I think that Mr. Gary had In a way a' sort of desire to say to his friends in important business: " 'Come and have a look at this fellow you thought eo terrible; no tice that he does not shoot at the musicians; that he eats in a normal way and prefers his food cooked; that when he talks he talks sanely as you and I talk, and talks nothing but the soundest kind .of American ism." "That is only a guess, however. In any event it could not have been the big motive. Behind it all, I believe, was a desire of these men all Americans, men who have done things and are doing big things, men who have a stake in the country to take counsel' together on the big problem of national preparedness. Under the circumstances, was it not natural that I should be asked to at tend and eubmit my views? I was glad to go, glad that these men were seeing the light. That's all there was to that. "What did I- tell them? Exactly what I have been telling others for months past, ever since the war in Europe began, and what I propose to tell everybody who will listen to me the need of preparation. "But with all of this talk about the Gary dinner why is the luncheon Bobby Collier gave at Harvard club overlooked? There were politics there ln Plenty- Mr. Collier, I suspect, also had something of the 'I told you so' idea in his head when he planned the luncheon, for ln the movement 'for preparedness he was In much the same position as Judge Gary with me, but lonesome so far as his every day associates were concerned. "All but one or two of the men he had at the luncheon were anti-Roose velt men three years ago. They were anti-Roosevelt men when I began talking preparedness IS months ago. Then they said, as Judge Gary's friends bad said. "Roosevelt is rock ing the boat." Three-fourths of them most of the party were writer: agreed with me before they left. "We did talk politics there the straightest kind of politics. The po litical discussion was Btarted by Frank Simonds referring to an edi torial in the New York Tribune call ing attention to the way party lead ers were dodging the real issue and asKing, uo tney want Roosevelt?" meaning, as you know, for president in 1916. That editorial was strong meat. It appealed to me immensely. "In the discussion that followed, I said that, much as I dislike Mr. Wil son and despise his policies, in the event of the republicans nominating any man on a hyphen platform or on hyphenated promises. I would sup port President Wiison for re-election with all. of the strength at my com mand. "And, by Godfrey, I mean it! If there's a mongrel platform adopted by the republican convention, much as I dislike Wilson, I'll stump the country for him from' one end of it to the other and I won't ask his per mission to do so either. ... "No platform and no man who swerves in the slightest degree from absolute loyalty to the greater Amer icanism can have my support. I will not be neutral if such a candidate is named or such platform adopted. There is no such thing as being neutral between right and wrong. Neutral! I do not care who the man Is or who his friends are or who comes to me in his behalf, if such a candidate is named, I will fight him with every weapon at my command. "But at neither place did I say any thing to advance either my own can didacy or that of any other man. I am not interested in candidates. I am interested in principles. My sole in terest at these two affairs was to try and arouse the American people, to urge them and ultimately, through them, compel congress to take tie proper attitude on the question of greater Americanism and national preparedness. If you say that I am working not for a nomination, but as every American should work to se cure the peace and prosperity of the United States, you will have hit the nail on the head. "And don't overlook the fact that any republican who seeks President Wilson's place by pandering to the hyphens will find that he is fighting Roosevelt as well as Wilson. "1 dislike Wilson, I dislike his poli cies almost to the point of hate, but I am too good an American to stand idly by and see him beaten by a mongrel American or by one profess ing mongrel principles." THE COLONEL A D jrDGR HUGHES. . THROUGH the 1916 campaign Colonel Roosevelt was careful, even with his intimates, to say nothing that would in any way reflect upon Judge Hughes. Hughes was the candidate of the party, he preferred him over Mr. Wilson, but he was not the type T. R. favored. More than that, in their personal relations the Colonel felt that Judge Hughes had not treated him quite fairly. This was in con nection with the Barnes libel suit in which the Colonel had hoped Judge Hughes would be one of his most im portant witnesses. Occasionally during the campaign a scornful reference to the "bearded lady" advised whoever - of the inner circle was addressed that it was Mr. Hughes who was in the Colonel's mind. Such occasions' were rare, and developed only, when the oolonel, who with all his heart and soul prayed for iepubllcan success, was piqued by the lack of "pep" in the Hughes canvass and the failure of the candidate to take a definite position on Germany. He was, moreover, thoroughly famil iar with the innermost details of the Hughes campaign, more so, some folks thought, than the candidate himself. These details came to him from many and widely scattered sources. For example, there was hardly a reporter on the Hughes train or at the national headquarters but that was cold toward the candidate. The more sea soned of them were of the T. R. "old guard," as members of the "Roosevelt newspaper cabinet," and as loyal to the colonel as the bull pup he some times referred to as a standard of loyalty. These did not hesitate to tell, the Colonel whenever 'they saw him and they made It their business to meet him whenever possible the inside news of the trips. "Feeling as you do," he remarked to one of these, "you are going to find it difficult to vote for Mr. Hughes.1 "Hughes, hell," replied William Hos ter. the man addressed; "I desire to save a 'fragment of my self-respect.' After Hoster had gone, I remarked that he seemed "to feel rather keenly on the subject of Hughes.". J "I am afraid, said the Colonel "that there are a great many likj him. Hughes is not an attractive per sonality at best. Close contact with him does not make him more attrac tive, for. he is a very, selfish, very self-centered man. Those boys would j like to be his frinds. but he won't let them and his namby-pamby policy or lack of real policy disgusts them. "They have, as the boys would them selves say, taken his measure, "V1 1 i 9 s'V , , "You know as well as I do that some of the boys on that train and at Bridgehampton (Hughes' summer home) are among the shrewdest judges of politics ln this country. They see they must see mar.y things on a trip any candidate will overlook, however shrewd he is. They know the psychology of crowds and fhe newspapers and are valuable advisers in a campaign. Does Mr. Hughes take advantage of all this? No, he Just withdraws Into his whiskers, and their advice, when they manage to force it upon him, is ignored. "What these men hate is his cow ardice his refusal to say anything, however right, that might jeopardize his chances. If he had consulted these men and taken their advice he would never have trafficked with Jerry O'Leary." With the verdict of the Chicago con vention Colonel Roosevelt never quarreled. He accepted it loyally and whole - heartedly, though, it should be said, with misgivings as to the result, and prepared to efface himself as much as possible, lest by unduly remaining in the limelight he Injure the candidate's chances. His fear was that Hughes would not make the right sort of a campaign. "Hughes' danger," he then said, "is that he will not carry the fight to Wilson." The declaration that Hughes would have to fight to win was made Im mediately after the convention and before the public at large knew what position he would take in the can vass. He was not at all confident of the result, not wholly satisfied with Hughes as a candidate, but never hesitated about suporting him. When he made this declaration he had prepared his letter declining the progressive nomination and was awaiting the meeting of the pro gressive national committee in Chi cago before making public his posi tion. Judge Hughes knew this; so did the leaders of the republican and what was left of the progressive party. His own programme was definite. It provided for such speeches for Hughes as might be called for, but otherwise none of the limelight for him. "The truth is." said he, "and a fel low does not like to speak as I am going to, I have done my share. Let someone else carry the load for a while. "After tomorrow's meeting ln Chi cago I hope to be let alone. The committee will agree with me there will be nothing more for me to Bay. I have said it all In my letter. Mr. Hughes has seen It and is satisfied. There Is nothing more for me to do or say. "Don't you see that as things are working out I took the only course open? If Burton or Harding had been named I would have to support the nominee against Wilson. Imagine Hughes at his very possible worst, and he cannot do worse, than Wilson has done or Is doing. It is impossible. Any change is bound to be a good one. Hughes will develop all right if he is elected. I can do nothing but support him. - , "Hughes won't come out here. I don't believe he will. What will prob ably happen is this: I will meet Mr. Hughes ln town at dinner; 'speeches will come later If they come at all- Whatever I do depends on Mr. Hughes. "I cannot make his fight for him or tell him how to fight. He must do his own battling, make his own plans. His danger is that he will not carry the fight to Wilson. If he does that he is safe. But if he allows Wilson to get the jump on him he Is beaten. Wilson will do it with him if he does not watch out. As matters stand and if the election were held tomorrow. Hughes Is beaten. "Here is the cruelty of this nomi nation of Hughes: For years he has been out of touch with real things; he knows nothing of the great things the progressive party movement stood for and did; he is out of touch with 1 f 1ST S ..-ai ".".'if. Ifr-' A'fs;; ... i'fc 5 . 1 "J -Ci? J with national and world politics. He is nominated at a time when we needed an advocate not a judge. "I cannot but support Hughes. You see that as clearly as I- do. It is the only thing for me to do because it is the right thing f do." A few days later, June 28, to be exact,. Colonel, Roosevelt nrotored Into New York to dine with Mr. Hughes just as the colonel had said some days before they probably would meet. The two dined alone with, the colonel told me, Mr. Hughes doing most of the talking. "It was," he told me the next day, "not my night to talk. When I had pledged him my support to the limit there was little for me to say. As I have said to you and to others, I can not make his fight or plan it. "I did tell him, though, that he'd have to make an aggressive fight of it, to keep Wilson on the jump every blessed minute, and not to be any more afraid of hurting the feelings of pro-Germans, real Germans and pacifists than he was of hurting the feelings of race-track gamblers when he was governor; that he must hit and hit hard." "Will he do it, colonel V I asked. "I don't know." he replied. "A term on the bench takes the punch out of many men; it slows them up. It may be that way with Hughes; I don't know. But I do know that he must fight to win." At this talk he reiterated a hope, expressed immediately after Mr. Hughes was nominated, that the newspapers allow him to drop out of the limelight. "There won't be a thing doing out here." he said ("here" being Sagamore Hill). "You see I have simply got to stay out of the limelight. These fools who want me to jump into the middle of the campaign do not know what they are talking about. "It would lick Hughes sure. "It could not help but make him a tail of the Roosevelt kite. It would not be fair to him or to me. You see that. The most I can do Is to make two or three prepared addresses. "Furthermore, unless you boys (the reporters) keep me to the rear, allow me to go to the rear, you'll beat Hughes sure as shooting make no mistake about that." In the Hughes campaign Colonel Roosevelt made one trip as far west as the Rockies, the original pro gramme of going through California being amended. This change in the itinerary ln all probability cost Mr. Hughes the election. Made by the national committee, the colonel's in timates believed the change was due to a desire that nothing be done which might help Hiram Johnson in his campaign for the senate, or of fend Harrison Gray Otis, W. W. Crocker and other "old guardsmen" who were opposed to him. .. Even then, the trip came danger ously close to ending at Denver, where on his arrival the colonel found a messenger awaiting to ask that he confine future addresses to the tariff and Mexico and let Germany and pre paredness alone. At first the colonel agreed to this. Then he wired the national committee canceling all his engagements east of Denver. This the committee apparently dared not do, for he was wired to proceed as he wished. From this trip the colonel returned rather depressed and worried as t the result. It was to have been his i i.,;, ,."- Vie .-" - J" only trip, but in the last week of the campaign the republican national committee called on him to go to Ohip. There had been many calls for him from that quarter early in the con test, but it was not until November 1 when he was started on an admitted forlorn hope. That night, speaking of the situa tion, he declared the Wilson tide was receding, but he doubted if it was re ceding fast enough. . "I doubt It," he said. "I have no fears for New York, but I am afraid of the west. If Hughes would only do something! . "Hughes lias aot made .WUsou fight. As matters are, the people do not know where Hughes does stand - they look upon him as another Wil son when they do not look upon him as a man without a policy.- "It Is his own fault. I tell you he would have won even German votes by preaching straight Americanism. "The campaign has lacked definite direction. It has been like Mr. Hughes speeches it has lacked the punch. It is a fact that a lot of the aged reactionaries who have had so much to say at headquarteps really think this fight could have been wo on the tariff." , Coming back east after speaking In Toledo and Cleveland, he returned to the subject, declaring that Ohio was gone, that even "poor Herrick is beat en with the rest a victim of the cow ardice of others." "Herrick" was Myron T. Herrick, our ambassador to France in the early days of the war, and a prime favorite of the colonel; he was the candidate for the United States senate. "The 'Old Guard' here is not awake yet," said he; "they have simply thrown the state away. "I have been asked tonight why I did not come out earlier ln the cam paign when they asked for me Instead of going into the sagebrush. I told them L went where I was sent: that they should ask that question of the national committee." Sometime after the campaign was ended, a visitor at Sagamore Hill re marked: "Anyway, we haven't Hughes to worry about." "Exactly," said the colonel1; "we did, not elect Hughes and we are not re sponsible for Mr. Wilson. "Hughes would have been another Wilson in many respects, only he would have surrounded himself with men of a higher grade than Mr. Wil son has about him. He could not well get men Inferior to those about Mr. , Wilson. But he would have consid ered his election an act of God, and, in the Wilson way, been careless or contemptuous of the opinions of others." Mr. Hughes came up for discussion again at luncheon at Sagamore Hill just before Christmas of that year. The colonel" was, as usual, to play Santa Claus at .he Cove school, and the "newspaper cabinet" was down for the occasion. In the luncheon party, in addition to Colonel and Mrs. Roosevelt, were N. A. Jennings, Mrs. Jennings, William Hoster, Rodney Bean, S. L. Bate, the then resident correspondent at Oyster Bay, and my self. As It was the first time since election that so many members of the "cabinet" had .met with the colonel, there was much discussion of that event, but more of the statement of Secretary Lansing a few days previ ous to the effecfthat "'we are on the edge of war." followed by the secre tary's explanation that he did not ex actly mean what he seemed to say, the whole matter complicated by ru mors of "leaks" to Wall Street and bad breaks in the market. "The -antics of the last few days," said the colonel in this discussion, "have restored to me what self-respect I lost supporting Mr. Hughes." Months later Colonel Roosevelt told something of his relations with Judge Hughes prior to 1916 that partly ex plained the small opinion he held ot him. Hughes," said he, "went plumb back on his words and on me when Barnes sued me for libel. One of Barnes' grievances was my charge of biparti san management of the state of New York by him and Murphy. Hughes himself made that charge to me when the direct primary fight was on. Later, when I needed him, he denied all knowledge of it. "It came about in this way: In his fight as governor for good govern ment, Mr. Hughes complained that Murphy and Barnes were working to gether to defeat legislation; that there was evidence of a definite agree ment and the two machines were working as one, not only in this, but in other matters affecting the public Interest. "When the Barnes suit came up, I wanted him as a witness. He declared that he did not recall the conversa tion and that he had no recollection that such a state of affairs had ex isted. Even when he was shown a printed statement coming from him, he had no recollection of the matter. That is the way Mr. Hughes stands up. "It was his idea in this campaign to keep away as much as possible from all reference to the war in Eu rope or preparation for our inevitable part in it. He wanted to make his fight on war with Mexico, as though people could be interested in that. The real subject he dodged whenever he could. More than that, he tried to make me dodge it. "To do this Garfield was sent to meet me ln Denver and ask that in my speeches, especially In Chicago, I omit preparedness and national de fense. It was feared that I would alienate the women voters. I agreed to do so, but after sleeping on the matter, decided it was not the thing for me to do. So I wired national headquarters canceling all of my en gagements. The answer to this was advice to proceed as I had been, talk ing what was in me. "Results ln Chicago proved that was the correct course. The honest course always is. At the stockyards, I had a most wonderful meeting and the women were the most enthusiastic of the lot- The idea of American manhood, willing and insistent on de fending its women and .children even to the point of going to war to avenge .1 . ,.,,i.Ja,. uraa nnt- at oil i KK... rent to them. On the contrary, they took no offense at my treatment of the Lusitania affair. "That was Mr. Hughes's work his idea of the way a candidate should go. the way the advocates of a candidate should go, always dodging any real issue that might cost votes." Again, ln the Mitchel campaign. Colonel Roosevelt expressed an .opin ion of Judge Hughes. It was at a meeting in Madison Square garden over which the judge presided. To make it a go, every device of the po litical showman was resorted to. Even the old-fashioned torchlight parade. ed. Colonl Roosevelt, who had been speaking in Schuetzen park, Astoria, came in late. I met him in the Twenty-seventh street entrance to the hall. "How's the meeting going?" be asked, sotto voce. "It's cold, freezing cold, colonel," I answered. "You'll need your over coat." The colonel grinned. "Hughes." he "replied, "must have brought his Ice with him." 1