Newspaper Page Text
Empress, Aeting 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 E uropean Court Intrigues, Adviser to
the British Secret Service Foreign Department, Frequently Consulted by
Euwropean Secret Service Departments on Spying and Espionage.
CHAPTER XWVIL '
The subsequent trinl and sentence
R .
"
The mluu of Soukhominoff had
w foilowed by the nm‘nmt of
assistant, General ivanoff, as
&me-.n—; ‘worke m‘M ot
or, & us
sian, who watehed with horror
fl: Adownfall of his chief, and who, on
elevation to office, set to work to
estabtish munition factories npon a
m-r footing and keep them at work
three shifts dadly at high
wages, Polivinoff was out to win
P War, Hhomtme of correspond.
with Lord Kitchener and with
the and Ttalian Wq;hlinb
ters was no mere pretense, knew
the peril of the German octopus, and
intended to cembat it. Omne night at
a reception his wife gave, Rasbutin
arrived undnvited, whereupon he gave
orders to his servants to turn the
monk out, saying!:
of Germany.”
Those words prowed his downfall
my roof shall never shelter a spy
The monk told the Tsaritza of his
treatment at his excellency’s house,
and at her instigation Sturmer and
Protopopoff, all-powerful as they
were, got to work to ruin him, fear
ing lest he might mmake some nasty
adlegations.
DOOM WAS SEALED.
fne Duma reopened, and General
Poid anoff, quite unsuspicious of the
eoming storm, made a speech which
showed the higher quarters that he
wag seeking the good graces of the
people. By this the general's doom
was sealed. The Empress, having al
ready found him to be a thorn in the
side of the pro-Germmn camarilla,
poisoned her husband’s mind agains®
him, declaring that he was toadying
to the Duma and forming bis- plans
to suit his wishes.
“Polivanoff is not our friend, she
declared over the dinner table at
Peterhoff, where we were sitting en
famille gne night, “POm all sides I
hear that he speaks of you with con
tempt. There ig Schouvaieff, the
head of the war intendant ships. Why
not appc\ 1t him as Minster?”
The Emperor, always weak and
vacillating, hesitated.
“He has done excellent work with
Alexieff, the chief of your general
staff. He deserves promotion, togeth.
4r With General Ivanoff, who com
mands the Southwest Army,” went on
the Empress. “If you appointed
Schouvaieff as Minister of War, our
allles would be well satisfied.”
HAND OF GERMANY.
“ will consider it,” was His Maj
‘ty‘l response, and the dessert hav
ing been served, he rose from the
&gll with the Grand Duke Nicholas,
and left us in order to smoke.
A week later General Polivanoff
fell, struck down by the hidden hand
of Germany. The Emperor was at
the army headquarters when his ex
cellency, the general, sent in his us
wal weekly report with some papers
which required the sanection of the
eommander-in-chief,
When the imperial ecourier brought
back the papers to the War Minis
ters room in Petrograd, the general
found among them the following au
tograph notes by the Emperor:
“Two ukases to be prepared and
sent to general headquarters for sig
nature:
No, I—ll appoint General Schouv
al"fl as Minister of War,
No. 21 relieve General Polivanoff
of his duties ag Minister of War, and
1 thank him for his fulfillment of
them and for his untiring zeal in the
interest of the Empire.”
Thus once again the hand of Alex
andra Feodorovna was lifted against
a stanch and zealous Russian official
becavse he was a hater of Ger
many.
BROUSSILOFF'S WORK,
Following this almost immediately
the BEmpress endeavored most stren
uously, aided by Rasputin, and the
Minister of the Interior and spy of
Germany, Protopopoff, to discredit
and crush out General Broussiloff,
who before thawar had been in gom
’tnnnd of an army corps in the distriet
of Odessa.
Broussiloff had been promoted to
the highest position in the Tsar's
suite—that of adjntant general-—and
as such he possessed the Emperor's
most complete confidence. He had
xlone gplendid 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 hefore the devastat
ing fire of the Russian artijery
Tehernovitzy, Kolomya, the Rovno
fortifications and several minor forts
eurrender:d, and the Russian 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 Kiaiser, which urged her to
suppress Broussiloff's energy at all
costs. The Austrians were being hard
pressed . therefore some skeleton
/‘;uld he dragged from Broussi’off's
cupbonrd and flung out into the light
of day.
PLOT MATCHED,
I happen to know that Sturmer and
Protopopoff were ealled to audience
and, with Alix, some subtle plot was
formad by which It was wrranged that
the Hidden Hand should strike the
victorious general at the summit of
hin greatast triumph
Today all the wonld knows how onr
gplendid national hero’s career was
cut short hy the pro-German gyco
phants lin office ~that Teutonle gang
who were rapldly hurling the house
of Romanoff to its doom
As with Broussiloff, so with Iv inoff
and a Aozers othe of our briliant
strategists, While Rasbutin, of hate
ful memory, worked through hix cult
in the salons of Petrograd soclely, 80
sqlid the Empress ind the Ministers
Sturmer and P'rotopopoff 1 combine
to hurry the Tsar Nicholix-—a man
surely to he piteid and not excorated
~—agWay to oblivion In three days,
aw wnic wastime ta AaTPt. the wilent in.
sifioue hand of Prussia was upon
overything in Russia. HEven over the
Tear's daoghters the mock monk and
ex-hotse stealer held as great an in
fluence as he did over the Empress
herself,
The world plot of Germany was an
accomplished fact. I 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
#ins could not advamce far into our
illimitable empire, but in the country
they overran, driving back our gal
lant troops, who were 80 often with
out arms, they gave the ctyil inhabi
tants a taste of Hun rule and Hun
methods.
PEOPLE NOT BLIND.
The Russian people were not blind.
There is no shrewder person on the
earth’s surface than our Russian mu
iik. 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
seents dislovalty. And while our mil
lions of Russia were ‘regarding the
Tsar as “father” and reading all sorts
of reports of the self-denial of the
®mpress and her daughters in their
hospital work, and saw photographs
of them visiting and tending the
wounded, vet Alix was ever scheming
to carry out the original arrangement
made at Rominten—that after three‘
weeks of war Russia should give in
and make a separate peace. I
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 th&eren! grit of the people, or the
way Duma would compel the car
rying on of the:.war in face of every
obstacie.
In consequence of the ugly turn
things were taking for Germany and
Austria, the Emperor William had
begun to be alarmed.
Nearly all the ladies of Russian so
eiety, headed by the traitorous Em
press, were doing war work. Private
hospitals had been opened in every
direction, and on every side, notwith
standing the pro-German plots of
Ragputin, Protospopoff and others, the
determination to win was rapidly In
creasing.
WORD FROM KAISER.
Suddenly one day the German agent
Hardt, whom I had not seen for ne‘ar_‘
ly two years, arrived at the palace,
and asked for audience of the Em-I
press. |
He looked weaty, as though he ha.d‘
just come off a long journey, and,
lnaturully, I remarked that I had not'
i met him of late. I
! “I have just arrived from Stnck-‘
"holm,” .he replled. *“I left Derlin five
davs ago, and traveled by way of Co
penhagen.” I
’ “Rerlin!” 1 echoed, surprised, and at’
| once inquired the conditions of things
| in the eapital of Germany. |
‘ When, ten minutes later, I present
led Hardt to the Empress, he handed
| her an autograph leiter 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 yvou will return tomorrow eve
ning 1 will then be able to give an
I»nswvr.“ she said at last, at which
l the Kaiser's messenger bowed himself
out, |
| SENDS FOR STURMER. |
I “Zeneide, 1 wigh to sece Sturmer, He
| was with the Emperor half an hour
irn::u Order inquiry to be made for
{ him, and tell him I wish (o see him.”
i\ As lewithdrew for that purpose I
| passed Rasputin, who entered the Km
| press’ room.
“Ah, Father!™ I head Alix exclain
Iqui('kly, “this & fortune, [ helieved
vou had gone to Petrograd this morn.
i ng. 1 want your advice.”
i And 1 closed the door behind me,
[ Ten minutes later I brought in
Sturmer, 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
I*lm the monk. “You may remain.”
hen, 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, |
I “i can not see where such an action
as the Emperor Willlam desires wil!
lead us. ‘Why should he wish me to
' put pressure upon Roumania to join
| the Allies?”
I “To me the reason is quite clear,”
‘t‘le‘l Rasputin,
! “While Roumania remains neutral
Germany ean not attack her, As goon
| as ghe declares war she will be over.
| run, and her grain and oil supplies
will fall into Germany's hands.”
ROUMANIA.CO!RCED.
“Yes, if Germany Is to win, she
must have Roumania.”
“But Roumania & not yet ready. |
gave audience to the Rfumanian Min
ister only vesterday, and pressed him
to urge upon his Government the ne.
| cessitly for an early decision,” said His
Excellency,
I “We do not want her to be ready,”
| Alix declared,
“You must act as the Emveror Wil
lam wishes. Give Roumania three
days’ ultimatum, If she does not join
| ug then we will attack hepr"
| “Ax your majesty wishes,” replied
the traftorous Minister, bowing, “&ou.
Inmnm is quite unprepared.”
| "B much the better, She will be
| conquered within a week, and the
| concuest will save the situation for
! (yermany Remember your agreement
| at Rominten”
“I do not forget it. your majesty, |
lfih:nll gend the ultimatum to Bucha
rest it once,’ And presently he with
drew
Suech was the manner in which a
gallant little nation, innocent of the
deadly but subtle hand behind the
throne of the Romanoffs, was be
traved. As i now well known, Rou
mania was, owing to the pressure pu!
upon her by M. Sturmer, forced to
take un srme arainst the Central
WEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1919,
THIS photograph was made as Vice President Thomas R. Marshall signed the suffrage reso
lution which had just been passed by the Senate by a vote of 56 to 25. To left is Miss
HelenyGardner; to right, Mrs.,, Maud Wood Park, of Massachusetts; directly behind the Vice
President’s chair is\Senator Watson, chairman of the suffrage committee.—(Copyright by In
ternational Film Service.) \
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Powers, and, just as the Empress had
prophesied, she was invaded and
broken within a week, her huge stores
of grain and her oil wells falling into
the hands of the enemy.
CZAR DEFENDS WIFE.
Not long after this the Grand
Duchess, Victoria Feodorovna, re
turned to Petrograd from a visit to
her sister, Queen Marie, of Roumania,
at Jassy. She came to Tsarkoe-Selo,
and asked for audience with the
Tsar, which was granted. Afterward
she told me in confidence that in the
course of conversation she had ven
tured to refer to the great vpopuln
ity of the Empress with both the
army and the navy, owing to her
dealings with the mock saint and the
pro-German ‘pollcy which they sus
pected her of pursuing.
At once the Limperor became in
dignant, and demanded by what right
she should date to criticise the ac
tion of the saritza. With an angry
slushy upon his cheeks His Majesty
asked:
“What on earth has Alix to do
with politics or our foreign policy?
She never seeks to influence me ex
cept in the spirit of justice and hu
manity. Is she not a sister of mercy?
Does she not nurse the wounded with
great self-abnegation? You have not
seen the quantities of letters she re
ceives expressing heartfelit gratitude
for her efforts on behalf of the poor
fellows. No, Victoria, you are quite
mistaken, and n: are the people. The
efforts of Alix And of my daughters
are very highly esteemed by all.”
Those words of the Tzar's, told to
me by the Grand Duchess herself,
show h«\v- blinded he was to all his
wife's clever juggling.
Indeed, within ten days of that au
dience the Grand Duke Nicholas
Michaelovitch ecalled upon the Em
peror Nicholas, and denounced !he‘
Tsaritza as a treacherous and hostile
German woman, I
‘“T have said my say,” said the
Grand Duke, “and now yopu can have!
me shot and bury me in your palace]
garden.” I
GRAND DUKE BANISHED.
Nicholas looked at him with glassy
eyes, put went on offering him light
ed matches for his cigarettes, umll
shook hands with him when he left.
The Grand Duke thereupon wrote 'I"'I
Tsar a letter in which he again ac-|
cused the Tsaritza of being a false
adviser and a traitress to Russia.
| 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 [ 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 murs«
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 tae
most remarkable 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 lip
“Has anything happened? Tell me the
truth!"
“1 only know what Protopopoff has
just telephoned to me from the Min
istry,” 1 said
| ’ (To Be Concluded.)
.
Aeroplane on Auction
. N
Fails to Find Buyer
(By Internationnl News Serviee)
LONDON, June 14.~=The first Al.mml‘nn--'
put up for auction in the history of the
world did not find agbuyer
'he auction was held at the Hendon
erodroms A Grahame-White machine,
fully equipped, n sporting single-seates,
tuned to 100 miles an hour, was for sale,
Bidding went up by small stages until
$2,260 was r@athml Then it uln(‘?nhnvu lal
a standstill, ,and the machine was withe
drawn, as the resrve was $2.600
“People are still very shy.” smid Clagde
Grahame« White, “but it will come all
right
.
Laborer Inhales His
I . »
~ Beer and It Kills Him
| (By Internatienal News Serviee)
| LONDON, June i A Pimlico laborer
named Willlam O'Conner drowned himsolf
' peculiar manner
At the nguest evidence was given that
he drank n quantity of beer on (ood ¥y l
| duy and died wuddenly Dr. Callier smaid |
t hegfound heet n the man's lungs,
I e |“l' doubt s OVCannor had taken nI
| dlecp breath and had drowned himsell by |
pringing the heer down into his lungs 1
'he caume of death was suffocation, and
" eriied ¥ vt denth .
.
I The Jackson Family I
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Jackson
oh
By FRANCES COWLES.
(Copyright, 1919, by the MeClure News-
I paper Syndicate,)
{ The coat of arms of the Jackson
' family here shown by request is ar
gent on a fesse, between a goat's
| head and a ship in ful sall, a grey-
I hound courant between two pheons,
I or, The crest is a goat's head couped,
argent, armed and bearded, gorged
with a eollar gules. There i 8 no motto,
! Anthony Jackson is the first an
| cestor from whom descent of this
i family oan be traced in an unbroken
line He was born at [ecleston, in
| the parish of BSt. Michael, Lancashire
| England Amuxl the beginning of the
| seventeenth gentury In 1640, witn
{ his brother Richard, he removed teo
'lreland and settled in Ulster Richard
i married Margaret Keete, who, like
| himself, was an emigrant from Eng
¢ land
| A few vears later Anthony and Rich
( ard, having become disciples of George
Fox, established the (first Friends'
| meeting in Ireland
| Anthony Jackson's son, lsaac, was
{ the progenitor of the Pennsylvapia
Jackson family in this country, or
I ““the first ettler.” With his wife,
| Ann, and their children, he arrived in
| America n 1728 He was then 6
years old
I There is a tradition that the father
| and unclie of Isaac Jackson, the first
immigrant wecompanied Oliver Crom
well t Ireland on the Invasion of
that country and in his campalign
against the Duke of Ormond
A grandson of lsaac Jackson, Wil
liam Jackson Vil a Friend and an
elder It 18 related of him that he
would never lend mon ala 4 rate of
interest exceeding b per cent, and he
| allowed | debtors to pa very much
I.|~ it nited their owr convenience,
He wag plain in styie of living and
' the ancient tre € W its fitting
accompaniment adorne his family
table long afte t 1l disappeared
{ from ever other Isehold
' Isaae, in onor [ it mmigrant
ancestor, has alw been a favorite
name in this J imily,
The descend of Isaac anda Ann
lackson haxe + soclety and
hold family me t stated inter
vals at H no Ve Chester
I County, Penr 1 where Isaac
Juckson etthe ! Is arrival in
this country \ ‘" 18 800 linea!
descendant ¢ together _at
one of thess ' .
One, of the werished by the
family is a rtificate, which
bears the { the original
Isaue ) cre are also some
digshes giver ' esent. The
| are of wood turned, with tea
cups of mal ‘ I
If you ever YN f clock
which ha ‘ n it “Made by
Isance Jod or ma be certain
that It wa ‘ ock In Its day
The clockma Vit the son of
“Honest Willin J on,'”"! as he wuy
I cglled--not tha { wis rare to find
‘ an honest J i ome facetious
people of other huve suggested
but because of mdoubted and
country-wide ‘ itlon for unswery.
ing integrity
The Jackse ve ever been an
honest, indu torprising, o
fearing, God pl It s sale
perha tle pride—that not
A single n 15 ever belonged
to the fan y
| roRreTELLs DEATH,
[ (By Internntionn] News Seryiee,)
SWAMP S June 14
) - end '
11 w r ¥ M ins
1D Ray i told hew family
Mhe died he t the home of b
pistor, M she had
Death Spares Court
From Trying Friend
(By International News Service.)
CLEVELAND, OHIO, June 14,«“Abated
by death.*™
The writing of these worde while tears
coursed from his eyes spared Judge Vir
gil J. Terrell the ordeal nf rimn( in
‘lu(lxnmn! on his boyhoed chum, Morris
darling, who “‘went wrong.” lmrllnr. vho
Ih;nI a long eriminal record, finally was
icked up in Cleveland as a Dickpocket,
‘rlo hanged himself the day before he
‘Wwas to have been arraigned before his
Ifrwnu of boyhood days.
. AR
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This set (s composed of twenty-four beantifully
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A Comport : Height, 5% inehes; dinmeter, § inches,
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Enemy Exporters Get
v
On the Job Early
PORTLAND, OREQ., June 14 —Refors
the ink ia dry on the peace treaty, export
ing houses o! enemy ocountries are opening
trade ohannels with Ameriea. Among let
ters already reesived In this country Is
Yt -
P e
Ql DOn’t ForgEt l@
B : -.-—'_ /, \\. /1
g/ The Kiddies Love KRS
///) Toys ,% A
5 ‘ Axfi’.fim: Il@
V » Toy Store. & "Ib ‘
¢'@ e e daly 2w s e rom %Ifix
~ E New York. AVI e I
"> Toyland Is \\\
>g( uy. Snd. for “ 24
?%\“ [ tbe ,Kiddies 1§
%7 MIRROR %
&, 4cssWitiALL D
AKE (0. Mill and River Streets
,Q}'l“ Jm LA ircoi@j AURORA, ILLINOIS
one from a ship broker and experter of
Trieate, w#o nlso offers the services of "'my
house at Flume, hfiln: at the gea outlet of
| Jugo-Blavia, Austfa and Hungary." Ths
| writer weleomes what he deserihes as “the
ruccessful termination of the war,” and
| ,ays his customers Ars rhowing a prefer.
ence for American-made goods,
' The Chamber of Oommerce her is in re
| coipt of the letter.
\""1 fl’/ N\ ‘!', “ W ,;:}'
. . .‘"«;‘.‘-o - .:&
Six Turablers for water ice tea or lemonade: Height,
44 inchen: flare shape, sapacity, § ounces,
Six Grape Juice Tumblers: Height, 3% inches, ea
pacity, b ounces, “
Double Handled Sugar Bowl: Height, 2% inches;
width, (with hasdies), 6 inches,
in ?lm for iwr approval. Then if you are
delig ted with the letl make the small
monthly &ymnu until our special price
is paid; otherwise return it within ten days
At our expense, not yours
The inherent love of the beautiful in
every woman's soul often famishes for such
imperisbable works of art in the home,
Prices of such goods in the past have been
prohihiwz except for the wealthy, This
offer breaks down the barriers, all may take
advantage of it. It matters not what your
station or eircumstance; thisoffer is for you
because you are honest and because you ad
mire things that are what they seem to be,
that ARE good through and through,
Sonow, while this offer is before you;
while e opportunity issoliberally presented
to you, justsign .n(l mail the coupon and the
set will be forwarded to you promptly for
your inspection and approval
KILLS ¢5-POUND HEDGEMOG,
(By International News Service)
WARE., MASE, June ld-Jossph A
noyar“ot a twenty-five po\;x Rodnho'
near his homs after the nnlmnk ad boen
treed by a ealf, It Invaded the pllrufl
and the oalf at onoe dllgulofl ita right
there and pint {t to flight, tha formear
going up thoe tree to safety,
IV/
P am Pitcher: Height, 3% inchen; width,
/ ll::lumn handle), 4 inches.
Berry or Fruit Bowk Dismeter, § inchos;
depth, 2% inches.
six Berry or Dessert Dishes: Diametes, 64
inches; depth, 1% inches.
Every is gusrantesd a perfect cutting,
from hL?n't:h. l::l in quh; fully wp W ~n
Quaker Valley standard, '
. N——
Get 1t from the Factory
Use the handy Cou
. - -
.
: Quaker Valley Mg, Ca Aurora [llinois
Ship me the GENUINE Cut Glass Factory Bargain No, 2600,
} direct to my home, Then, if |am «l»ll‘htfl: it ov.n(hm
that you claim for it, [ will remit 51.87 the first month
‘ $2 amonth for four months, making $9.87 inall; etherwise
§ D will return it within e days st your sxpense,
|
) /
| crnrnnemtnee se e -.0.00 S 8 S —— - e
' (Write your name in full here)
|
'
1 _~--.-.‘w.~---------....._........_....-._....._.
| rite street or rural route number here)
1
|
- -- o
1 (Write city and state here) biseJuna g
If you prefer that we ship rn-plld at o insored
loss or breakage (which is a wise *
- Seventv-live cents, stamps or coin , coupoa
5D