Newspaper Page Text
4A
Russian Empress Greatly Pleased When An
other Enemy of Germany in Tsar's Couneils
s Killed in Theater by an Agent,
WRITTEN BY THE BARONES S ZENEIDE TZANKOFF, NEE
KAMENSKY, OF RUSSIA.
EDITED BY WILLIAM LE QUEUX,
Famous Traveler, Authority on European Court Intrigues, Adviser to the
British Secrct Service Foreign Department, Frequently Consulted by
European Secret Service Departments on Spying and Espionage.
(Copyri . vy W n le Queu X Book and Translation Rights Are
CHAPTER XIV,
Rasputin naturally expressed some
surprise tha{ the matter should inter
est her majesty so deeply; but Alix,
on her part, cleverly concealed her in
dignation,
Half an hour later I ushered into
the Imperial presence the assistant
director of the dreaded OKhrana, an
alert, youngish man. Alix was await.
ing him aione.
“Tell me,” she demanded petulant
ly. “what is this story about some
woman having been arrested for being
corcerned in a plot against our friend,
Monsieur Stolypin?”
“The young woman, your majesty,
is named BaltZ, from Stavropol. She
was arrested in a house in the Klin
sky Prospect last night, having been
derounced to us as head of a des
perate plot against he life of his ex
cellency Peter Stolypin. The attempt
was to be made with bombs as his
excellency was leaving the Ministry
at noon today,” was his reply.
“And who are her assoclates?’ Alix
asked.
“Three men named Kartamecheff, a
shcemaker: Semenoff, an engineer,
and Kozell, a printer. All three have
long been suspected ag nihilists. But
the woman is undoubtedly at the head
of the conspiracy,” replied the ele
gart bureaucrat Birileff, “1 have only
an hour ago, signed the order for the
woman to be sent to Shlusselburg
and the men to Siberia"
Stolypin's Orders.
“Does Monsieur Stolypin know of
this?"
“I informed him this morning, and
he suggested that the woman be sent
to Shiusselburg.”
Alix pursed her lips, a habit of hers
when unusually displeased. The Min
ister's suggestion was but natural,
of course. .
“Were any papers found?’ she
asked, :
“I helieve so—some bhelonging to
this woman,” was the man's reply as
he stood before her, his hands behind
his back, like a schoolboy under ex
amination.
“What else do vou know?" asked
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A e AL AS DR i 5
the Empress quickly, in such an ir-‘
ritated tone that the assistant direc
tor of the department charged wuh‘
the personal safety of the imperial
family beewme filled with wonder.
“Very little, your majesty,” he an
swered, “Plots are being hatched on
every hand; therefore it behooves us
to exercise the greatest care, and
stamp out by the most drastic meas
ures any semblance of conspiracy.”
“Have you seen this woman's pa
wers?"” ’
“Yes They were brought to me
this morning " ¥ ¢
Demands Papers.
“You have them here—in the pal
ance? 1 wish to see them,” the Em
press exclaimed eagerly, and Mon
sieur Birileff was at once sent in
search of them.
‘The fools! The outrageous idiots!"
cried Alix, stamping her foot in rage
theymoment the door had cloged. "Only
to ’hlnk, Seneide,that they have ar
rested that woman! Some agent
provocateur % denounced her. 1
wonder what gou have heen dis
covered. 1 wonder If she had that
compromising letter from Stolypin
upon her.”
In order to satisfy herself upon that
point, Alix had ordered the papers be
lorging to the prisoner to be pro
duced.
A quarter of an hour later the as
sistant director returned with a large
official envelope, which he emptied,
handing the contents to the Kmpress.
In feverish haste Alix seated herself
at her little writing tabel gnd ex
amined them, They were mostly let
ters from her parents in Stavropo,
and friends in Saratov, One was
from the famous lawyer named Alts
chiller, who, by the way, later on
conducted Madame Boutoviten's (aft
erward wife of General Soukjomli
noff) sensational divorce case, and into
whose hands the German, Hardt, had,
at Alix's or(imfianz‘u
action agains v ster,
Agent Commended.
“That letter we d 0 not exactly un
derstand,” remarked the police official.
“1 am having inquiries made of Mon
sieur Altschiller. It seems as thnugh‘
the woman has some deep personal
grievance against his excellency, Yet
the plot seems to be purely political
in motive, judging from the fact that
her three male accomplices are nj
hiliste.”
The Emovress reflected a few mo
ments. Then, having satisfied herself
thut Stolypin’s letter to Vera had not
been recovered, she assumed a careg
less attiutde, remarking: |
“Ah! it is really a great pity when
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMER:CAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, MAY 25, 1919,
women have such grievances against
our honorable statesmen. You must
be congratulated, Monsieur Birileff,
upon having crushed the conspiracy
which no doubt was a desperate one.”
And with these words of com
mendation she dismissed him,
The moment he had gone her maj
esty ordered me to call up Hardt upon
the telephone, as she wished to speak
to him,
This | did, and ten minutes later
the Tsaritza was talking with the
German secret agent in the capital.
I eould not catch her words, but
no doubt whatever she sald was very
guarded. She only used the telephone
when occasion absolutely necessitated,
When she came forth from the tels
ephone cabinet she was more angry
than ever.
Strangers to Her,
“The infernal Idiots!” she cried.
"‘Somobody has denounced the girl in
order to seek reward, Hardt says
that the three nihilists arrested were
complete strangers to her. She wus
lodging in the same house as they
were~that was all.” |
“Curtous, though, that the woman
Baltz should also be arrested. Some
body must have known that she was
Stolypin's enemy. Was not that a
secret?” | remarked. |
“No secret is safe with our Black
Cabinet at work,” she declared, "I
happen to know that my own letters
have been tampered with! That is
why 1 send all 1 can by courier—|
especially any letters to Germany.”’
A moment later she ordered me ml
get her a telegraph form-—one of
those large, blue ones specially print
ed for their majesties’ use,
Then, seating herself at a table, she
wrote out a 4 message.
“It will take too long for a mes
senger to go to Nikki at Odessa,” she
remarked as she sat writing, “so |
must telegraph.”
Then when she had finished she
handed it to me to take to the teleg
raphist at the other end of the pal
ace,
On the way I read the words she
had penned, They were addressed to
the Emperor, at Odessa, and were:
“l ask you to immediately sign an
order for the release of Vera Baltz,
wrongly charged with conspiring
against Stolypin, and the return of
her papers. A grave Injustice is be
ing done to an innocent person. The
men arrested with her are guilty, but
she is not. Inform me by telegraph
that you have done this. To arrest
innocent persons as nihilists in these
eritical days only irritates the people,
and makes matters much worse —
ALIX.”
Altchiller Family.
Two hours later a footman handed
me a telegram for her majesty, and
on opening it 1 found the Emperor's
reply. It said:
“1 have telegraphed the order for
the release of Vera Baltz, of whose
arraest | have heard nothing. You are
ever watchful that injustice should
not be done in our name, and I thank
vou, and the people should also thank
vou,—~NIKKIL"”
When, five minutes later, [ handed
the message to the Empress, she reud‘
it, smiled in triumph, and tossed it
into the fire. Ten minutes later she
was again speaking to the man Hardt
over the -telephone, giving instfuc
tions through him to the lawyer Alt
schiller,
I may heré reveal a further and
deeper intrigue. The family of Alt
schiller was,well known in Russia be-i
fore the war. They were Austrians,
who had years before established
themselveg at Kiev, and, later on, as
Altschiller, senior, rose in society,
transferred themselves to St. Peters
burg. This Altschiller, senior whom
1 knew well, and never suspected, has
since been proved to have bheen the
chief of the Austrian spying organi
zation in Ryssia.
l.ong before 1914 it was whispered
that Altschiller—who absconded a
few weeks before war was declared-—
was a spy, and his close ilntimacy
with the Minister Soukhomlinoff was
freely commented upon,
Dangerous Person.
J Indeed, on one occasion at Tsars.
hoe-Seloe, M. Makeroff-—who was
then Minister of the Interior—in my
presence and before both Emperor
and Empress, told the Minister of
War openly that Altschiller was a
dangerous person. But bald-headed
old Soukhomlinoff stood up for him,
declaring that he had known him in
Kiev before, and that he was per
fectly honest,
Yet at the general's trial his bank
ing account was examined, It was
also shown that this Altschiller had
had, with the German spy Missoye
doff, free access to the Minister of
War's private rooms, that they regu
larl yexamined his most confidential
papers, and that no secret was with
held from them! And, further, it was
proved that Austrian money in large
sums had been regularly paid into
the Minister's account by this very
man whom he defended before the
Emperor.
I mention this solely in order to
show the nature of those traitors with
whom Alexandra Feodorovna was
dealing. Much whitewashing of the
Romanoffs will, of course, be at
tempted in the years hereafter; Gut
nmh.ln‘ can ever erase the blots upon
the *imperial escutcheon which Alix
of Hesse has placed upom it.
Cunning Intriguer.
As a regult of Vera Baltz's arrest,
the Empress caused the downfall and
disgrace of the well-meaning official,
Birileff. When once her mind was
set upon intrigue or vengeance she
always went to work slowly, but with
a cold, calculating cunning that was
unequalled. Upon the man or woman
whom she had marked down for dis
grace, ruin—nay, even for death—in
those horrible oubliettes or in far-off
log capin in the Siberian snows, she
would smile benignly, and even waive
court etiquette until the victim was
at his ease. But sooner or later, if
she waited even for years, she would
strike, and strike with a vicicus and
relentless hand,
I give: her plot against Stolypin
and his wife in rather full detail be
cause its denouement not only turned
against her own ambitions, but had
an effect upon herself and the im
perial dynasty which she had never
foreseen. Truly she has lived to rue
the day that she ever set her hand
against Stolypin.
The release of Vera Baltz was, of
course, immediate. Hermann Hardt,
no doubt, told her of the Empress’ in
tervention upon her behalf, and the
Austrian Altschiller, junior—arrested
after war was declared—further reas
sured her as to her position. At the
order of the Empress, through her
despicable agent Harat, the necessary
legal papers were being prepared,
and Alix wag secretly gloating over
her triumph when Stolypin would be
held up teo publie ridicule and the
pious Madame Stolypin would know
of her husband’'s backsliding.
Liberty Almost Gone,
About three weeks went past, when
Russia was amazed at still another
terrible outrage. 'The nihilists had
suddenly entered the struggle which
stolypin was waging against the
whole nation. A single whisper
against an individual had become
sufficient to send him without trial
to Siberia, while the liberty of no
body was safe. The nihilists had,
therefore, once more resorted to ex
tremes. They hatéad Stolypin for his
cold, callous relentlessness and for
the way in which he countenanced
wholesale arrests and deportations of
perfectly innocent persons.
Stolypin, against whom the Aus
trian Altschiller had already prepared
a case in the law court, had a summer
villa on what is known as the Islands
of the Apothecaries, near Petrograd,
and here he was living with his wife
and two children, son and daughter.
Surrounded as he was by police
agents, who kept him under observa
tion day and night, he naturally be
lieved himself perfectly secure. He
was not aware—just as the Empress
and every one else was in ignorance—
that the woman Baltz, now imbued
with nihilist ideas, had resolved to
kill her enemy rather than eéxpose
him in the law courts. Indeed, truth
to tell, the previous plot had been
conceived by her, and M. Birileff had
acted perfectly honestly.
Second Plot Deeper.
This second plot was, however,
more deeply laid than the first, Oneé
summer’'s night, the Premier’s villa
having been cleverly undermined, an
explosion occurred which nearly de
stroyed the place, wrecked many
houses in the vicinity, killed forty
five persons and wounded the two
lchildren. though his excellency him
self escaped.
Stolypin, amid this disaster, re
mained perfectly calm. Having seen
that the wounds inflicted upon his
children were dressed, he at once left
for Peterhof-—where we happened to
be—and had audienge of the Tsar.
1 remember that night well. News
of the explosion came Lo us over the
telephone.
wWhen 1 informed Her Majesty of
the number of dead, she said:
“Ppor people! It would have been
better if Stolypin himself had been
among the number. That man is dan
gerous to us, 7Zeneide. He hates the
Emperor William.”
At the audience His Excellency had
with His Majesty he pointed out how
dastardly was the attempt upon his
person and that of his family, and
represented to the Emperor the ne
cessity of showing no merey to those
who were trying to shatter the throne
and Its power. . |
Gave Him Free Hand. ‘
The Emperor thereupon gave his.
favorite Minister a free hand, and the
latter, suspecting the woman Vera of
being the instigator of the attempt,
caused search to be made for her, but
the Empress, through Hardt, had
taken good care that she had escaped
to Danzig, there to await the social
{coup that was intended.
I Meanwhile, the Nihilists were not
inactive. A further plot was formed
against Stolypin, and into this entered
a Jew named Bagrov, who had been
one of the secret agents of the Pre
mier—an agent-prcvocaeur whom he
had employed to watch Vera's move
ments on her arrival in Petrograd,
but who had later on fallen in love
with the girl,
When our court left for the Crimea
in the autumn it was arranged that
we should stop at Kiev, so as to allow
the ' Emperor to attend the military
maneuvers there. M. Stolypin gccom.
panied us in the train, being the prin
cipal member of the suite,
On the day of our arrival at Kiev
there was a gala performance at the
theater, at which we were all pres
'en(. With a ticket signed by Stolypin
himself, the secret agent Bagrov ob
|tained entrance to the theater, and,
{ entering his chief's box, he watched
his opportunity to fire at him with a
revolver,
Dies From Wound.
1 saw Stolypin fall back in his
chair. Then all became confusion and
1 attended Her Majesty, Who at once
rose and left.
| The wounded Minister lingered for
three days, and then succumbed. But
ail Russia stood aghast, and even His
Eyveelle~ e ave dnumb with
horror-gall save Alix, who was se
crotly delighted, for still another en
emy of Germany had been removed,
She even induced Nicholas to re
fraln from attending the funeral of
his murdered servant, and we all left
for the Crimea on the very day of
the funeral, an event purposely ar
ranged by Alexandra Feodorovna in
order to express her contempt for the
dend man and to accentuate her own
triumph. An enemy of Germany had
been removed, and the young woman,
Raltz, the instigator of the «rime, had
disappeared—to Paris,
It was spring again and we were
back at Tsarkoe-Selo when Nicholas
one day at luncheon, in an unusually
happy mood, suggested a yachting
cruige down the Baltic to visit the
Court of Denmark at Copenhagen,
Alix was at once concerned regard
ing the little Tsarevitch, to whom she
was entirely devoted—whether he
should accompany us, The Emperor
suggested that he should be left at
home, but Alix was determined that
he should also be taken,
} She Had Her Way,
“Then let Ivan Khanoff take him
by train and meet us in Copenhagen,”
Nicholas suggested,
lvan Khanoff was a most devoted
Cossack servant, a real fine tull
bearded, straight-nosed specimen of
manhood, who had been appointed
“nurse maid” to the puny little heir.
“No,” sald the Empress emphatical
ly. “Alexis Nicolalevitch will travel
with us. The weather is quite calm
and the change will be most benefi
cial"
“Well, Alix, If you wish it so, T will
give orders at once,” said the Tsar,
for, weak and careless, he always fell
in with hig wife's suggestions, wheth.
er in domestic or political affairs. His
mind was a vacillating one, which
could be influenced at will by the
strong-minded, scheming Empress.
One of our great Russian authors
wrote in 1912 facts which, alas! were
only too true, and which was the
“handwriting on the wall.” He de
clared that no misfortune had been
spared to Nicholas 11 and had he only
understood their importance he would
have been the most unhappy man in
the whole of his vast Empire. War
humiliated his country, revolution
had enfeebled it, bad and tainted pol.
itics had dishonored it, the blood of
thousands of people who perished
quite uselessly cried out for revenge,
the tears of other thousands of un
happy creatures who languished in
prisons or in hopeless exile appealed
to Heaven for the chastisement of
those in authority who sent them to
a living death. Danger surrounded
him; treason dogged his footsteps:
his nation disliked and distrusted
him: his family was hostile to him;
his only brother was banished; his
mother was estranged from him; the
wife of his bosom was the victim of a
strange and mysterious malady; his
only son and the successor -to his
throne and crown had been smitten
with an incurable illness, He had no
friends, no disinterested advisers, no
Ministers whose popularity in the
country could add something to his
own. And amid ruip he stood alone,
a solitary figure, the more pathetic
because he did not realize the trag
edy of his own fate. |
Another Plot.
Though none of us on that day at
Tsarskoe-Selo knew it—not even our
safeguarding, ‘®ever-vigilant Okrana,
which cost the empire half a million
roubles yearly—a deep-laid and most
terrible plot was at that moment
afoot against the dynasty. Its insti
gator. as was long afterward proved,
was the wild, handsome revolution
ist, the woman Vera Baltz, whom the
Empress herself had brought from
Stravropol.
Of what occurred on hoard the
yacht on that memorable spring aft
ernoon, that vile and awful plot of
Vera Baltz, which, failing in its main
purpcse, left the heir of the Roma
noffs a cripple and invalid for life, I
will relate in the next chapter,
Truly, the sins of Alexandra Feo
drovona were alréeady being visited
heavily upon her!
The dead Stolypin left Russia a
legacy in the form of M. Sazonov, of
whom British and American readers
have been told muon,
He Was Clever.
Sazonov was clever, resourceful,
and also a sycophant; also somewhat
remarkable, Stolypin’s wife was his
sister-in-law, and by the grace of the
dead Minister he had been pitch
forked into high official position. Out
wardly he was a poor, weak person.
At court, when he arrived—one of
“the long procession,” as the Empress
called them—he would shake hands
with one in a 2 nervous kind of way,
He had a cold, clammy hand, and
was of a highly religious turn of
mind, a great admirer of Great Bri
tain, and a close friend of a certain
Mr. Birkbeck, now dead, who lived at
Stratton Strawless, in Norfolk, Eng
land, and with whom he often sfayed.
To me M. Sazonov had, before the
war, often expressed his firm convie
tion that Russia should never enter
into the troubles in the Balkans. His
journeys to and fro to England were
unfortunate for him, for when, in
1914 %2 returned fram visits to Paris
and to Balmoral the Russian people
suddenly railed at him and declared
him to be “the meek lamb with a halo
around his head,” as one Petrograd
newspaper put it. .
(To Be Continued.)
YANK KNOWS FOOD VALUE
{By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, May 24.—The returning
American soldier knows the value of food,
and 8o he is going in to help win the
world food war by planting victory gar,
dens. Among requests for garden books tg
‘the National War Garden Commission was
‘one from Private James E. Kent, Ordnance
department, Fort Winfield Scott, San Fran
cisco, who says he wants to join the sol
\dlers of the soil.
e it
NO LOAFERS HERE.
(By International News Service.)
ALEXANDRIA, IND., May 24.—N0 idlers
can he found in this town. Chief of Police
Stokes started lookimg around for a man
to relieve a oliceman who wnntxd'to take
a 10-day vacation. He could not find a
man that was not working. The policeman
will not get a vacation.
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(By Internationnl News Service,)
PITTSBURG, May 24.—~What Is sald
by hurch leaders to be the first real
move toward church union lin the
United States, if not in the modern
world, is being made here. Three
hurch congregations o 1 different de
nominations—Christian, Haptist and
Presbyterian-—each radically differing
from the other in its doctrinal views,
are planning to merge in one great
congregation and build an interdenom
inational church.
Every question in connection with
the detadls of the merger has been
agreed upon except buptism, and’it is
sald that this would be amicably ad
justed by making the method of bap
tism--sprinkling ; or immersion-—op
tional with the individual or his spon
sor,
The merger was the result of out
door union meetings of the three
hurch last summer Committees were
appointed later to confer on consolida
tfon., The committees ironed out all
the doctrinal differences until the i{s
sues of baptism and communion pe
riods appeared Both the Presbyterian
and Phr{s!ian churches have open com
munion, the Baptist distributing .it
every month, the CHristian every week
while in the Presbyvterian Church the
service I 8 solemnized every three
months, A ronmrmntsg will be feffected
whereby communion will be given prob-.
ably- every two weeks or every month
BOYS OTWIT POLICE.
(By Ifternational News Service.)
COLMBUS, OHIO, May 24.-—Two youths
n a stolen antomobtle were heing hotly
pursued by ‘the pelice They were several
blocks in the lead when they thought of a
iever move to outwit their pursuers, They
drove to the curb, left the car and took
another a few feet ahead and escaped.
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DIRECTORS:
H. W. BROWN
Vice President H. G. Hastings Co,
ERWIN C. CATTS
Lieutenant of Engineers, Increase
Production Division, U. S. Army
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ISOUTHERN PHE'S
MATERI .Co |
THI; SOUTH’S LARGEST KODAK SUPPLY HOUSE.
Says Mr. Snapshot, “See where the arrow points—right across
from the Flatiron Building at the junction of North Broad and Peacn
tree streets—to Kodak headquarters in Atlanta, at 72 N, Broaa.
Close to the leading hotels, theaters, office buildings and principal
street car lines, Kodak hedaquarters is easy to find and well worth
going to for service supreme Fifty styles in Kodaks for you to
choose from, at $2 to $232.
Kodak Finishing and Everything
Pertaining to Photography—
8-Hour Developing Service
SOUTHERN PHOTO MATERIAL CO.
Kodak Headquarters 72 North Broad St.
ST. ELMO MASSENGALE
Pres. Massengale Advertising
Agency
JOHN W. STEWART
Atlanta, Ga.
CALVIN TICHENOR
President