Newspaper Page Text
8A
Empress, Acting on Kaiser’s Command, Brought
About Fall of Hero Who Beat the Teutons on
Austrian Front.
‘WRITTEN BY THE BARONESS ZENEIDE TZANKOFF, NEE
KAMENSKY, OF RUSSIA.
Edited by WILLIAM LE JUEUX,
Famous Traveler, Authority on European Court Intrigues, Adviser to
the British Secret Service Foreign Department, Frequently Consulted by
Zuropean Secret Service Departmen ts on Spying and Espionage.
CHAPTER XVIL .
The subsequent trial and sentence
left no doubt in the public mind as
10 the general's gullt,
The dismissal of Soukhominoff had
been followed by the appointment of
Ivis assistant, General Polivanoff, as
his successor, The latter was a deep
and earnest worker, a patriotic Rus
tian, who had watched with horror
the downfall of his chief, and who, on
hiis elevation to office, set to work to
ostablish munition factories upon a
proper footing and keep them at work
with three shifts daily at high
vages. Polivinoff was out to win
the war, Hig exchange of corregpond.
ence with l&urd Kitehener and with
the French and Itallan War Minis
ters was no mere pretense, He knew
the peril of the German octopus, and
intended to combat it. One night at
o reception his wife gave, Rasputin
trrived uninvited, whereupon he gave
orders to his servants to turn the
inonk out, saying: |
of Germany.”
Those words proved his downfl.ll‘
my reof shall never shelter a spy
*"he monk told the Tsaritza of his
treatment at his excellency's hou-«.‘
+nd at her instigation Sturmer and
Protopopoff, all-powerful as they
were, got to work to ruin him, fear
dng lest he might make some nasty
tJlegations.
? DOOM WAS SEALED.
The Duma reopened, and General
Tolivanoff, quite unsuspicious of the
coming storm, ma"e a speech which
thowed the higher” quarters that he
“wag secking the good graces of the
people. By this the general's doom
was sealed. The Empress, having al
-leady found him to be a thorn in the
tide of the pro-German camarilla,
;»ohoned her husband’'s mind against
im, declaring that he was toadying
to the Duma and forming his plans
to suit his wishes,
“Polivanoff is not our friend, she
¢ eclared over the dinner table at
Veterhoff, where we were sitting en
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| head of the war intendant ships. Why
not appylt him as Minster?”
| " The Kmperor, always weak @nd
| vacilating, hesitated,
| “He has done excellent work with
'Aloxlen, the chief of your general
staff. He deserves promotion, togeth.
er with General Ivanoff, who com
mands the Southwest Army,” went on
the Empress. “If you appointed
Schouvaleff as Minlster of War, our
allles would be well patisfled.”
HAND OF GERMANY.
“1 will consider it,” was His Maj
esty's response, and the dessert havs
ing W gerved, he rose from the
table with the Grand Duke Nicholas,
and left us in order to smoke,
A ‘week later General Polivanoft
fell, struck down by the hidden hand
of Germany. The Emperor was at
the army headquarters when hig ex
cellency, the general, sent in his us
ual weekly report with some papers
which required the sanction of the
commander-in.chief,
When the imperial courier brought
back the papers to the War Minis
ter's room in Petrograd, the general
found among them the followhmg au
tograph notes by the Emperor:
Two ukaseg to be prepared and
sent to general headquarters for sig
nature: ‘
No, 1T appoint General Schouv
aleff as Minister of War.
No, 2--1 relieve General Pollvunq
of his duties ag Minister of War, an
1 thank him for his fulfillment of
them and for his untiring zeal in the
interest of the l‘émplre." -
Thus once again the hand of Alex
ardra Feodorovna was lifted against
a stanch and zealous Russian official
because he was a hater of Ger
many.
BROUSSILOFF'S WORK,
Following this almost lmn‘\?dlamy
the Empress endeavored most stren
uously, aided by Rasputin, and the
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HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, JUNE 15 1919.
- MARSHALL SIGNS SUFFRAGE BILL
TIHS photograph was made as Vice President Thomas R. Marshall signed the suffrage reso
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Minister of the Interior and spy of
Germany, Protopopoff, to discredit
and crush out General Broussiloff,
who before the war had been in com.
mand of an army corps in the district
of Odessa.
Broussiloff had been promoted to
the highest position in the Tsar's
suite-—~that of adjutant general—and
as such he possessed the Emperor’'s
most complete confidence. He had
done splendid work on the Austrian
front, breaking through and taking
tens of thousands of prisoners. The
Austrian fortifications, on which they
had worked for over three months,
and which they believed impregnable,
were swept away before the devastat
ing fire of the Russian artillery.
Tchernovitzy, Kolomya, the Rovno
fortifications and several minor forts
rurrender>d, and the Rusgsian army
successfully crossed the river Styr,
This success was unexpected by
Potsdam, and the man Hardt, who
sought audience of the Empress, de
livered to her a confidential letter
from the Kaiser, which urged her to
suppress Broussilgff”s energy at all
coste, The Austrians were being hard
pressed; therefore some skeleton
should be dragged from Broussiloff's
cupboard and flung out into the light
of day.
PLOT HATCHED,
I happen to know that Sturmer and
Protopopolf were called to audience,
and, with Alix, some subtle plot was
formed by which it was arranged that
the Hidden Hand should strike the
victorious general at the summit of
his greatest triumph,
~ Today all the world knows how our
splendld national hero's career was
eut short by the pro-German syco
phants in office-—~that Teutonic gang
who were rapidly hurling the house
of Romanoff to its doom,
As with Broussiloff, so with Ivanoff
and a dozen other of our brilliant
strategists, While Rasputin, of hate
ful memory, worked, through his cult,
in the salons of Petrograd society, so
did the Empress and the Ministers
Sturmer and Protopopoff all combine
to hurry the Tsar Nicholas—a man
surely to be piteid and not execrated
~-away to oblivion., In three days,
on my returato court, the silent, in
sidions hand of Prussia was upon
everything in Russia Even over the
Tear's daughters the mock monk and
ex-horse stealer held as great an in
fluence as he did over the Empress
herself,
The world plot of Germany was an
accomplished fact. 1 watched, and day
by day and week by week realized
that our dear Russian land was in
evitably and irrevocably in the grip
of the enemy, Their horde of assas
sins could not advance far into our
{limitable empire, but in the country
they oveyran, driving back our gal
lant troops, who were so often with
out arms, they gave the civil inha@-
tants a taste of Hun rule and Hun
methods,
PEOPLE NOT BLIND.
The Russian people were not blind.
There i& no shrewder person on the
earth's surface th®n our Russian mu-
Jik. Yet underneath his careless idle
ness there, is a craft and cunning that
can not be equaled. He is watchful,
and by his boorish intuition he easily
scents disloyalty. And while our mil
llone of Russia were regarding the
Tsar as “father” and reading all sorts
of reports of the self-denial of the
'Empress and her daughters in their
hospital work, and *aw photographs
of them visiting and tending the
wounded, vet Alix was ever scheming
to earry out the original arrangement
made at Rominten-—that after three
weeks of war Russia should give in
and make a separate peace,
The Kaiser and the Tsaritza, with
their fellow conspirators, had reck
oned without the fine loyalty of Rus
sia to the throne, They knew nothing
of the real grit of the people, or the
way the Duma would compel the car
:xmu on of the war In face of every
stacle,
In consequence of the ugly turn
things were taking for Germany and
Austria, the PEmperor Willlam had
begun to be a'armed,
Nearly all the ladies of Russian so.
elety, headed by the traitorous Fm
press, were doing war work, Private
hospitals ad been opened in every
direction, and on every side, notwith
standing the pro-Ge man plots of
Raspatin, Protopopoff and others, the
determination to win was rapidly in.
creasing, ‘
WORD FROM KAISER,
Ruddenly one day the German agent
MHardt, whom | had not seen for near.
Iy two years, arrivad _at the palace,
and asked for audience of the Em
press
He looked weaty, as though he had
Just come off a long Jjoumey, and,
|nnur..l|_\-, 1 remarked that | had not
met him of late, ‘
“I bave just arrived from Stocks
holm,” he replied. *“I left Berlin five
days ago, and traveled by way of Co
penhagen.” |
“Berlin!” I echoed, surprised, and at
once inquired the conditions of things
in the capital of Germany.
When, ten minutes later, I present
ed Hardt to the Empress, he handed
her an autograph letter from the
Kaiser, saying:
“The Emperor gave me this at gen
eral headquarters to bring direct to
your majesty."”
Alix opened it, read it through
twice, and then sat for a few mo
ments, her brow knit in thought.
“If you will return tomorrow eve
ning I will then be able to give an
answer,” she said at last, at which
the Kaiser's messenger bowed himself
out,
SENDS FOR STURMER.
“Zeneide, 1 wigh to see Sturmer, He
was with the Emperor half an hour
ago. Order inquiry to be made for
him, and tell him I wish to see him.”
As 1 withdrew for that purpose I
passed Rasputin, who entered the Xm
press' room.,
“Ah, Father!” I head Alix exclain
quickly, “this is fortune. I believed
you had gone to Petrograd this morn
ing. I want your advice."
And 1 cloged the door behind me.
‘ Ten minutes later I brought in
i Sturimer, who, in addition to holding
| office as president of the council, held
the portfolio of Foreign Affairs,
' “Close the door, Zeneide,” com
manded the Empress, who was seated
with the monk. “You may remain”
Then, turning to the Minister, she
{ handed him the secret letter from the
Kaiser.
“Well?" she asked inquiringly, when
he had read it.
Sturmer shrugged his shoulders, |
“j can not see where such an action
as the Emperor Willilam desires will
lead us., Why should he wish me to
put pressure upon Roumania to Jom‘
the Allies?"
“To me the reason is quite clear,”
sald Rasputin,
“While Roumania remains neutral
Germany can not attack her. As soon
as she declares war she will be over
run, and her grain and oil supplies
| will fall into Germany's hands.”
ROUMANIA COERCED.
“Yes, if Germany is to win, she
must have Roumania.”
“But Roumania is not yet ready. 1
gave audience to the Roumanian Mln-!
ister only yesterday, and pressed him
| to urge upon his Goveinrient the ne
cessity for an early decisiow,” said His
Excellency, .
“We do not want her to be ready,”
Alix declared,
“You must act as the Emperor Wil. l
llam wishes, Give Roumania three
days' ultimatum, If she does not join|
us then we will attack her”
“As your majesty wishes,” replied
tne traitorous Minister, bowing. "Rou
mlania is quite unprepared.”
“So much the better. She will be
conquered within a week, and the
sorouest will save the situation for
Germany. Remember your agreement
at Rominten” .
“I do not forget it, your majesty, I
'uhull sepd the ultimatum to Buchl-‘
| rest at once, ' And presently he with
drew, . ‘
Such was the manner in which a
gallant little nation, innocent of the
| deadly but subtie hand behind the
throne of the Romanoffs, was be
ilrnyod. As 18 now well known, Rou
mania was, owing to the pressure put
| upon her by M. Sturmer, forced m!
take up drms against the Central
| Powers, and, just as the Empress had
:pruphuled, she was invaded and
| broken within a week, her huge stores
| of grain and her oil wells falling tnlo'
‘the hands of the enemy. |
| CZAR DEFENDS WIFE. |
| Not long after this the Grand
{ Duchess, Victoria Feodorovna, re
i turned to Petrograd from a visit to
| her sigter, Queen Marie, of Roumania,
at Jassy., She came to Tsarkoe-Selo,
innd asked for audience with the
Tsar, which was granted, Afterward
i she told me In confidence that in tho‘
course of conversation she had ven
| tured to refer to the great unpopular.
sty of the Empress with both the
|xu-m)' and the navy, owing to her
| dealings with the mock saint and the
| pro-German policy which they sus
| pected her of pursuing. |
| At once the ..mperor became in
{dignant, sand demanded by what right’
she should date to criticise the ac
tion of the Usaritza. With an ongry
flush upon his cheeks His Majesty
asked: “ ‘
“What on earth /has Alix to do
with politics or our forelgn poliey?
She never seeks to influence me exs
cept in the spirit of justice and hu
manity. Is she not a sister of mercy?
{ Does she not nurse the wounded with
| great se!f-übnegation? You have not
seen the quantities of letters she re
lcewu expressing heartfelt gratitude
for her efforts on behalf of the poor
Tfellow-. No, Victoria, you are cuite
‘mlstaken. and so urq{he people, The
efforts of Alix and of my daughtors
are very highly esteemed by all.”
~ Those words of the Tzar’s, told to
me by the Grand Duchess herself,
show h« .- blinded he was to all his
}w!le's clever juggling.
| Indeed, within ten days of that au
dience the Grand Duke Nicholas
‘Michaelovitch called upon the Em
peror Nicholas, «nd denounced the
Tsaritza as a treucherous and hostile
Germ.an woman,
“] have said my say,” said the
Grand Duke, “and now you can have
me shot and bury me in your palace
\garden."
GRAND DUKE BANISHED.
Nicholas looked at him with glassy
eyes, but went on offering him li_ht
ed matches for his cigarettes, and
shook hands with him when he left.
The Grand Duke thereupon wrote the
Tsar a letter in which he again ac
cused the Tsaritza of Leing a false
adviser and a traitress to Russia.
1 was in attendance upon the Em
press when her husband entered and
began to read the Grand Duke's let
|ter. He had not uttered twenty
words when <he flew into a rage,
snatched the the letter from his hand,
and tearing it into fragments, vici
ously threw them upon the carpet.
. “That is how I treat my enemies,
Nicholas,” she said. “And that is
how you should treat yours—if you
only had the courage to do so!”
~ Save that the Grand Duke was ban
ished to his country estate, nothing
was done to him,
Quickly, however, followed the mur
der of Rasputin, of which the de
tails have already been published, and
need not be repeated here. The
world was happily rid of one of e
most remaikable and evil libertines
of the country. ‘
But it fell to my lot to break the
news to her majesty that the monk
was missing. ‘
“Missing!” she gasped, starting up
wildly, her face blanched to the lips.
“Has anything happened? Tell me the
truth!™
“I only know what Protopopoff has
just telephoned to me from the Min-,
Istry,” 1 said. |
(To Be Con.luded.)
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LONDON (by mail),—British naval
architects are watching but withhold
ing judgment on American-built con
ecrete steamships, Only concrete barges
of small tonnage are being built 1n
Gredt Britain,
W. L. Scott, of Lloyds Register, told
the sixtieth session of the Institution of
Naval Architects that conditions favors
ed concrete shipbuilding in the United
States more than in this country.
““Concréte shipbuilding in the United
States 18 on more elaborate lines than
in Great Britain—if anything, on rather
too elaborate lines,” he said, “having
regard to the recent need for immediate
production, bus had lh’ war continued
and the original program of the EKmer
gency Fleet Corporation been proceed
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arrangements had been made, would
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‘“‘Considerable money and energy have
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It will pay you both in time and money to consult me and learn the truth about your condition before placing vour
case with any one, = :
Consultation and Examination Free.
407.08-09-10-11_ Silvey Bulilding, Atlanta, Ga. Phone |, 7254,
. Hours: 9 to 1, 3 to 7: Sundays, 12 to 2; Holidays, 12 to 2. u
THIN, NERVOUS PEOPLE
NEED BITRO-PHOSPHATE
What It Is and How It IncreasesWeig ht, Strength and
Nerve Force In Many Instances
SHOULD BE PRESCRIBED BY 3“8? DOCTOR AND USED
IN EVERY HOSPITAL.
Says Editor of “Physicians’ Who's Who.”
Take plain bltro-phmphm is the ad
vice of these physicians to thin, delicate,
nervous people who lack vim, -n-rgz
and nerve force, and there seems to
ample proof of the efficacy of this prep
aration to warrant the roeogmmdn
tion. Moreover, if we ju?o om the
countless preparations and treatments
'whlch are continually being advertised
for the purluue of making thin people
fleshy, developing arms, neck and bust,
and replacing ugly hollows and angles
by the soft curved lines of health and
beauty, there are evidently thousands of
men and women who keenly feel their
ex essive thinness,
Thinness and weakness are often
due to starved nerves. Our bodies need
'mon phosphate than (s contained in
modern foods, , Physiclans claim there
iis nothing thn"' will supply this de
fletenci #o welF as the organic gnoo
phate known among druggists as bitro
phosphate, which lp‘hmo:pennln and is
sold by Jacobs armacy Comp‘nr‘
stores In Atlanta and most all
druggists under a guarantee
of satisfaction or money back.
By feeding the nerves directly
‘eadwelzht is a success so far es de
ign and structural efficiency go. y
“The question of economical success,
both in production and working um!er
Trust Me! Try Dodson’s Liver Tone!
Calomel Harms Liver and Bowels
Read my guarantee! Liven your liver and bowels
and get straightened up without taking sicken
ing calomel. Don’t lose a day’s work!
Theres' no reason why a person
should take sickening, salivating calo
mel when 50 cents buys a large bot
tle of Dodson's Liver Tone—a perfect
substitute for calomel.
1t is a pleasant, vegetable liquid
which will start your liver just as
surely as calomel, but it doesn’'t make
you sick and can not salivate.
Children and grown folks can take
Dodson's Liver Tone, because it is
perfectly harmless.
Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is
Glass of Salts
Cleans Kidneys
If your Back hurts or Bladder bothers you, drink
lots of water '
When your kidneys hurt and your
back feels sore, don't get scared andl
proceed to load your stomach with a|
lot of drugs that excite the Kkidneys
and irritate the entire urinary tract,
Keep yowr Kkidneys ciean like you
keep your bowels clean, by flushing
them with a mild, harmless snlts‘
which removes the body's urinous.
waste and stimulates them to their
normal activity. The function of the
kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24
hours they strain from it 500 grains
of acid and waste, so we can read
ily understand the vital importance
of k®ping the kidneys active.
Drink lots of water—you can't
drink too much; also get from any
pnarmacist about four ounces of Jad
and by uuppl{ln. the bodiy cells with the
necessary K‘uphnrlc ood elements
bitro-phosphate should produce a~ wel
come transformation in the appearance:
the increase in welght frequently being
astonishing,
Clinical tests made jn Bt, Catherine's
Hospi'al, N, Y. C., showed that two
patients gained in weight 23 and 27
pounds, respectively, through the ad
ministration of or?nlc phosphate;
both patients claim they have not feit
as strong and well for the past twelve
years,
Increase in welght also carries with
It a general lmprovament in the health.
Nervousness, sleeplessness and lack of
energy, which nearly always accompany
cxcnnlvo’ t“hlnneu. nmnklh ’no'an dlni
appear, dull eyes ought to br en an
pnl:‘.cl\eeku glow wl?h the- Dioom of
perfect heaith,
Physicians and hospitals everywhere
Are now recognizing its merits hr its
use in ever increasing quantities,
Wn& Kolle, M. D, editor of New
o “Phycisians’ Who's Who," says:
"Buro‘!'h:;ghau should be prescribed
by every tor and used in every hos-
peace conditions, however, can only 1
determined by the continuation of pra
tical experiments such as are now bek
lcarrlcd out.”
mercury and attacks your bones. Tal
a dose of nasty calomel today a:
rou will teel weak, sick and naus
ated tomorrow. Don't lose a day
work. Take a spoonful of Dodson ;
‘L.iver Tone instead, and you will wal
Lp feeling great. No more biliou: -
ness, constipation, sluggishness, heac -
ache, coated tongue or sour stomac'
Your druggist says it you don’t fir {
Dodson’s Liver Tone acts better tha
horrible calomel your money is wali.
‘ng-for you.—Advertisement.
' Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glas3
|ot water before breakfast each morr -
ing for a few days and your kidneys
|will act fine. This famous salts i 3
made from the acid of grapes an |
lemon juice) combined with lithia, ar |
has been used for generations to clea |
land stimulate clogged Kidneys; als»
‘to neutralize the acids in urine so ¢
ino longer is a source of irritatio:,
thus ending bladder weakness, #¢
Jad Salts is inexpensive; can nc:
injure; makes a delightful efferve -
cent lithia-water drink which every=
one should take now and then to kec)
their kidneys clean and agtive. Ti -
this, also keep up the water drinkin. .
and no doubt you will wonder who!
became of your Kidney trouble an!
backache.—Advertisement.
pital to Increase strength and nerve
force and to enrich the blood.”
Joseph D, Harrigan, Former Visiting
SpecuS to North Eastern Dllptr:‘r
tory, says: ‘“Let those who are wekk
thin, nervous, anaemle, or run-down
take a natural, unadulterated substance
such as bitro-phosphate and you wil
soon see some astonishing results |
the increase of nerve energy, strength
of body and mind and power of endur
ance.”
Bitro-Phosphate is made entirely o
the organic phosphate compound re
ferred to in the National Standard Dis
pensatory as being an excellent toni
and nervine and a preparation whic!
has recently acquired considerable rep
utation in_the treatment of neurns
thenia, The standard of excellence
strength and purity of its substance i*
beyond c~on. for every RBitro-Phos
phate tablet is manufactured in striet
accordance with the U, 8 Pharma
copoela test requirements, Bitro-Phos
phate Is therefore not a patent medi
c¢ine and should not be confused witr
any of the secret nostrums, so-ealled
tonics or widely advertised “‘cure-alls.”
CAUTlON—~Although Bitro-Phospha
Is unsurpassed for relleving n:zoux'
ness, sleeplessness and general weak
ess, owing to Its tendency to Increasc
welght it should not be used by anyone
who does not desire to put on